01/30/2026
Morning thought for anyone chasing something bigger
One thing you have to understand, and I cannot stress this enough, is that when you start trying to grow in life, you are going to hear comments. Not advice. Not help. Comments. Little jabs. Passive remarks. Doubt dressed up like concern.
We get them all the time. It comes with the territory. You start building something, you start improving your life, and somebody says, “Yeah, it looks good now, but just wait.” Just wait until it slows down. Just wait until it gets hard. Just wait until it does not work.
Here is the truth. Life has slow seasons. Business has slow seasons. Growth has slow seasons. That is not a surprise. That is the process. The difference is some people use that as a reason to prepare and get better, and some people use it as an excuse to stay where they are.
I did not always think this way. My mindset had to change. And it did not change by accident. It changed when I started surrounding myself with people who believed in building, not blaming. People who asked, “How can we do better?” instead of, “Why is this happening to me?” I started listening to people who had actually built something. I started learning that struggle is normal, setbacks are normal, and growth is uncomfortable. That is when things started shifting.
You are going to have people in your life, sometimes even family, who always have a reason why something is not their fault. It is the market. It is the economy. It is other people. But rarely is it their effort, their attitude, or their lack of action. Laziness and a negative mindset will kill more dreams than a bad economy ever will.
I had an old friend send me a picture of his brand new truck. Nice truck. I mean that. I would love to drive it. He was proud, and he should be proud of what he likes. But then he made a comment to me like, “Keep doing what you are doing and you will get one too.”
I sent him a picture of me standing in front of my old 6.0. What he did not see in that picture was the building behind me. He did not see the tools inside. He did not see the people who earn a paycheck in that building. He did not see where I chose to invest. To him, the truck was the symbol of success. To me, the building, the equipment, and the opportunity for others is the return.
That is mindset. Some people look in your glass to see if you have more than them. Others look in your glass to make sure you have enough. One mindset builds. The other compares.
If you are trying to change your life, expect resistance. Expect comments. Expect people who do not understand why you are not spending money to look successful when you are trying to build something that actually is.
Do not let someone else’s limited thinking shrink your vision. Keep learning. Keep adjusting. Keep surrounding yourself with people who solve problems instead of creating excuses. That shift in mindset is what changes everything.