Nearly everyone has many opportunities they have never taken because they choose not to. How many older people have never
ridden a motorcycle
gone fishing
gone hiking
knitted
cooked a complex meal
gone sailing
been skydiving
read a lengthy book series
played in a local sports league
coached children
painted a house
painted artwork
sculpted anything
built a simple things out of wood
built a complicated thing out of wood
welded
taken a canoe/kayak/inner tube down a river
gone white water rafting
travel (all kinds!)
All of these things are accessible to the average physically fit person into their 60s. Even the ones that don’t often have special access options for those with disabilities.
But people frequently choose not to try some things because they assume they won’t like them or because of construction concerns, but they also overlook a lot of free or nearly free experiences that they could always try. I haven’t even done all of the things in my example list!
knitted
been skydiving
played in a local sports league
either don’t seem worth the time, effort and other investment vs other new experiences that could be had for less time, effort, expense, risk, etc.
A poster above hit a key point: responsibility. I’ll extend it with: children. At some point, if you have children you care about, helping them get the most out of life, both while you are here and after you are gone, takes precedent. Instead of running a bucket list check-sheet for yourself, the real challenge is ensuring that your children can do the things they want to do in their lives.
Nearly everyone has many opportunities they have never taken because they choose not to. How many older people have never
All of these things are accessible to the average physically fit person into their 60s. Even the ones that don’t often have special access options for those with disabilities.
But people frequently choose not to try some things because they assume they won’t like them or because of construction concerns, but they also overlook a lot of free or nearly free experiences that they could always try. I haven’t even done all of the things in my example list!
Some things, such as:
either don’t seem worth the time, effort and other investment vs other new experiences that could be had for less time, effort, expense, risk, etc.
A poster above hit a key point: responsibility. I’ll extend it with: children. At some point, if you have children you care about, helping them get the most out of life, both while you are here and after you are gone, takes precedent. Instead of running a bucket list check-sheet for yourself, the real challenge is ensuring that your children can do the things they want to do in their lives.
I did a new thing just this weekend, wasn’t even on your list.