John, thanks for your hones answers. It's been enlightening to read all the
answers. Charles, I hope to be as disciplined as you, one day.

One of the biggest tensions in my life has been between the activist in me,
who wants to change the world, and the recluse in me, who wants to run away
from the world. Currently, I work with a non profit working on financial
inclusion (www.ispirt.in & www.productnation.in). I have other consulting
gigs but the iSPIRT one has been most intense and has pretty much taken
over my calendar. I like the fact that this work contributes to a good
cause, but there are moments when I crave intense solitude. I never liked
multi-tasking and doing too many things at the same time. I stopped
watching TV many, many years ago... try not to spend too much time on
Twitter and Facebook... and thoroughly hate the always-on online lifestyle.
With age, I have realized that time is not money. Time is precious and we
choose to exchange it for those things that  we value the most, whether
that be taking care of our health, a walk in the park, meeting loved ones,
or reading a book. I find that there is great joy in doing things slowly,
meditatively... However, my working life has all been about cramming as
much as possible into every minute available, and doing a hundred things at
once... not complaining, but just making an observation... after all, it is
those jobs that gave me a degree of financial independence. For a change, I
want my life to be not always about efficiency, but also about beauty and
the joy of each moment.  Let's see how this works out :-)

Venky

On Mon, Jan 23, 2017 at 10:32 PM, Radhika, Y. <[email protected]> wrote:

> ​Thank you so much for your honesty John. Other accounts for slowing down
> always sound like they come from wherever lotuses grow (supposedly that is
> where Vancouverites live!).
>
> best wishes.
> Radhika
>

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