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Post by sree on Oct 15, 2022 19:41:42 GMT -5
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Post by sree on Oct 15, 2022 23:05:58 GMT -5
He told three stories derived from his life's journey. In each story was a learning he had gotten.
First story: "You have to trust in something — your gut, destiny, life, karma, whatever." Second story: "You've got to find what you love. So keep looking until you find it. Don't settle." Third story: "Stay hungry. Stay foolish."
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Post by sree on Oct 16, 2022 14:23:21 GMT -5
He told three stories derived from his life's journey. In each story was a learning he had gotten. First story: "You have to trust in something — your gut, destiny, life, karma, whatever." Second story: "You've got to find what you love. So keep looking until you find it. Don't settle." Third story: "Stay hungry. Stay foolish." His first story was about his stumbling through life from one situation to another: from his birth as a bastard, to the founding of his company, Apple, at age 21. He would become a millionaire two years later.
The learning that Jobs gleaned from this stage of his life is odd. He dropped out of college and bummed around for a year and a half before going on a spiritual journey to India in 1974 at age 19. He switched from Hinduism to Zen Buddhism, when he returned months later, and finally changed into a full-blooded capitalist building a business in his parent’s garage. Those dots he connected were all over the place like stars in the Milky Way.
I guess he must have trusted in whatever.
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Post by sree on Oct 17, 2022 11:04:09 GMT -5
He told three stories derived from his life's journey. In each story was a learning he had gotten. First story: "You have to trust in something — your gut, destiny, life, karma, whatever." Second story: "You've got to find what you love. So keep looking until you find it. Don't settle." Third story: "Stay hungry. Stay foolish." His first story was about his stumbling through life from one situation to another: from his birth as a bastard, to the founding of his company, Apple, at age 21. He would become a millionaire two years later.
The learning that Jobs gleaned from this stage of his life is odd. He dropped out of college and bummed around for a year and a half before going on a spiritual journey to India in 1974 at age 19. He switched from Hinduism to Zen Buddhism, when he returned months later, and finally changed into a full-blooded capitalist building a business in his parent’s garage. Those dots he connected were all over the place like stars in the Milky Way.
I guess he must have trusted in whatever. If you have to trust in something, “whatever” is the option for someone, like Jobs, who had a great alignment.
“whatever” is not whatever. The latter is the path of the loser, the counter culturalist, the rebel without a cause.
The rest of us muddle through life.
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Post by sree on Oct 18, 2022 11:45:51 GMT -5
His first story was about his stumbling through life from one situation to another: from his birth as a bastard, to the founding of his company, Apple, at age 21. He would become a millionaire two years later.
The learning that Jobs gleaned from this stage of his life is odd. He dropped out of college and bummed around for a year and a half before going on a spiritual journey to India in 1974 at age 19. He switched from Hinduism to Zen Buddhism, when he returned months later, and finally changed into a full-blooded capitalist building a business in his parent’s garage. Those dots he connected were all over the place like stars in the Milky Way.
I guess he must have trusted in whatever. If you have to trust in something, “whatever” is the option for someone, like Jobs, who had a great alignment.
“whatever” is not whatever. The latter is the path of the loser, the counter culturalist, the rebel without a cause.
The rest of us muddle through life. His second story was about his mundane life from which he learned the value of pushing the limit when chasing your dream: don’t settle.
It’s a pity that Job’s dreams were the pursuits of selfish gratifications. This does not take away the merit of living an inspired life to the fullest. Such a life, however, is a gift of destiny or karma. One cannot have it. It has you and leaves you for better or for worse.
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