Living a Life of Ends

Below is an excerpt from an article I was reading today.  I loved it and thought I would share this excerpt along with a link to the full article if you wanted to read it yourself.  Plus, it can’t hurt that the author has my name!  :)   Take a look and let me know what you think below!

When we treat the things we do as simply functional steps towards some future ends, function replaces meaning, and we transform our very selves into objects for the satisfaction of some future self.

http://www.lifehack.org/articles/productivity/living-a-life-of-ends.html

Making your Max the Min

I recently went to a lecture series where I got some sound advice for personal development and growth in general.  I love lectures like this because I love to be motivated to do what no one else has ever done before.  I love having someone finally tell me that my dreams are within reach if I but go to work to achieve them and believe.  I live that type of belief system every day of my life.

For a reason I didn’t know when I was growing up, I always LOVED when somebody told me I couldn’t do something because it was too hard, nobody else had done it, or that I wouldn’t be good at it.  I especially loved it when I was playing basketball because it would make me play harder and better as I was out to “prove” something.  All throughout our lives, there are those who tell us we can’t do things because those things are too hard, nobody has done them before or that we just weren’t meant to do those things.  BALONEY!  :)   That kind of talk just fuels my fire even more to succeed!

Back to this lecture series, one thing they mentioned really stood out to me and has stuck with me ever since.  This simple phrase, “Don’t make your minimums your maximums.”  In almost everything we do in our lives, there is a minimum bar, a standard, that we must meet.  How often do each of us set that minimum standard as our goal, even our limit.  For example, how often do we set our limit to succeed in our occupation as “enough to cover my basic, basic needs” and we are comfortable with that?  Making your minimum also your maximum negates all potential and drive to succeed in not only you, but those who are around you.

Many are good, but few are great.  I believe that the difference lies between where your personal limits are set.  Are they set at the minimums?  Or are they higher than you can reach at the moment…you must stretch yourselves?  Your only limit to your dreams in life, whether it’s financial freedom, more time with family, better at basketball, learning how to play the piano, or whatever else it may be, the only limit is yourself and your own belief system.  Everything within that is reachable — so why not expand that limit, and enlarge your belief system?

Joan of Arc once said,

“One life is all we have and we live it as we believe in living it.  But to sacrifice what you are and to live without belief, that is a fate more terrible than dying.”

You only live once — what are you doing today to make the most of it?

Life is about…

Cool little story…take a look and let me know what you think in your comments!

Life isn’t about keeping score.  It’s not about how many people call you and it’s not about who you’ve dated, are dating, or haven’t dated at all.  It isn’t about who you’ve kissed, what sport you play, or which guy or girl likes you.  It’s not about your shoes or your hair or the color of your skin or where you live or go to school.  In fact, it’s not about grades, money, clothes, or colleges that accept you or not.  Life isn’t about if you have lots of friends, or if you are alone, and it’s not about how accepted or unaccepted you are.  Life just isn’t about that.

BUT life is about who you love and who you hurt.  It’s about how you feel about yourself.  It’s about trust, happiness, and compassion.  It’s about sticking up for your friends and replacing inner hate with love.  Life is about avoiding jealousy, overcoming ignorance, and building confidence.  It’s about what you say and what you mean.  It’s about seeing people for who they are and not for what they have.  Most of all, it is about choosing to use your life to touch someone else’s in a way that could never been achieved otherwise.  These choices are what life is about!!

Feeling irritated by the small things others do?

I don’t know about you…but I often feel irritated by the small things others do or don’t do. To give you a few examples, think about roommates not doing dishes, making beds, keeping tidy, or more generally picking up their clutter.  Of course, each one of us adamantly refuses to believe that they would NEVER do such a thing.  I’ve come to the conclusion that the things that bug us most about other people are usually the things that we need to fix in ourselves and our very own personal lives.  Anybody else think this way?  Carl Jung did…

“Everything that irritates us about others can lead us to an understanding of ourselves.” – Carl Jung

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