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Thursday, 23 April 2026

Holding the Line

 Intentionality sounds nice when you say it out loud.

It sounds like planning. Like clarity. Like someone who has their life together.

But that is not how it feels when you are actually in it.

Most times, it feels tight. Like you are walking a narrow path, and you cannot afford to drift. You are saying no more than you are saying yes. You are doing things you did not use to do, and repeating them long after the excitement has worn off.

There is nothing glamorous about it.

I have seen what it takes to push into something new. Not just trying something once or twice, but deciding this is a direction and staying with it. The early days are usually loud. Ideas are fresh. Energy is high. You talk about it a lot.

Then it gets quiet.

You realise it is going to take more time than you thought. More discipline, too. You do not see results as quickly as you expected. Nobody is clapping. Sometimes, nobody even notices.

That is where intentionality either holds or breaks.

Because now, it is no longer about inspiration. It is about whether you can stay with the work when it starts to feel repetitive. When the path is not as clear. When you have to keep choosing the same thing over and over again.

There is a kind of strength that comes from that.

Not loud strength. Not the type that announces itself. It is steady. Built in small decisions. You wake up and do what you said you would do. You adjust when things are not working, but you do not abandon the direction every time it gets hard.

I have also seen how easy it is to lose that line.

You start out clear, then you begin to bend. You take shortcuts. You tell yourself you will get back on track later. Before long, you are moving, but not in the direction you planned.

That is the risk.

Intentionality is not just about starting well. It is about staying aligned when it would be easier not to. It is about holding the line even when it feels thin.

And sometimes, it will feel very thin.

But if you stay with it, something shifts. You begin to trust your own process. You are not chasing every new thing. You are building something that can hold.

It may not look impressive from the outside. But it is solid.

Nugget:
Intentionality is not proven in what you start. It shows in what you keep doing when it stops being exciting.

1 comment:

  1. You may not have it when you start out, but once you set your heart to doing something, you just do, they maybe days when it's not going to be exciting, they may be days, it would be extraordinarily good, but your decision remains, not because of how you feel, but because you decided to.... I call it sticability. I think the strength of your sticability comes from staying, not running when things get boring or rough, but staying at it until you build what you set out to., it's not easy but it's got a beautiful fruit in the end or in the course of time. Taking it a day at a time would help... Depending on your source everyday.

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