16 Reminders For When You’re Afraid Of Pursuing An ‘Unrealistic’ Life

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Throughout our lives, we’re constantly told to be realistic. We’re supposed to seek things with a clear end in sight, to seek what’s known and predictable—we get rewarded for following this and punished if we don’t.

If you wanted to be yourself, even your best self, there are those that have probably discouraged you from doing so because that’s “unrealistic.” If you wanted to make a change in your life, you’ve held yourself back by your fear of being “unrealistic.”

So you resign, you dissociate, and soon you live passively, with your potential buried under mounds of fears and excuses. You know something’s wrong, but you feel like if you do anything about it, you’re not being realistic enough.

But here are some reminders that will encourage you to pursue the unrealistic life that you want for yourself:

1. You aren’t guaranteed a long or stable life. Your time is shorter than you think, and there’s no time to be indecisive about whether you want to resign to a realistic life or go after an unrealistic one. Any change you want to make must start today.

2. Living a life inside of your head isn’t as good as actually living it. If you’re constantly keeping an unrealistic life bottled up, you’re doing a disservice to yourself by not doing anything to get it out there.

3. Regardless of who you are, what you’ve done, and how negatively you perceive yourself, you can still move forward on a different path. It’s not guaranteed to be free of struggle, but it’s indefinitely worthwhile because you’ll never learn if you remain stuck with what you’ve always known.

4. If you allow other people’s fears, judgments, and bleak predictions to control the way you think and act, you’re guaranteed a lifetime of misery and regret. Do you honestly want that to be your end?

5. Despite how many failures you’ve experienced and rejections you’ve had, you’re not talentless, lazy, unimportant, or unintelligent. Don’t let any setback influence you to believe that you’re unqualified to break free from a life you no longer feel alive in.

6. Reality gives you constraints and rigid expectations. Unreality gives you confidence in your ability to work around those constraints in spite of them, resulting in something you couldn’t have possibly expected from yourself.

7. The more you feel resigned from your life, the more you’ll inevitably complain and grumble about the things that are going wrong without doing anything out of fear that the solution is “too unrealistic.” Don’t let life turn you into a bitter or jaded person who’s convinced that remaining powerless is somehow better than seeking alternatives that are beyond anything that’s ever been done before.

8. When you’re in active pursuit of an unrealistic life, you’re rejecting all that the world has taught you, and you’re becoming the author of your own life instead of a flat and static character in a cliché storyline written by someone else.

9. If you want to heal from your past, being unrealistic is the only way to heal, because reality constantly reminds you of what you can’t do and reinforces how incompetent you are. But you can defy reality by improving, growing, and becoming more than who you used to be.

10. Reality says, “You are helpless, you are too weak to fight against me, and you will remain this way because I have total control over your future.” Is this what you want to listen to for the rest of your life?

11. In its essence, self-improvement involves being unrealistic, because you’re doing more than what you think is possible. When you’ve conquered anything that you used to view as an impossibility, you know that being unrealistic can push you to grow in ways you couldn’t have imagined.

12. When you lift yourself up, you inspire others to do the same. When you share your triumphs over your struggles, you inspire others to fight their own battles, no matter how much realistic people say it’s “unrealistic” to do so.

13. Being unrealistic shows that you love yourself enough not to accept a life that keeps you small and unable make progress in things that are most valuable and true to you.

14. Do not feel guilty for wanting an unrealistic life. You aren’t doing anyone any good by making yourself suffer through a bleak reality, controlled by the pressure to keep up with anything that kills you inside.

15. Deep down, you know we live in a sick and twisted society that makes you believe that seeking a life full of abundance, inner peace, authenticity, and vitality is unrealistic. No wonder people are so anxious and depressed from being forced into a mould that tries to turn them into what they aren’t for the sake of remaining realistic. So defy it. Conquer it. Rise against it. In doing so, you free others.

16. By default, you’re assigned a role in life – the role of a broken person who needs constant validation to feel good, while being manipulated to feel inadequate and unworthy. If you want to change your role, you need to be unrealistic by knowing how much you’re really worth and sharing your gifts with the world.