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asher
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perhaps more frightening that the inability to decide, is the impending promise of stasis, should you neglect to do so. I'd like to say things get better, but really, they just change. Different decisions, different outcomes, different consequences, different rewards. Adapting to these changes is easier when one's feet aren't rooted to the ground, though. Very few decisions are life or death and once you get past that initial dread of failure (whether under your own steam or through the fulfillment of actually failing) it's easier to decide. A comforting fact is that, more often than not, a wrong decision is easily righted. Not everything in life has to happen all at once. A choice you regret making now can, most likely, be righted down the line. Life is longer than most people think and it doesn't happen to those who stand still. It can be scary, but often it's the adreneline of fear that fuels life's greatest choices and creates startling successes.
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080307
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