
Loss rarely announces itself.
It often does not arrive with a single moment you can point to, name, and explain. It accumulates in the background, in the spaces we stop paying attention to, in the things we assume will hold without care.
I have come to believe that a lot of what we regret losing was not taken from us. It was left unattended.
We tend to think of maintenance as something mechanical. You service the car. You fix the roof. You update the system. There is a schedule, a checklist, a clear signal when something needs attention. It feels practical, contained, almost impersonal.
But the more I watch how people live and lead, myself included, the clearer it becomes that this same principle shapes everything human, only in ways that are harder to see and far more consequential.
Relationships do not break in a moment. They thin out. Conversations become shorter. Curiosity fades. Assumptions take the place of understanding. What once felt natural starts to feel like effort, and then eventually, it feels like distance.
Trust follows a similar path. It is not destroyed in one act as often as we like to believe. It weakens through small inconsistencies, through things said and not followed through, through attention given elsewhere. Each moment is easy to dismiss. Together, they become a pattern.
Even our sense of self is not immune. The discipline you once held, the standards you quietly lived by, the way you showed up when no one was watching – these do not disappear overnight. They loosen. You negotiate with yourself. You let one thing slide, then another. Over time, you find yourself further away from who you thought you were, without ever having made a conscious decision to leave.
I think this is why maintenance is so often ignored. It asks for effort when nothing appears to be broken. It requires presence without urgency. It demands that you care before the cost is visible.
And most of us are conditioned to respond to what is urgent, not what is important.
In my experience, the real work in leadership is not just in solving visible problems. It is also in noticing what is beginning to drift before it becomes a problem at all. It is in holding the line on standards that no one is actively challenging. It is in creating space for conversations that do not feel necessary yet, but will be missed later if they never happen.
I humbly accept that this is not always comfortable work. Maintenance rarely is. It can feel repetitive, even unnecessary at times. There is no immediate reward for doing it well. No recognition for preventing something that never happened.
But I would contend that this is where the substance of a life is built.
Not in the moments where we react, but in the quiet discipline of staying close to what matters.
I have seen teams that were once deeply aligned slowly lose their edge, not because of a strategic misstep, but because the small rituals that held them together were allowed to fade. The check-ins became transactional. The shared language lost its meaning. The sense of ownership softened. Nothing dramatic happened. And yet, everything changed.
I have also seen the opposite. People who stay in conversation even when it would be easier to withdraw. Leaders who revisit expectations before they become frustrations. Individuals who tend to their own growth with a kind of quiet consistency that does not seek attention.
There is a steadiness to them. Not because they avoid difficulty, but because they do not wait for difficulty to force their hand.
As I mentioned above, I wonder if part of the challenge is that maintenance asks us to take responsibility without the pressure of consequence. It asks us to act early, when we still have options, when the cost is low, when the outcome is still within our control.
Repair, on the other hand, often arrives when those options have narrowed. When something has already been compromised. When we are no longer choosing freely, but responding to what has already unfolded.
And so the question becomes less about what we are fixing, and more about what we are quietly allowing to slip.
What conversations have we postponed? What standards have we softened? What relationships have we assumed will take care of themselves? What parts of ourselves have we stopped investing in because life became busy, or complicated, or simply distracting?
From what I have experienced, the answers to these questions rarely feel urgent in the moment. But over time, they shape the trajectory of everything.
Maintenance is not a task. It is a posture.
It is a way of staying engaged with what matters before it demands your attention. It is a commitment to care that is not driven by crisis. It is the discipline of showing up consistently, even when nothing is asking you to.
And perhaps most importantly, it is an acknowledgement that the things we value do not sustain themselves.
They require us.
Not once. Not occasionally. But regularly, intentionally, and often quietly.
Because in the end, what we lose is rarely taken all at once.
It leaves in increments, in moments we barely notice, until one day we look back and realize it is no longer there.
And by then, we are no longer maintaining.
We are busy, often desperately, trying to repair.







