
This past Tuesday, I found myself sitting down with two remarkable young men. Both are immensely talented. Both are in the formative years of their lives. Both are standing at an important crossroads, thinking deeply about what comes next.
I have always enjoyed conversations like these. There is something deeply rewarding about exploring ideas with people who are curious, reflective, and willing to challenge one another’s thinking. They rarely end where they begin. Instead, they leave me with new questions, new perspectives, and, quite often, the quiet urge to write. The conversation wandered from one idea to another before settling, almost unexpectedly, on a question that has occupied my own mind for years: How do we learn to truly live in the present while still building for the future?
Over an hour, we found ourselves dissecting a pattern that I believe touches many lives today: A life where the next always eclipses the now. Where the desire to be somewhere else outweighs the appreciation of where we already are. Where constant movement leaves little room for the quiet rewards that come from choosing, every so often, to stay still.
That was the life I once lived. A life I do not regret, because there is real value in building, striving, and pursuing what comes next. Infact, I know many people who live that way, and I admire and respect them deeply. But it is no longer the life I want for myself, and the reason is not fatigue. Over time I developed a greater sense of situational awareness and a deeper appreciation for the present, and it has quietly become the foundation upon which I define my priorities, make my decisions, and determine what deserves my attention.
This is the life I now try to cultivate – not perfectly, and not always successfully, but intentionally.
That shift did not arrive as an insight. It arrived, as the important ones often do, over dinner with a good friend. It began with a deceptively simple exercise – one that turned attention into arithmetic and forever changed how I think about time.
I was, at the time, going at full energy – accelerated, relentless, deep in the entrepreneurial chase. I was pursuing unicorns and the future state of bliss that comes bundled with them, the one tied to growth and scale and a definition of success that lived permanently on the horizon, a target that moved a little further out every time I got close. I want to be clear that I do not think there was anything wrong with that. I remain a great believer in knowing where you are going and why. A life without a plan is not freedom, it is drift. But that night my friend taught me something about the plan’s proper place, and it has governed how I make decisions ever since.
The lesson was not that I should abandon the plan. It was that the plan cannot be the thing in control. You do not live for your plan. The plan fits inside your life, not the other way around. The moment that inverts – the moment your one, unrepeatable life becomes the raw material your plan consumes – is the moment something has gone profoundly wrong, and the tragedy is that it feels, from the inside, like ambition. Like virtue, even. It looks exactly like doing well.
Here is what he had me do. He asked me to write down the names of three people I love and genuinely enjoy being around, with one condition: they could not be people who currently lived in my city. Three names. Then he asked me to count, honestly, how many times I had seen each of them in the last three years, and for how long. Then came the turn. Taking that same three-year window, he asked me to estimate how many more such windows each of them likely had – how many three-year cycles before age or illness or simple distance took their health, their sharpness, their availability. And then, with that number in hand, he asked me the only question that actually mattered: at my current frequency, how many more times would I see them before I no longer could?
I still remember the arithmetic, because it did something to me that no amount of exhortation ever had. My closest, dearest friend in the world – the person I would have named first on any list – I was seeing once every three years. Run the numbers forward and the answer was that I had perhaps ten more meetings with him left. Ten. This was a man I had once seen more than ten times in a single week. An entire remaining lifetime of friendship had quietly compressed into a figure I could count on my fingers, and I had not noticed, because I was busy, because I was building, because there was always a next thing and he would always, surely, be there. The same brutal arithmetic held for my parents. I had been treating presence as an inexhaustible resource, and the exercise simply showed me the meter I had been refusing to read.
That is the moment something shifted, and I want to be precise about what shifted, because it was not a mood. It was a decision framework. What my friend had actually handed me was not a guilt trip about seeing people more often. It was a way of pricing a choice that I had been making blind. Every hour has an opportunity cost – this is not news to anyone who has run a business – but I had been applying that logic only to money and momentum, the things that were easy to count. I had never once applied it to the things that were hard to count and impossible to replace. Fame and scale and the moving target of success all had a number attached. My friend’s genius was to put a number on the other side of the ledger too, and to force me to see that I had been trading the irreplaceable for the merely impressive without ever consciously agreeing to the deal.
This is the part I now try to pass on, especially to younger people I mentor, because I see them making the exact trade I made, with the same blindness and the same conviction that it is the right thing to do. They live in the next. They think ceaselessly about it. And the cost is not that they are unhappy – often they are exhilarated – but that they are making enormous, irreversible allocation decisions without ever seeing them as decisions at all. The choice to pour another year into the chase is also a choice not to spend that year somewhere else, with someone else, and the second half of that sentence is invisible to them. You cannot make a good decision about a tradeoff you cannot see. Good judgment, in the end, is mostly the discipline of making the invisible half of the ledger visible before you sign.
There is a second discovery that came once the first one landed, and it is smaller but I think it completes the point. When the arithmetic taught me to actually inhabit the present, I found I could suddenly taste it. I am a foodie, unapologetically, and yet for years I had been eating without eating – fuelling a body in motion, tasting almost nothing, because my attention was always one course ahead of my fork. When presence became a practice rather than an accident, food came back to me. A simple, well-made meal became one of the genuine pleasures of my day rather than a pit stop between ambitions.
I mention it because it clarified something I could not have articulated before. If you asked me what I would do with real abundance of time and money – the very things all that striving was supposed to eventually purchase – my honest answer is two things: the people I love, and the food I love. Those are the priorities that live at the imagined finish line, the rewards I was deferring the present to earn. And here was the quiet revelation: I already had access to both. Right now. In this moment. Not in some future, funded, arrived-at version of my life, but here, available, on offer, being ignored. The finish line I was sprinting toward was selling me back, at enormous cost, the very things I was running past to get there.
It is out of this arithmetic that I arrived, almost by accident, at something I now hold close: a genuine philosophy of stillness. I have written a fair amount, elsewhere, about stillness and quiet and what they have given me, and I used to think of that as a separate thread of my life – the softer, more contemplative counterweight to the strategist and the builder. I no longer see them as separate at all. The stillness grew directly out of the ledger. Once you have priced the present honestly and seen what it is actually worth, sitting inside it stops feeling like idleness and starts feeling like the most rational thing you could possibly do. Quiet is not the opposite of a well-run life. For me it turned out to be the dividend of one – the thing you finally have the clarity to enjoy once you stop mortgaging every moment against a future that keeps moving.
So the argument I want to leave you with is not really about slowing down, and it is certainly not about abandoning your plans. I am still a planner. I still want to know where I am going and why. It is about which side of the ledger you are willing to count. Most of us are ruthless accountants of the things that are easy to measure and sentimental amateurs about the things that actually matter, and we call this being driven. The most consequential decisions of a life are rarely the dramatic ones. They are the quiet, repeated allocations of a Tuesday evening, of a free weekend, of the years when the people we love are still within reach. Those decisions are being made whether or not you are paying attention.
The arithmetic never stops.
The only question is whether you will do it while it can still change the outcome.







