Niko Molina
New member
- Apr 10, 2014
- 134
- 0
Question directed towards Mike, but others are welcome to chime in.
Was there a defining moment? Something happened and you just knew your vocation was a professional detailer?
There is a book called "Mastery" written by Robert Greene and its about how "masters" became masters. Albert Einstein, Leonardo da Vinci, etc. etc. and they each had at defining moment that when it happened, they knew what their passion was. They knew what they wanted to do with themselves. Sometimes it's an interest of theirs when they were children...typically it really is something they were interested in when they were children or something happened when they were young that sparked their interest.
For example, Einstein's dad gave him a compass when he was young and the way the needle moved due to some invisible force (magnetic poles) amazed him and he spent his life studying and making a career out of something he was truly interested in: to discover more about these invisible forces that effect the world, how they work and if there are more. Physics was the language to understand (or at least try to) and he used that to pursue his vocation.
Or is it a fun and money-making way to channel your case of OCD? Cause let me tell you, I've got a bad case of OCD and detailing seems to just fit right with that lmao
Was there a defining moment? Something happened and you just knew your vocation was a professional detailer?
There is a book called "Mastery" written by Robert Greene and its about how "masters" became masters. Albert Einstein, Leonardo da Vinci, etc. etc. and they each had at defining moment that when it happened, they knew what their passion was. They knew what they wanted to do with themselves. Sometimes it's an interest of theirs when they were children...typically it really is something they were interested in when they were children or something happened when they were young that sparked their interest.
For example, Einstein's dad gave him a compass when he was young and the way the needle moved due to some invisible force (magnetic poles) amazed him and he spent his life studying and making a career out of something he was truly interested in: to discover more about these invisible forces that effect the world, how they work and if there are more. Physics was the language to understand (or at least try to) and he used that to pursue his vocation.
Or is it a fun and money-making way to channel your case of OCD? Cause let me tell you, I've got a bad case of OCD and detailing seems to just fit right with that lmao