Redfire
and Blood
- Local time
- Today 3:16 PM
- Joined
- Jan 10, 2011
- Messages
- 422
People who achieved what they wanted to achieve. Was that because:
1: They experienced some sort of satisfaction along the way?
2: The final goal meant enough for them to make sacrifices along the way?
3: Some combination of both?
It could depend on the person, of course.
e.g: Elon Musk wants to get to Mars. He builds a company (Zip2), sells it, builds a second company (Paypal), sells it, builds another company (Tesla Motors), and another (SpaceX), which is basically taking over NASA. He majored in physics, and most likely enjoys it very much. But he didn't HAVE to conquer another planet. He could've done a PhD on physics, worked as a regular programmer; he had many options. And he chose one where he is exposed to astronomical amounts of stress, which have led to some panic attacks, kept him away from his family, destroyed his social life, etc.
I obviously simplified this man to a ridiculous extent (getting to Mars wasn't even his life mission, but it's certainly impressive and he'll probably get there), it's just an example. But: where does he stand on the previous question? What if I want to do something as ambitious as that? Like: cure cancer. Get to Jupiter. Whatever. (no I'm not planning on doing that, it's hypothetical). Could it be that I'm just not meant to do it? I don't like the right things, or can't tolerate the stress?
My answer:
I lean towards "only you can answer that". But I want as much feedback as possible.
1: They experienced some sort of satisfaction along the way?
2: The final goal meant enough for them to make sacrifices along the way?
3: Some combination of both?
It could depend on the person, of course.
e.g: Elon Musk wants to get to Mars. He builds a company (Zip2), sells it, builds a second company (Paypal), sells it, builds another company (Tesla Motors), and another (SpaceX), which is basically taking over NASA. He majored in physics, and most likely enjoys it very much. But he didn't HAVE to conquer another planet. He could've done a PhD on physics, worked as a regular programmer; he had many options. And he chose one where he is exposed to astronomical amounts of stress, which have led to some panic attacks, kept him away from his family, destroyed his social life, etc.
I obviously simplified this man to a ridiculous extent (getting to Mars wasn't even his life mission, but it's certainly impressive and he'll probably get there), it's just an example. But: where does he stand on the previous question? What if I want to do something as ambitious as that? Like: cure cancer. Get to Jupiter. Whatever. (no I'm not planning on doing that, it's hypothetical). Could it be that I'm just not meant to do it? I don't like the right things, or can't tolerate the stress?
My answer:
I lean towards "only you can answer that". But I want as much feedback as possible.