Por que temos tanto medo de perder o que conquistamos?
Podemos ficar aqui horas debatendo a resposta para esta questão.
Para mim, a resposta está relacionada ao fato de que somos criados desde cedo com esta mentalidade de escassez.
Para mim, a resposta está relacionada ao fato de que somos criados desde cedo com esta mentalidade de escassez.
Que cada um possa encontrar a sua própria resposta, no contexto da sua vida. Refletir sobre esta questão é fundamental.
A vida ensina a viver e quanto mais envelheço, mais percebo que certos hábitos mentais limitam meu potencial. Por isso tenho falado sobre este tema em meu novo curso online. Clique aqui para saber mais.
Viver com medo de perder o que conquistamos (bens materiais ou não) é um destes hábitos que definitivamente nos limita.
Que tal começarmos a olhar a vida sobre outra ótica?
Ao invés da lógica da escassez, vamos começar a molder nossa mente para a lógica da abundância.
Viver a vida plenamente, a cada dia, sempre lembrando que não há a nada a perder...
Viver a vida plenamente, a cada dia, sempre lembrando que não há a nada a perder...
Podemos nos entregar 100%, dar nosso melhor a cada momento. Ganhar ou perder é só uma ilusão do nosso Ego.
Vamos praticar?
Nossa mente tem uma incrível capacidade de se adaptar a novos estilos de vida, novas crenças. Mas para que isso aconteça precisamos praticar.
Exercício:
Reserve 1 dia por semana para:
# ser grato por tudo o que você já conquistou, pelas pessoas que te cercam, pelos aprendizados, pela jornada de vida que você teve até aqui
# praticar o desapego, no sentido mais amplo da palavra
(desapego emocional, material, desapego dos velhos pensamentos, crenças., desapego dos medos)
# ao final do dia, reflita. Como você se sentiu?
# anote seus insights em seu caderno de autoconhecimento
# comece a repetir esta prática em mais dias, até que se torne uma rotina
Segue um texto que fala sobre isso e que me inspirou a trazer este tema hoje.
https://benjaminhardy.com/
For most people, the stakes simply aren’t high enough.
There’s not enough reason to get up early and work, get off Facebook, or get into shape.
Put most simply, most people don’t have a compelling enough why. If they did, their whole life would be different. Life, apparently, isn’t worth giving everything they’ve got.
Most people don’t want to assume greater responsibility, and thus, greater freedom. Responsibility is not something outside of you, nor is “security” outside of you, like in a paycheck.
These things are internal. And the more responsibility and security you choose to have, the more you are enabled to be then do and then have.
When you chose greater responsibility over your life and the welfare of others, you can’t help but be compelled to live at a higher standard. You have a reason, no, a responsibility to be and do your very best in everything you do.
Such a sense of responsibility provides more than enough motivation and urgency to push through exhaustion and sometimes despair. Indeed, your why will empower you to endure any how, as Frankl explained.
I can personally attest to these principles. I’ve felt dark depression and have been whipped-out. I’ve been without answers as to how things would workout. But somehow, they always do, when I’m connected to my deeper why.
Here’s the paradox, you have absolutely nothing to lose.
There is No Downside
“When I had nothing to lose, I had everything. When I stopped being who I am, I found myself.” — Paulo Coelho
In the book, Antifragile, Nassim Taleb borrows from Seneca to explain a way to live with zero downside.
To the stoics, there is no downside. If you lend someone money and they don’t pay you back, then it was your intention they have it. If they do pay you back, consider it a pleasant surprise. If your business fails, so be it. When you’re antifragile, you actually get stronger when you experience failure and defeat — the opposite of being fragile.
Ryan Holiday, borrowing from Marcus Aurelius describes this as turning the obstacle upside down. You often can’t control what happens, but you absolutely can control how you respond. Might as well turn everything to your benefit.
But there’s something far more fundamental than mentally reframing things to always be in your favor. You were born naked, and you will also die naked. You can’t take your possessions, or your “success” with you.
Everything in your life is a gift. Being alive in the first place is a ridiculous and rare privilege.
Being able to read, a gift. Not earned. Having any possessions at all. A gift. Indeed, feeling entitled to anything is the most skewed and confused perspective of reality.
You can’t earn the rite to be alive, or to have anything. Everything in your life is a bonus. If you’re still alive in 5 minutes from now, then the next 5 minutes are an unearned bonus.
There is zero downside in life, only upside. You literally have nothing to lose. You only have to gain. Hence the need for extreme gratitude. Moreover, hence the need for extreme giving. There’s nothing more beautiful than improving the lives of other people. Again, it’s all a gift. Why not share in the abundance?
Don’t you see it? Everything is abundance.
All around you, everything. All benefits. Seriously, look around your physical proximity. All upside. Said Max Planck, “When you change the way you look at things, the things you look at change.”
When you realize that everything in your life is an unearned bonus, you don’t get over-attached to what you have. You also don’t get over-obsessed or jealous about what you don’t have.
Conclusion
Live like everything is on the line.
Know intuitively that whatever you have in your life is a bonus. You have nothing at all to lose.
This approach to life will allow you to ceaselessly respond to any and all failures. It will help you not get over-attached to your ego.
It will help you appreciate, truly appreciate, what you have.
The people in your life. They are a gift. Don’t take them for granted. They are beautiful. Go over and above for them. They deserve it. Live your life for them.
Don’t waste this precious gift.
For most people, the stakes simply aren’t high enough.
There’s not enough reason to get up early and work, get off Facebook, or get into shape.
Put most simply, most people don’t have a compelling enough why. If they did, their whole life would be different. Life, apparently, isn’t worth giving everything they’ve got.
Most people don’t want to assume greater responsibility, and thus, greater freedom. Responsibility is not something outside of you, nor is “security” outside of you, like in a paycheck.
These things are internal. And the more responsibility and security you choose to have, the more you are enabled to be then do and then have.
When you chose greater responsibility over your life and the welfare of others, you can’t help but be compelled to live at a higher standard. You have a reason, no, a responsibility to be and do your very best in everything you do.
Such a sense of responsibility provides more than enough motivation and urgency to push through exhaustion and sometimes despair. Indeed, your why will empower you to endure any how, as Frankl explained.
I can personally attest to these principles. I’ve felt dark depression and have been whipped-out. I’ve been without answers as to how things would workout. But somehow, they always do, when I’m connected to my deeper why.
Here’s the paradox, you have absolutely nothing to lose.
There is No Downside
“When I had nothing to lose, I had everything. When I stopped being who I am, I found myself.” — Paulo Coelho
In the book, Antifragile, Nassim Taleb borrows from Seneca to explain a way to live with zero downside.
To the stoics, there is no downside. If you lend someone money and they don’t pay you back, then it was your intention they have it. If they do pay you back, consider it a pleasant surprise. If your business fails, so be it. When you’re antifragile, you actually get stronger when you experience failure and defeat — the opposite of being fragile.
Ryan Holiday, borrowing from Marcus Aurelius describes this as turning the obstacle upside down. You often can’t control what happens, but you absolutely can control how you respond. Might as well turn everything to your benefit.
But there’s something far more fundamental than mentally reframing things to always be in your favor. You were born naked, and you will also die naked. You can’t take your possessions, or your “success” with you.
Everything in your life is a gift. Being alive in the first place is a ridiculous and rare privilege.
Being able to read, a gift. Not earned. Having any possessions at all. A gift. Indeed, feeling entitled to anything is the most skewed and confused perspective of reality.
You can’t earn the rite to be alive, or to have anything. Everything in your life is a bonus. If you’re still alive in 5 minutes from now, then the next 5 minutes are an unearned bonus.
There is zero downside in life, only upside. You literally have nothing to lose. You only have to gain. Hence the need for extreme gratitude. Moreover, hence the need for extreme giving. There’s nothing more beautiful than improving the lives of other people. Again, it’s all a gift. Why not share in the abundance?
Don’t you see it? Everything is abundance.
All around you, everything. All benefits. Seriously, look around your physical proximity. All upside. Said Max Planck, “When you change the way you look at things, the things you look at change.”
When you realize that everything in your life is an unearned bonus, you don’t get over-attached to what you have. You also don’t get over-obsessed or jealous about what you don’t have.
Conclusion
Live like everything is on the line.
Know intuitively that whatever you have in your life is a bonus. You have nothing at all to lose.
This approach to life will allow you to ceaselessly respond to any and all failures. It will help you not get over-attached to your ego.
It will help you appreciate, truly appreciate, what you have.
The people in your life. They are a gift. Don’t take them for granted. They are beautiful. Go over and above for them. They deserve it. Live your life for them.
Don’t waste this precious gift.
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