Sarah Lewis
![Sarah Lewis](/assets/img/authors/sarah-lewis.jpg)
Sarah Lewis
done thrive stills
We thrive not when we've done it all, but when we still have more to do.
pain punishment rewards
Pain is not a punishment. And pleasure is not a reward. You could argue that failure is not punishment and Success is not reward. They're just failure and success. You can choose how you respond.
world mastery labels
Success is a label that the world confers on you, but mastery is an ever-onward 'almost.'
mastery arriving reaching
Mastery is in the reaching, not in the arriving.
path experts realizing
Masters are not experts because they take a subject to its conceptual end. They are masters because they realize that there isn't one. On utterly smooth ground, the path from aim to attainment is in the permanent future.
motivational distance winning
A near win shifts our view of the landscape. It can turn future goals, which we tend to envision at a distance, into more proximate events. We consider temporal distance as we do spatial distance. (Visualize a great day tomorrow and we see it with granular, practical clarity. But picture what a great day in the future might be like, not tomorrow but fifty years from now, and the image will be hazier.)
hard-work simple persistence
Grit is not just simple elbow-grease term for rugged persistence. It is an often invisible display of endurance that lets you stay in an uncomfortable place, work hard to improve upon a given interest, and do it again and again.
mastery pursuit
The pursuit of mastery is an ever-onward almost,