7 Comments

This is a fantastic way of illustrating it! It can bring us great comfort to look at our overall progress that way, detaching ourselves from timelines we typically had impressed on us earlier in life. This makes me think of application to that resilience graph I work on. The setbacks are not the point. Where am I compared to 3 months ago? One year ago? How am I doing 5 years from now? This depends on choices I make today and this week on how to respond.

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Fascinating 😎

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Glad you enjoyed it Emma.

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Great story and points! Yes it is important to not expect a perfect or perceived perfect reading each time but acceptable and adjust to your incremental or directional correctness. I like the lesson of not being electrocuted and having a better way to gauge or measure :) Another lesson may also be that the pilot expects close to precision when he/she enters the cockpit (interesting meaning btw) so we have to remember that lives do play a part in our daily actions, not just for ourselves but others. Yes nice view, I guess vantage points are important too....Pax, Lux et Amor! Veritas IHS

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Yes indeed. There wasn't much room for error for the pilots. It is a dangerous profession.

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Yet if we are called to something we love and believe in it makes complete sense and there is no danger worth conquering! “It’s better to cross the line and suffer the consequences than to just stare at the line for the rest of your life.” -Paulo Coelho Enjoy the day my friend and reach further than you think....

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May 25, 2023
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Thanks. I've been blessed with some great experiences.

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