PS: my images are all mine, I took the first (images) on my blog during COVID 2020, the second was taken in college in 2019
I was watching Madagascar recently and noticed the animals drinking sea water. So, the sea water was salt water, which is obviously not suitable for consumption, but they drank it, gargled it, and spit it out again.
They knew it was not fit for consumption, but they still took it, savored it, and spit it out. It is a typical example of living life; anything aimed at fun, adventure, or hustling is always risky, but we continue to do these things because the end goal is to buy/afford something more savory that tends to compensate for the risks.
Adaptation sounds easy to say, but hard in practicality
Most people understand that these risks have the potential to go horribly wrong, but they must adapt or die.
I developed high blood pressure at a young age, and in retrospect, I believe it was caused by emotional stress and many years of sleepless nights. Back then they said sleep was for the poor, and hardworking people weren't supposed to sleep.
We took this saying to heart, by literally choosing to stay awake at night in searching of opportunities that could boost one's finances. It was dangerous because, frankly, the human body cannot function without sleep.
It will gradually pack up; however, motivation was motivation, and I guess it was just an exaggerated way of telling people to hustle.
I remember getting a gig on Fiverr, and the person assigned me a task and a deadline. I had a 9-to-5 job, so I could not work all day, only at night.
My day job boss would not let me do a side hustle while working for him, so I usually stayed awake until midnight.
Funny thing is, some of the people I worked for would take advantage of the system by refusing to pay.
They will say the work was not good enough, but you will have submitted it to them, and they will be able to use it, while you will have spent time and effort for no reward.
I worked for a woman who owned a website and paid me weekly for contributing to it. I was using a mobile device that could turn off and on. I was unable to save my work because it was on a Java phone.
Sometimes I would spend a long time creating content for her website only for my phone to suddenly turn off, forcing me to restart.
These issues indicate that you put forth effort, but the results are uncertain. Going to a public computer house was not an option because they were expensive and I knew little about them.
Android phones were new in Nigeria and incredibly expensive. My 9-to-5 left me sick and bedridden for months, and I had no idea my blood pressure was skyrocketing. Combine this with the struggle to put food on the table and the recent loss of my father.
This was ten years ago, and the advancements we have today make the hustle of the past seem very underrated.
I know someone who was struggling to get the attention of popular brands by working for them for free; many of them never acknowledged his efforts, but he kept going because he was passionate.
This guy today now works for different brands although he's not rich per se, but he's now earning money for the things he loves doing. Now he gets paid for what he previously did for free.
These are the people I started hustling with over 13 years ago; things are not as good as we would like, but they are not as bad as they were 13 years ago.
Opportunities were scarcer back then, but not as saturated; opportunities are plentiful now, but oversaturated. The current generation cannot even handle internet downtime, whereas we had only 2G and Java devices.
You won't live if you don't die. Even the Bible said it.
John 12:24-26 KJV Verily, verily, I say unto you, Except a corn of wheat fall into the ground and die, it abideth alone: but if it die, it bringeth forth much fruit
It simply means that you cannot multiply unless you throw everything you have into the wind. One of the simplest ways to become impatient is to look at people who have achieved success. We fail to question the price they've paid. People pay in cash or in kind, but it can feel easier at times because success stories become tainted when details of struggles are included.
It is easier to say Oh, I started two weeks ago, and now I have a Mercedes 2024, but saying "I started ten years ago, and I am in a much better place" is less colorful.
People loves sucess stories without stress or effort because they want to validate their impatience or lack of struggle.
I know someone who begged for job trials ten years ago, but no one would even try him, let alone pay him. As of three years ago this person was turning down job offers because he already had full-time, part-time and many jobs begging for him to be the face of their business.
If you had not heard about the difficulties in the middle of the story, you might have assumed this guy skipped it. This person struggled for years to pay bills, eat properly, and handle family responsibilities.
The other harsh reality is that you can struggle and do things incorrectly, which is why you can die and never live again. You need a clear roadmap, a plan, and many other things, but you will not be able to avoid the phase of struggles and failures.
Dying is frightening, but people do it on a daily basis, monthly, annually, and even for decades; you can not simply live if you can not afford to die.
Interested in some more of my posts
It's best to savor life while it lasts, because the sad truth is that no one live forever. Diseases will eventually sneak up on you just like the high blood pressure did for you. I developed it myself in my 30's, a genetic gift from my DNA as it runs in the family.
Life it unpredictable, that's the one constant we have. Make it the best life you can, and earn anyway you can. Your phone has become a great earner for you! Keep up the good work, and try to avoid dropping dead anytime too soon!
Mine was as a result of the stress. Mainly from the emotional ones as well as the chronic night of intentional sleeplessness. Well I guess sometimes we get these health issues intentionally or unintentionally. Genetic issues are the harshest. It's not like sugary T2 diabetics that's caused by sweet tooth, which makes it even harsher.
Sleep is for the poor" is such a dangerous lie. I pushed myself too hard before and it only made things worse. Hustle culture can really mess you up. I did workout regularly, pushed myself beyond limits and had a pinched nerve, now I do exactly what Dwayne Johnson the rock says, let pain be your guide
Yeah, that phrase is a dangerous lie. I think many people tends to work too hard and listen to motivational quotes at the same time. Most motivational speeches are just overrated and will not really apply to real life situations.
yes you're precisely right man
Reality is tough. It sukcs that things didn't work out that and the struggle was tough. It would suck to use a phone and for it to shut down after you finished creating your work. At least phones have gotten a lot better though.
Mobile devices have truly gotten better, it was a struggle back in the day, and it's such a different that 10 years have made overtime.
So true. We shouldn't underestimate the effort some people put towards achieving a goal. From the outside it might look easy, but it most likely involved long-term, sustained consistency combined with some risk taking.
Exactly, the sacrifices people have to make is somewhat understated, and like you've said sometime it involves consistency and long-term planning. Risky taking is actually where it can go all wrong. Shout-out to all risk takers all there.
The thought of dying is very scary but how truthful it is that we can never really live unless we die.
There are indeed many ways to die but I’d choose to die peacefully physically when I’ve achieved all God has for me but aside that I’ve died a couple of times from very hard life experiences and each time am better and deeper…
Actually, I wasn't talking about the literal death. In the post's anecdotal examples, the death i mentioned is a metaphorical representation of the struggles of life.
Sure I understand
And that’s why I also reiterated that I’ve died many time through life incidents that happened to me. I sure get your stand point and you also buttressed it with the scripture backing
When you take the BP drugs regularly I believe it will go but not completely you have to check it regularly. There's always struggles behind a success story
Yeah BP medication can make a difference