The other week was a hoot. A few interesting things happened.
We sat down with the lovely Michaela Thomas to feature on her Pause, Purpose, Play podcast, speaking about the philosophy behind our company, where people go wrong with self-development, how to improve the relationship you have with yourself and much more.
It was a bit of a pinch me moment to have such high praise from a Clinical Psychologist and to hear how she and her community use the journal. We'll let you know when the episode drops.
Secondly, we are now entering the design phase for the latest improvements of the Evolve Journal. As the name suggests, we aren't happy staying still, we are constantly listening, experimenting and seeing how we can build more useful tools to help people in their journeys. Please do reply to this email with any ideas, suggestions, gripes, we read everyone, and you can help shape the next version.
Health
If you’re willing to be uncomfortable you are ahead of the majority.
Wealth
“Rather than rewarding intellectual humility, we too often mistakenly conflate (false) certainty with confidence and power.”
— Brian Klaas
Relationships
"The best relationships only come once you’ve learned to be at peace alone" — Mark Manson
Freedom
When we think about freedom, we often jump to external things, more time, more money, fewer restrictions. But true freedom also comes from how we face challenges internally, especially when the path ahead gets tough.
One mental tool for navigating hardship while staying on course is something called the "Stockdale Paradox".
It’s named after Admiral James Stockdale, a U.S. Navy officer who survived over seven years as a prisoner of war in Vietnam. Despite enduring horrific conditions, he didn’t lose hope. Importantly he also didn’t lie to himself about how bad things were.
Stockdale later explained that the prisoners who struggled the most were the optimists, the ones who kept saying, “We’ll be out by Christmas,” and then felt crushed when it didn’t happen. Instead, he survived by balancing two opposing forces saying "You must never confuse faith that you will prevail in the end, which you can never afford to lose, with the discipline to confront the most brutal facts of your current reality."
This is the heart of the Stockdale Paradox... Hold onto hope, while facing reality head-on.
When it comes to freedom, whether it’s breaking a habit, building a new lifestyle, or chasing a goal, we often swing too far one way, either blind optimism or complete discouragement. But real progress comes when we embrace both. You stay grounded, but never give up on the bigger vision.
So this week, in your journal, ask yourself:
Where in my life do I need to pair optimism with realism?
What truth have I been avoiding that, if faced, would actually help me feel freer?