Life gives you two main lenses to look through. One is a mirror—everything you see is simply a reflection of yourself. Your needs. Your wants. Your to-do list. This lens is clean, simple, and efficient. It filters the world down to only what touches you directly, and everything else becomes static in the background.
The other lens is a window—transparent and porous. It lets you see not only yourself but the people, businesses, and lives moving just outside your orbit. You notice their struggles, their wins, their tight corners. You notice when they’re quietly building something incredible or quietly falling apart. This lens makes life more complicated, because once you see something, you can’t unsee it. And once you care, you might feel compelled to do something about it.
The mirror road is easy, but it’s also narrow. You’ll never bump into something unexpected, because you’re not looking for it. And sure, you might move faster—but it’s like driving a sports car in a tunnel: smooth, quick, and utterly limited in where you can go.
The window road is messier, slower, and sometimes asks more from you than you feel you have to give. But here’s the secret—it also multiplies what you get back. Caring connects you to people who will root for you, refer you, remember you. It makes your world bigger, richer, and more resilient when your own road gets rocky.
Recommendation? Walk the window road. Care about others and their situations before it becomes “your problem.” Not because it’s noble (though it is), but because it’s the cheat code to a life that’s more meaningful and less lonely. In business, in friendships, in passing conversations—you either help build a bigger table or you keep eating alone.
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