Hello, I’m a mentalist who dreams of economic freedom. This time, I would like to write the third article on mental management through the story of “The man I Met in the Park”

How many times in your life have you experienced frustration that you think is really bottoming out? Or how many times you asked yourself, in your imagination,

“What if everything you have disappeared?”

It’s been seven years since I ran out of the institute and I’ve asked myself more questions than I thought, and I think I’ve actually experienced that situation four times in the last five years.

It was originally a super-positive personality to overcome all of that moment without the thought of frustration, but I think my passion was ignited by acknowledging that I was more humble, lazy, and careless with the thought that I gained

“A valuable experience that won’t lose more money in the future”

thanks to my current failure!

Even if others laughed at me, I always gained strength to move forward with the thought that if I set a grand goal with my own dream in my arms, all the difficulties now pass by for a while, and that I blocked the dam from collapsing with a hole

If you take a step forward when you’re worried and frustrated, your goal will eventually be one step closer.

The editorial was too long. Now shall we go see the man we met in the park.


< The man I met at the park >

A man was walking slowly in a park. It was an old man about the same age as my father who had thick wrinkles.

But he walked too slowly. The foot he stepped on was shaking, and I could see at a glance that he was attracted to the ground.

When I looked closely, I was walking toward crutches a few steps away. But when a student ran to the crutch and tried to give it to him, he stopped him.

“Student, I’ll do it.”

While the student looked at him curiously, the man walked hard for a long time picked up crutches. Then he threw his crutch forward again and spoke.

“I’m sorry to the student who tries to help me on purpose. Actually, I’m in rehabilitation training after the car accident, and I’m training to walk alone a little more without crutches. But thank you very much, student”

So, the man started walking again toward the crutches that fell in front of him.

-Source: Warm Day-


< I’ll read good article… >

Even if you can’t use it because you hurt a finger, your life is uncomfortable, but how hard would it be if you lost a part of your body or were injured in a sudden accident and couldn’t use it?

What if I can’t see my eyes sometimes? What if you can’t hear? I often think about the situation that has changed from now.

And whenever that happens, I try not to lose hope and try not to come to such a situation, but I don’t get frustrated even if I come, and I try to overcome it like this, and I shake off my worries about the future.

Worry also only creates new worries, and in fact, 8 to 9 out of 10 worries are often worries that cannot be solved immediately.

I understand that it is difficult to let go because I have lived like that because I am originally very worried. So, I think we should keep practicing putting it down.

It will be easy to get tired of invisible changes right now, but I’m sure that if you try to put down your efforts even once and try to change yourself, one day that you don’t even know will come.

Thank you for reading the rambling comments again today. It’s like a diary pretending to be a mental care post. Have a good day and fighting for this week.

★ Bertolt Brecht ★

No one will improve your fate unless you do it yourself.

What’s scarier than fear – Mental care second post – | Top_Mental (top-mental.com)

I love that person.

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