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Country doctor Park Kyung-cheol's self-revolution

Original price was: $38.00.Current price is: $29.00.

Area: Books for parents / General novels / Self-management
Age: Books for parents
Composition: 14.5×21.2cm | 380p
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Description

Wandering in life is nothing more than trial and error, but we often regard this as a sin. Wandering is not a sin. For humans, not having wandering means having no will to move forward. This is because humans are animals that desire, and that desire is the driving force behind our will to become better. Wandering is an experiment to overcome limitations, and overcoming them is an achievement.
The important thing here is that you must follow the right path even if it is difficult. If you compromise or take a detour to easily escape the moment, you will end up trapped in a maze from which you cannot escape. The temptation to avoid limits is as tempting as the devil's kiss. But the moment we get caught up in this, we become fish caught in a net. In other words, desire is the will for improvement, but at the same time, it can also be a foolish impulse to sprinkle one's own blood on the altar to celebrate victory. pp.17-18

Silence appears to exist outside of me, but I, who thinks, actually exist within silence, and my 'self' or 'inside' grows as I observe myself through silence. Silence is the only thing that can observe and warn me as I am shaken by all kinds of impulses, emotions, and temptations. In a moment of silence, my own contemplation of the world begins.
Silence is not just not speaking. The moment of silence separates you from the outside world, so being silent is more than simply not speaking; it means stopping all actions based on inertia. So being silent about others and about others is another form of passion. For example, closing one's mouth while appreciating music is in itself a violent gesture. pp.34~35

In reality, we always live as defined as ‘someone’. For example, in a family relationship, we live as a father or son or daughter, socially as a citizen or citizen, in a company as a position, or even as someone's friend or colleague. Relationships frame us with dozens or hundreds of attributes, and there is no way to avoid this. The moment one completely rejects the attributes of Homo sapiens, there will be no way to avoid social isolation, if not loss of space. In severe cases, the person will be admitted to a mental hospital, given cephamine (a strong sedative), and walking down the hallways with unfocused eyes. Or, it may be sitting in a hole dug on a mountainside and making animal howls. Just as being born as a human being itself was not a choice, our lives are not that selective either. p.74

Of course, this contextualization is secretly learned and brainwashed by those who benefit from it. Therefore, it is not easy to see through it, and even if you do, it is even harder to muster the courage to speak out. This is because being on the fringes of the system is always scary. However, if you are a young man with a passionate heart, the problem is different. The future masters are young people, and young people have the obligation to become their own masters, see through the problems of the world in which they will live, and fix, develop, and refine them with their own hands. It is important to inherit the legacy passed down by the older generation, but it is also the responsibility of young people to correct mistakes, improve them, and develop them. Therefore, if young people fall into the trap of contextualization and fear criticism and conform to it, it is the same as declaring that they will give up their own future. If you have a passionate heart, boldly escape this trap. pp.110~111

So what is that field? It is not a machine production field that cannot escape the curse of entropy, but a human-centered system such as leisure, entertainment, cosmetics, education, healthcare, bio, and clean energy. These fields gain added value through people, not machines. In the past, the efficiency of machines was important, but now we are entering an era where people and their spark become added value. p.137

This is a story about when I was learning to swim. Usually, after learning the kick by repeating 'um~pa' for about a month, you will be able to swim quite well from the second month. At this time, if you set a goal of completing two laps from the beginning and make strokes, almost without exception, you will run out of breath and give up after about one and a half laps. However, on the other hand, if you think that you completed one and a half laps yesterday and will do even more today, you will definitely complete two laps. If you define a limit, you will not be able to go any further and will stop, but if you think you are going beyond the limit, your psychological limit will increase further.
The essence of life is like that. The life of a revolutionary is always progressive and motivated, but the life of a complacent person is always skeptical. That is why we must always live as revolutionaries, and only the life of such a revolutionary is a life in which one is the master. p.160

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