The Free Test

Here is a strange little lantern to hold up to your work:

If you gave it away for free, would you still be excited to hand it to someone?

Not forever. Not as a business model. Calm down, capitalism, put the foam finger away.

But for one honest second, strip away the invoice, the title, the campaign goal, the quarterly goblin math. Imagine giving the thing to someone because you believe it should exist. Because it might help. Because it might make a person blink twice and say, “Well, hell, I needed that.”

If the answer is yes, there’s a good chance you’re building something with a heartbeat.

If the answer is no, that doesn’t mean quit. It means look closer. Sometimes the work is meaningful, but the method is murdering it. Sometimes the project is right, but the audience is wrong. Sometimes you’re not bored by the mission, you’re just buried under fourteen approvals and a spreadsheet wearing a little executioner’s hood.

A few other tests help.

Would you tell a friend about it without needing to sound important?

Would you put your name on it if nobody else’s name was attached?

Would you still care about the outcome if you didn’t get credit?

Would you defend the work in a room full of skeptics without turning into a PowerPoint raccoon?

Would you be proud to explain it to your kid, your neighbor, your bartender, your future self?

Would you feel a little electricity if someone improved it, shared it, stole the idea and made it bigger?

That last one is the spicy pickle. Meaningful work isn’t always precious. Sometimes it wants to travel. Sometimes the best ideas are less like trophies and more like seeds with suspicious little backpacks.

Stay Positive & Remarkable Work Has A Pulse Before It Has A Price

The Weather Inside The Room

When the room feels crooked, check your own pockets for the bent ruler.

It is easy to blame the meeting, the inbox, the traffic, the mood of the whole bewildered circus. And sure, sometimes the circus really is on fire and the clowns are unionizing in the parking lot.

But start inside.

Your tension leaks. Your hurry hums. Your resentment puts on boots and tracks mud across the room before you say a word.

The outside world is not always your fault. That would be too heavy a backpack for one bony little soul.

But your energy is often the first match.

Before you demand better from the room, become better in the room.

Take a breath. Loosen the jaw. Choose the next generous move.

The world may not change instantly…. but the weather might.

Stay Positive & What’s The Forecast Again?

Two Steps Back … Or Up?

“One step forward, two steps back” is one of those phrases we treat like wisdom because it has been wearing a cardigan in the attic of language for a hundred years.

But I don’t buy it.

Not always.

Sometimes what looks like two steps back is actually two steps up.

You move forward. You hit resistance. The project gets weird. The meeting gets foggy. The plan sprouts six elbows and starts tap dancing on the conference table. The old story says you’re losing ground.

Maybe.

Or maybe you’ve climbed high enough to see the shape of the thing.

That’s the strange gift of perspective. From the ground, a detour looks like failure. From the balcony, it looks like strategy. From the basement, a pause feels like a problem. From the roof, a pause feels like a moment to redefine the map.

Leadership lives in that difference.

The average panic merchant sees a setback and starts shaking the vending machine of certainty.

“We were making progress. Now we’re behind. Now we have to recover. Now somebody must be blamed, preferably someone not in this room. And definitely not me.”

But foresight leadership asks a better question: “What can we see from here that we couldn’t see before?”

That question changes the room.

A missed deadline might reveal that the goal was poorly defined.

A difficult conversation might reveal that two teams were using the same words to mean entirely different species of snake.

A failed launch might reveal the customer truth everyone politely stepped around because it smelled like emotional labor.

That is not always backward movement.

That is elevation.

Two steps back says, “We lost something.”

Two steps up says, “We gained a view.”

And the funny little cosmic banana peel of it all is that both people may be right. The person who says you moved backward is not necessarily wrong. There may be rework. There may be delay. There may be a spreadsheet somewhere wheezing like an asthmatic accordion. But the leader’s job is not to win the vocabulary argument.

The leader’s job is to choose the frame that helps the team move forward better.

Stay Positive & Perspective Is Not Decoration; It Is Equipment … If We Choose It To Be

The Gospel Of A Few Extra Bags

Life rarely arrives with exact change.

You think you need twelve bags of mulch. You buy fourteen because the flower beds look hungrier up close than they did from the driveway. Or maybe you buy ten and realize the backyard was less of a botanical empire and more of a polite suggestion. Either way, the yard gets covered. The flowers do not file a complaint. The universe does not send a certified letter informing you that your estimate lacked moral character.

Same goes for work.

You budget for a certain amount of paid support, a certain number of hours, a certain amount of effort, patience, runway, polish, stamina. Then reality comes swaggering in wearing muddy boots and a grin. Turns out the client needed more hand holding. Turns out the project needed less. Turns out your team moved faster than expected. Turns out your own energy tank was running on fumes and coffee-scented optimism.

The amateur gets offended by this.

The pro expects it.

That is one of the great secret handshakes of a sturdy life: assume some give and take. Assume the estimate is a sketch, not a commandment. Assume your first guess is a flashlight, not the sunrise. Build a little room into things. A little margin. A little mercy. An extra bag of mulch in the trunk.

If I can go on for one more moment…

There is a strange kind of freedom in expecting variance. A joyful realism. You stop demanding that life be a vending machine and start treating it like a garden. Gardens need adjustment. Weather changes. Soil surprises you. Some seasons ask for more water. Some ask for pruning. Some ask for patience and a better hat.

And here is the punch in the chest for anybody trying to build something meaningful: the people who leave room for reality tend to outperform the people who demand reality behave.

Not because they are smarter.

Because they are steadier.

Stay Positive & A Little Extra Goes A Long Way (Goes For Kindness To Yourself, Too)

Name The Leak, Not The Plumber

A room gets weird the minute we start pinning problems to people like cheap ribbons at a county fair.

He’s the bottleneck.
She’s difficult.
They never get it right.

Now the problem has put on a human costume, and once that happens, good luck solving anything.

People get defensive. Pride shows up with a folding chair. The real issue slips out the back door smoking a cigarette.

But when you name the problem, something cleaner happens.

The timeline is unclear.
The handoff is messy.
The expectations changed halfway through.
The feedback came too late.
Nobody owns the final decision.

Now we’re talking.

Problems, when named properly, become movable furniture. You can rearrange them. Lift them. Kick the legs a little. See what’s underneath.

People, on the other hand, tend to dislike being treated like broken machinery. Funny isn’t it?

This matters at work, at home, in friendships, in marriages, in group texts, in marketing meetings with too many slides and not enough honesty. The second you make a person the villain (whether they are there or perhaps even long gone), the conversation becomes a trial.

But…the second you make the problem the subject, the conversation becomes design.

That’s the shift.

Not: Who screwed this up?
But: What keeps causing this?

Not: Why are they like this?
But: What pattern are we tolerating?

Name the problem, not the people, and you give everyone a chance to stay in the room (with heart and passion and the care they showed up with) long enough to fix it.

Stay Positive & Accuracy Is A Better Architect Than Blame

Strike The Match Before The Work

A room does not wait for permission to become something.

The second you walk in, it starts becoming the kind of room it is going to be. Same with a task. Same with a spreadsheet. Same with the revenue readout sitting on your calendar like a brick with a password.

We talk a lot about setting the tone in a room, but not enough about setting the tone for the work itself. That matters just as much. Maybe more. Because work has a temperature. It has a pulse. It can feel dead on arrival or charged with purpose, and that shift often comes from something shockingly small.

About two minutes.

Two minutes of real intention. Two minutes of care with your sleeves rolled up. Two minutes of deciding that this hour deserves your best voltage, not your leftovers. You do not need a mountain retreat, a perfect playlist, or a motivational speech from the heavens. You need a brief act of commitment.

Open the file like it matters.

Read the first line like it leads somewhere.

Say the first sentence in the meeting like you came to move something, not just survive it.

That is the trick. Mood is more than just what you bring into a room full of people. It is what you bring into the next hour of your life. Passion, determination, focus, positivity…they are not giant theatrical performances…they are matchsticks. Small. Hot. Enough to start the fire.

You do not have to conquer the whole block of work at once.

You just have to set the mood before the mood sets you.

Stay Positive & Light It Up

Static & Sparks

Most struggle is not mysterious. It is usually one of two gremlins wearing a fake mustache.

Too much input.
Too much output.

That is the whole circus, more often than not.

When you cannot start, when the project sits there like a piano tied to your ankles, the problem is often not laziness or lack of talent. It is input. You have not sorted the pile. You have not named the real goal. You have not decided what matters, what is noise, what is vanity, what is fuel. Your mind is a pantry stuffed with unlabeled cans, and now dinner feels impossible.

But when the deadline is breathing hot onion breath down your neck, the problem is often output. Too much circling. Too much polishing. Too much rehearsing imaginary disasters that will never leave the womb of your anxiety. You are not lacking insight. You are marinating in it.

There is no perfect balance. Life is not a chemistry set with one final, holy formula. But there is a perfect blend for this moment, this task, this Tuesday afternoon when your brain feels like a shopping cart with one bad wheel.

Ask: do I need more input, or more output?

That question alone can save hours. Sometimes days. Sometimes a whole season of mistaking hesitation for complexity.

Stay Positive & Don’t Misdiagnose Struggle For Motion