Organized Thinking: The Self Sufficient State

Ilexa Yardley
The Circular Theory
2 min readAug 24, 2017

Content, operations, rest.

Content, operations. Rest. (Photo by Angela Franklin)

Three of anything reduces to two. Meaning, you survive to exist. That’s it.

This produces a self-sufficient state. No matter what you do.

Therefore, you are the content, and, the operation. And, then, you rest.

So, half-of-your day is devoted to content and operations. Whether you are aware of it or not. Nature keeps these in balance. In check. What you do produces who you are, and, 50–50, vice versa. Why you need to rest.

So, you have to think about who you are, what you are doing every day, what you want to do, with, who you are, and, what you are doing, every day. And, you don’t need me to tell you this. Again, it comes, by, naturally.

You have to figure out, do you want to be a little fish in a big pond, a big fish in a little pond, a little fish in a little pond, or a big fish in a big pond.

Once you have this figured, you will notice, all of these are the same.

Your life is up to you. Not just what you do with it. How you think about what you are doing with it, what you did with it, what you will do with it.

Everything changes. Nothing changes. Expectations share a circle with experience. If you are disappointed about anything, your expectations were off. You forgot to take into account the 50–50 circle beneath reality.

Complementarity is the basis for identity. This produces a self-sufficient state. Therefore, no matter what you do, no matter where you go, everything is AOK. It’s up to you to see it that way.

Conservation of the circle is the core dynamic in nature.

https://www.amazon.com/Circular-Theory-Ilexa-Yardley-ebook/dp/B0046ZS1KQ

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