- Joined
- Jul 26, 2018
- Messages
- 434
I've been struggling with a lot of personal productivity, goal, purpose related issues this year. One of which "Life purpose." I've been working with Chase on. He has a great philosophy that you should find tasks or goals that give you the emotions you enjoy. Most of us "coach" types intrinsically love helping and teaching people, so naturally, we gravitate towards creating work that does this: writing, videos, teaching, etc. But you must choose large goals. For example, Elon Musk's ultimate goal is to populate the cosmos with humanity, thus ensuring our survival. Not to create electric cars. That's a smaller goal that leads to his grand goals.
Where I've struggled is I choose smaller goals, and when I lose interest, I drift for weeks, months, even years, not really working all that hard, but just drifting in limbo.
So, with this question in mind, I spent this week researching and creating this article: The Heroic Guide to becoming a successful man.
I could share it all here, but it's 4k words long, and has all sorts of nifty artwork. The only I haven't included yet are internal links.
So the tldr, is this is for creative men, who feel unhappy unless they're creating. Or for the man who feels he's not achieving the sort of life he feels he could. It's a guide that I hope can help you, if that's where you're at.
I hope it stimulates conversations. And if you find typos, or intellectual errors, please let me know.
Where I've struggled is I choose smaller goals, and when I lose interest, I drift for weeks, months, even years, not really working all that hard, but just drifting in limbo.
So, with this question in mind, I spent this week researching and creating this article: The Heroic Guide to becoming a successful man.
I could share it all here, but it's 4k words long, and has all sorts of nifty artwork. The only I haven't included yet are internal links.
So the tldr, is this is for creative men, who feel unhappy unless they're creating. Or for the man who feels he's not achieving the sort of life he feels he could. It's a guide that I hope can help you, if that's where you're at.
I hope it stimulates conversations. And if you find typos, or intellectual errors, please let me know.