Who said life isn about the destination it about the journey




















So we become impatient when it takes too long to get that something. All the while we forget to look around us for e.

Others will have reference points related to the many destinations they have reached, to the various jobs they have been holding, to the children they have, etc. There are no rules for these reference points. When I was a kid, I thought the most important reference point was going to be at 18 — the age that was going to officially split childhood and adulthood. And I had the impression that once an adult, my life would be set and perfect!

While there was nothing wrong with that again! Stooke said that education is a journey and not a destination , for we must keep developing. In the rock band Aerosmith released the song Amazing as a single. Millman was excited and happy during the trip because he expected to be shown something important and when he was shown a non-descript rock he was initially disappointed.

Dan Millman: The journey… the journey is what brings us happiness… not the destination. Many of the examples above conform to the following flexible phrasal template. The linguistic term snowclone is used for these collections of related phrases:. In conclusion, current evidence indicates that the phrase under investigation is an anonymous modern proverb that entered circulation by Thanks to Jack Herring for his query on this topic.

This question was constructed by QI based on his inquiry. Update History: On September 2, the citation for Emerson was added together with the reference to the film Peaceful Warrior. Google Books full view link. Verified on paper. HathiTrust link link. Accessed youtube. You hold yourself to higher standards and demand more from the articles you share with the world. The professional knows that fear can never be overcome. He knows there is no such thing as a fearless warrior or a dread-free artist.

We put the goal on a pedestal. As James Clear writes ,. Goals are not something that I pay attention to. I just sort of do what I feel like is the right thing to do in any given situation. Neither of which is who you will actually be when you get there. The fastest way to get to a particular spot, however, is to set your compass and start walking. The idea here is to commit to your goal with the utmost conviction.

Develop a clear, single-minded focus for where you are headed. Then, however, you do something strange. You release the desire to achieve a particular outcome and focus instead on the slow march forward. Pour all of your energy into the journey, be present in the moment, be committed to the path you are walking.

Know that you are moving unwaveringly in one clear direction and that this direction is right for you, but never get wrapped up in a particular result or achieving a certain goal by a specific time. In other words, your goal becomes your compass, not your buried treasure.



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