They say you’re doing too much.

I ask, do you like roller coasters?What do you like about them? The thrill—the rush of adrenaline that floods your body, creating a mix of exciting emotions. A sudden dopamine spike that some interpret as fear, nervousness, or euphoria. This is what challenges outside the comfort zone do to me. The thrill of doing something…

I ask, do you like roller coasters?
What do you like about them? The thrill—the rush of adrenaline that floods your body, creating a mix of exciting emotions. A sudden dopamine spike that some interpret as fear, nervousness, or euphoria.

This is what challenges outside the comfort zone do to me.

The thrill of doing something new and risky carries the illusion that it might “destroy my life.” But the ride is safe—so why do you still feel nervous and excited?
Because it almost isn’t. The safety is hidden beneath an illusion of chaos, where the margin of error is so narrow that everything must function with precision. Operating within these tight margins demands intentional methods. This cultivates a flow state, which leads to effortless improvement—and even more precise methods. It becomes a recursion. You realize that not only can you do it—
you’re already doing it.

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