


Last week I decided that it was really dumb of me to put off rollerblading-which I remember was lots of fun-for fear of how I may look to others. A few times I’ve thought to myself, “I want to start rollerblading again.” Nonetheless, I kept putting it off because, at least at first, I’m going to be wobbling along and I’m going to look foolish. I used to rollerblade when I lived in Washington, DC-in fact, I’d rollerblade on Pennsylvania Avenue right in front of the White House-but I haven’t gone rollerblading in years. She wants to go rollerblading and that’s what she’s doing, regardless of what other people may think. That being said, I sincerely admire the fact that she doesn’t seem to care how she looks. Frankly, she looks a little bit ridiculous-she teeters back and forth, and from side to side, and she looks like she’s scared of losing her balance and falling.

She doesn’t rollerblade very well at all. In the last few of weeks, I’ve seen a woman-she looks American and is probably in her early fifties-rollerblading by. I jog three times a week along a jogging and cycling path that runs parallel to the ocean. (You can read the post below or watch the YouTube video.)ġ. If you’re looking for ways to be more daring, bold, and audacious, you’ll find seven of them below. At the same time, people who didn’t graduate at the top of their class and who went to community college can get far if they do have these traits. However, not enough is said about the need to be daring, bold and audacious.īrilliant people with Ivy League educations probably won’t get very far-or, at least they won’t get as far as they could–without these three qualities. You’ve probably heard that the people who succeed in life are those who are smart and have a good education. “Fortune favors the audacious.” – Desiderius Erasmus What would your life be like if you were more daring, bold, and audacious? Would you go on more adventures? Would you pursue a different vocation? Would you have less regrets?
