I’d say that the major difference between me and Tim Ferris is that I just don’t care enough.
I don’t know that Ferris has some tremendous reservoir of determination and drive that you or I lack.
We fill our days doing something. Isn’t it odd that we choose such unproductive things?
When forced by time and other constraints to be productive, I will be, and I enjoy it. Recently, I’ve had such constraints, and I’ve been pretty productive. For me, at least. I’ve been working on my car recently, and find that work begets the desire for more work. I’m looking for more things to fix. I’ll be off to the auto store today to get more parts. I don’t have to wrestle my desires to make myself think of my car, I do, and I want to fix it.
Ferris seems to find a problem, or an opportunity, and do something about it. What could seemingly be more natural, yet actually be more rare?
It’s probably not a case of self control as much as habits in thought and action. George Washington and Thomas Jefferson, and believe that whole time period, were big on virtue as the habit of right action. It’s probably nothing more complicated, nor emotionally significant, than habit.
I don’t know that Ferris has some tremendous reservoir of determination and drive that you or I lack.
We fill our days doing something. Isn’t it odd that we choose such unproductive things?
When forced by time and other constraints to be productive, I will be, and I enjoy it. Recently, I’ve had such constraints, and I’ve been pretty productive. For me, at least. I’ve been working on my car recently, and find that work begets the desire for more work. I’m looking for more things to fix. I’ll be off to the auto store today to get more parts. I don’t have to wrestle my desires to make myself think of my car, I do, and I want to fix it.
Ferris seems to find a problem, or an opportunity, and do something about it. What could seemingly be more natural, yet actually be more rare?
It’s probably not a case of self control as much as habits in thought and action. George Washington and Thomas Jefferson, and believe that whole time period, were big on virtue as the habit of right action. It’s probably nothing more complicated, nor emotionally significant, than habit.
That is to say… very complicated and significant but easier to trivialise.