For almost all of human history, survival itself required effort. Not ambition. Not self-actualization. Not fulfillment. Effort.
If you didn’t work, plan, improvise and endure, you didn’t eat. If you didn’t cooperate with others, you didn’t last long. If you weren’t resourceful, disciplined or at least lucky, your life ended early and harshly.
That reality shaped us. It shaped our bodies, our minds and our sense of who we were. For tens of thousands of generations, human beings learned something fundamental about themselves: I can do hard things — and my life is better because I did them.
That knowledge wasn’t philosophical. It wasn’t abstract. It was visceral. You could see it in the shelter you built, the crops you harvested, the animals you raised, the children you kept alive. Effort led to results, and results led to confidence. Self-esteem was not something you talked about. It was something you earned.
Then, slowly at first, and then very quickly, everything changed.

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Urban Meyer’s drunken behavior points to deeper character issues
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For an American church, the Fourth of July should be just another day