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Nik Pathran
4K posts

Nik Pathran
@nikpathran
Exploring how to stay human in an economy designed for machines. I write about Identity, the Performance Trap, and the cost of faking it.
شامل ہوئے Nisan 2015
19 فالونگ84 فالوورز

Measure of a Man - Size of his problems
Measure of a Man - How he responds
Does he lose his frame ?
Does he maintain his focus ?
Does he solve what needs solving ?
If you want comfort don't move towards
Freedom Strength Mastery Wealth
Peace will be found one day - Not comfort
You'll get better - Attaining grit and wit
What is your approach ?
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Competence is a magnet for complexity.
We assume that getting better at our jobs makes things easier. That it leads to a plateau of peace.
But the better you are, the heavier the load you carry.
The reward for reliability is even more responsibility, not less.
At the end of the day, comfort is never the destination of mastery.
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@lifewithskanda What you admire in others is also data about yourself.
It points at something in you that wants expression.
Use it as a map.
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@lifewithskanda You can stay in the fight forever
if you're fighting toward something
that is true to you.
Most who quit usually lost
the 'why' before they lost the will.
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Nik Pathran ری ٹویٹ کیا
Nik Pathran ری ٹویٹ کیا

@lifewithskanda That's the recipe to make something that outlasts you.
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@nikpathran You need to work with your heart, brain and hand.
Just one won't work.
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"A man who works with his hands and his brain is a craftsman; but a man who works with his hands and his brain and his heart is an artist." ~ Louis Nizer
Most professional identity is built at the craftsman level. And it's often mistaken for the ceiling.
Because adding the heart, the actual self underneath the role, is the most dangerously uncomfortable addition. It makes the work identifiable as yours. It makes rejection personal.
The craftsman can always say the work wasn't good enough. The artist cannot hide behind that.
When the heart is in it, the person is in it.
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@nikpathran You need the 3 to make it count!!!
Hand, brain and heart.
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@Marketwith_eze Indeed Eze.
Think different and then act different.
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@lifewithskanda The best work is made
with total purpose and
zero attachment to how it lands.
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@nikpathran You need to have a purpose behind your creation.
Otherwise.
There was no point in the creation.
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@xWarriorCode And the hardest part is
that 'real' can't be faked into existence.
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@nikpathran Discard fake
Allow real
Real resonates with real ones
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@nikpathran An eye opener. We should create from heart. Not create for validation.
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Henry David Thoreau said: "The price of anything is the amount of life you exchange for it."
Most of us apply this to what we pursue. Almost no one applies it to what we avoid.
The risk not taken. The thing you didn't create. The version of you you've been circling for years, one you want to become, but never stepped into.
These never feel expensive. They feel like waiting, like being careful. Like not yet.
But just because you stopped looking doesn't mean the ledger stops running.
Every day you delay is a day of your life handed over.
Jung called it the unlived life. He said it was the most dangerous thing. Because it's the slow loss of vitality that looks, from the outside, like a perfectly managed life.
The risk looks expensive. But it's often the cheapest purchase available. It costs a moment of fear, and it returns years of growth.
The avoidance looks cheap, but it's the most expensive thing you will ever buy.
Thoreau was never talking about money. He was talking about the only currency that matters... the aliveness that constitutes a human life.
And the question is: will you keep paying for what you've been avoiding?
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@JustYobi_ Indeed.
Take the time.
And make sure to put the heart and soul in it.
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@nikpathran Build it slowly. One of the highest benefit you can grant yourself.
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Nik Pathran ری ٹویٹ کیا

@lifewithskanda Indeed.
And most think they're evaluating.
But they're actually just reacting to urgency.
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@nikpathran You need to evaluate the value of it and decide what to do.
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Some tasks are rubber balls. Some are glass balls.
If you drop a rubber ball (an email, a routine meeting), it bounces back. You can pick it up later.
If you drop a glass ball (your health, your family, your sanity), it shatters. It does not come back the same.
Modern culture tricks you into thinking every ball is glass. It makes you juggle until you collapse.
Let the rubber fall. Protect the glass.
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@xWarriorCode Most have the order the other way around.
Protecting strangers on the internet
while dropping glass balls at home.
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@nikpathran Learn to differentiate value of importance.
Activities and People
Don't get fooled in thinking about
things far away from your country.
First You then nearby people and communities
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@xWarriorCode Jung said the unlived life accumulates.
And eventually surfaces as
bitterness, projection, or a desperation.
That candle doesn't care if
you're living or waiting.
But if you're just waiting,
the candle eventually haunts.
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@nikpathran This is why I'm not a fan of passivity in Men
Candle burns away everyday
One ought to take his chances
Even at a high cost or
His life will be lost
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Indeed.
And I'd add -
Identity that survives the end of the craft
was never really about the craft.
It was something deeper.
Something the craft was expressing.
Most don't choose their craft consciously.
The craft chooses them via
circumstance, pressure, or pure accident.
Excavate what's beneath the craft you already have,
before an endpoint forces that question.
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@nikpathran Layered meaning
Most will attach their identity to their craft
Then when craft is done they are empty and done
Thing is there are crafts that can transcend
end points of given career / life changes
Pick ones you can do till the end
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