![]() |
|
|
|
Tree-Hugging Member
Join Date: Oct 2006
Location: Northern California
Posts: 1,676
|
Short answer: Yes.
Only people who aren't paying attention never ask if they are on-track. I look at my past and wonder what things would be like now had I taken a different route; however, what is done is done, and after looking back the critical step is to turn around and decide what the future should be like. Several years ago I bought my wife a plaque that reads: "What would you do if you knew you couldn't fail?" Words worth living by. Jim
__________________
~~~~~ Politicians should be compelled to wear uniforms like NASCAR drivers, so we could identify their owners. ~~~~~ |
||
![]() |
|
Registered
|
Marcus, these are eternal questions asked by men through the ages. It is a process of reassessing your place in life, the ol' "who am I?" Asking the questions makes you normal. Overreacting makes it into a mid-life crisis.
|
||
![]() |
|
Registered
Join Date: Jan 2002
Location: Long Beach CA, the sewer by the sea.
Posts: 37,694
|
Hell, I'd buy a car and enter the Indy 500. At 63 YO, I'd be on a Wheaties box for sure. Wouldn't that be so cool that an old man could whip up on Marco Andretti?
Hell, if I knew I couldn't fail, I'd buy a car for Mario too! |
||
![]() |
|
Make Bruins Great Again
|
With all due respect to all those that have posted, is it possible that you have missed (or dismissed) the answer to your emptiness along the way? To further elaborate would require a trip to PARF and I don't wish to make this another platform for useless bickering. I will only suggest that you do what we used to do in College: go back and recheck all your calculations to see if a mistake was made.
__________________
-------------------------------------- Joe See Porsche run. Run, Porsche, Run: `87 911 Carrera |
||
![]() |
|
Registered
Join Date: Nov 1999
Location: Herrin Ill USA
Posts: 1,611
|
Markus, I think every one of those questions come with age.
I've been fighting them for a few months now. Unemployment gives you a lot of time to think about things. The question that comes to the top for me now is, Is it worth it? I'm not suicidal so don't worry there guys, but the things that used to make me happy just don't do it anymore. It seems like I'm in a fog, and can't find the sun. I'll keep stumbling through it though, I'm too damned stubborn to give up. As my Father says Markus, "you seem to have your ***** together". It shows in your posts. The things that are the most important to you never come second. You're a good man, as just about everyone here is. We really do have some good people here. |
||
![]() |
|
Registered
Join Date: Apr 2001
Location: Linn County, Oregon
Posts: 48,517
|
Quote:
__________________
"Now, to put a water-cooled engine in the rear and to have a radiator in the front, that's not very intelligent." -Ferry Porsche (PANO, Oct. '73) (I, Paul D. have loved this quote since 1973. It will remain as long as I post here.) |
||
![]() |
|
![]() |
Banned
Join Date: May 2005
Location: Earth
Posts: 31,744
|
Don't think about the present, think about the future.
Currently I am in about a 15 year ahead mindset. It is sometimes weird when I think about it. If you take care of the future, the present takes care of itself. |
||
![]() |
|
Registered
Join Date: Jun 2005
Location: Hamburg & Vancouver
Posts: 7,693
|
Quote:
I grew up watching Bergman films, and I suspect some of your issues are Swedish issues. The only cure I can think of for those is a long holiday. Take a month in Thailand or Crete or Perth or Santiago or Accra or some other warm and happy place.
__________________
_____________________ These are my principles. If you don't like them, I have others.—Groucho Marx |
||
![]() |
|
Registered
Join Date: Jun 2000
Location: bottom left corner of the world
Posts: 22,729
|
Marcus. You just need to go down to the beach one summers day and you will see more beauty than most of us will see in a lifetime.
I decided to drop what I saw as my game plan as a late teen and accept the person I am. Strangely I'm about the oposite of what I thought I would turn out to be. I feel that looking at the greener grass on the other side of the fence, and envying what other people have, won't change it for me. And probably most of those "other" people look at me and envy what I have. |
||
![]() |
|
Registered
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: The Golden State
Posts: 1,533
|
Marcus, I am in my 40’z and was told a long time ago you reinvent yourself every 4 years?
Always wondered what that meant until I realized I do it every 4 years (not profession but rather attitude and perspectives) YMMV ![]()
__________________
Rod... 2010 - 997 PDK, Black on Black, Daily driver. 1987 - 930 Grand Prix White, Not looking for crazy HP, just harmony! |
||
![]() |
|
Registered
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Fullerton,Ca
Posts: 5,463
|
trust me, like I said...you need to drink more.
Get a mountain bike, or a shifter kart, track your 911 or buy a motorcycle. Life is to be lived. I've only broken my ankle in three spots, my tail bone, 4 ribs, both wrists,my left elbow needed a Dr. with a drill and a screwdriver to but it back together, 1 concussion, and compressed T-10 to 1/2 of it's height. ![]() Live harder.
__________________
" Formerly we suffered from crime. Today we suffer from laws" (55-120) Tacitus |
||
![]() |
|
Did you get the memo?
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Wichita, KS
Posts: 32,368
|
Quote:
__________________
‘07 Mazda RX8-8 Past: 911T, 911SC, Carrera, 951s, 955, 996s, 987s, 986s, 997s, BMW 5x, C36, C63, XJR, S8, Maserati Coupe, GT500, etc |
||
![]() |
|
![]() |
Canadian Member
|
People see me, they see my Porsche and 9 out of 10 times I get "mid-life" crisis comments.
Ha! I tell people that it's all a LIE, there is NO mid-life crisis! That's just how long it takes a man to pay cash for his toys. If I knew then, what I know now; I'd of done it sooner ![]() PS: that usually shuts them up too ![]() |
||
![]() |
|
A Man of Wealth and Taste
Join Date: Dec 2002
Location: Out there somewhere beyond the doors of perception
Posts: 51,063
|
Dear livi
RE your Thread..On getting lost in the shufle of life.
When I was 20 years old I realized I didn't know jack about anything and that I was a lost soul. To that end I knew it would take time so I began a process of examining my life, going back into family history to see why the people in my family were the way they were. My guiding principle for all these years has been, "What does it gain a man to inherit the world only to lose his soul." The greatest achivement a man can have is peace of mind, for what does wealth garner a man when it is so transitory a thing considering that our lives are so short. These verty words are what I realized when I was 20. For many years I trudged on down that dusty road. Putting piece by piece together, each event examined as it took place. Till a year or two ago I realized that I had come to the crest of a hill and the promised land that I had worked and sought so hard to find was right there in front of me. The arrival is not quiet what I had imagined it would be when I started, but in some ways it is far beyond my expectations. On the personal level my ability to focus my intelect and my ability to anticipate people and events astounds me. Not only do I have self knowledge, but have developed a unique talent of being able to construct and deconstruct human activity at will. The accuracy and the power that being able to rely upon ones imagination is literarly untold. It transcends time and distance. I always knew I had talent, but now have the abilty to wield that talent. The challenge going forward for me is to put those talents which I have honed to use. To leave something substantial behind, to add to the thinking of this world
__________________
Copyright "Some Observer" Last edited by tabs; 03-13-2009 at 09:06 PM.. |
||
![]() |
|
A Man of Wealth and Taste
Join Date: Dec 2002
Location: Out there somewhere beyond the doors of perception
Posts: 51,063
|
To tell the truth some of the things I have posted on this Board and elsewhere are very advanced thinking that is a given. I know that some things are even cutting edge, the only question that I still have is am I blazing a new trail where no one else has gone before? Or been able to articulate in an analytical manner.
BTW I know who to ask to get my answer.
__________________
Copyright "Some Observer" |
||
![]() |
|
Registered
Join Date: Jun 2007
Location: Lake Oswego, OR
Posts: 6,059
|
Markus,
This is of course THE existential quesiton: why am I here? I too am plagued at times by this and have envied friends who are blissfully ignorant enough to never ask such questions. However, as one who does ask, there needs to be an answer. The best anwswer I have found is James Taylor who sings "the secret to life is enjoying the passage of time." So, there you go. The answer rests within yourself. For all of the previous philosophical BS here is a personal note. So far in 2009 I have been working my butt off and getting nothing accomplished. I found myself spiralling into a slump. I believe I have remedied this but you never know. I believe that the key may be to make a change. However for this to work effectively, you must have a workable strategy and stick with it. My issue was making a change and then not succeeding in the short term, then jumping back to my old comfortable pattern. That is a recipe for a funk my friend, try to avoid it. Another thing. I am just North of 45 Degrees lattitude. I believe Sweden is significantly North of that. All the Swedes I have met look very young. They tell me it is because the sun is never seen in Sweden. As an MD, you are aware that lack of sunlight can lead to depression. This is still early March. You might consider that. It certainly impacts me and MANY people near me. I would imagine that people further North have it much worse. Let me say that I have never met you and probably will never have that priviledge. However, you strike me as a man of high integrity, compassion and humor. These attributes come across in your posts regularly. You are pretty universally well regarded if you read other's postings about you. These attributes that you demonstrate are among the most desireable that we can offer as humans and you possess them. Congratulations! While you are in a time of reflection (to put it nicely) you need to properly accept the positive attributes that you possess. I know all too well that life can come across flat and empty. It is perhaps my life's biggest challenges to make it meaningful. Good luck! You can do it. I have compete confidence in you. Larry |
||
![]() |
|
Student of the obvious
Join Date: May 2000
Location: Phoenix
Posts: 7,714
|
When I was younger (late teens - early 20s) I made myself miserable wondering/worrying about what life held for me. It took a while, but I eventually learned to spend significantly more of my life living in the moment instead of contemplating the past or future. It's hard for me to describe the level of contentedness that brings.
My life has turned out much differently than what I would have wished for 20 years ago, but I can hardly imagine a change of circumstances that would result in greater happiness. The funny thing is that the individual events leading up to what has become my life seem stastically unlikely. A while back our daughter asked my wife and I how we met and the chain of events had so many twists that I shuddered at the thought of how one seemingly minor change years ago would have resulted in a completely different life today... but I guess that's true for everyone. Some random, key events in our lives - My wife: Had multiple offers from grad schools and chose Emory in Atlanta, which put us in the same state. She and her first husband could only afford one car, so she bought a scooter to get around. Taking the MSF course on her scooter, she realized a 'real' motorcycle was a better choice and started researching them on Prodigy. This lead to a Georgia riders forum and a new bike. Me: Went in the Navy out of high school. A friend introduced me to one of his friends - someone who would, years later, get sent from Chicago to Atlanta to work on a tech project a few miles from my house. The manager of this project would soon quit and I eventually got that job. While in that job I wandered in to an office supply store and saw an open box PC that was on sale. This purchase resulted in me getting online. About the same time I saw a magazine ad on the back of a magazine (that someone left turned around on the newstand) for a new Yamaha Seca II which had a very low price. I bought the bike and while using my new PC ended up on Prodigy where I met my wife to be. A group ride to Deals Gap was arranged by someone on the board. My wife-to-be crashed her bike right in front of me. This crash was the catalyst that caused her and her husband to split and she ended up renting a room from me until she could find an apartment, but eventually decided that renting from me was a better deal despite a longer commute. It's interesting to consider that any one of those (or other factors), if altered, would have easily resulted in an entirely different life for us and perhaps many others. If the magazine were placed on the newstand front cover out instead of the back cover out, my entire life could have followed a different path!
__________________
Lee |
||
![]() |
|
Registered
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: Pine Mountain Georgia
Posts: 844
|
Markus, three pages of responses. Says a lot about how all of us pelicans think about you and how you are perceived. I would only suggest you are and have been dealing with a case of " burn out". From what I know, which is very little, it takes time to work thru it. Take some of the suggestions, like, plan some events to look forward to, take a day off each week and do something with your kids or get some exercise. I guess the deal is - do something- don't just sit and stew. Do we all think about this stuff from time to time, yes. Does it do any good? Not really.
__________________
1990 Wanderlodge PT-40 75 911S Silver Anniversary 1952 MGTD 1983 Mercedes 300 TD 1969 Lincoln |
||
![]() |
|
durn for'ner
Join Date: Feb 2005
Location: South of Sweden
Posts: 17,090
|
Ladies and Gentlemen,
Four years down the road, in the company of this phenomenal assembly, I have on multiple occasions had the most astonishing exchange of knowledge, humor, heart and soul. This thread contains so many insightful replies, so much life experience, that I will simply have to print it out. I am humbled as ever in the vicinity of the Pelican community. Thanks. Thanks so much all of you.
__________________
Markus Resident Fluffer Carrera '85 |
||
![]() |
|
Canadian Member
|
Quote:
Life is meant to be enjoyed; follow your Bliss! (Joseph Campbell) Levi: Good stuff I agree! |
||
![]() |
|