My dearest readers,
I recently stumbled across an article on "The
Importance of Breaking Free of…Yourself," which I found to be too vastly grounded
in Chinese philosophy on the one hand, yet had it made valuable claims concerning
the expansion of one’s horizon on the other. Since I’ve written about breaking
free before and refrain from comfort zone discourse at large, I tried to find a
way that is tangent to both, forged into a short proposition: Overcome yourself
in order to expand yourself!
Recording artist Drake sings in one of his
songs "I’m leaving, I’m leaving, you know I got my reasons." About a year ago, however, I wrote a post against that, about coming home once
all of the work is done, little of which was and is true, because a year ago I
couldn’t entirely grasp what all was awaiting me once I had come home. It
seemed like there was always another departure hanging from the ceiling,
watching, judging, and demanding. And with that overseeing the course of what
was to follow, I soon came to notice that it was never—in itself—the premise
of coming home once my tasks were in
the books, it was and is by no means this
pleasurable feeling to let lose a drive and motivation I (and figuratively we) formerly had no idea existed. What
is more, it were the willingness and the amenability to make new moves out into the
wide open that kept me going, and it is concisely this dynamic between
departure and return that distinguishes the shrewd from the careless in general.
I do not (primarily) want to talk about leaving
the comfort zone in order to make moves in life, but I want to bring to (your) attention
that in order to expand ourselves we must
continually thrust outside of what we’re comfortable and familiar with, or at
least have the appetence to do that. There is a tremendous amount of potential
within you, within all of us, so why compromise that with the lack of desire to
exploit it? This being said, let us all be aware that leaving what we know, at
times leaving everything behind, is generally a reasonable personal concern
that often prevents us from trying new things, which eventually barricades up
the extent of opportunity we either have or could have; and is trying to avoid that
alone not a damn good reason to take your coat and your leave and bust into the
wide open to not only see what is out there, but to see what is within you?
"Go hard or go home!" they say, and you shall
know that you can always go home; but it is for the shrewd to go out there, and
explore and exploit. In the end, everything we do is just everything we’ve done
(cf. Corey Taylor), but be aware that we are also held accountable for the
things we haven’t done. "Your perspective on life comes from the cage you were
held captive in" (Shannon L. Alder). In that sense, it is all up to you whether
you stay home or leave (and break free) in order to expand yourself, because
that will determine the quality of your opportunities, and separate the ones
you have and the ones you could have from the ones you could have had.
Expand yourself! Be present not only where you or others expect it. Be present elsewhere, in pain and predicaments; be unexpected, unpredictable—and do so every step of the way; for then you are to find your true potential, the self-affirming ego boost we so often strive for—and let that be thy personal #MomentumToGo!
Expand yourself! Be present not only where you or others expect it. Be present elsewhere, in pain and predicaments; be unexpected, unpredictable—and do so every step of the way; for then you are to find your true potential, the self-affirming ego boost we so often strive for—and let that be thy personal #MomentumToGo!
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