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    Bring4th Bring4th Community Olio I think I may have figured out why I find it so hard to focus during meditation walks

    Thread: I think I may have figured out why I find it so hard to focus during meditation walks


    EvolvingPhoenix (Offline)

    Member
    Posts: 1,760
    Threads: 122
    Joined: Apr 2018
    #31
    04-27-2019, 11:18 AM
    Thanks xise. I'm glad to think I might be making some progress. It doesn't always feel like it, but I'm glad it's the case. I've got a lot of stuff I'm working through and it's all really daunting. Thanks for the support.

      •
    Aion (Offline)

    Sentinel of the LVX Decad
    Posts: 4,760
    Threads: 45
    Joined: Apr 2015
    #32
    04-27-2019, 10:54 PM (This post was last modified: 04-28-2019, 01:31 PM by Aion.)
    I turn 30 in a few months and my life isn't anywhere close to what I imagined it would be by this point. I understand the pain of feeling like you are not activating your potential and making the most out of life. However, there is some comfort for me knowing that there is nothing we do that is totally useless. Often things feel 'set up' for some interaction.

    I always try to remember these lists I've seen of people who didn't make their accomplishments til later in life. I've always seen myself as a 'late bloomer' in one sense, but in another more like a 'slow build' character. Slow build characters tend to start out weaker at lower levels but then grow exponentially to be super strong in later levels. I think I'm gonna be a badass when I'm old. I am still working on building that now though.

    Here's one list:

    1. Martha Stewart
    Stewart had worked on Wall Street and owned a Connecticut catering firm, but her real success came after age 41 with the publication of her first book, Entertaining, and the launch of Martha Stewart Living seven years later. (Of course, she weathered some pitfalls later, before rebounding once more.)

    2. Joy Behar
    Known today as a former co-host on The View, Behar was a high school English teacher who didn't launch her show business career until after age 40.

    3. Vera Wang
    Wang was first known as an accomplished figure skater and a fashion editor before deciding before her 1989 wedding, at age 40, that she wanted to be a designer. She commissioned her own wedding dress for $10,000 and opened her first bridal boutique the following year.

    4. Tim and Nina Zagat
    This husband and wife team had each turned 42 before they gave up their legal careers to write their first restaurant guides. Their eponymous company is part of Google now.

    5. Robin Chase
    The founder and former CEO of Zipcar had left her 40th birthday in the rearview mirror and was taking time off from work to be with her children when she and a friend, Antje Danielson, came up with the idea for the car-sharing company in 2000.

    6. Harland Sanders
    Sanders was "a failure who got fired from a dozen jobs before starting his restaurant, and then failed at that when he went out of business and found himself broke at the age of 65," according to one account. But then things worked out when he sold the first Kentucky Fried Chicken franchise in 1952.

    7. Rodney Dangerfield
    The late, great comedic actor was best known for his roles in 1980s movies like Caddyshack and Back to School, but he was 46 before he got his first big break--on the Ed Sullivan Show.

    8. Duncan Hines
    At age 55, he wrote his first food and hotel guides (including one that mentioned Sanders Court and Caf, the original restaurant owned by Harlan Sanders, above). At age 73, licensed the right to use his name to the company that developed Duncan Hines cake mixes; unfortunately he died six years later.

    9. Charles Darwin
    He was 50 years old before he published On the Origin of the Species in 1859, the book that espoused the theory for which he best known today. (The Darwin Awards came much later.)

    10. Samuel Jackson
    Jackson 46 years old (and in recovery from addiction to cocaine and heroin) before he starred alongside John Travolta in Pulp Fiction.

    11. Donald Fisher
    At age 41, after a series of entrepreneurial ventures, Fisher and his wife Doris Fisher founded The Gap. It's now a $16 billion a year company with more than 3,200 locations worldwide.

    12. Ray Kroc
    Kroc had passed his 50th birthday before he bought the first McDonald's in 1961, which he ultimately expanded into a worldwide conglomerate.

    13. Sam Walton
    Although he'd owned a small chain of discount stores, Walton opened the first true Wal-Mart in 1962, when he was 44.

    14. Julia Child
    Her first cookbook was published when she was 39; she made her television debut in The French Chef at age 51.
    [+] The following 1 member thanked thanked Aion for this post:1 member thanked Aion for this post
      • EvolvingPhoenix
    AnthroHeart (Offline)

    Anthro at Heart
    Posts: 19,119
    Threads: 1,298
    Joined: Jan 2010
    #33
    04-27-2019, 11:10 PM
    I republished my novel, The Warlock Name at 40 years old. And I should have my 2nd one by the time I'm 42.
    Working on a trilogy.

    No matter how much you don't want to work on something, just choose what is the least sucky thing to do.
    For me, I realize it would leave great potential if I actually work on them. Maybe one day I'll have 10 books under my belt.
    [+] The following 1 member thanked thanked AnthroHeart for this post:1 member thanked AnthroHeart for this post
      • EvolvingPhoenix
    EvolvingPhoenix (Offline)

    Member
    Posts: 1,760
    Threads: 122
    Joined: Apr 2018
    #34
    04-28-2019, 01:38 AM
    (04-27-2019, 10:54 PM)Aion Wrote: I turn 30 in a few months and my life isn't anywhere close to what I imagined it would be by this point. I understand the pain of feeling like you are not activating your potential and making the most out of life. However, there is some comfort for me knowing that there is nothing we do that is totally useless. Often things feel 'set up' for some interaction.

    I always try to remember these lists I've seen of people who didn't make their accomplishments in life. I've always seen myself as a 'late bloomer' in one sense, but in another more like a 'slow build' character. Slow build characters tend to start out weaker at lower levels but then grow exponentially to be super strong in later levels. I think I'm gonna be a badass when I'm old. I am still working on building that now though.

    Here's one list:

    1. Martha Stewart
    Stewart had worked on Wall Street and owned a Connecticut catering firm, but her real success came after age 41 with the publication of her first book, Entertaining, and the launch of Martha Stewart Living seven years later. (Of course, she weathered some pitfalls later, before rebounding once more.)

    2. Joy Behar
    Known today as a former co-host on The View, Behar was a high school English teacher who didn't launch her show business career until after age 40.

    3. Vera Wang
    Wang was first known as an accomplished figure skater and a fashion editor before deciding before her 1989 wedding, at age 40, that she wanted to be a designer. She commissioned her own wedding dress for $10,000 and opened her first bridal boutique the following year.

    4. Tim and Nina Zagat
    This husband and wife team had each turned 42 before they gave up their legal careers to write their first restaurant guides. Their eponymous company is part of Google now.

    5. Robin Chase
    The founder and former CEO of Zipcar had left her 40th birthday in the rearview mirror and was taking time off from work to be with her children when she and a friend, Antje Danielson, came up with the idea for the car-sharing company in 2000.

    6. Harland Sanders
    Sanders was "a failure who got fired from a dozen jobs before starting his restaurant, and then failed at that when he went out of business and found himself broke at the age of 65," according to one account. But then things worked out when he sold the first Kentucky Fried Chicken franchise in 1952.

    7. Rodney Dangerfield
    The late, great comedic actor was best known for his roles in 1980s movies like Caddyshack and Back to School, but he was 46 before he got his first big break--on the Ed Sullivan Show.

    8. Duncan Hines
    At age 55, he wrote his first food and hotel guides (including one that mentioned Sanders Court and Caf, the original restaurant owned by Harlan Sanders, above). At age 73, licensed the right to use his name to the company that developed Duncan Hines cake mixes; unfortunately he died six years later.

    9. Charles Darwin
    He was 50 years old before he published On the Origin of the Species in 1859, the book that espoused the theory for which he best known today. (The Darwin Awards came much later.)

    10. Samuel Jackson
    Jackson 46 years old (and in recovery from addiction to cocaine and heroin) before he starred alongside John Travolta in Pulp Fiction.

    11. Donald Fisher
    At age 41, after a series of entrepreneurial ventures, Fisher and his wife Doris Fisher founded The Gap. It's now a $16 billion a year company with more than 3,200 locations worldwide.

    12. Ray Kroc
    Kroc had passed his 50th birthday before he bought the first McDonald's in 1961, which he ultimately expanded into a worldwide conglomerate.

    13. Sam Walton
    Although he'd owned a small chain of discount stores, Walton opened the first true Wal-Mart in 1962, when he was 44.

    14. Julia Child
    Her first cookbook was published when she was 39; she made her television debut in The French Chef at age 51.

    Thanks Aion. I needed to see that list to remind me some people come into their own at later times in life. I had no idea Samuel L. Jackson was 46 by the time he starred in Pulp Fiction, and had a history of drug addiction behind him! Damn. That one surprised me the most.

    I really need to learn guitar, just to fulfill my creative potential. Tomorrow, I'll start practicing again.

      •
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