sangheilios
Master Don Juan
- Joined
- Sep 25, 2018
- Messages
- 2,674
- Reaction score
- 2,792
- Age
- 34
It's pretty well understood that most men should seek to better themselves in a variety of ways (career, finances, fitness, etc.). However, most men ultimately still are within an averageish range for most of these traits and really don't stand out all that much. However, for some men they are able to take this beyond a certain range that is out of the norm, much of this is due to genetics, being at the right place and the right time or often times "cheating" (steroids, scam artist/con men, creating a fake lifestyle image, etc.). With the millennial generation I feel social media has allowed them to create an image of status and success which does not actually exist, I can think of many people who engage in this nonsense and it is all nonsense.
Anyway, here is the issue I have with true self improvement.
I was at the gym earlier and had a killer workout, a hobby that I regularly enjoy. On this particular day it was much busier than usual and while I've been aware of this for a while I'm physically at a level that is completely different than the vast majority of men without steroid use, largely a result of genetics. I've been criticized with this before but looking back it's always originated from a place of insecurity from other people, both men and women.
While I've never had some killer career to brag about, I'm slowly approaching on millionaire status, excluding real estate, and I'm getting to the point with that where most people can't even dream of. I've learned to keep this to myself entirely, as I've found it seems to attract the wrong people into your life (social climbers, gold diggers, etc.). However, in order to accomplish all of this required a lot of research, time and energy and ultimately financial resources that I risked and put on the table.
One of the main issues I have is that with these various types of self improvement is that it sets you well apart from others, which obviously has it's pros and it's own cons as well. I've found that as I continue to improve I really just cannot relate all that much to people around me. I've even found that people I used to enjoy spending time with I now feel keep me back from growing. One thing that I've noticed is that as I've become more goal oriented and continued climbing the ladder of success my tolerance of a lot of things has diminished. I used to think that these different people changed when in reality they've stayed the same and instead I've grown and changed quite a bit. Overall I feel that this has grown to isolation and instead of sitting around in boredom you use that time to even further build upon your success, which deepens the social isolation.
One of the solutions to this is to find people that are on the same page as you, but as you continue to grow and improve this becomes increasingly difficult to do so.
Anyway, here is the issue I have with true self improvement.
I was at the gym earlier and had a killer workout, a hobby that I regularly enjoy. On this particular day it was much busier than usual and while I've been aware of this for a while I'm physically at a level that is completely different than the vast majority of men without steroid use, largely a result of genetics. I've been criticized with this before but looking back it's always originated from a place of insecurity from other people, both men and women.
While I've never had some killer career to brag about, I'm slowly approaching on millionaire status, excluding real estate, and I'm getting to the point with that where most people can't even dream of. I've learned to keep this to myself entirely, as I've found it seems to attract the wrong people into your life (social climbers, gold diggers, etc.). However, in order to accomplish all of this required a lot of research, time and energy and ultimately financial resources that I risked and put on the table.
One of the main issues I have is that with these various types of self improvement is that it sets you well apart from others, which obviously has it's pros and it's own cons as well. I've found that as I continue to improve I really just cannot relate all that much to people around me. I've even found that people I used to enjoy spending time with I now feel keep me back from growing. One thing that I've noticed is that as I've become more goal oriented and continued climbing the ladder of success my tolerance of a lot of things has diminished. I used to think that these different people changed when in reality they've stayed the same and instead I've grown and changed quite a bit. Overall I feel that this has grown to isolation and instead of sitting around in boredom you use that time to even further build upon your success, which deepens the social isolation.
One of the solutions to this is to find people that are on the same page as you, but as you continue to grow and improve this becomes increasingly difficult to do so.
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