Quote of the Day – 10102025


Personal Reflection

There’s a rare honesty in this quote — the kind that cuts through the polite illusions we build around “purpose.” Johns isn’t romanticizing contribution; he’s demanding accountability. He’s calling out that quiet cowardice that disguises itself as caution — the way we postpone our lives in the name of preparation, waiting for the mythical moment when the fear will fade and the path will clear.

But the truth is, most of us hedge not because we lack ability, but because we fear insignificance. We hesitate, edit ourselves mid-sentence, and bury our ideas in “someday.” We tell ourselves the timing isn’t right, that the world doesn’t need one more writer, one more painter, one more dreamer. Yet contribution isn’t about scale — it’s about offering what only you can. Sometimes that means creating something raw and imperfect, sometimes it means showing up for someone who’s about to give up. Either way, it requires the courage to exist unapologetically.

Maybe the shame Johns speaks of isn’t moral but existential — the ache of realizing we let fear keep us small. Perhaps our only real task is to live in such a way that when the end comes, we can say we tried. Not perfectly. Not painlessly. But honestly.


Reflective Prompt

If you stopped hedging — if you stripped away the excuses and met your own potential head-on — what would you create, build, or give? What would your version of “contribution” look like, not in grandeur, but in truth?


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5 thoughts on “Quote of the Day – 10102025

  1. I posted this very topic on my IG yesterday. The quote was a screenshot that says “The scariest thing is neglecting your true potential”. I know what I want to do. I know what I must do to get there. If I want to vault myself to the next level – there is a plan. Why then am I looking at myself in the mirror most mornings trying to talk myself out of it? I’m disciplined in so many ways (physically I never miss a workout). Why then am I in fear of moving towards my writing goals? Thank you for your wisdom. I’m bringing it with me on my trek to the gym. 💪🏼❤️

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    1. That mirror moment you mentioned — that’s not weakness or lack of discipline. That’s the threshold. You’ve already proven you can build muscle, structure, routine. The gym teaches control. But writing? That isn’t control. It’s exposure.

      Weights don’t ask who you are. The page does.

      Thanks, Kiki

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