Most people don’t set out to look weak at work. In fact, many of the smartest, most competent, and most well-meaning professionals do everything in their power to be thoughtful, collaborative, and humble. But that’s the catch. It’s often the well-intentioned behaviours — the quiet pauses, the … [Read more...]
Everything, Everywhere, All Urgent: The Collapse of Our Collective Attention
There’s just too much happening. Everywhere you look, the world is vibrating with noise — all of it claiming urgency. What was once a rare call to action is now a constant background hum, amplified by every platform, every alert, every headline. And in this constant state of “crisis,” we’re … [Read more...]
When Leaders Dim the Lights
There’s something breathtaking about working alongside brilliance. The kind of mind that sees patterns the rest of us miss. That reshapes problems before we’ve even named them. That makes you sit up, take notes, and wonder how such clarity could ever be taught. But brilliance is fragile — not … [Read more...]
The Future Whispers Before It Shouts
Most people think the future arrives with a bang. That one day, something changes and we’re suddenly living in a new reality. But it never really works like that. The future doesn’t announce itself - it murmurs. It’s subtle. It tugs at the edges of our attention long before it becomes obvious. … [Read more...]
The Graceful Exit: Knowing When to Leave Before You’re Asked
There’s a quiet kind of wisdom in knowing when to stop. A discipline, almost. It’s the ability to read the room, to sense the shifting winds, to notice the unsaid before it becomes the said. Some call it intuition. Others call it maturity. I think of it as learning to recognize your own expiry … [Read more...]
Mowing Lawns and Moving Lines: A Quiet Rebellion Against Transactional Living
The other day, someone asked me why I had taken the time to mow my neighbour’s lawn while I was already mowing mine. On the surface, it was a simple question. But it gave me pause. Not because I didn’t know the answer, but because the question revealed more than it intended. It wasn't really … [Read more...]
The Quiet Advantage of Not Knowing
We live in a time where knowing is everything. Knowledge is currency, speed is advantage, and expertise is the performance everyone is expected to give, all the time. If you’re not in the loop, you're out of the game. Or so we’re told. But there’s a different kind of power that doesn’t show … [Read more...]
The Swipe Test: If Trust Starts Online, Where Are You?
There was a time when proximity was destiny. We worked with the people we lived near, fell in love with the ones we bumped into at events or in lecture halls, and trusted those we saw every day. Familiarity bred connection. But we no longer live in that world. Today, our first impressions are … [Read more...]
The Only Kind of a True Friend
is the kind that knows you even when you forget yourself. Not all friendships are built to last. Many are circumstantial. Some are seasonal. Others feel eternal, until they aren’t. We’ve all seen connections fade when the titles change, the usefulness expires, the party ends, or the … [Read more...]








