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Old Nov 13, 2017, 03:29 PM
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Grath Grath is offline
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Member Since: Nov 2017
Location: Netherlands
Posts: 114
Quote:
Originally Posted by JustAnUntakenName View Post
But it can become too late time is running out. You can only achieve certain things within a certain window of opportunity, once that has passed you are physically too old, with too little experience and skill to complete what others have completed decades before you.

Success = Work + Skill + Luck

I have no luck and having BPD doesn't help in that regard. I try to work at building my skills, but my skills aren't improving - they are in decline.

Who would want to hire a 30-year-old woman with a degree (that she just got... a simple four-year degree that took her seven years to complete), who also has no positive work experience to reference, and a declining work portfolio if anything to show for at all?

I'm miles behind my peers and it feels like the harder I try to catch up the less point there is in trying to because the window of opportunity is closing. I'm 25 years old and I have nothing to show for my life, there's nothing except regret and mistakes that I don't seem to learn from.

I'm scared. I have so many dreams and I can see them dying in my hands, I'm so scared. When my parents die I'll be alone and I don't know what I'll do. I don't know where I'll go or how I'll cope. The future is terrifying and my plans to protect myself aren't panning out.
I have almost the exact same thoughts every day. You have to realise that these are malignant thoughts that aren't productive at all. This is a part of you pretending to act in your best interest. In reality, this part of you sabotages you with these attitudes.

What helps me in these situations are some counter arguments:

– Vincent van Gogh only started painting with 27, and in only eight years he became a master in his craft.
It's never too late to be really good at something.

– Robert M. Pirsig was a child prodigy and went to university to study biochemistry with 16. Yet despite his early starts, he failed. Regardless, he worked as an English teacher after that and published Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance, considered to be one of the most influential books of the 20th century, with 46.
Life is not linear, there can be turns and dead ends and you still might end up in the right place.
Thanks for this!
JustAnUntakenName