Another thing I like to do is look at things from a “comparative advantage” point of view:
I hope that I will get healthy at some point in my life, and I don’t think that is unrealistic. Other than investing time into making that happen faster, which is only possible up to a certain degree (it might be the case that nothing works for me until there is a new drug in 10 years which then works, in which case only investing into health right now would be a mistake), I would like to do stuff that I can still somewhat do. So for personal development, invest precious energy in the thing you can still do at 25% and that’s somewhat relevant for your life rather than the thing you can do at 5%.
Matches my experience with ME/CFS.
Another thing I like to do is look at things from a “comparative advantage” point of view:
I hope that I will get healthy at some point in my life, and I don’t think that is unrealistic. Other than investing time into making that happen faster, which is only possible up to a certain degree (it might be the case that nothing works for me until there is a new drug in 10 years which then works, in which case only investing into health right now would be a mistake), I would like to do stuff that I can still somewhat do. So for personal development, invest precious energy in the thing you can still do at 25% and that’s somewhat relevant for your life rather than the thing you can do at 5%.