Losing interest and curiosity means losing many opportunities to enrich oneself
In my architectural feng shui class, I met a college student born in 1995.
He often posts some cases and insights in the group, and his words show a particularly positive and studious spirit.
He is a student majoring in landscape design and fell in love with architectural feng shui by chance. He enrolled in a course to study it.
Of course, many classmates around him expressed incomprehension towards his behavior.
And he believes that Feng Shui is a discipline that integrates aesthetics, environmental studies, geography, the Book of Changes, and so on. It is a culture that has been passed down for thousands of years and can be combined with his own profession to incorporate reasonable garden design on the basis of Feng Shui planning.
Therefore, he followed his own interests and signed up for this course without hesitation.
The next day, I posted on my social media a method to change my sub-health status. He started practicing on time and shared his physical feelings with me. Before this, many people had not even opened this link.
He has curiosity, maintains a strong interest in things, and tries new things with an open mind. Through continuous experimentation, he naturally makes judgments and accumulates knowledge.
But in reality, many people are like their classmates around them, completely unaware of what they like and never actively change. When seeing others behaving differently from oneself, it feels unreasonable.
They feel lost and confused while refusing to try, so the world in their eyes is only so big, and their worldview is bound to be narrow and mediocre.
Wide interests come from your curiosity, and your attempts and explorations are expanding and filling your world.
On the contrary, directly refusing to try things that one does not understand loses the opportunity to explore and enrich oneself.