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How to become motivated to become the best version of yourself.
Why Most Intelligent People Struggle in Life and Careers
I have watched brilliant people ruin themselves with almost scholarly precision. Not all at once. Not in the movie version where the gifted student flames out and everyone whispers about wasted potential. Real decline is slower and more bureaucratic than that. It happens in graduate offices with dead ficus plants, in startup conference rooms that smell faintly of burnt coffee and dry-erase marker, in labs where somebody with a spectacular mind cannot answer a simple email for nine days because the email is not interesting enough.
By KURIOUSKabout 4 hours ago in Motivation
Why Health and Safety is Important in a Fitness Environment
Health and safety in a fitness environment is extremely important, especially in today’s society where more people are actively going to the gym and taking part in exercise programmes. As the fitness industry continues to grow, the number of risks within these environments also increases.
By Saad a day ago in Motivation
My Fear of Fiction
Introduction I don't think I am very good at fiction and don't believe that I could ever write a book. To me, there is too much planning involved and my mind likes to run off in an uncontrolled manner where I reign it in if I get too wild. This is really about how I manage to write fiction despite being scared stiff every time I put pen to paper, or finger to keyboard.
By Mike Singleton 💜 Mikeydred a day ago in Motivation
The Rejection
How 117 "No's" Led to the Biggest "Yes" of My Life REJECTION NUMBER ONE 😤 The first investor I pitched my business idea to listened politely for exactly four minutes before interrupting me to say "This is the worst idea I've heard this year and I hear terrible ideas professionally" and then stood up, shook my hand, and walked out of the conference room leaving me sitting alone with my carefully prepared slide deck and my shattered confidence and the first of what would become one hundred and seventeen rejections that collectively transformed me from a naive optimistic entrepreneur into someone who understood that the path to success is not paved with yeses but rather with nos that teach you what yes requires 📉
By The Curious Writera day ago in Motivation
The 5-Second Rule
THE MORNING I ALMOST QUIT EVERYTHING 😰 Three years ago I was standing in the parking lot of the company where I had worked for seven years staring at the front door and physically unable to make myself walk through it because the anxiety that had been building for months had finally reached a level where my body simply refused to cooperate with my mind's instructions to move forward, and I stood there for twenty-two minutes according to my phone's step counter which recorded no movement during that period feeling simultaneously paralyzed and panicked because I knew that not walking through that door meant losing my job and losing my job meant losing my apartment and losing my apartment meant moving back in with my parents at thirty-four years old which felt like a confirmation of every fear I had about being fundamentally incapable of functioning as an adult in a world that seemed to operate by rules everyone else understood but that I had never been given 😔
By The Curious Writera day ago in Motivation
It's Difficult Without a System | The Iron Standard Day #2
After completing the first day of the challenge (Read Day 1 for the rules here), I found that I only managed to complete 14 out of the 18 tasks. The challenge was always going to be ambitious, and with this many to do I found myself rushing to complete as many as I could before the day's end. I need to have a system.
By Dave's Your Uncle!a day ago in Motivation
The Two-Pizza Rule for Decision Making
THE DECISION PARALYSIS EPIDEMIC Modern life presents an unprecedented number of decisions daily, with some researchers estimating that the average adult makes approximately thirty-five thousand conscious decisions every single day ranging from what to eat and what to wear to complex professional and personal choices that have long-term consequences, and this massive decision load produces a state of chronic decision fatigue where the quality of your choices deteriorates progressively throughout the day as the cognitive resources required for good decision-making deplete, and the result is that your worst decisions tend to happen in the evening when your decision-making capacity is at its lowest, which unfortunately is when many of the most consequential personal decisions are made including relationship conversations, financial choices, and parenting decisions.
By The Curious Writer2 days ago in Motivation





