In my last pop-psych book, Living Life, Anyway, in Chapter 11 I talk about “Living Life, Passionately." The following is the first paragraph of that chapter (p. 81):
“Having strong, vigorous and robust feelings, emotions, and desires central to your life,” is one of the ways by which living life, passionately could be described. Occasionally, I metaphorically think of life as a sailboat, and, as most people know, among all of the variables pertinent to sailing a sailboat there are two which are critical: the boat’s sails and the boat’s rudder. Without sails, a sailboat doesn’t go anywhere, and without a rudder a sailboat has no purposeful direction. In life, without passion, our lives may not go anywhere, and without values, reason, and responsibility, our lives would have no purposeful direction. As implied in my dedication of this book, the “good life” has good sails and a good rudder. Chapter Twelve of this book focuses on responsibility and this chapter focuses on passion, and in case you may be wondering why I chose to address passion first, my rationale is rather simplistic: purpose and direction are not really that important if there is no energy, activity, or movement. There is a multitude of passions, too many to discuss herein. Nonetheless, I would like to briefly address six passions, with specific musings regarding why the respective passions are central to living a good and happy life.
2 comments:
I believe in being passionate about my feelings, and that's how I live passionately. :) :)
Hi Kelly,
Being passionate about your passion is like thinking about your thoughts. A good way to stay that way! Cool!
Thanks for stopping by,
Bill
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