Nature of True Intentions and Purpose

This is my second-ever blog post following the initial one where I initiated the topic 'The Nature of Human Nature.' Right now, as I am typing, I have no specific intention, goal, or topic in mind. I am simply in a relaxed mood, ready to delve into the unplanned section of this blog where I share various life lessons.

So let's begin. Just now, I mentioned intent, and even last night, I lectured my friend about the whole concept of actions with pure intent and purpose. Now, it's 2024, and the diversities and separations among people are becoming very clear. Many people tend to alienate those who achieve and get everything they set out for.

First, let's make something clear: when I say 'achieve and get everything they set out for,' I mean through countless revisions, switches, and tests. That process is far from linear. The act of alienating those individuals from ourselves, as if we aren't all literally the same species, is very eye-opening to how little we understand our daily thought processes, especially considering the little attention most of us put into it simply because it isn't deemed important.

Now, the only thing differentiating you from those people on an alienated level is that they pay attention to the very small things: their daily decisions, actions, food intake, and emotions. Immense self-resource is put into those aspects. What I've personally realized after starting to implement the same practices is that a seemingly random decision — as small as what you eat in the next hour — can be the difference between stumbling upon something amazing or completely missing out on that opportunity, or even a long-time relationship, etc.

I don't mean that we should stress over every decision. Just put a little extra thought into each one. Start small, and from there, it will grow into a beautiful analysis and system of elimination that will become natural to you, and you will see the benefits. Everyone and nothing is perfect, so sometimes you will have slips. That's perfectly natural; you are human, and your emotions can still influence you despite your level of control.

The nature of our activities is entirely dependent on ourselves, with obvious influences from our environment, as mentioned. For illustration, stop viewing your day as just another random occurrence. Look at it through the lens of the ripple effect and a line of dominoes falling down: the direction of everything is directly linked to the next set of possibilities that is connected to everything you'll experience tomorrow and years to come in the future. Your life is a system; it operates as such. But when you ignore all that, you ignore what you are capable of because you view yourself as so small and insignificant, which leads to the alienation of what we call the rich, the powerful, the elite, the lucky, the favored, and many more names.

Control is the key to everything. You have to start small because that's where everything originates from.



Comments

  1. Good read, I found it interesting how you phrased "many people tend to alienate from those who achieve (the rich, lucky or powerful) and not vice versa.

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