diff --git a/blog/identity-values-strengths.html b/blog/identity-values-strengths.html index d74580c..144be74 100644 --- a/blog/identity-values-strengths.html +++ b/blog/identity-values-strengths.html @@ -59,7 +59,7 @@

Sprint 1 - An Exploration In Identity, Values, and Strengths

I can't say I'd typically consider myself the sort of person to enthusiastically quote a US President, but there's certainly something to that oft-stated line in JFK's infamous address on the 1960's US space effort. It was a wild time in human history, and despite the shadowy motivators that ultimately drove the mission onward, the fact is that it demonstrated that we as a species are not limited to the world that we know.

- In my eyes, it's a monumentous point to prove, and one I find to be highly respectable. I don't consider myself as being a fan of resting on ones laurels. If anything, I find it tedious and boring, and find far greater satisfaction in the trials of exploration, no matter how ruthless or daring the unknown may be. + In my eyes, it's a monumentous point to prove, and one I find to be highly admirable. I don't consider myself as being a fan of resting on ones laurels. If anything, I find it tedious and boring, and find far greater satisfaction in the trials of exploration, no matter how ruthless or daring the unknown may be.

Generally speaking, I'm not particularly enthused about talking about myself from an identity perspective. What sense of identity I have around who I am, has mostly come from working out what I am not. I see more value in self-reflection through the lens of other people, and as such, I chose to use the prompts for this post in asking my closed-circuit collection of human connections as to what they perceived my values to be.