Is there a point when you should let go or just forget about these "pesky little thoughts"? For instance, maybe time and opportunity have passed for a bridging the idea and action.
Good question. I think we'll know when we take action. It's only then will we experience what Seth Godin calls "the dip": the long slog between starting and mastery. But I think the scariest thing is not knowing when the time has expired—when the pervasive thought has stopped being pervasive, but the mind still believes it's being bothered by an idea that will no longer produce a fruitful reality.
Is there a point when you should let go or just forget about these "pesky little thoughts"? For instance, maybe time and opportunity have passed for a bridging the idea and action.
Good question. I think we'll know when we take action. It's only then will we experience what Seth Godin calls "the dip": the long slog between starting and mastery. But I think the scariest thing is not knowing when the time has expired—when the pervasive thought has stopped being pervasive, but the mind still believes it's being bothered by an idea that will no longer produce a fruitful reality.