Today I sharing an piece from the app Peptalk. I think you will love it and perhaps you'd love the app as much as I do.
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Hey, Team Danesa here walking back to the Building Better Humans Project podcast. I've recently, or actually over the last twelve months, I've been listening to or using an app called pep Talk, And I just want to start by saying, this is not a paid advertisement. This is just my personal experience. But I've been listening to motivational, inspirational talks, including videos, on this app called pep Talk. Now, I'm not exactly sure what it costs me. I'd have to go and have a look. I'm sure it's a yearly fee, and maybe I've paid it monthly, but I normally pay those things yearly, and this has been one of the best that I've found. It's just a whole heap of things put together. And the one that I'm about to share with you is called being patient with the process, and it's about a little bit I talked about on Monday, how patience is one of those things that we absolutely need because it takes longer than we think it's going to take in order to achieve things. But we get stuck with wanting instant results, instant gratification because that's the world that we live in. And this idea is that the patience isn't just about doing the do it's the patience with the entire process it takes to achieve something. There's no way that we can achieve anything without going through some sort of process. So I love this I wanted to share it with you, But more importantly, I guess I wanted to encourage If you're into inspirational, motivational stuff, which I imagine coming along to this show you would be, then maybe pep Talk is something that you would love to download and have listened to as well. Again, not a paid advertisement that says that I actually really really enjoy this one, and I think there's great value in it. So here it is being patient with the process.
Whatever you're going through, whatever you're suffering through, whatever you're feeling. This light is a process, and.
The creator of the universe can't.
Give you everything that you were meant to have unless you go through the process.
And that's a long process. The suffering I'm talking about means that we're being patient with a process. That we have our eyes forward, our head up, and we are driving in the direction of where we want to go, where we need to go. Our eyes are corn we're walking in that direction, and.
We are moving through that suffering with intention.
You cannot wish for a strong character and an easy life. Each is the price of the other. What if what you're going through isn't hard? What if you're just sensitive.
We're either going to exhaust every option or we're going to be successful. And if we don't make it, and we can look ourselves in the mirror and say we did everything we can, that's acceptable.
If you die in moment, what will die with you?
What dreams?
What ideas?
What talent?
What leadership?
Potential?
What greatness that you showed up to brave that you allowed fear of procrastination.
To hold you back. Perhaps that's why Hendry David wrote the word Old God.
To reach the point of death only to realize that you've never lived, Only to realize that you've never scraped the surface of your potential.
The only people who succeed are those who can do what they know.
They should do, without excitement to motivate them.
Find something difficult to do.
You need that you're not built for.
Comfort or pleasure.
You pick up the cross and shoulder it uphill, because that's where.
All the meaning in your life will be.
Derived from It's in the difficulty, it's in the responsibilit it's not in the hedonistic self gratification.
We have not been conditioned in this generation to find joy in difficulty. Instead, we want to find joy in extreme pleasure. I mean they presuppose that if they find the perfect circumstance, that that will lead to bliss, instead of realizing that actually bliss is found in the difficulty. So that as we look the true difficulty of life, that is eventual death and difficulty on the path of it, it doesn't daunt to us because we've lived in difficulty too.
You're going to go in that innermost cave.
You're not going to come face to face with God.
You're going to come face to face with yourself, and let me tell you something.
You are worthy. I want to leave this earth becoming who I know deep within I am supposed to be. I want to talk to somebody who's trying to keep their life from falling apart. I want to talk to somebody who's trying.
To resist destruction.
And I want to let you know that we can let everything that can be shaken be shaken, so that that which cannot be shaken can remain. If you don't start welcoming destruction, you may never see who your friends are. If you don't welcome destruction, you may never see what your annointing is. If you don't welcome destruction, you may stay in a relationship that's less than you. If you don't welcome destruction, you may never birth the business. But until I decide that I can handle destruction, then I may not get the breakthrough I'm looking forward.
But it's never too late to recalibrate and decide that we are going.
To be patient with the process of life that is leading us and developing us and forging us into exactly who God created us for me.
Thanks for listening to this episode of The Building Better Humans podcast with your host Glenna'sa for feedback. To stay up to date or go back and find an old episode, head over to one ady dot net dot au heah, the Building Better Humors Project Pie cares this guy