Submitted by TreatThompson t3_10ke9am in GetMotivated
As kids, we get sold hard on the world. We build fantasies, develop ambitions, and form dreams. We grow up thinking life is spent building a bridge to reach them all.
But when we get older, we start limiting what's possible.
Tim Ferriss says we get “Adventure Deficit Disorder.”
The first reason I think of for this is that “life just gets in the way.” We get responsibilities and don’t have the time to build those bridges.
But I think that reason is a spectrum. For some, it’s absolutely true, and for others it’s a cop-out excuse not to feel guilty about lack of effort.
I also think after school the messaging we hear stops being “you can do anything you want” and starts being “get to work.”
In my life I feel like my dreams are still just as possible, it’s just a matter of making more sacrifices to free up the possibility of them.
The adventurer/dreamer mindset has to be intentionally fostered now, because the way my life is now might not let that childhood mindset flow on it’s own.
Curious about others thoughts on this.
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I share ideas from great thinkers so we can stand on the shoulders of giants, instead of figuring life out alone
AllThePrettyHouses t1_j5q5rnz wrote
Only when someone else's life rests in your hands - parenthood, fellow soldier, climbing partner on the other end of your rope, eldercare, etc. - does adventure become real. It's the ultimate commitment with the highest stakes. Otherwise, it's a literary platitude.