Culture Magazine

The Benefits of a Slower Brain

By Grace Peterson @GracePeterson3
Life Buzz has a list of 30 Things to Stop Doing Right Now. Among them are these:
  • Stop trying to buy happiness.
  • Stop being jealous of others. 
  • Stop wasting your time explaining yourself to others.
  • Stop being scared to make a mistake.  
  • Stop overlooking the beauty of small moments.  
  • Stop trying to make things perfect. 
  • Stop focusing on what you don't want to happen. 
  • Stop being afraid to make a mistake.
  • Stop berating yourself for past mistakes. 
When you're young, these seemingly overly simplistic life principles can seem insurmountable. It feels totally natural to beat ourselves up, be fearful of trying new things, be too busy to notice the small moments. It's just how our brains are wired, to swim against the currents of emotional health. 
When I was younger, self-improvement lists such as this one would really piss me off. They felt so grandiose and righteous and preachy and even outlandish.  
But when I got older, oh my. Things improved dramatically!  Of course, I didn't attain perfection. I still haven't. But my brain slowed down and things seemed to fall into place. 
Nowadays, I'm comfortable in my own, flawed, wrinkled and liver-spotted skin. I can enjoy life and shrug off my blunders. Lists like these seem kind of silly. I don't have to strive to attain emotional health. It's happened. It's a reality. And my foibles, well, they're just part of the package and most of the time I can laugh about them. 
Back when I was in my twenties and thirties, I wish someone would have told me, "Grace, it'll get easier!" 
If you're in your twenties, thirties or even your forties and reading this. Hang in there. It's going to get easier. 
The Benefits of a Slower Brain 

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