The shaping of one's self-image is an important insight in psychology and personal growth. A person can gradually become who they aspire to be through continuous imagination and self-suggestion. You can repeatedly imagine yourself as successful, wealthy, positive, passionate, and highly motivated, reinforcing this identity in daily life until you move closer to your ideal self.
You have enough reasons to admire those who wake up early every day. If you do not believe it, try it yourself. Once you do, you may find that others begin to admire you as well.
I never witnessed a perfect bloom of flowers, yet I have already seen through the emotions of the world. I never waited for a brilliant season of spring, yet my heart has grown cold. In the cycle of time, life writes down layers of vicissitudes, coldness, desolation, and solitude. Unfinished sorrow spreads across the edges of memory, in the eyes and in the deepest part of the heart. Fate touches me with cruelty, brushing against my longing, my waiting, my loneliness, and my fragile hopes. Before I could shake off the dust of the journey or play a beautiful melody, I already find myself wandering afar, with dew turning into frost and the world becoming bleak and cold.
Life can be divided into two types of people: those who are willing to try, and those who refuse to try, choosing instead to sit aside, crying over what they have lost and criticizing others.
President Reagan once said, “It is morning again in America,” a phrase that reflects optimism and confidence in the future.
Rather than calling life a journey, it is more like appreciating scenery. Ups and downs are normal, gains and losses are part of experience. Time moves forward continuously, so do not let your youth pass in vain. Many troubles in life come from the limitations of our own mindset. Every experience, whether beautiful or painful, is a turning point and a hint from fate. Cherish this life, because once missed, it will never return.