In the last year or so I started to see so many people of my age that have done truly incredible things and still doing more.
For the vast majority of my life my only goals were gettimg academic satisfaction and doing unproductive stuff in the free time to get temporary pleasure. No end goal whatsoever.
I kind of don’t know what I’ve been doing in the last 17 years while someone gets a patent on solar systems, other invents a new recyclable plastic, and another found a successful startup. I mean, they all find what they’re supposed to be doing with their lives and excel in them.
I feel overwhelmed for trying to pace up with these kind of people. Yet I don’t like the way the things are and I can’t do anything but envy those people.
Anyone with experience in this regard? How did you deal with this? Did you eventually “pace up” with these people or was it too late or an unattainable goal?
Edit: Whoops, I didn’t expect so many replies! Thanks, I’ll look into them all

  • @sealhaslupus
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    331 year ago

    one of my psychologist friends said a long time ago “if you don’t keep improving yourself, then what’s the point in living”.

    you’re clearly already taking steps on self-improvement and personal introspection, which is probably one of the hardest things a human can do.

    honestly you’re already kicking goals if you try and be a better person each day. No one can ask more of you.

    • @frosty99c
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      281 year ago

      Man, that doesn’t resonate with me at all. I don’t think there is any point to living other than just enjoying your time here. Sure, work when necessary to be able to afford the necessities, develop some skills to be able to afford a few luxuries, but honestly just do things that make you happy. Self-improvement as a reason to live seems awful. If you’re unable to improve, are you a failure? If you’re already happy as you are, should you just end it?

      • @sealhaslupus
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        91 year ago

        it depends on what you consider self-improvement to be

        • Em Adespoton
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          51 year ago

          This is the core. I improve every day; part of that is by still not being dead.

          Some people measure improvement by monetary wealth; some by fame, some by influence, some by personal happiness.

          The key is to figure out what YOU value instead of measuring your improvement by someone else’s scale.

    • @[email protected]
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      91 year ago

      Living like that sounds very harmful to ones mental health. Sometimes people can’t improve despite trying and trying, and being told there’s no point in living without improvement would just help people that are already depressed justify their thoughts on not being alive any more.

      • @sealhaslupus
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        21 year ago

        the comment isn’t literal. it was an off handed way of saying that it is beneficial to try and improve oneself to get the most out of life.

        i perhaps shouldn’t have qualified his profession because this was a conversation over beers, not his place of work.