Fleeting Growth
At times, it's scary to just sit down and write. Your ideas cannot formulate onto paper the more you try to materialize them. Your thoughts become a blur, a fleeting moment you wish to remember. The more pressing the need the write, the harder it becomes. Your mind goes blank in that precise moment that you need a release. A foggy haze gets swept up in your mind; the more you try, the more you fail. This disorganized writing process starts to become your norm. You finally come to terms with it and learn to live with it: it's simply your style.
Writing has served as an outlet for me, especially during times of peak stress. Whether it be from career demands or interpersonal strain, putting these sensations onto paper gives me a sense of empowerment. After it becomes transferred onto another medium such as a computer screen or piece of paper, the effect of this in and of itself serves as a reminder of the transient nature of emotions. As fragile and delicate as they may be, emotions can rile us up, or dampen the mood. Innately, some of us are bound to relish in our personal thoughts, and others are doomed to despair. The silver lining of these realities is that we can learn to control a large portion of how we react to our internal world. We don't have to let it manifest in an organic way at all. We can rationalize these feelings and objectively handle them. This method of proactively engaging with our psych can mitigate the effects of aberrations in order to assimilate into a life of normality.
Our quality of life is heavily impacted by how we deal with the inevitable. We can choose to become a victim to life's misfortunes or we can rise above and beyond. The beauty of every struggle is always the byproduct- a refined version of who we were before. The process behind change, transformation, and growth involves lots of trial and error, and sometimes, even stagnation. We have to lose ourselves, purpose, and even sanity, in order to regain it and start over. This sort of spiritual cleansing will allow us to reach new heights of awareness with a stoic demeanor.
At times, it's scary to just sit down and write. Your ideas cannot formulate onto paper the more you try to materialize them. Your thoughts become a blur, a fleeting moment you wish to remember. The more pressing the need to write, the harder it becomes. Your mind goes blank in that precise moment that you need a release. A foggy haze gets swept up in your mind; the more you try, the more you fail. This disorganized writing process starts to become your norm. You finally come to terms with it and learn to live with it: it's simply your style.
Writing has served as an outlet for me, especially during times of peak stress. Whether it be from career demands or interpersonal strain, putting these sensations onto paper gives me a sense of empowerment. After it becomes transferred onto another medium such as a computer screen or piece of paper, the effect of this in and of itself serves as a reminder of the transient nature of emotions. As fragile and delicate as they may be, emotions can rile us up, or dampen the mood. Innately, some of us are bound to relish in our personal thoughts, and others are doomed to despair. The silver lining of these realities is that we can learn to control a large portion of how we react to our internal world. We don't have to let it manifest in an organic way at all. We can rationalize these feelings and objectively handle them. This method of proactively engaging with our psych can mitigate the effects of aberrations in order to assimilate into a life of normality.
Our quality of life is heavily impacted by how we deal with the inevitable. We can choose to become a victim to life's misfortunes or we can rise above and beyond. The beauty of every struggle is always the byproduct- a refined version of who we were before. The process behind change, transformation, and growth involves lots of trial and error, and sometimes, even stagnation. We have to lose ourselves, purpose, and even sanity, in order to regain it and start over. This sort of spiritual cleansing will allow us to reach new heights of awareness with a stoic demeanor.
At times, it's scary to just sit down and write. Your ideas cannot formulate onto paper the more you try to materialize them. Your thoughts become a blur, a fleeting moment you wish to remember. The more pressing the need to write, the harder it becomes. Your mind goes blank in that precise moment that you need a release. A foggy haze gets swept up in your mind; the more you try, the more you fail. This disorganized writing process starts to become your norm. You finally come to terms with it and learn to live with it: it's simply your style.
Writing has served as an outlet for me, especially during times of peak stress. Whether it be from career demands or interpersonal strain, putting these sensations onto paper gives me a sense of empowerment. After it becomes transferred onto another medium such as a computer screen or piece of paper, the effect of this in and of itself serves as a reminder of the transient nature of emotions. As fragile and delicate as they may be, emotions can rile us up, or dampen the mood. Innately, some of us are bound to relish in our personal thoughts, and others are doomed to despair. The silver lining of these realities is that we can learn to control a large portion of how we react to our internal world. We don't have to let it manifest in an organic way at all. We can rationalize these feelings and objectively handle them. This method of proactively engaging with our psych can mitigate the effects of aberrations in order to assimilate into a life of normality.
Our quality of life is heavily impacted by how we deal with the inevitable. We can choose to become a victim to life's misfortunes or we can rise above and beyond. The beauty of every struggle is always the byproduct- a refined version of who we were before. The process behind change, transformation, and growth involves lots of trial and error, and sometimes, even stagnation. We have to lose ourselves, purpose, and even sanity, in order to regain it and start over. This sort of spiritual cleansing will allow us to reach new heights of awareness with a stoic demeanor.
At times, it's scary to just sit down and write. Your ideas cannot formulate onto paper the more you try to materialize them. Your thoughts become a blur, a fleeting moment you wish to remember. The more pressing the need the write, the harder it becomes. Your mind goes blank in that precise moment that you need a release. A foggy haze gets swept up in your mind; the more you try, the more you fail. This disorganized writing process starts to become your norm. You finally come to terms with it and learn to live with it: it's simply your style.
Writing has served as an outlet for me, especially during times of peak stress. Whether it be from career demands or interpersonal strain, putting these sensations onto paper gives me a sense of empowerment. After it becomes transferred onto another medium such as a computer screen or piece of paper, the effect of this in and of itself serves as a reminder of the transient nature of emotions. As fragile and delicate as they may be, emotions can rile us up, or dampen the mood. Innately, some of us are bound to relish in our personal thoughts, and others are doomed to despair. The silver lining of these realities is that we can learn to control a large portion of how we react to our internal world. We don't have to let it manifest in an organic way at all. We can rationalize these feelings and objectively handle them. This method of proactively engaging with our psych can mitigate the effects of aberrations in order to assimilate into a life of normality.
Our quality of life is heavily impacted by how we deal with the inevitable. We can choose to become a victim to life's misfortunes or we can rise above and beyond. The beauty of every struggle is always the byproduct- a refined version of who we were before. The process behind change, transformation, and growth involves lots of trial and error, and sometimes, even stagnation. We have to lose ourselves, purpose, and even sanity, in order to regain it and start over. This sort of spiritual cleansing will allow us to reach new heights of awareness with a stoic demeanor.

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