The Life You Are Living, Did You Choose It? We have all heard this story. A wealthy man—burned out, exhausted, and carrying the invisible weight of success—arrives at a quiet beach resort. He has spent decades building, accumulating, and sacrificing, and now, finally, he has come to rest. And then he sees him. A fisherman. Relaxed. Still. Content. Not striving, not chasing, not checking his phone every five minutes, and just being. And something about that unsettles him. So, he does what most of us do when we are uncomfortable with someone else's peace—he questions it. “Why aren’t you fishing more?” he asks. The fisherman smiles. “I have enough.” The wealthy man insists—work harder, earn more, expand, build, grow, and one day, you, too, can retire and relax like this. The fisherman pauses. “And what do you think I am doing right now?” That question weighs heavier than most of us care to admit, because beneath it lies a truth we rarely confront. Many of us are chas...
Part Four: Observations from a Men’s Group debate session on the making of a man and what it means to think for oneself By the time the room had stretched beyond its planned end — beyond the polite constraints of time, beyond even the structure we thought we were following — something had settled into place. Not loudly. Not ceremoniously. With the quiet certainty of a truth that doesn't need to announce itself. What we had built was no longer just a meeting. It wasn't even a debate. It had become a training ground. Not the kind you sign up for with forms and neatly defined outcomes. Something more demanding — a place where thinking was no longer optional. That realization carries weight because when you strip everything else away — the format, the speakers, the laughter, the long hours — you are left with something far more fundamental. A man either knows how to think. Or he does not. There is no middle ground that holds under pressure. He may speak well. He...