> partying 6 nights in a row, hanging out being care free, living for the moment etc.
If those are good things to do, why are they not good when you're not in your 20s? If they're not good things to do, why would they be good in your 20s?
They sound kind of like stupid, boring wastes of time to me. But if they genuinely make you happy, why would they stop genuinely making you happy because your hair fell out and you got fat?
> When you're in your late 20s, dropping everything and rolling out will most likely be near impossible.
When I was 29 I quit my job, and then digitized the Oxford English Dictionary, published my first peer-reviewed paper, moved into a Volkswagen bus, drove all over the country with my wife (having to learn to rebuild the van's engine in the process), and moved to Argentina.
> P.S. to me a Michael Jackson or Mark Zuckerberg are not a great life, because they were/are unidimensional. They are what they are and not much outside of it.
Given that statement, I'd bet money you don't know Zuck personally.
If those are good things to do, why are they not good when you're not in your 20s? If they're not good things to do, why would they be good in your 20s?
They sound kind of like stupid, boring wastes of time to me. But if they genuinely make you happy, why would they stop genuinely making you happy because your hair fell out and you got fat?
> When you're in your late 20s, dropping everything and rolling out will most likely be near impossible.
When I was 29 I quit my job, and then digitized the Oxford English Dictionary, published my first peer-reviewed paper, moved into a Volkswagen bus, drove all over the country with my wife (having to learn to rebuild the van's engine in the process), and moved to Argentina.
You can live a cliché, but you don't have to.
> P.S. to me a Michael Jackson or Mark Zuckerberg are not a great life, because they were/are unidimensional. They are what they are and not much outside of it.
Given that statement, I'd bet money you don't know Zuck personally.