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A perception of yourself that you just can't shake

mattd.substack.com

2 points by MattDemers 3 years ago · 3 comments

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anonymouskimmer 3 years ago

> whenever you go from one thing to another, make sure to leave in connection.

What I get from this sentence (out of context) is to not burn bridges. Have a way to go back if you decide the new direction isn't right for you.

> In a creator, athlete, or inflection sense, the decision is being made by the market. It is being made by time. It is not a quiet rebellion, led by your brain, telling you that you don’t actually like the thing you’re doing anymore.

For any of us I think.

Novelty generation has some of these driving forces amped up, but typecasting I think applies to so many of us. And has basically for all of history.

  • MattDemersOP 3 years ago

    >What I get from this sentence (out of context) is to not burn bridges. Have a way to go back if you decide the new direction isn't right for you.

    I think that it's more speaking to... "I know why this thing that I'm leaving led me to the place I'm going, and I'm appreciative for that." Notsomuch the practical burning bridges in terms of jobs, but the piece I was quoting was more about the mental progression of "Okay I was really into this type of relationship, but it doesn't work for me any more. But I'm going to keep the connection of why it did work for me, so I can have context and appreciation for the growth I'm experiencing as a person."

MattDemersOP 3 years ago

Got inspired by some writing about personal change that happens when your brain says "Nope, this (person, job, situation) isn't working for you anymore."

Felt it applied well to creatives and athletes who feel like they still have a role to perform, based on something very personal.

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