• If you’re stuck in “planning mode,” this is your wake-up call.

    We’ve been taught to make the perfect plan, read all the right books, take all the right courses, and wait for the stars to align before we make our move. But in the real world, especially in business, startups, and creative pursuits—overplanning is the enemy of progress.

    The Problem With Perfection

    You can spend months trying to architect the perfect strategy. But here’s the truth: No plan survives contact with reality. Markets shift, customers act unpredictably, and ideas evolve. That perfect plan? It’ll likely get thrown out within the first week of actual execution.

    Instead of obsessing over step 10, focus on step 1. Start.

    Study Just Enough to Begin

    Yes, learning matters. But too much theory without action is procrastination disguised as preparation. Read just enough to understand the basics, then move. The real education begins when you’re knee-deep in the work—talking to customers, building products, shipping imperfect things.

    Experience is the fastest teacher. Books and podcasts can’t simulate the chaos (and genius) of the real world.

    Build > Plan

    Execution is everything. Ideas are cheap, but execution is rare and powerful. Build that app. Launch the blog. Post your art. Email your pitch. Record your demo. Sell the first version—even if it sucks. Every action creates feedback. Every feedback loop makes you better.

    And yes, you will screw up. You’ll launch too early. The product might break. Your audience may not care. But you’ll also learn 10x faster than the person still stuck in their Trello board of theoretical perfection.

    The Breakthrough Doesn’t Come From Thinking

    You don’t find “the big idea” by waiting for inspiration or mapping out every contingency. Breakthroughs come from momentum. The process of doing, failing, adjusting, and doing again. Each attempt sharpens your instincts. Each tiny win builds confidence.

    You stumble into brilliance when you’re in motion, not sitting still.

    Focus on the Opportunity, Not the Outcome

    Don’t worry about nailing it right away. Focus on showing up and creating. Let curiosity pull you forward. Build things. Try ideas. Put your work into the world and let it evolve. That’s how all great things are born: not from flawless plans, but from bold starts and relentless adjustments.

    TL;DR – Here’s Your Permission Slip

    • Don’t wait until you know everything.
    • Start with what you have.
    • Launch fast. Learn faster.
    • Make mistakes. Fix them.
    • Keep creating until something clicks.

    Success rarely comes to the most prepared. It comes to those who act boldly, adapt quickly, and never stop moving.

    So close the tab with the “Ultimate Planning Guide.” Open a blank doc. Ship something messy.

    Your breakthrough is waiting on the other side of action.

  • Author, T. Harv Eker mentioned that the first step to wealth is consciousness—becoming aware of how you view money. And to be honest, it’s not something we acquire or choose. It’s something that’s programmed into us from the time we’re children, before we even understand how money works.

    This programming is passed down from generation to generation, from our parents to us.

    He suggested looking back and remembering how your parents and the people around you viewed and talked about money while you were growing up. That’s how you’ll understand how you were programmed when it comes to money matters.

    Looking back, I remember my father had an unstable job. He was a construction worker, so his work was project-based. There were months he had work, and months he didn’t. When the waiting time between projects got longer, that’s when I would hear my parents arguing about money. I also remember my mother taking on side jobs just so we could get by. She worked as a nanny, a saleslady, and a laundry washer.

    At our lowest points, we ate only porridge, or rice with soy sauce or sugar—just to have some taste.

    That’s why I was always so happy when my father had work again. That was when we got to eat special food—like pork—and when my mother’s wallet was thick. But once the project ended and her wallet was empty, I knew the cycle was starting all over again.

    Now that I’m an adult with a stable job, I realize I’ve learned how to budget my income for travel, monthly expenses, and to financially support my parents. But still, I haven’t been able to save properly for the future or for emergencies.

    I dream of a stable life and having a lot of money, yet I’ve never truly aimed for a higher position at work.

    Reading Secrets of the Millionaire Mind made me realize how my relationship with money was shaped. I saw that I often lack motivation to pursue what I truly want—because I don’t act until I’m already running on empty. It’s the same whenever I visit my parents or relatives and see their living conditions. That’s when I feel a strong drive to work hard, chase my dreams, and eventually help them. But when I return home, those feelings fade and I fall back into my old routine—planning in my head, but not really taking action.

    However, during the early days of living with my partner—when we were barely getting by and waiting for my next paycheck (he didn’t have a job for a few months)—I managed to come up with different side hustles just to survive.

    Looking back at all this, I’ve realized that between being a spender or a saver, I’m a spender. I don’t save or prepare for rainy days unless I’m almost out of money. That’s the mindset I grew up with—you only worry about money once it’s gone.

    If you still have some left, that’s when you act. That’s also why I struggle with long-term planning. I’m amazed when others talk about their 5- or 10-year plans. As for me, my only plan has been to “save”—but without knowing what I’m saving for.

    I save “for the moment,” but in truth, I end up spending as long as there’s something left.

    This is why I’ve been unable to reach my financial goals. But learning this about myself has made me more conscious of the decisions I make about money.

    Understanding my “money blueprint” has helped me see the root of my behavior. And as T. Harv Eker says, we hold the wheel of our own lives. We can change our course if we choose to. We just need to put in the work and create a new money blueprint that fits our current life.

    Stop being a victim—start taking action. I’m working on mine now. I hope this helps shed some light for you too. I highly recommend reading the book if you want more guidance. I’ll keep you updated on my progress.

    For now, I’d love to know—have you taken time to reflect on your own money blueprint? Let me know!

  • It’s okay if you plan and fail. Accept that things you want to do don’t happen because you allow them to. You don’t have to say sorry. Just man up to take responsibility of your actions.

    After accepting it, plan again. Learn from your mistakes and see what areas you can improve. 

    You only have one life so live it well. Be mindful, take care of body and pursue what will make you happy.

    If you’re not where you want to be yet. Keep working, your brain is wired to tell you to stay on your comfort zone but you know that the most successful people  are those who are not afraid to take risks. 

    Stop thinking that you don’t have time, you have. Stop thinking that you are tired or you need to rest. You have to fight the things that will make you complacent. 

    You deserve a better life and that fire in you is there for a reason.

    There’s no other time to start again than now. Time is running but you know you can’t beat it. Focus on what you can control and that is your will power.

  • Pursuing your dreams is never an easy thing which is why only few fulfill theirs. Most people tend to quit when things get harder or when they lose the will to carry on.

    So how do you keep yourself motivated to be able to achieve your dreams in life?

    I was browsing in YouTube one day when I came across Mr. Beast video, a famous YouTube vlogger that I subscribed to. The video is about his philanthropy project where he built 100 wells in Africa.

    While he was visiting a school where they built one of the wells, he entered one of the classroom and a student asked him, “What is the secret of success?” he simply replied, “ Just find something you love doing and do it for a long time, and eventually, you’ll succeed.”

    Jimmy Donaldson a.k.a Mr. Beast also mentioned in one of his interviews about his passion in creating YouTube videos since he was 13. At a young age, he affirms to himself that he’s going be a successful youtuber. He said that if you really want to do something, you got to work hard for it. He even mentioned his sacrifices just to achieve his dreams, “I literally gave up my teenage years from 13 until after 19 just making YouTube videos.”

    With sheer will and persistence, he became the most subscribed individual on YouTube with 209 million subscribers at the age of 25 as of this writing.

    What is my take here?

    You got to find that which you really love and stick to it no matter what.

    Good for those people who already found their calling at an early age, but for those who do not, don’t worry, it’s not the end of the road yet, you still have the rest of your life to find it. Sometimes it hides in plain sight, in your daily activities, hobbies, or past time that you love to do and feel most alive while doing it.

    When you already found it, stick to it and never let go. No matter how many set backs or challenges you face, even when no one believes in it, carry on.

    So How Can You Do It?

    You got to keep that burning desire in you and never let go until your dreams manifested in your reality.

    Like Jimmy Donaldson’s story, the success didn’t come to him right away. A lot of people in his life laughed at him, ask him to quit, and we don’t know as well how many times he might have given up or this idea enters his mind when his hard work doesn’t seem to bear any fruits. There might be a lot of reason for him to quit, but no, he pushed and pushed until the universe rewarded him and gave him the content idea that catapulted his success.

    So How Can you Maintain the Motivation?

    You will not always be at your best self, you will not always be inspired so it’s important to create a habit that works for you as this will sustain you in working towards your goal. Just like Octavia Butler once said, “Forget inspiration. A habit is more dependable. Habits will sustain you whether your inspired or not.”

    Keeping a habit or activity planner will help you track your progress and will fuel you to keep on pushing forward. Remember, your small steps today when accumulated can make a big impact in your future.

    To keep yourself motivated when you’re unable to is to just create a habit and stick to it. Remember, it takes years of years of hard work, dedication, and unstoppable desire to achieve whatever it is you want in life and make your dreams into a reality.

  • It’s okay to be afraid when you start from scratch. Embrace mistakes, late night sleep, uncomfortable changes, and rigorous time learning then realize you had it wrong all along.

    Instead of focusing on your fear; thinking if it will work, if it will be worth it, focus instead of endless possibilities of what you will achieve and what you will become. Focus on the things you can make for your life if you keep going.

    There are many outside forces that will cripple your beliefs, but don’t let it ever cripple your dreams. It’s okay to cower for some time but be sure to come back again…stronger.

    Once you found your feet and inspiration again, work right away to keep the fire burning. Don’t think how much time you lost, but think of it as a time you need to think things over to identify what you can improve in your past actions.

    Don’t worry about the future because it will always be scary. You need to focus on the present because your actions today will prove that your past is just a learning phase and the future you want is achievable.

    Know that you are now starting again from experience. Your past is your map, your present is your lamp, and your future is a destination that is only one step at a time away.

    You can do it! Believe in yourself because you can!