Inventory Is Not Just For Shelves

Inventory is not just for shelves, support queues, or the nervous little pulse of cash flow. It is for you.

A good store counts what is moving, what is stale, what is missing, and what is quietly leaking money through the floorboards. A smart SaaS team does the same with support. Rate the issue. Demand the business impact. Find out what is actually hurting people before you decide what gets fixed first.

Funny how rarely we do that with our own lives.

What is working. What is collecting dust. What keeps breaking. What keeps costing you energy, trust, money, momentum.

Take inventory of your habits, your relationships, your attention, your excuses.

Business already taught us the trick. Count what matters. Measure the impact. Prioritize the fix.

You are not a warehouse, sure.

But you are still carrying too much dead stock.

Stay Positive & Can I See Your Inventory Tracker?

Awkward Is Usually A Decision You Made In Advance

Most awkward moments are not born in the room. They are smuggled in.

They show up wearing your assumptions. They sit in the passenger seat on the drive over. They whisper that this conversation is going to be weird, this introduction is going to be clunky, this silence is going to mean something terrible. And then, like obedient little stagehands, your shoulders tighten, your laugh gets brittle, your brain starts tripping over its own shoelaces.

But awkwardness is often just untreated fear with a nametag on.

Walk in prepared to make the other person feel seen instead of preparing to protect yourself. That changes the temperature fast. Curiosity loosens the knot. Empathy opens a window. Ask a real question. Notice something human. Let the moment breathe without trying to wrestle it into perfection.

Lean in.

Not like a motivational poster. Like a person who has decided that connection matters more than performance.

Stay Positive & You Decide How To Crown The Moment

When Help Shows Up Wearing A Hall Monitor Badge

Micromanaging rarely enters the room twirling a villain mustache. It usually shows up with a clipboard, a nervous smile, and a speech about standards.

That is what makes it slippery.

If someone says, “I do not mean to micromanage, I just want…” that is not always proof, but it is a very loud alarm bell. Same goes for constant check ins disguised as support, rewriting work that was already good enough, asking to be copied on everything, needing approval on tiny decisions, or giving people responsibility without the oxygen of actual autonomy.

And yes, this is about spotting it in other people so you can manage up. But it is also about catching your own reflection in the glass.

Micromanaging often grows from decent soil. Care. Pressure. Fear. High standards. The desire to protect the outcome.

Nobody wakes up and says, “Today I shall become the office hall monitor of human potential.”

It happens when trust gets replaced by control, one “quick tweak” at a time.

So pay attention to the signals. Are you clarifying, or are you clutching? Are you helping, or are you hovering? Are you coaching, or are you quietly telling someone you do not believe they can carry it?

No one is perfect. That is the point.

The work is not to become pure. The work is to notice sooner.

Because sometimes the most generous thing you can give a person (or ask for) is not more direction.

It is room.

Stay Positive & Ready To Walk The Hall Again?

The Weekly Reset Button You Forgot You Own

Most people run Start Stop Continue like it is a meeting ritual. A little corporate incense. Light it. Wave it. Go back to doom scrolling.

Try this instead: run it on your life.

Once a week, sit down like you are the CEO of your attention. Make three lists, but do it by pillar.

Family

  • Start: one tiny ritual that makes everyone feel seen
  • Stop: distracted half listening that pretends it counts
  • Continue: the thing you already do that your people secretly live on

Fun

  • Start: something delightfully unproductive
  • Stop: waiting for “free time” like it is a tax refund
  • Continue: the hobby that makes you feel more you

Work

  • Start: the one move that creates leverage
  • Stop: performative busyness, the adult version of finger painting
  • Continue: the habit that keeps the wheels from falling off

The point is not optimization. The point is honesty.

Stay Positive & When You Don’t Decide What Stays, Everything Gets To Squat

Turning Your Brain Into A Power Tool (3 ?s)

A funny thing happens when people say, “I just need better answers.”

Most of the time, what they actually need is better questions.

We live in an era where the ability to ask a brilliant question is sitting right next to the ability to order tacos without speaking to another human being. The power is already in your pocket, already in your browser, already humming behind a text box that does not judge your spelling or your existential dread.

And yet we still show up like we are begging for scraps. We toss a vague request into the void, then act betrayed when the response tastes like cafeteria oatmeal.

Here is the cheat code. Bake it into your instructions. Tattoo it on your workflow. Whisper it to your future self like a conspiracy.

Before you give me a response, ask me three questions that if I answer will make your response ten times better.

That is it. Three questions. Not thirty. Not a doctoral thesis. Three clean, clarifying lanterns held up in the fog.

The best coach is not the one with the loudest advice. The best coach is the one who refuses to let you stay blurry.

You can be the coach you wish you had. Start by demanding better questions. Update your project instructions now.

Stay Positive & Power On

Cool Shit, Vibes, And Strategy

Claude Code is cool shit. It feels like wizardry. Type a thought, get a working artifact. Whisper at the machine and it builds the bridge you were about to build with your face.

But wizardry still needs a clipboard.

Not because clipboards are sexy. They are not. A clipboard is what your ideas carry when they want to survive contact with the calendar.

Every era has its cool thing. First it was people. Then agencies. Then digital tools. Now AI. The connectors change, but the winning formula barely moves: strategy, measurement, impact, support.

Strategy is where you stop treating the tool like a magic wand and start treating it like a lever. Faster toward what? Cleaner for who? Braver in service of which outcome?

Measurement is where the dopamine gets audited. Did cycle time drop, or did you just produce more stuff? Did quality improve, or did defects move later? Did humans get freed up for higher judgment work, or did they become hall monitors for half baked outputs?

Impact is where the tool earns its seat. Not “the future.” Not “transformational.” A before and after you can say out loud without incense.

Support is the unglamorous kingmaker: training, guardrails, examples, shared libraries, permissions. Internal first (norms, reviews, data boundaries). Then external (agency alignment, standards, approvals). Then your stack (systems of record, not shadow screenshots).

AI does not replace the fundamentals. It spotlights whether you have them.

Stay Positive & Cool Shit Scales When You Make It Intentional

Two Second Costume Changes

Today, try this: before you talk, before you type, before you fire off that little emotional paper airplane of a comment, pause.

Two seconds.

Put on the other person like a jacket.

Not in some saintly, harp music way. In a practical way. In a “what would feel decent if I were driving their brain right now” way. If you were them, walking around with their calendar, their back pain, their inbox, their boss, their kid who would not put on shoes, their quiet fear that they are falling behind.

How would you want to be treated?

Stay Positive & Two Seconds, Costume Change, Act