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879 sats \ 3 replies \ @elvismercury 21 Jan \ on: How to Fail mostly_harmless
One refinement, from my perspective: even being in a position to fail is kind of an advanced move, and a rare one.
There's vast swathes of modern life that's never made concrete enough to ascertain success or failure, it's like you're living in a purgatory of non-action, non-striving. You vaguely intend numerous things, but don't commit to any of them, or take responsibility for them, and so the undertaking can't be said to have failed, nor succeeded. It lives a ghost's unlife in your mind, looming over it all, haunting away potential dedicated efforts.
Getting to the point where something is at stake would therefore be great progress. Whatever happens from there -- success, failure -- is of less import. I can work with either. It's hard to work with nothing. And yet such a siren song, to keep yourself safe! To not aspire. To not put anything on any line.
Sigh.
This is a geat book by Dale Carneggie: How to Stop Worry and Start Living
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being in a position to fail is kind of an advanced move, and a rare one
True but then you describe what sounds like a failure, albeit a meta-failure, to put something at stake. I think my own words here would suggest to begin putting stuff, anything, and randomly if need be, at stake, and do it over and over again and let yourself fail to put the right stuff at stake.
to keep yourself safe!
Gross :)
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That's a good way to put it: meta-failure.
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