fbpx
Menu

Jordan

Forum Replies Created

Viewing 2 posts - 1 through 2 (of 2 total)
  • Author
    Posts
  • #75877
    Jordan
    Participant

    What are you doing to add value to other people?
    What are others doing to add value to you?
    Do you have a plan for personal growth?

    What question do you wish people would ask you?

    Have no interest in the things around you?
    Disinterest in the people around you?
    Don’t see a point to it, whatever ‘it’ is?
    Sounds familiar?
    Maybe then you’ll find similarities with my story:
    My family showed little interest in me or my interests. Always felt like whenever I was excited about something, they were just there to tear me down. I hadn’t connected with physical people in a long time. Became more and more of a shut in. I could not find a like mind, and I became increasingly “lost”. The few people who I could occasionally talk to and get something resembling a conversation began to chastise me for being out of touch with reality.

    Little blog post for you, Jas. (This is more or less my mindset throughout the climb out of my emotional hole.):

    I found some books and blogs of successful people. Dale Carnegie and his incredibly cheesy titles were so offputting I actually picked up his most famous “How to win friends and influence people”. After reading that my self image had gone to crap because I was doing a lot of things wrong according to the book. So I changed. I put on a show for people. I cared less about me and more for others. I became a hollow kind of happy while searching for ‘my purpose in life’. This hollowness was punctuated by ‘unexplained outbursts completely uncharacteristic of you’.

    I became perpetually mad to fill the hollow happy show I gave everyone. It felt like everything I did was to help someone else in their endeavors when I had zero clue how to access what it was I wanted to do. I put together a metaphor of walking around a walled kingdom that was mine with no way to get in. Where everything I did was the equivalent of walking sideways along the wall looking for a way in, collecting things along the way in the hopes of eventually scaling this proverbial wall to gain access to my kingdom. I’d go do jobs and help other people in their kingdoms in hopes of gaining help to gain access to what belonged to me, but I always found myself alone when standing at the edge of what was mine.

    Inadvertently, I kindled a fire for personal growth. It began to seep into everything. My job handed me promotions hand over fist. People loved me. I became a people person. At least in public. In private there were still many nights that ended in tears because I was not headed in the direction I felt called to. I didn’t see how what I was doing that day pushed me over the walls into my kingdom. I felt like a king, a leader, without anyone to lead. I’d fallen into such a habit of listening to what everyone else wants, I’ve literally forgotten how to even think about what I want.

    3 months ago I was approached by a man who had a vehicle for leadership and wealth. I have never wanted anything more than this. Yet I still struggle in taking it and I don’t understand why. I wonder if I simply have to relearn how to want something and take it for me. Either way, I have never felt so much joy and frustration as when I feel like I’m finally making progress.

    TLDR: I digress. Happiness is overrated, progress and growth are far more fulfilling while figuring out how to leave your mark on the world. leave the haters and naysayers in the dust.

    When you start doing what it is that you feel you have been called to do, there is nothing short of ceasing the pursuit that can take away your joy.

    #75691
    Jordan
    Participant

    I’m beginning to feel that I found this forum by no mere accident.
    Having read through many of the stories here, I’m breaking a status quo and extending my hand.

    Helen, no. People were not born to feel like this. It is not ‘normal’. Maybe for much of society it’s normal, but I’ve found much of society gives up. Do you really think you are where you are to be a cog in some CEO’s machine? Wouldn’t we all want to believe there’s better options out there?

    Consider this, the concept of an employee is relatively a new concept. Less than 15 years ago, baby boomers had dreams of working in a tiny little office wearing lapel shirts and skinny red ties at IBM for 40 to 50 years. That was ‘the dream job’ for many people, yet I’m fairly confident an audible form of disgust came from anyone who just thought about wanting to sit in a cubicle for 40 years, let alone 50.

    20 years ago, something around 70% (I may be off by a bit but regardless it was significant) of business was privately owned and full of entrepreneurs. A word which has almost been demonized in today’s America.

    “You should be able to go to work and not feel half-dead after a day. Am I wrong? What should I change?” There are very few people alive today who probably could accurately answer this question with certainty. I would wager such individuals are very successful people who don’t trade their time for dollars.

    As for feeling half dead after a day? Average vacation time is two weeks out of a year. Considering the average person can’t calm down during the week until their ‘friday’ in which they unwind all evening, spend saturday playing, and then sunday worrying about monday. Add all that up and the average person lives their life to the fullest 2 weeks out of the year, and stressed out for 6 weeks sporadically. The rest of the year belongs to the job.

    Is that normal? To live your life at 2 months out of 12, or 1/6th it’s potential, until you are 62 years old(The average retirement age)?

    If any part of this text has you upset, I want to have a chat with you. Why? I’m looking for people who are winners, and winners don’t go around getting paid at the value of a job willingly.

    If you don’t want to try and take my hand, then I encourage you to find someone else. You’ve heard “Show me your friends, and I’ll show you your future.”, what do you know about mentors? If you don’t have a mentor, then you are living your future. Look at people who are 10 years into what it is you think you want to do in life. Look at them and decide if you like the way they are living and the things they are doing.

Viewing 2 posts - 1 through 2 (of 2 total)