XaiJu
ncase
ncase

patreon


Fearsonas + Patreon Rewards + What's Next?

First, thank you so SO much for the powerful response to Adventures With Anxiety! It means a lot to see that this story – inspired by my own life story – can help other folks' life stories, in some small way. πŸ’–

In fact, let me brag a bit, and show off the fanart folks have drawn of their own "anxiety animals." Or should I say... "fearsonas"?

(for more fanart + credits, see twitter thread)

Speaking of art from fans, here's art *for* fans.

πŸ”ΊIf you chose the $5+ Patreon Reward, here's your Polygon Avatars! πŸ”Ί

✏️If you got the $10+ Patreon Reward, you should've gotten your hand-drawn peeps last week! Please message me if you didn't get yours.

Here's a sampling of the peeps and polygons:

So, what's next?

I've been thinking a lot about this, life-wise. For 20+ years, I've organized my life and sense of purpose around projects. I've always been haunted (as in "anxiety disorder" haunted) by that question,

"What can I do that's most valuable to the world?"

So I asked a few friends – who, IMHO, do world-valuable work – how they answer that question. Their reply:

They don't.

From a neuroscientist friend: Sure, her research may eventually cure Parkinson's or whatever, but the "problem" with foundational research is you CAN'T know the applications in advance. Therefore: she gains meaning from what she *does* have control over: learning deeply, asking good questions, doing rigorous and honest research.

From a edu-YouTuber friend: He reminded me about "spontaneous order" and "emergence", how local choices lead to global changes. (See: Parable of the Polygons) His advice: just do what's helpful/healthy for you, and – as long as it's not harmful/unhealthy to others – your local actions will lead to the global good anyway.

Other replies:

And yet, "do what's fulfilling for you (that doesn't harm others)" still feels... selfish. Like, where would we be without Gandhis or MLKs, who sacrifice themselves for the greater good? Or maybe it never felt like a "sacrifice", that just was what's fulfilling for them?

(What do you think of this "conflict"(?) between doing what's valuable for yourself "vs"(?) others? Tell me in the Patreon comments!)

I don't know. So, here's my plan:

For the next 6 months, I'm going to experiment with being more "selfish".

That means: 

As for projects:

For example – teasers for future projects! – here's 11 ideas I've at least already outlined:

(What do you think of these project ideas? Leave a comment!)

So that's my experiment of "just do what's valuable for me (that's not unhealthy for others)". Will try it out for 6 months, if by the end of it I'm a corrupted monster, I'll revert my brain-branch to an old commit.

I'll keep y'all posted. And as always, thank you so so so so so much. <3

πŸ’–,
~ Nicky

Comments

I connect with a lot of what you say, I really appreciate you sharing your thoughts (I wish I could articulate more but my brain hasn't been cooperating with the wording of things lately!)

Shey

Good for you! Personally, I struggle with very similar feelings. Part of me says that if I'm not sacrificing myself for others, I'm being selfish. The book that has helped me the most in the past 6 months, as I learn to put my own needs first is Self-Compassion by Kristin Neff. If it's any help, I think you've done more good in the world already than many people do in a whole lifetime. It's okay to structure your life differently now. I agree that "projects" are very anxiety inducing, and I'm interested to hear about your journey to finding a different frame of mind.

Tim S


More Creators