I’ve lived long enough and have navigated through enough to know with authority there’s just no putting life in a box or no telling what God has planned next. And I am just so nosy - I can’t wait to see how it all shakes out. The older I get, the faster I can work up to curious. ![]() My point: If I had to wait for brave’s arrival to step out and suck at something new, I’d be waiting forever.īut curious? Curious, I’ve got down cold. I have even had a few personal moments where I somehow managed to appropriately steel myself long enough to rise up, and over, and beyond something unwelcome.īut I’ve also got a worry streak a mile wide first developed as a child by exceptionally risk-averse parents and further nurtured into adulthood by far too many Dateline episodes. We Can Stop Waiting For Brave’s Arrival if We Can Just Find Curiousĭon’t get me wrong - I believe in bravery. I know it exists because I have seen it firsthand. When brave finally does arrive on the scene, it’s generally a sloppy, emotional burst that swings from all fired up to completely fizzled out every 46 seconds. ![]() Brave seldom shows up when I need or expect it to. In fact, I barely know brave.įor me, brave is a deadbeat emotion: entirely unreliable and utterly inconsistent. My not-so-deep dark secret : I’m rarely brave. I love the sentiment - but I struggle with the application. I keep seeing the phrase, “Be brave enough to suck at something new,” popping up all over my social media feeds.
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