Balancing Integrity and Passion

in integrity •  6 days ago 

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Invest in people so that they do not believe you have used them solely to achieve your goals. Integrity requires that you do what is right, in the right way, and at the right time. Integrity does not disparage others or become enamored with material possessions. It obtains traction through thankfulness for God's grace rather than losing its footing on the allegiance ledge of money. Walking with your Lord will lead you to integrity, which brings serenity and security. As a result, get it, keep it, and don't sell it for anything.But is it the best option? Is it rational to abandon your highly wanted aim in favor of anything else solely for the sake of protection? Follow me as I streamline my mental process.

Your "safe pick" may provide the necessary and desired comfort and security, but is happiness guaranteed? Life on this earth is tough enough. We navigate our different lives influenced by the numerous difficult choices we must make. There is no assurance that we are constantly making the correct choice. Sometimes we do, but in other cases, agony and persistent grief are unavoidable. This is where your life choices should come into play. Doing something you enjoy might make you feel better, especially during difficult times.

Furthermore, if we thoroughly study the idea of passion versus safety, we quickly see that we are never truly safe as long as we engage in anything we despise or pursue out of fear. In today's highly competitive world, our backup career, which we pursue out of fear, will become someone else's primary goal. Our plan B will be someone else's plan A. This immediately puts us at a disadvantage in terms of the amount of energy and focus we have. The safe choice could ruin us.

On the contrary, what we love consumes us with obsession. We do it for free, significantly increasing our odds of mastery while decreasing the cost of failure. As a result, a decade of mixed success on a passion project is fundamentally less burdensome than unspectacular when contrasted to a full career in a disagreeable sector. It is not safe to use our one life to drive ourselves to do things we know we will not love just to stay existing. It is masochism.

We may all have to endure the educational system for the first two decades of our lives, but we will all leave school at some time. We must eventually answer the question of what life is about beyond obedience and fear. Having a passion is unusual. Most people don't. However, if we are fortunate enough to have one, we should be aware that not responding to its call puts us at risk far more than we should.

So, what do you think? Passion versus safety? If you have any views or comments, please leave them in the comments area.
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  ·  6 days ago  ·  

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