Not “A” win, but winning in general, Winning at Life if you will.
To me, this means :
Staying true to myself, becoming only what I decide I want to be (which is in turn based on achieving sub-goals)
Achieving my lesser and short-term goals.
Being able to constantly improve myself
Not Dying (I’m only not signed up for cryo because I live in Japan and have trouble with the creation of a suitable policy. Ideally, I’d like to go transhuman.)
Explicit failure scenarios involve becoming a future self that stays still instead of moving forward. If I became a person who was satisfied with the status quo without any desire to expand her horizons, that would be a dramatic failure.
Another possibility to avoid is giving in to biology, blindly following urges and, yes, succumbing to biases.
In other words, Winning is Future-Bending to get to be the Me I want to be.
I often get frustrated by definitions like yours, because they are so recursive. Moving through your criteria, you want to be true to yourself (references ‘yourself’), achieve your goals (references ‘your goals’), improve yourself (references ‘yourself’), and not die (implicitly references the continued existence of your self).
Do you have any notion at all of what the self is that you’re trying to be true to and improve? Put another way, why would it be a tragedy if you died?
Please don’t take this as a personal attack—I don’t know you, and don’t dislike you. I just want to learn more about your reasoning.
I often get frustrated by definitions like yours, because they are so recursive. Moving through your criteria, you want to be true to yourself (references ‘yourself’), achieve your goals (references ‘your goals’), improve yourself (references ‘yourself’), and not die (implicitly references the continued existence of your self).
Do you have any notion at all of what the self is that you’re trying to be true to and improve? Put another way, why would it be a tragedy if you died?
Please don’t take this as a personal attack—I don’t know you, and don’t dislike you. I just want to learn more about your reasoning.
Not “A” win, but winning in general, Winning at Life if you will.
To me, this means :
Staying true to myself, becoming only what I decide I want to be (which is in turn based on achieving sub-goals)
Achieving my lesser and short-term goals.
Being able to constantly improve myself
Not Dying (I’m only not signed up for cryo because I live in Japan and have trouble with the creation of a suitable policy. Ideally, I’d like to go transhuman.)
Explicit failure scenarios involve becoming a future self that stays still instead of moving forward. If I became a person who was satisfied with the status quo without any desire to expand her horizons, that would be a dramatic failure. Another possibility to avoid is giving in to biology, blindly following urges and, yes, succumbing to biases.
In other words, Winning is Future-Bending to get to be the Me I want to be.
I often get frustrated by definitions like yours, because they are so recursive. Moving through your criteria, you want to be true to yourself (references ‘yourself’), achieve your goals (references ‘your goals’), improve yourself (references ‘yourself’), and not die (implicitly references the continued existence of your self).
Do you have any notion at all of what the self is that you’re trying to be true to and improve? Put another way, why would it be a tragedy if you died?
Please don’t take this as a personal attack—I don’t know you, and don’t dislike you. I just want to learn more about your reasoning.
I often get frustrated by definitions like yours, because they are so recursive. Moving through your criteria, you want to be true to yourself (references ‘yourself’), achieve your goals (references ‘your goals’), improve yourself (references ‘yourself’), and not die (implicitly references the continued existence of your self).
Do you have any notion at all of what the self is that you’re trying to be true to and improve? Put another way, why would it be a tragedy if you died?
Please don’t take this as a personal attack—I don’t know you, and don’t dislike you. I just want to learn more about your reasoning.