After some amount of prodding by Udhay, I decided to think about this a bit.

In my opinion, most people quit because it's just the easiest thing to do.
It's the final step in a sequence of small decisions that paint you into a
corner whose only exit is quitting.

Interestingly enough, I don't think the lack of explicit decision making
always results in bad outcomes. I think you end up doing what you *really*
want, rather than what you think you want or what society tells you to want.

This is good thing when you're making career choices, less so when you are
trying to eat more healthily or exercise more.

At some level, wisdom is knowing when to trust your gut.

-- b

On 27 Jul 2017 08:31, "Udhay Shankar N" <ud...@pobox.com> wrote:

> I occasionally listen to the Tim Ferris podcast, and I found last week's
> episode [1] particularly fascinating. It's a panel of people giving their
> take on the question "how does one decide when to quit and when to
> persist". I recommend listening to the episode, but my intention in posting
> here is to ask the community the same thing.
>
> How do *you* decide when to quit and when to persist?
>
> Udhay
>
> [1] https://tim.blog/2017/07/23/when-to-quit/
> --
>
> --
> ((Udhay Shankar N))  ((via phone))
>

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