全 13 件のコメント

[–]angels_fan 0 ポイント1 ポイント  (0子コメント)

I prefer to go 100% 80% of the time rather than burn out and go 60% 100% of the time.

I have no problem taking a couple of hours every night to decompress.

[–]TheFamilyAlphaPro-Masculine Evangelist 0 ポイント1 ポイント  (2子コメント)

Today I coached my kid's baseball team & we won the semi-finals.

I then went home & we played some more baseball (practiced pitching, my son is starting in the championship game humble brag) then we watched some Bob's Burgers & begged the fuck out.

You don't need to reach the peak of Everest every day, but god damn, you can let screens raise your kids and be so boring that your wife is more interested in a show.

[–]red-sfpplus[S] 0 ポイント1 ポイント  (1子コメント)

Yeah, we didn't sit around long. Just got home from the park after I got my second wind. Trust me, the get about 1-2 hours a WEEK on their iPads.

Wife is sunburn to a crisp which is why she was inside while we were outside.

Congrats on the win, and keep up the great work you do!

[–]TheFamilyAlphaPro-Masculine Evangelist 0 ポイント1 ポイント  (0子コメント)

Thank you & keep up the good work leading the family man.

[–]creating_my_life -1 ポイント0 ポイント  (8子コメント)

what to do on our off days.

I have approximately 15,000 days left in my life.

I don't give myself "off days".

[–]red-sfpplus[S] 9 ポイント10 ポイント  (6子コメント)

But you give yourself an expiration date. Cool.

[–]stonepimpletilistsMod / Red Beret 5 ポイント6 ポイント  (5子コメント)

Heh.

The puritan work ethic is strong in people. If you want a recharge, then fuck it, you get to call it. Im no stranger to being "on" 24/7/365.

If you want to spend your scant days off sitting down and enjoying quiet, do it. The wife just enjoys you in the same house while vegging.

Life is a marathon, not a sprint. It sure as shut beats burning ones self out, because they cant handle being at anything other than 100% 24/7

[–]creating_my_life -1 ポイント0 ポイント  (4子コメント)

Life is a marathon, not a sprint.

I used to be like that. I'm middle-aged now, and sometime in the last few years I've switched my mindset to "every fucking day is a sprint." Maybe it's fear-of-missing-out; maybe it's the awareness of my mortality. Whatever the root cause, I've definitely experienced a shift in this belief from my 20s (always planning for the future) and 30s (life is a marathon).

[–]stonepimpletilistsMod / Red Beret 1 ポイント2 ポイント  (0子コメント)

Maybe. I burned the candle too much.

If im going balls. Deeo, want to ensure im the one with the money shot at the end of it.

Most things someone else does

[–]red-sfpplus[S] 0 ポイント1 ポイント  (2子コメント)

My interpretation is your post is you either have, or could be afraid of regretting something. Something you might not even know about, thus the need to sprint everyday.

Funny, as I get older (closing in on 40) I find myself slowing down...WAY down and enjoying the ride, experiences and the flowers much more than my 20's and early 30's.'

I could be off-base, but when I stopped living for 5, 10 years in the future, and living totally int the day, and moment my level of happiness went up noticeably. Anxiety went down, etc.

Food for thought.

[–]creating_my_life 0 ポイント1 ポイント  (0子コメント)

My interpretation is your post is you either have, or could be afraid of regretting something.

Lots of FOMO in my life. I wholly admit that. I think it's more just being aware how we all have a finite amount of time in life, and just wanting to capitalize on my last 10 years of being physically in great shape.

Funny, as I get older (closing in on 40) I find myself slowing down...WAY down and enjoying the ride, experiences and the flowers much more than my 20's and early 30's.'

I've got 10 years on you. And I might have said the same thing in my late 30s.

I could be off-base, but when I stopped living for 5, 10 years in the future,

I did that all in my 20s. Worked my ass off, did everything "right", but wasn't happy. My 30s weren't bad. Finding red pill in my 40s made the last pieces come together for me.

[–]ParadoxThatDrivesUs 0 ポイント1 ポイント  (0子コメント)

Is being happy the most important thing?

[–]Persaeus 0 ポイント1 ポイント  (0子コメント)

I approach life in the same mindset, and started so at age 47, after discovering TRP but with two changes to your view

  • I think in terms of months because a smaller number is more intuitive and there are cycles to a month.

  • if you study longevity, you will find there is a lot more variation in life expectancy than life vigor. Human vigor, with exceptions, pretty reliably falls off a cliff mid-70s. Who in the fuck knows when you will actually croak.

I have 296 months to get some until I turn 73.