Remember that life it LOOOOOOOOOONG. I'm with @PABLOF7z on this - you have to really be conscious that it's a marathon and act accordingly. Recently, it's helped me to think of life more explicitly as chapters. I've still got a lot to write so panicking about where I am now does me no good. nostr:note10fp3r9k5lg9djrn983f6av5gptn0wt5hlrpff6y4evq6ls46csnsjc85ep
I hate to beat a dead horse, but this is one big reason why we use agile, rather than developing in a series of cram sessions. The latter isn't sustainable, over a long period of time.
People always act like I'm just being a QA killjoy, but I've seen developers furiously hack away and then literally fall into a heap, right off of their desk chairs. Just boom, he's out.
Very good points. I cut down my hours in healthcare this year and will be focusing more on myself going forward. We have far too many mentally and physically unwell people working in healthcare, which is bananas. But it makes sense given how we live. nostr:nevent1qqste5g3lcd84tv0rfpnjneu75s6dr9s8p43prgnl58vg6nmsy32desppemhxue69uhkummn9ekx7mp0qgspwwwexlwgcrrnwz4zwkze8rq3ncjug8mvgsd96dxx6wzs8ccndmcrqsqqqqqprhhnzp
Totally agree. This goes back to what I’ve termed the Heirarchy of Relational Leadership. Most people have the order backwards. It should be: 1. God 2. Self 3. Family 4. Others (Business, Team, Community) Too many people put their relationship with God last, slave away earning fiat, get home and have little to no energy remaining to engage with the family in a healthy way, and rarely ensure their own self is optimized. It’s important we recognize the correct order of relationships and prioritize them accordingly.