• Oisteink@lemmy.world
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      5 days ago

      Humans adapt. We have abysmal bandwidth, so we have adapted. If anything is normal you don’t notice. You reserve bandwidth for the unexpected. You already know how to react and what to do/feel regarding daily life.

      Break rhythm

      • dnick@sh.itjust.works
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        5 days ago

        Absolutely, you stop measuring the passage of time in days and years and start measuring it in experiences. When you’re young and everything is new it’s absolutely full. The 10th or hundredth time you’ve done something you handle it more easily but it also starts to seem like one ‘thing’.

        Routine is the quickest way to looking back on life and feeling like it was the blink of an eye.

    • phutatorius@lemmy.zip
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      4 days ago

      Use it or lose it is true of the mind and the body. And it’s better to burn out than to fade away (and no, I don’t mean taking Kurt’s way out).

    • spectrums_coherence@piefed.social
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      3 days ago

      I feel this way precisely because I keep doing new and novel things: there are so much to learn, think, and try out, I feel I am constantly in a rush.

      When I was younger, I either have well-defined tasks or I would hit technical blocks forcing me to stop for a long time. Now, I get to work on all the hard problems to my heart’s desire, and is also more skilled, thus hits way less blocks. I am in a constant race against my own ideas and desires to try new things…

      It is cool and fulfilling, but also terribly exhausting most of the time :(