Quotes

Stop Talking, Start Doing: Why Henry Ford’s Quote Still Hits Different in 2025

Action Changes Things sign

So I was scrolling through some old quotes the other day (yes, I’m that person who gets lost in quote rabbit holes), and this gem from Henry Ford smacked me right in the face: “You can’t build a reputation on what you are GOING to do.”

Oof. Right in the feelings, Henry.

The “Someday” Syndrome Is Real

You know what’s wild? I bet every single one of us has that friend who’s been “about to start” their business for like three years now. They’ve got the perfect logo designed, they’ve researched their target market to death, and they can tell you exactly how they’re going to dominate their industry… someday.

But here’s the thing – nobody’s buying what you’re not selling yet.

I used to be the King of grand announcements. “I’m going to write a long romance series!” “I’m starting a podcast!” “I’m learning Japanese!” My poor friends probably rolled their eyes every time I declared my next big adventure. And honestly? They had every right to. Because most of those things? Yeah, they never happened.

Why We Love the Planning Phase (A Little Too Much)

There’s something intoxicating about the planning stage. It feels productive, doesn’t it? You’re making lists, doing research, maybe even buying supplies. Your brain tricks you into thinking you’re already succeeding because you’re thinking about succeeding.

But planning without action is just elaborate procrastination with better stationery.

I learned this the hard way when I spent six months “preparing” to start running. I bought the shoes, downloaded apps, mapped out routes, read articles about proper form. Want to know how many times I actually ran during those six months? Zero. Zilch. Nada.

The Reputation Reality Check

Here’s what Henry Ford understood way back in the early 1900s: your reputation isn’t built on your intentions, your plans, or your potential. It’s built on your deliverables. People remember what you actually did, not what you said you were going to do.

Think about the people you respect most. Are they the ones who always have big plans, or are they the ones who quietly get stuff done? Yeah, exactly.

Small Actions, Big Impact

The beautiful thing about Ford’s philosophy is that you don’t need to do something earth-shattering to start building your reputation. You just need to start doing something.

Want to be known as a helpful person? Start helping people in small ways – hold doors, offer genuine compliments, listen when someone needs to vent.

Want to build a reputation as a reliable professional? Start by actually meeting your deadlines instead of just promising you will.

Want to be seen as creative? Stop talking about your art and start making it, even if it’s terrible at first.

The Fear Factor

Let’s be real for a second – sometimes we stay in the planning phase because it’s safe there. You can’t fail at something you haven’t started yet, right? But you also can’t succeed.

I get it. Putting yourself out there feels vulnerable. What if people don’t like what you create? What if you’re not as good as you thought? What if you embarrass yourself?

Just Start Where You Are

You don’t need perfect conditions to begin. You don’t need the ideal setup, unlimited time, or complete confidence. You just need to start with what you have, where you are, right now.

I finally started that blog I’d been “planning” for years by literally just writing one terrible post and hitting publish. Was it perfect? Absolutely not. Did anyone even read it? Probably not. But it existed, and that was more than all my planning had ever accomplished. And though I didn’t continue with Japanese, I did learn French and I’m still studying it to this day. I also finally got off my duff and wrote books, though they were urban fantasy stories rather than romance. There’s not law that says we can’t change our mind, right? What counts is that I started doing something.

The Compound Effect of Doing

Here’s something cool that happens when you shift from planning to doing: momentum builds. Each small action makes the next one easier. Each completed task adds to your track record. Before you know it, people start noticing not what you say you’ll do, but what you consistently deliver.

Your reputation becomes less about your promises and more about your patterns.

My Challenge to You (And Myself)

So here’s what I’m thinking – what’s one thing you’ve been saying you’re “going to do” that you could actually start today? Not finish today, just start.

Maybe it’s finally publishing that blog post you’ve been drafting. Maybe it’s making that phone call you’ve been putting off. Maybe it’s just taking one small step toward that bigger goal.

Whatever it is, let’s stop building castles in the air and start laying some actual bricks.

Because at the end of the day, Henry Ford didn’t become famous for talking about cars – he became famous for making them. And making them accessible to regular people. And revolutionizing manufacturing in the process.

But it all started with doing, not just planning to do.

P.S. I’m definitely guilty of everything I just wrote about, but hey – at least I actually wrote this post instead of just thinking about it!


Buying a fixer-upper is always risky, but for Marek and Randy, the risk isn’t just financial. Their new Michigan farmhouse comes with no hot running water, endless repairs… and a resident ghost. Marek can’t ignore the young man who appears in fleeting visions, dressed in old-fashioned clothes and radiating sorrow. While Randy struggles with his new job and their strained romance, Marek is pulled deeper into the farmhouse’s past—a past that demands to be remembered. A Touch of Cedar is about the things that haunt us: broken trust, lost love, and tragedies that refuse to stay silent.

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Fear of Screwing Up Is the Real Screw-Up

embarrassed man hiding face

So the other day I stumbled across this quote that completely stopped me in my tracks—like, mid-sip of my lukewarm coffee, mouth open, full internal monologue kind of stop:

“The greatest mistake you can make in life is to be continually fearing you will make a mistake.”
—Elbert Hubbard

First of all, shoutout to Elbert Hubbard for smacking us across the forehead with truth like that. (Fun fact: Hubbard was an American writer, philosopher, and all-around opinionated guy who also went down with the Lusitania in 1915. Yeah. THAT Lusitania. History is dramatic.)

Anyway, the quote hit me because it’s so painfully relevant to, like, every single anxious thought spiral I’ve had since birth.

I don’t know about you, but I’ve wasted an obscene amount of time fearing imaginary future screw-ups. Like, I’ve held entire fake arguments in my head, rehearsed how I’d apologize for things I hadn’t done, and talked myself out of trying stuff—just in case I wasn’t perfect at it on the first try. (Spoiler: I wouldn’t have been, because that’s how learning works. Duh.)

The Perfection Paralysis Is Real

You know that feeling? That itchy fear that if you say the wrong thing, wear the wrong thing, post the wrong thing, exist the wrong way, you’ll somehow ruin everything?

Yeah, that voice sucks.

It’s that low-grade hum in the back of your brain whispering, “Don’t do it. You’ll mess it up. People will laugh. People will notice. People will REMEMBER THIS FOREVER.” (Spoiler again: they won’t. Everyone’s busy worrying about their own mess-ups.)

I once spent three whole weeks obsessing over whether I used the wrong emoji in an email. Not because it was offensive or anything—just because I was afraid it made me look “unprofessional.” It was a freaking smiley face. A smiley face. I could’ve written a whole novella in that amount of time. With a plot and everything.

What Are We Even So Afraid Of?

Seriously though—what is the actual worst-case scenario?

You launch your website and a link is broken. Okay. You fix it.
You try watercolor painting and your flowers look like wet ghost pancakes. Big whoop.
You go on a date and accidentally spill water on your pants and it looks like you peed. That one’s…embarrassing, sure. But you survive. You laugh. You turn it into a story later. Maybe even a blog post.

Fear makes everything seem huge and final. But in reality? Most mistakes are just little speedbumps. They don’t mean you’re a failure. They mean you’re doing stuff. And that’s so much better than standing on the sidelines in a bubble of self-doubt.

Little Kids Don’t Worry About This Crap

You ever watch a toddler try to walk? They fall, like, a thousand times. They don’t cry about being “bad at walking.” They just face-plant, giggle, and try again. Sometimes with a half-chewed cracker in hand. Iconic behavior, honestly.

But somewhere along the way, we learn shame. We learn to measure ourselves against others. We get report cards, performance reviews, follower counts. Mistakes become something to dread instead of something to learn from.

It’s such a trap.

Here’s What Helps Me

When I catch myself in mistake-fear-mode, I ask: “Okay, but what if it goes right?”

Because weirdly enough, fearing failure is also fearing success. If you never try, you never fail. But you also never win. You never surprise yourself. You never have those weird, scrappy, beautiful moments of figuring it out on the fly.

Also—rumor has it that Thomas Edison reportedly failed over 1,000 times before inventing the lightbulb? Imagine if he gave up because he was afraid to mess up filament number 762. We’d still be bumping into furniture after sunset.

So Yeah….I’m Still Figuring It Out

So here’s my hot take, straight from the caffeine-rattled heart: Let yourself screw up.

Messy is okay. Awkward is normal. Trying and failing and learning loudly is human.

Don’t let the fear of imperfection keep you from living. Make the weird art. Write the bad poem. Tell the dumb joke. Launch the project even if it’s not “ready.” (Nothing’s ever really ready.)

Because honestly? The only real mistake is letting fear boss you around.

P.S. If you made a mistake today? Congrats. You’re alive and doing things. 10 points to you!


If you enjoy time travel stories, you might want to check out A Touch of Cedar. It’s a gay-themed story about ghosts, betrayal and murder.

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Looking Foolish, Looking Great

Photorealistic image of single young man dressed outlandishly

Okay, so Cher once said, “Until you’re ready to look foolish, you’ll never have the possibility of being great.” And honestly? That’s one of those quotes that just crawls under your skin, hangs out for a while, and then suddenly smacks you upside the head when you least expect it.

I mean, who hasn’t chickened out of doing something because we were terrified of looking like an idiot? Me, many times. Karaoke nights, new dance classes, even daring to post my first piece of writing online—each one was a battle between “this could be fun” and “oh no, what if people laugh at me?” Spoiler alert: sometimes they did laugh. And yet, that’s where the magic happens.

The Fear of Foolishness

The thing about looking foolish is that it’s wired deep into us, like a bad ringtone from the early 2000s we can’t uninstall. Nobody wakes up thinking, “Today, I hope I embarrass myself in front of strangers!” But here’s the rub—avoiding foolishness usually means avoiding growth. It’s like living life with the training wheels still on your bike when deep down you know you’re ready to coast down the street with no hands, hair blowing in the wind, yelling something ridiculous like “I’m king of the cul-de-sac!”

Looking foolish is the down payment for greatness. You can’t skip it.

Cher Knows Stuff

Let’s be real: Cher is not exactly someone you’d associate with playing it safe. This is a woman who wore a full-on feathered headdress and sequins on TV when everyone else was still ironing their collars. She’s reinvented herself more times than I’ve reorganized my desk (and trust me, my desk has moods). If she says you’ve got to risk looking foolish, I’m inclined to listen.

My Foolish Resume

Okay, confession time. My personal foolish résumé is long. Here are some highlights:

  • First Zumba class I taught: forgot half the choreography and ended up improvising a move I now call “panicked grapevine.” The students laughed, but you know what? They came back.
  • Trying to speak French in Paris once: I asked for “pain de chocolat” (bread of chocolate) instead of “pain au chocolat.” The baker gave me the side-eye of doom. But he also gave me the pastry. Worth it.
  • Publishing my first book: I hit “publish” and immediately thought, “Oh no. Everyone’s going to think I’m full of myself.” Instead, people actually bought it. Some even liked it!

See? Foolishness didn’t kill me. In fact, every time I stumbled, it shoved me closer to being better.

Famous Fools Who Became Legends

Here’s the fun part: the greats didn’t start out looking polished. They looked, well… kinda foolish.

  • She-Who-Shall-Not-Be-Named got rejected by twelve publishers before Harry Potter found a home. Can you imagine pitching a book about a boy wizard living under the stairs, and everyone’s like “nah, pass”? Bet that felt foolish. But without those nos, we wouldn’t have Hogwarts.
  • Lady Gaga used to perform in dingy New York clubs wearing bizarre, handmade outfits that made people roll their eyes. People thought she was weird. She leaned into it. Now she’s got Grammys, Oscars, and a meat dress in the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame.
  • Steve Jobs got laughed at when he insisted on making computers “beautiful.” People said, “It’s a machine, Steve, not a piece of art.” Guess who’s holding iPhones right now? Yeah.
  • Oprah was told she was “unfit for television.” Imagine if she had listened. We’d all be Oprah-less, and the world would be a little dimmer without her couch-jumping guests and book club picks.
  • Albert Einstein—get this—was considered slow as a child and didn’t speak fluently until around age four. Teachers thought he was dull. Foolish? Maybe. Great? Definitely.

What ties them all together is that willingness to look silly, to be dismissed, to be underestimated. And instead of hiding from it, they carried on, head held high, even if their shoes were untied.

Why We Need Foolishness

Greatness doesn’t spring fully formed from our heads like Athena from Zeus’s forehead. (Imagine the headache.) It’s messy, clumsy, awkward. Looking foolish means you’re trying something new, stepping off the well-worn path, and planting your flag in unknown territory.

Think about it: babies look foolish trying to walk. Teens look foolish figuring out their style. Artists look foolish showing off their early sketches. But without those stumbles, nobody ever becomes graceful, stylish, or skilled.

How to Lean Into It

So, how do we actually do this whole “embrace foolishness” thing without curling up into a ball? A few tricks I’ve learned:

  1. Laugh at yourself first. If you trip in public, make it part of the show. (Bonus points if you bow.)
  2. Collect your bloopers. Keep a mental list of times you looked silly. Later, they become great stories—sometimes even icebreakers.
  3. Remember nobody’s watching as closely as you think. Seriously. Most people are too busy worrying about their own foolishness.
  4. Channel your inner Cher. If she can wear a naked illusion gown on the red carpet in 1988, you can probably handle fumbling a Zoom presentation.

The Payoff

Here’s the good part: once you get comfortable with looking foolish, you stop caring quite so much about what other people think. And that’s where real creativity starts kicking in. Suddenly, you’re singing louder, writing bolder, dancing wilder, loving harder. You’re not tiptoeing through life—you’re strutting.

Cher nailed it: foolishness is the toll booth you pass through on your way to greatness. And the best part? The toll’s usually just your ego, and honestly, that thing can afford to be downsized.

So, next time you’re about to shrink back because you think you’ll look ridiculous—remember Cher. Lean into the foolishness. Who knows? Greatness might be right around the corner, feathered headdress and all.


book cover for The Golem's Guardian

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Living Outside the Box of Expectations

man standing in fron of 7 doors of different colors

So Bruce Lee, in all his lean, lightning-fast glory, once said: “I’m not in this world to live up to your expectations, and you’re not in this world to live up to mine.” Every time I read that, I feel like he’s looking directly at me—probably side-eyeing me, actually—like, “Hey buddy, stop twisting yourself into a pretzel just to make everyone else happy.”

And honestly? That hits.

The Sticky Web of Expectations

I don’t know about you, but I’ve spent way too much of my life playing the expectation game. Family expects one thing, friends another, society a whole buffet of “shoulds.” You should get a certain job. You should date a certain type of person. You should buy the house with the lawn and the matching mailbox. (Meanwhile, my dream mailbox would probably have a gargoyle perched on top, glaring at the mailman, so yeah—expectations and I don’t really vibe.)

What Bruce is saying isn’t just about rebellion for rebellion’s sake—it’s about freedom. Living up to someone else’s expectations feels like carrying around a backpack full of bricks. At some point, you either collapse under the weight or you shrug the whole thing off and walk away lighter.

The Messy Business of Being Yourself

Of course, the fun part about living outside expectations is that it’s messy. You don’t get a tidy roadmap. People give you that look—you know the one, the mix of confusion and mild disappointment, like you just told them you prefer pineapple on pizza or that you never watched Game of Thrones.

When I first started writing, I worried so much about what people would think. Should I write something “marketable”? Should I tone down the queer characters? Should I make my stories a little less… weird? (Spoiler: no, no, and absolutely not.) And here’s the kicker—when I finally stopped caring about writing what people “expected,” my work actually started resonating with the people who mattered. The ones who got me.

Expectation Is a Two-Way Street

The second part of Bruce’s quote is sneaky important: “…and you’re not in this world to live up to mine.” That’s the part we sometimes forget. It’s so tempting to judge people when they don’t align with our script for them. I’ll admit it—I’ve caught myself thinking, “Why can’t so-and-so just do it this way? My way? The obviously right way?”

But Bruce is basically handing us a hall pass for humanity. He’s saying: cut people some slack. Don’t expect them to orbit around your little planet. They’re the star of their own weird, messy, beautiful show, just like you are.

A Life Less Scripted

I think about this every time I do something that feels a little off-script. Like, the day I decided I’d rather spend money on French lessons than a new gadget. Or the time I started a project everyone said wouldn’t sell, but I did it anyway because it made me happy. There’s a strange peace that comes with knowing: hey, I’m not here to meet your checklist, and you’re not here to tick boxes for me.

It’s kind of liberating when you realize the only person you really have to impress is yourself. And even that can be tricky—I’m a tough critic of my own stuff—but at least I’m playing by rules I set, not ones handed down by some invisible committee of “acceptable life choices.”

Why Bruce Was Right (and Why It Matters Now)

Bruce Lee was a martial artist, sure, but he was also a philosopher in a tank top. He understood something we’re all still grappling with: expectations are invisible chains. You can spend your whole life rattling against them, or you can just, you know, snap them and walk out the door.

The world’s loud with voices telling us what we should be, how we should act, who we should love, what success should look like. But when you strip all that noise away, you’re left with a quieter, more honest truth: we’re just here to live, not to perform.

And maybe that’s what Bruce was really getting at. Life isn’t about role-playing someone else’s script. It’s about writing your own—typos, detours, gargoyle mailboxes and all.


Thanks for hanging out with me for this little ramble on Bruce Lee wisdom. Now I kind of want to tape that quote to my fridge, just to remind myself every time I reach for leftovers that I’m not on this planet to meet anyone else’s standards. (Unless the standard is not eating the last donut without offering it to someone first. That’s just basic manners.)

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Don’t Let Your Dreams Melt (Seriously, Grab a Spoon Already)

An exceptionally attracive young man holding an ice cream cone

Full transparency—when I first read the quote “Having a dream you don’t pursue is like buying an ice-cream cone and watching it melt all over your hand” (thanks, Frank Papasso, for the messy visual), I immediately flashed back to one very traumatizing July afternoon when I bought a double-scoop mint chip cone and tried to “walk and eat” while wearing white shorts. Spoiler: the mint chip won. And it definitely melted all over my hand. And knee. And…ugh, let’s not relive that any further.

But honestly, it’s the perfect metaphor. We all do this. We get excited about something—we read an inspiring book, get hit with a genius idea in the shower, or watch a movie and think, “Yep, I’m gonna do that”—and then? Nothing. The dream sits there. Melting. Slowly turning into sticky regret syrup.

Dreams Aren’t Decorative

Dreams aren’t meant to be displayed on a shelf like those dusty Funko Pops we bought during lockdown. They’re meant to be used. Eaten. Savored. (Ideally before they drip down your arm and you end up crying in public.)

I have a friend who’s been talking about starting a podcast for, no joke, six years. SIX. He even bought a mic. He bought two mics just to be extra serious. He has episode outlines. He has a name. He even designed a logo—which honestly looks pretty legit. But the podcast? Still a dream. Still sitting in the “someday” drawer. And every time we talk about it, I can practically hear the theme music of lost opportunities playing in the background.

That’s a melted ice-cream cone moment.

You Gotta Eat It Before It Gets Ugly

You know that feeling when you first get a brilliant idea? It’s like opening the freezer and seeing your favorite ice-cream flavor waiting for you. You’re excited. You’re pumped. But if you just stare at it and never actually… grab a spoon… you’re basically just torturing yourself.

Want to write a novel but “don’t have time”? Same thing. You’ve bought the cone, you’re holding it, and then you keep scrolling TikTok while it drips onto your shoes. Yikes.

Want to travel the world “someday”? Travel doesn’t magically happen. You don’t wake up on an alpaca farm in Peru by accident (although wow, what a plot twist that would be). You plan it. You save. You book the ticket. You EAT THE CONE.

It Doesn’t Have to Be Fancy

Here’s the thing—I used to think that pursuing dreams meant you had to go big. “If I can’t write the perfect novel draft in one sitting, why bother?” That mentality made me stall for months. Meanwhile, other people were posting messy drafts and celebrating tiny milestones like, “Wrote 300 words today!” And I’d be like… “300 words? Psh.”

But guess who finished a book? THEM. Because they took little bites of their ice-cream every day while I was waiting for the “perfect moment” to enjoy mine (which never came, by the way—because life doesn’t come with perfect moments, it comes with sticky, half-melted ones).

A Little Melting is Okay (Just Don’t Let It Go to Waste)

Look—sometimes life gets messy. Sometimes the sun is beating down and the dream gets a little soft around the edges. That’s okay. Honestly, melted ice-cream is still ice-cream. It still tastes good. You just have to act before it disappears completely.

Start the business even if you’re not 100% ready. Write the first chapter even if it’s kind of bad. Sign up for the dance class even if you’re “not in shape yet.” You will literally never be fully ready. You just have to take the scoop and go.

Quick Reality Check Examples (a.k.a Little Bite-Sized Scoops)

  • Want to learn French? Ten minutes a day on Duolingo is better than waiting for “when I have time for formal classes.” (though there are much better options out there than Duolingo)
  • Want to start a blog? Write one post. Just one. Post it. Stare at it proudly.
  • Want to run a marathon? Walk around the block today. Seriously. That counts.
  • Want to start a YouTube channel? Record a goofy 30-second intro video. It doesn’t have to be Spielberg-level.
  • Want to open a bakery someday? Start by baking muffins for your neighbors this weekend. Boom. First customer feedback.

Final Scoop

If Frank Papasso taught me anything (other than to carry napkins), it’s that dreams are fragile. They don’t wait around forever. And watching them melt without ever taking a bite? That’s not just sad—it’s kind of tragic. Don’t do that to yourself.

Go grab a spoon. Take one messy, imperfect, glorious bite right now.

Thanks for coming to my sticky TED Talk.


My Ghost Oracle Box Set (Nick Michelson) is now available from your favorite online retailer.

Here’s a link for Books 1-3

Here’s a link for Books 4-6

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The Little Things That Make Life Big

a good-looking young man rushing about

You know that feeling when you’re rushing around, trying to juggle a million things at once, and then—bam!—you stop and realize you haven’t really enjoyed any of it? I was having one of those “go-go-go” days when I stumbled upon this quote:
“Enjoy the little things in life … for one day you’ll look back and realize they were the big things.” – Unknown.

At first, I kind of brushed it off. I mean, life’s busy, right? Who has time to slow down? But then, the more I thought about it, the more I realized—this quote is a total game-changer.

We’re so obsessed with big milestones—getting that promotion, finishing a book, traveling to the dream destination—things that feel like they define our success or happiness. But what about all the stuff in between? The tiny, almost forgettable moments that happen while we’re on our way to those big things?

I’m talking about the morning cup of coffee that’s just perfect. The kind where the steam curls up, filling the room with that rich, comforting aroma. Or when you’re walking down the street and the sun hits you in just the right way, warming your face like a big, invisible hug. Yeah, those moments.

I know, I know, it sounds a little corny, but I swear, when you really start paying attention, you notice these little things all around you. And suddenly, your day doesn’t feel as rushed. It’s like you’ve hit “pause” and you get a moment to just breathe.

Here’s the thing, though. Life has this weird way of speeding by, right? One minute, you’re planning your week, and the next, it’s already the weekend and you feel like you haven’t fully experienced the days in between. For me, there’s this urge to always be “productive,” to tick things off the to-do list, and it’s easy to forget about those small moments that don’t seem like they matter in the grand scheme of things.

But when you do take a step back, you realize those are the moments that make up life. Think about it—how often do we catch ourselves laughing at something silly? Or remember the last time someone gave you an unexpected compliment? It’s those little slices of joy that sneak into our everyday routine, and they end up being the things you remember when you look back.

I can’t help but think of my favorite bookshops (you know, the cozy ones that smell like old pages and coffee). I’ve spent hours wandering through those aisles, with no real agenda except to get lost in the stories. The quiet hum of the shop, the soft shuffle of pages, the smell of aged paper—it’s one of those things that makes my soul happy. It’s nothing huge, but when I look back, I think that’s what I’ll remember: not the big trips I’ve taken, but the small, peaceful moments spent with a book and a coffee in hand.

And here’s another one—pets. Okay, I think back to when I used to have my cat, but those little moments when he would hop on my lap and snuggles up for no reason other than he felt like it—that is pure bliss. It doesn’t get more simple than that, but when I think about the kind of comfort I’ll look back on years from now? That’s it.

You might be thinking, “But how can these things really matter in the long run?” Well, that’s exactly why they do. They’re the things that make us feel connected to ourselves, to others, to the world around us. These tiny little moments fill in the spaces between the “big things.” They’re the ones that give you that warm, fuzzy feeling when you’re remembering your past.

The truth is, we often get caught up in thinking life is all about the major milestones. It’s like we’re so focused on reaching the “big stuff” that we forget the little moments are what build the foundation for our happiness. One day, you might look back and realize that the happiness wasn’t just in the big achievements—it was in the way the rain smelled after a storm or how your favorite song made you feel on a random Tuesday. It’s those moments that add up and build your story.

So, here’s my challenge to you (and myself): Start paying attention to the little things. Don’t wait until it’s too late to realize what you had. Take a pause, notice the details, and let yourself really feel them. Whether it’s a shared laugh with a friend, the feeling of soft sheets on your skin at the end of a long day, or the quiet moment when you’re staring out at the sunset—you’ll realize that these little things, in all their simplicity, are actually what makes life big.

At least, that’s what I’m telling myself the next time I’m rushing through my day.

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Why Bob Marley’s Words Hit Different When the World’s on Fire

evil puppet master pulling strings

So I’ve been thinking about this Bob Marley quote lately: “The people who were trying to make this world worse are not taking the day off. Why should I?” And honestly? It’s been stuck in my brain like a song you can’t shake, especially with everything happening right now in the US and, well, pretty much everywhere else.

I mean, you turn on the news these days and it’s like… where do I even start? Climate disasters, political chaos, social injustice – it feels like the bad guys are working overtime while the rest of us are just trying to figure out what to have for lunch. But that’s exactly why Bob’s words pack such a punch, you know?

The Never-Ending Shift

Think about it – the people causing harm, spreading hate, destroying our planet? They’re not clocking out at 5 PM. They’re not taking mental health days or going on vacation from their terrible agenda. They’re persistent, they’re organized, and they’re relentless.

I was scrolling through social media the other day (mistake number one, I know), and I saw this thread about how certain political groups are literally meeting every single day to strategize ways to roll back voting rights. Every. Single. Day. Meanwhile, I struggle to remember to water my plants twice a week.

But here’s the thing that gets me fired up about Marley’s quote – it’s not about guilt-tripping us into becoming workaholics for good causes. It’s about recognizing that making the world better requires the same kind of dedication that making it worse does.

Small Acts, Big Impact

You don’t have to quit your day job and become a full-time activist (though if that’s your calling, go for it). Sometimes “not taking the day off” looks like calling your representatives while you’re waiting for your coffee to brew. Sometimes it’s having those uncomfortable conversations with family members at dinner. Sometimes it’s just showing up to vote in local elections that nobody talks about but actually affect your daily life way more than presidential races.

I remember this one time, I was feeling completely overwhelmed by everything wrong with the world. Like, paralyzed by it. My friend Sarah told me something that stuck: “You can’t save everyone, but you can save someone. And you can’t fix everything, but you can fix something.”

That really shifted my perspective. The bad actors aren’t trying to destroy everything all at once – they’re chipping away, bit by bit, day by day. So why shouldn’t our response be the same? Consistent, persistent, relentless good.

The Privilege Check

Now, I have to acknowledge something here – not everyone has the luxury of not taking a day off from world-changing. Some people are barely keeping their heads above water, working multiple jobs, dealing with health issues, caring for family members. The quote hits different when you’re in survival mode.

But I think that’s part of what makes it so powerful. Marley wasn’t speaking from a place of privilege – he lived through poverty, violence, and oppression. When he talked about not taking the day off, he was speaking from experience about what it takes to push back against systems designed to keep people down.

What Does “Not Taking the Day Off” Actually Look Like?

For me, it means staying informed even when the news makes me want to hide under my covers. It means donating when I can, volunteering when I can’t donate, and speaking up when I witness injustice – even when (especially when) it’s awkward.

It means remembering that every small action matters. That text you send checking on a friend who’s struggling? That matters. The local business you choose to support instead of the big chain? That matters. The time you spend listening to someone whose experience is different from yours? That definitely matters.

Sometimes it’s as simple as choosing hope over cynicism, which honestly feels revolutionary these days.

The Marathon Mindset

I’ve started thinking about social change like training for a marathon. You don’t run 26 miles on day one – you’d burn out or injure yourself. But you do show up consistently, build your stamina, and keep your eyes on the finish line.

The people working to make things worse? They understand this marathon mentality. They play the long game. They’re patient. They’re strategic. And that’s exactly why we need to match their energy with our own sustained effort toward justice and healing.

Finding Your Rhythm

The beautiful thing about Bob’s words is that they’re not prescriptive. He’s not telling you exactly how to spend your energy – just that you should spend it. Maybe your thing is environmental activism. Maybe it’s education reform. Maybe it’s supporting local artists or feeding people experiencing homelessness.

What matters is showing up consistently in whatever way feels authentic to you. Because the alternative – letting the destructive forces have the field to themselves – just isn’t an option.

So yeah, the people trying to make this world worse definitely aren’t taking the day off. But neither are we. And there are way more of us than there are of them.

That’s something worth remembering on the hard days.

Stay strong, stay engaged, and keep showing up.


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