![]() The book “The Defining Decade – Why Your Twenties Matter” gives life advice to people in their 20s. You might find it difficult to comprehend the immensity of that time. You’re still carrying around a clock and a stamp, but instead of counting by the year, it’s now counting by the decade. That pattern weakens a bit in secondary school, but it truly breaks down after you leave school, probably around your early 20s. As long as you’re in primary school, you’re generally surrounded by people who have the same number stamped on their foreheads, and you’re given very clear goals on what to do for the year. At the end fo the year, the clock chimes and you get upgraded to the next stamp. Every day, you wake up and stamp your age on your forehead, and then every night you watch your clock tick once. It’s as if you’re live with a stamp and a clock. ![]() ![]() ![]() When you’re 10 it’s time for fifth grade, and then once you’re 11 it’ll be time for sixth grade, and you can expect your early life to just be a steady increment of grades. And a season for every activity under the heavens:Ī time to tear down and a time to build… Ecclesiastes 3 ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |