I’ve noted as I get older, my perception of risk has changed a lot.
when I was younger, I drunk/drug drived, I banged hats off. I always had this general feeling it would be alright.
Now, I am always scanning risks. I won’t touch a car if any alcohol in system. I worry a lot.
My test is good at 690.
I had a very bad few years in 30s where everything went wrong. I wonder - is my increased fear and worry a result of this (kinda like PTSD) or, is this simply getting older.
Also, I’ve also thought now I have things to lose. Family and career. At 20 I could always start afresh.
However I have friends the same age who still have this “it will be fine” attitude. I recently learned my friend who’s a taxi driver was an alcoholic for 15 years. I would be in a constant state of panic if I was doing that!
Anyone else notice their risk appetite decreasing as they age?
I actually find myself taking more risks as I get older. Several examples:
-raw dogging/nutting almost every new women I'm with
-driving: speeding, expired tabs, while intoxicated, passing cops
-getting into motorcycling. Literally showed up at dealer with 0.0 hrs of experience and rode the bike right off the light into heavy traffic and learned as I went.
-online poker and crypto trading.
-never following a single C19 protocol since they started in 2020
-outdoors: getting into rock climbing; I take more risks with hiking too, I'll rush down rocky cliff paths, across streams, climb up random trees, etc. I even went on a remote solo hike a while back that was 9 miles with difficult terrain and 500m elevation gain. Only brought 2L of water, had no emergency equipment, and did zero planning.
I think risk aversion is cowardly. Life is not worth living without risk. In fact, not taking risks can be risky to success and detrimental to a good life. That said, I definitely take it too far on the other side.
I'm actually a fairly neurotic person, so I would suspect Test is the bigger factor. Test is strongly correlated with risk taking (and spice tolerance). I would get a full hormone panel if I were you. Total testosterone doesn't tell you much of anything.