good question. earnestness always strikes me as trying hard to do something the RIGHT way.
in trying to do something the RIGHT way, one tends not to pay too much attention to what feels aligned to him/herself, but rather tries to align with someone’s idea, expectation, or rule.
but the magic of authenticity, the attractiveness of alignment only comes from letting go of striving and moving into what’s easy.
good question. earnestness always strikes me as trying hard to do something the RIGHT way.
in trying to do something the RIGHT way, one tends not to pay too much attention to what feels aligned to him/herself, but rather tries to align with someone’s idea, expectation, or rule.
but the magic of authenticity, the attractiveness of alignment only comes from letting go of striving and moving into what’s easy.
good question. earnestness always strikes me as trying hard to do something the RIGHT way.
in trying to do something the RIGHT way, one tends not to pay too much attention to what feels aligned to him/herself, but rather tries to align with someone’s idea, expectation, or rule.
but the magic of authenticity, the attractiveness of alignment only comes from letting go of striving and moving into what’s easy.
in what way?
in what way?
in what way?
[Comment imported from blog]
[Comment imported from blog]
good question. earnestness always strikes me as trying hard to do something the RIGHT way.
in trying to do something the RIGHT way, one tends not to pay too much attention to what feels aligned to him/herself, but rather tries to align with someone’s idea, expectation, or rule.
but the magic of authenticity, the attractiveness of alignment only comes from letting go of striving and moving into what’s easy.
howz that? 🙂
good question. earnestness always strikes me as trying hard to do something the RIGHT way.
in trying to do something the RIGHT way, one tends not to pay too much attention to what feels aligned to him/herself, but rather tries to align with someone’s idea, expectation, or rule.
but the magic of authenticity, the attractiveness of alignment only comes from letting go of striving and moving into what’s easy.
howz that? 🙂
good question. earnestness always strikes me as trying hard to do something the RIGHT way.
in trying to do something the RIGHT way, one tends not to pay too much attention to what feels aligned to him/herself, but rather tries to align with someone’s idea, expectation, or rule.
but the magic of authenticity, the attractiveness of alignment only comes from letting go of striving and moving into what’s easy.
howz that? 🙂