I am blogging everyday (or nearly everyday) on The Daily Stoic.
Adapt or die.
I am blogging everyday (or nearly everyday) on The Daily Stoic.
Adapt or die.
I am blogging everyday (or nearly everyday) on The Daily Stoic.
Disaster can hit at any time. I can prepare by practicing disaster recovery. It’s a term used in the IT world to account for an awful event that could impact the company. I should maybe do it in my personal life. It’s tough. My reasoning for not is because I am often thinking into the future. Two steps ahead and I do things to account for those potential outcomes. Both good and bad. Often bad. I feel I can take on there events with the right mindset.
Living within my means is something I try to do. There’s not many expensive things I want. What I do want is for golfing even then I try to get by with what I can. It’d be nice to have. Usually I’m looking for the purpose.
At one point I thought I had it all figured out in golf. At that point I had golf knock me down a peg. I shot some of my worst golf. This happened twice once when I stopped writing in my learn journal for golf. Then this past summer when I was counting shots during the hole. I realized I was overconfidence and I needed to take a more humble approach. It’s a good lesson for the game and life.
This is a stoic about control over my thoughts and choices and fears. I choose to let it in. The most impactful book in my life is Feel the Fear and do it Anyway by Dr. Susan D. Jeffers. It is a book that significantly changed my view on life. Fear is there for all of us. Less for others and more for others what the book helped me do is recognize the fear, accept it, and then move one. Use the energy to move forward. After a while there is less fear.
Divine intervention is not something I ask for. Life is something I accept as is. I used to want to hit reset and do it all over again. Like I could do in video games. I’ve learned there are opportunities for growth. I can’t change the past. I have limited control over the future. I can control my thoughts and choices and live in the present.
Stoicism is a life long pursuit. I’ve recognized that from the progress I’ve made and the faults and failures I still have despite continuing to study and practice stoicism.
This stoic focuses on resilience and accepting that there are lucky people and there are people who don’t have as much luck. They have to work harder to survive and even succeed. There’s value in the struggle it teaches me a lot.
Or ignore the haters. This is a lesson I’ve learned blogging and playing video games on the internet. Even social media can be vile. It’s tough. I still slip on the haters but in general I feel I understand it and often feel sorry for the other person because I know they are probably dealing with something internally.
Be strong and gracious to get through life is a valuable thing to remember. I’ve often thought if some tragedy struck me at the hand of another person I could handle it with grace. I feel like that would be tough to handle. One of the people who worked for me passed away in April. I had my moment of mourning and then moved on. Some might see it as inconsiderate or non-empathetic. I accepted the tragedy. The person was in car and he was known for driving fast. He hit a tree and the car rolled three times as a result. It’s how he live and how he passed. He made that choice and there’s nothing I can do about it now. It’s sad and we are doing things to honor him. That’s about as much as we can do.
I am blogging everyday (or nearly everyday) on The Daily Stoic.
This has been highlighted by the pandemic which has created a lot frustration, anger, and wasted energy. When the Colonial Pipeline was hit by a ransomware attack and gas had to be stopped for a weak fear drove people to do some really weird things and drive a fuel shortage for some places. I feel fortunate that I don’t fall prey to those newsie fears. I do have fear from time-to-time though. I try to remember this phrase and deal with the situation. It’s not always easy but it can be accomplished.
I am blogging everyday (or nearly everyday) on The Daily Stoic.
I feel like I’m slipping a bit with this second go around of the pandemic. I didn’t handle the first time around but I thought I eventually adjusted well. I’m finding now that may not be the case or that I need to adjust further. I’ve been fortunate not to be impacted by the pandemic. I’ve also seen the response a bit extreme. In my view it’s very inefficient and puts a lot of things on hold for small gains. I have to remember there are opportunities there. I also need to remember to have patience and to use what I’ve learned from studying stoicism.
I am blogging everyday (or nearly everyday) on The Daily Stoic.
It’s hard to find the positives right now. I’ve found a lot of positives in the pandemic and at work. The more this drags on though the harder it becomes to find the positives. Or maybe it’s easy and I’m just worn down and frustrated and lazy. It’s there. I know it is and maybe I’m not the right person to find the positives.