said Socrates.
Know yourself, and do your thing.
If you don't break this to-do into small products, it becomes a buzzword.
I have found my way. Even if the day when I knew my calling came, it would be short-lived. As time passes, you forget again. that's the person
I thought I could write it down in the app. That's not it. Forget to use the app. Even when I accidentally enter the smartphone app, they seem determined to hinder me rather than help me. I spend all my time figuring out where something is. When I wake up after a while, I'm looking into it because I'm preoccupied with the wrong thing in the app.
I stopped trusting apps – I wrote a diary with an app for 10 years, but for some reason, they are something I will look through after I die, and it doesn’t feel like a diary that contains my sincerity.
In the end, iterations mattered. Once a day, once a week, once a month, once a year... Which repetition you choose among them determines the quality of your life. Whether it is an app or a notebook is the next question. Did humanity's greatest mentors transcend themselves thanks to self-improvement tools?!
What is the best repetitive self-discipline? weather Looking back on myself, all the decisive things were born in the diary, and I was confident in myself while rereading them. My favorite book, <Walden>, is a compilation of Henry David Thoreau's diaries.
If a little tool is needed, the diaries can be taken out and viewed at any time. Rather than looking for tools, the key is to have a sturdy and simple notebook. I think that the fact that Kim Tae-won of the rock group Resurrection wrote a diary for over ten years with a simple notebook is a great thing in itself.
I also sincerely try to write a diary. Those tools are my hand-stained notebook and this blog.
November 19th in the woods
