Pumax
Don Juan
- Joined
- Mar 26, 2025
- Messages
- 116
- Reaction score
- 55
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Have you noticed how much he focuses on social groups?
It means that many of the activities we engage in on a daily basis need to be filtered by us in order to allow interaction with a variety of people, but at the same time, they need to stay within our personal "field of interest."
For example, if I enjoy playing soccer but dislike tennis, it’s clear that even if I start playing tennis and make some acquaintances, I might still not enjoy myself, or I might not build any real friendships.
That’s why, after trying many different things in life, we also need to identify the ones we truly enjoy more than others, and stick with those.
So, as adult men, how do you keep finding new experiences or things to do that keep your exploratory side alive and help you discover what you enjoy?
Maybe once a week or once a month you dedicate time to something you’ve never done before, but how do you find that activity? How do you come across it?
This really makes sense.At each stage of our lifes, we confront with one or more social circles.
For example, when we become parents, we naturally join social groups tied to our children's activities: school, sports, after-school programs, etc.
These groups are always mixed. Some people are kind and supportive; others may be toxic. It's not about how healthy or unhealthy the group is as a whole. It’s about learning how to adapt, interact, even with the toxic ones.
You’ll meet all kinds of people.
Competitive sports parents, for example, often include both great allies and difficult individuals such as those toxic ones (they're the majority), and also, shared activities don’t guarantee deep friendships.
True friends are like the pulp left behind in the strainer when you squeeze an orange, after countless social encounters, they’re the ones who remain when everything else has passed through.
This actually mean you should NOT isolate yourself because "everyone is toxic", or because you now know that. This actually might be true, unfortunately.
Instead, take things with humor, stay open, and use your personal "filter" to spot the few genuine connections worth keeping for the long term, while you're actually socializing with toxic people.
So as the saying goes, after countless social encounters, you actually have to be there squeezing the juice, and occasionally taking the liquid that comes out, putting it in the strainer, filtering the people, and seeing which ones are suitable and which ones you will instead throw in the sink because, they are not healthy, or cannot change,
Have you noticed how much he focuses on social groups?
It means that many of the activities we engage in on a daily basis need to be filtered by us in order to allow interaction with a variety of people, but at the same time, they need to stay within our personal "field of interest."
For example, if I enjoy playing soccer but dislike tennis, it’s clear that even if I start playing tennis and make some acquaintances, I might still not enjoy myself, or I might not build any real friendships.
That’s why, after trying many different things in life, we also need to identify the ones we truly enjoy more than others, and stick with those.
So, as adult men, how do you keep finding new experiences or things to do that keep your exploratory side alive and help you discover what you enjoy?
Maybe once a week or once a month you dedicate time to something you’ve never done before, but how do you find that activity? How do you come across it?
