Worldview
“I think that you become what you tolerate”
Intolerant Self-Authorship
Your identity is not defined by your aspirations but by the lowest standards you are willing to accept in yourself and from others.
A structured interpretation of your belief, not a prescription.
The take
You are the sole architect of your life, defined entirely by the boundaries you enforce. This radical accountability is freeing but isolates you from grace.
Where the canon lands
What this does to your life
Career
What kind of work this belief pushes you toward
- Quit jobs at the first sign of mission drift or cultural decay.
- Refuse to work with low-performers, even if it creates team friction.
- Reject promotions that involve tolerating bureaucracy for more pay.
- Bias toward roles where comp is at least 40% variable.
Financial
How money decisions shift if you take it seriously
- Never lend money to friends or family you suspect are undisciplined.
- Automate aggressive saving and investing, tolerating no deviation.
- Refuse to spend on low-quality goods, preferring to go without.
- Drop financial advisors who do not consistently beat their benchmarks.
Lifestyle
What you'd choose, tolerate, or refuse day to day
- Maintain a zero-tolerance policy for clutter in your personal spaces.
- Cut off news and social media feeds that produce outrage without insight.
- Follow a strict diet and exercise regimen, never accepting excuses.
- End friendships that consistently drain your energy or lower your standards.
Relationships
Who you're drawn to, who you'd disappoint
- End romantic relationships at the first instance of a core value violation.
- Refuse to engage in gossip or complaining with friends.
- Hold partners and family to the same high standards you hold for yourself.
- Explicitly state your boundaries early and enforce them without exception.
How this plays out
- 01
First-order
What you do this week if the belief is right
- Conduct a 'toleration audit' of your week: list every annoyance you accept.
- Choose one small, tolerated thing and eliminate it: the messy drawer, the flaky friend.
- Set one clear, non-negotiable standard for your next project.
- 02
Second-order
How those choices compound across months
- Your environment becomes a reflection of your increasingly high standards.
- Your social circle shrinks but deepens, composed only of those who meet your criteria.
- You gain a reputation for being demanding but effective.
- 03
Third-order
Who you become if the pattern holds
- You achieve a state of congruence between your values and your reality.
- You embody discipline and intentionality, becoming a model for others.
- You may become rigid and struggle to adapt to uncontrollable chaos.
- 04
Outcomes
Where you end up, for better or worse
- An exceptionally well-ordered and high-achieving life.
- A sense of profound personal agency and control.
- Potential loneliness and an intolerance for human imperfection.
What this belief costs you
Psychological
Develops a hyper-critical inner voice, leading to chronic dissatisfaction and an inability to rest.
Practical
Alienates allies and subordinates who cannot meet your exacting standards, leading to project failure.
Misapplication
You apply this to uncontrollable domains like health or market forces, leading to burnout and frustration.
Psychological
Creates anxiety around imperfection, making it impossible to experiment or be a beginner.
Practical
Your intolerance for ambiguity makes you a poor long-term strategist in complex environments.
Signals to watch
- Track the number of relationships (professional and personal) you terminate per quarter.
- Count the number of 'cheat meals' or missed workouts you have in a month. Is it zero?
- Log the number of times you say 'no' to a request versus 'yes'. Is the ratio increasing?
- Note how many times you start a sentence with 'I can't tolerate...' in a given week.
Your turn
What else do you actually believe?
One belief, one worldview. Try a contrarian angle, an uncomfortable take, or the thing you almost don’t want to say out loud.