Palácio e Convento de Mafra, Mafra Portugal
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@q-lvck
Palácio e Convento de Mafra, Mafra Portugal
Concept: We’re living in a nice apartment together , Frank Sinatra is playing softly in the background. Your hand is in my hair and your lips on my forehead, we are in love.
As you're nearly 30 now, what would you have told your 20 year old self if you had the chance? Do you have any advice or tips for people currently in their early 20's, possibly in college and worried about the future? Any advice to help build self-esteem and to achieve what they want? Thank you.
Combined with the following ask:
Do you have any tips for how to improve self-esteem and confidence? I think I may be an xNTJ but years of bullying, betrayal, depression, and bereavement have left me feeling pretty low and worthless.
A few thoughts below.
To my 20 year old self
You can be right and still lose the argument. How you communicate to someone and how you deliver the message is just as important as the contents of the message itself. If you disregards the nuances of other human beings and come off as a total asshole, they’ll completely shut down and reject your input no matter how great it is.
Don’t fight battles with no rewards. If people can’t stop you, they’ll try to distract you so you’ll trip over your own feet and sabotage yourself. Don’t let them.
Older people may be less intelligent than you, but they have more experience– listen and learn. Even idiots can teach you what not to do.
Shut up. Most situations don’t require your input, your action, your reaction, or your intervention. Often times it’s like throwing gas on a fire to put it out. If you’re patient and wait, the answers tend to reveal themselves or the problem will solve itself.
Always do your laundry, there’s nothing worse than running out of clean underwear.
On building self-esteem and confidence
Stop explaining yourself to people who have already made up their minds about you. It’s a waste of time so tend to the relationships with the people who genuinely care for your well-being.
Finish. Quitting is a pathological disorder that can spread to other areas of your life. If you quit at one thing, the odds are you have low resilience and you will give up at other endeavors in your life. No matter what– finish. Get to the end. No matter how imperfect you think the outcome will be, finish. You’ll either have a sense of accomplishment from having completed something, lessons learned from the failure, or both.
Small victories build confidence. If you can’t do the small things correctly, you won’t be able to tackle the big things. If you can’t wake up in the morning and jog a mile consistently then you’re not going to be able to climb Mount Everest. Patience is key and biting off more than you can chew will often end in failure and demoralization. Practice makes perfect, and progress takes time.
Pain is weakness leaving the body. Build your tolerance by trying new things outside of your comfort zone, push yourself when you feel like you want to quit, and confront the things you fear the most. Similar to lifting weights, the only way your body can grow stronger is by steadily increasing the weights until you can bear heavier burdens. The more you do this, the easier it becomes.
Be a thermostat, not a thermometer. That is, be consistent in your values, personality, and habits– don’t let your emotions and behavior mold to your environment because you’ll always be in a state of flux. It makes you vulnerable to other people dictating your moods.
Follow your heart but take your brain with you. Do the things you love but in a logical and planned way. Don’t question your goal if it’s what you truly want to do, but scrutinize your method because that’s what will determine success or failure.
On college
Evidence is more powerful than theory. In college and in the real world, you must be able to prove your abilities with evidence because just being “smart” isn’t enough. That evidence is superior performance, high grades, high test scores, and strong internships. You can’t stroll into a job interview and debate the interviewer, declare victory, and secure the position. Come with proof.
Do well no matter what. Even if you’re unsure about your major, never let your performance slide because GPAs are cumulative. If you only do well in the subjects you love, it will reveal to employers that you have selective motivation. This is a problem because in the real world you won’t enjoy everything assigned to you even at a job you love and employers need to have confidence you can still succeed.
Who you know is as important as what you know. Connections matter in the real world, don’t overlook building relationships with people who will be your peers, your friends, future colleagues, and potential future bosses for the rest of your life and professional career.
Don’t fuck around. If you’re paying thousands of dollars in tuition and going into debt, make sure you pick a career that can sustain you after you graduate. No matter how much you love fine arts, if you go $100,000 into debt at 6.5% interest, your life will be extremely difficult. Find a balance between what you love and what can support you.
Have a job offer before you graduate. When you’re a student, you have the luxury of being an intern and trying new things without companies having to navigate complicated labor laws. Once you graduate, you’re just another unemployed person. Take advantage of the time you have as a student to seize those opportunities so the transition post-graduation is seamless.
concept: it starts raining and i go outside. i lay down on the ground facing the sky. i get cleansed as thousands of drops fall down on my body
Ladislav E. Berka chess game,1930s. / gelatin silver print
The truth of the matter is that there’s nothing you can’t accomplish if: (1) You clearly decide what it is that you’re absolutely committed to achieving, (2) You’re willing to take massive action, (3) You notice what’s working or not, and (4) You continue to change your approach until you achieve what you want, using whatever life gives you along the way
Tony Robbins (via beinchargeofyourlife)
Stockholm Public Library — Asplund
There will always be people veiled by the delusion that they “know you” and try to manipulate that false truth into something the gives them a false sense of power.
It’s best to sit back and watch how these things unfold. The glorious shit show that is the human ego.
What would impress you?
Intelligence and consistency
A Room Of One’s Own
Museo del Prado, Madrid, Spain
Why do we Procrastinate?
1. Poor work habits. There are some who procrastinate on everything. They are always way behind and never schedule anything. They say they work well under pressure – but they are bad organizers who wait to the last minute before starting on a task. For them it’s only important when it’s due RIGHT NOW.
2. Feeling overwhelmed. When we don’t know where to start, and we don’t know what to do, it’s tempting to do nothing – as that’s so much easier! Also, sometimes work piles up, and we feel it’s all too much. So procrastinating here is a quick form of relief.
3. Aiming for perfection. There are some individuals who are sticklers for details. They can’t miss a thing and all their work has to be perfect. They’re under so much pressure to achieve an ideal standard that it takes them forever to complete a simple task.
4. Wanting to do something else instead. We all have projects that we just don’t want to do. It may be writing a report, or filing in a “stupid” form. We’re avoiding what’s unpleasant as it’s really not much fun. But delaying getting started won’t make it disappear.
Some advice for those who tend to be procrastinators …
· Acknowledge what you are doing; don’t pretend it’s not a problem
· Tell yourself that you don’t have to do it all at once. Make a start on something – that will help to change your feelings.
· Make your focus “getting started”, instead of finishing.
· Break those large assignments down and make a start on something small.
· Don’t beat yourself up. It’s a very common problem. You’re not the only one, and you can change your behaviour!
It’s easy to think that life can be broken down, categorized, and systematized in a predictable fashion such that one’s intended outcomes can be determined solely by one’s individual will and the application of “hard work” if one 1) hasn’t accepted that nature is stochastic, 2) has not experienced hardship in the form of social/cultural/racial/sexual persecution that has impeded their progress in life, 3) refuses to accept their own biological limitations (e.g. we are still mammals and subject to animal instincts; we are not purely rational beings), 4) underestimates the extent that culture and social conditioning form individual worldviews (which then inform our decisions in life).
There will always be forces beyond our control that could change our trajectory in life. It’s not only delusional but willfully ignorant to think otherwise.
It is the sign of a great mind to prefer things in measure to things in excess.
Seneca, On the Happy Life (via philosophybits)
Miles Davis, Hand, NYC, New York, 1953 / Miles Davis, Malibu, CA, 1989.
Herman Leonard.
Where do you live?
Not to be poetic but truly, really, inside my head