There was a time in my life when I believed that understanding the problem was enough.
I could explain why something wasn’t working.
I could identify the obstacles.
I could list every reason progress felt difficult.
And sometimes those reasons were completely valid.
Life was busy.
Resources were limited.
Confidence was low.
Circumstances weren’t ideal.
The problem was that none of those explanations changed anything.
Eventually, I learned a lesson that wasn’t comfortable but was incredibly freeing:
Outcomes don’t care about my explanations.
They respond to action.
That realization changed how I approach almost everything.
Because if we’re honest, most of us spend more time negotiating with ourselves than moving ourselves. We explain why today isn’t the day. Why conditions aren’t right. Why we’ll start after one more course, one more book, one more breakthrough, one more sign.
Meanwhile, the people making progress aren’t necessarily smarter, luckier, or more talented.
They’re simply moving.
One step.
One call.
One workout.
One difficult conversation.
One piece of work completed.
Again and again.
I’ve found that momentum has a remarkable ability to solve problems that overthinking never will. Clarity often appears after movement, not before it. Confidence grows through action, not contemplation. Energy expands when it’s used.
And yet there is another lesson hidden beneath all of this.
Many people struggle not because they lack ability, but because they are quietly resisting themselves.
They compare their gifts to someone else’s.
They wish they had a different personality.
Different talents.
Different opportunities.
Different circumstances.
They spend so much energy wishing they were someone else that they never fully develop who they already are.
You’ll never soar if you resent your wings.
The very qualities you possess — your experiences, your perspective, your strengths, even some of your scars — may be the exact things designed to carry you where you’re meant to go.
Not despite them.
Because of them.
This week, spend less time explaining and more time acting.
Take the step.
Make the call.
Write the page.
Start the project.
Have the conversation.
Trust that progress doesn’t require perfection.
It simply requires movement.
Because excuses may sound convincing.
But action is what changes lives.