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I shine despite my scarse
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It’s okay if the only thing you did this year was get through it...Some years are not about growth you can show.They are...
23/12/2025

It’s okay if the only thing you did this year was get through it...Some years are not about growth you can show.
They are about survival you can’t explain.

🍃 Waking up when you didn’t want to
🍃 Holding yourself together when everything felt heavy
🍃 Choosing to stay when giving up felt easier

That counts. More than you know.

Not every year is meant for building, achieving, or shining. Some years are meant for healing. Some are meant for enduring. Some are meant for learning how strong you actually are.

And even if it doesn’t feel like it right now —
this too will pass.

Buddhist wisdom reminds us of impermanence. No pain, no darkness, no season lasts forever. The mind tells you this moment is permanent — but it never is.

👉 You are not behind.
👉 You are not failing.
👉 You are not weak.

You are still here. And that matters.

🌱 Be gentle with yourself.
Rest if you must.
Heal at your own pace.

If all you did in 2025 was survive —
that was enough.
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Most people think their problem is laziness or lack of motivation. It isn’t. It’s distraction—subtle, constant, and soci...
23/12/2025

Most people think their problem is laziness or lack of motivation. It isn’t. It’s distraction—subtle, constant, and socially acceptable. Focus on What Matters by Darius Foroux quietly exposes an uncomfortable truth: your life is being shaped not by the big decisions you make, but by the tiny things stealing your attention every day. Notifications. Busywork. Endless plans that feel productive but lead nowhere. The book doesn’t shout at you—it whispers something far more dangerous: you are wasting your most valuable asset, and you don’t even feel the loss yet.

What makes this book unsettling is how accurately it mirrors your habits back to you. You start recognizing yourself in its pages—the goals you abandoned, the energy you scattered, the years that slipped by while you were “preparing.” Foroux doesn’t motivate you with hype; he corners you with clarity. And once you see how focus compounds into power—and distraction compounds into regret—it becomes impossible to unsee. You don’t read this book for inspiration. You read it because, deep down, you sense that if you don’t learn to focus on what truly matters now, the cost later will be unbearable.
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This book came at a time when I felt like I was pushing through life with a heavy backpack strapped to my soul. Everythi...
22/12/2025

This book came at a time when I felt like I was pushing through life with a heavy backpack strapped to my soul. Everything—work, goals, relationships—felt like a grind. I’d already listened to Greg McKeown’s Essentialism, but Effortless hit different. It wasn’t about stripping life down to the bare minimum. It was about shifting the way I move through life—from forceful to flowing. It made me ask: what if doing what matters didn’t have to leave me exhausted?

These are the 7 liberating lessons I carried from the book.

1. What if the easier path is actually the smarter one? Somewhere along the way, I picked up the belief that if something isn’t hard, it isn’t meaningful. Greg challenges that myth with a simple but powerful idea: “hard” doesn’t equal “valuable.” We can choose to do things in a lighter, more sustainable way and still create excellent results. That one mental reframe—ease isn't laziness—was already worth the listen.

2. Struggling is not the badge of honor we think it is. One of the book’s biggest truths is that we often equate struggle with virtue. If we’re tired and burned out, we must be doing something right. But Greg flips that on its head: struggle can be a sign we’re solving the wrong problem—or approaching it in the wrong way. Effortless action isn't cheating the system. It's choosing a smarter system.

3. Clarity is the antidote to overwhelm. I realized how often my stress comes not from the size of the task, but from the vagueness of it. When I’m unclear on what “done” looks like, everything feels heavier. Greg's tip to define a “Done for the Day” goal helped me narrow my focus. Now, instead of trying to do everything, I ask: “What’s the one valuable thing I can complete today that would make it a win?”

4. Rest isn't a reward—it’s a responsibility. This one hit me deeply. Like many people, I treated rest as something I had to earn—after burning out. Greg reframes rest as essential maintenance. When we consistently rest and renew, our minds s

I didn’t pick up How to Lead Smart People because I wanted to become some perfect leader. I picked it up because I was t...
21/12/2025

I didn’t pick up How to Lead Smart People because I wanted to become some perfect leader. I picked it up because I was tired of feeling like I had to have all the answers whenever people looked to me for direction. Leadership sounds glamorous until you’re actually in a position where talented people expect clarity, confidence, and consistency… even on days when you feel unsure of yourself.

I remember listening to the opening chapter while preparing for a meeting that I already felt nervous about. The team was full of sharp, opinionated people, and I kept thinking, “Who am I to guide them?” But as I listened, I started to realize that leading smart people isn’t about outperforming them or proving your worth. It’s about learning how to create space for brilliance without letting insecurity get in the way.

The book didn’t lecture; it held up a mirror. It made me confront the moments when I tried too hard to control, when I avoided difficult conversations, and when I confused leadership with perfection. By the end, I found myself breathing easier, not because leadership suddenly became simple, but because I finally understood that it wasn’t supposed to be. These are the 7 beautiful lessons I carried from the book.

1. Smart people don’t need you to be the expert, they need you to be the anchor. The book emphasized that leadership isn’t about knowing more than everyone else. It’s about offering stability, clarity, and direction so talented people can do what they do best without chaos or confusion.

2. Influence grows when ego shrinks. One of the strongest messages was that insecurity quietly destroys trust. When a leader becomes defensive or competitive, smart people shut down. Real authority comes from humility, self-awareness, and a willingness to listen before responding.

3. Clarity is more powerful than control. Instead of micromanaging, the book encouraged setting clear expectations and outcomes. It made me realize that giving people freedom within boundaries un

Follow up E books and store
19/11/2025

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The woman came and knelt before him. “Lord, help me!” she said.He replied, “It is not right to take the children’s bread...
19/11/2025

The woman came and knelt before him. “Lord, help me!” she said.
He replied, “It is not right to take the children’s bread and toss it to the dogs.”
“Yes it is, Lord,” she said. “Even the dogs eat the crumbs that fall from their master’s table.”
Then Jesus said to her, “Woman, you have great faith! Your request is granted.” And her daughter was healed at that moment.
Matthew 15:25-28

A Canaanite woman, desperate to save her sick daughter, is brave enough to call out to Jesus. When no one pays her attention, she pursues the Lord and His followers, crying out to Him continuously.
The disciples want Jesus to rebuke her, to send her away. He addresses her instead, because that’s what He does. When you follow Him, the Lord never sends you away empty-handed. He engages, He listens, and He provides.
At first, however, Jesus tells the woman He can’t help her.

While Jesus is still ministering to the world in His human form, His mission field is His own people, the Jews. The time for His mercy and grace to spread all over the world has not yet come.
The Canaanite woman reacts with faith—not by giving Jesus a carefully constructed theological argument. She simply kneels at His feet, holding onto the belief that the Lord is the only One who can help her. She uses Jesus’ own analogy and shows Him her faith in Him is unshakable, because she knows He is the Lord, the Son of David, and she trusts in His mercy. Instead of letting any cultural and ethnic obstacles sow the seeds of doubt, she clings even tighter to her belief, and appeals to His compassion.
Jesus doesn’t let her down, just like He never disappoints anyone who puts all their faith in Him. Because of her faith, He heals the Canaanite woman’s daughter.

Let this woman, who was shooed away by the disciples, but refused to believe in anyone but the Lord of lord, serve as an example in your relationship with God. No matter what anyone tells you, cling to Jesus. Trust in His love for you, in His miraculous mercy and grace

I picked up What I Wish I Knew When I Was 20 on a weekend when my curiosity felt like a hunger, I wanted something pract...
19/11/2025

I picked up What I Wish I Knew When I Was 20 on a weekend when my curiosity felt like a hunger, I wanted something practical and optimistic to rearrange how I thought about work and risk. Hearing Gwen Hughes read Tina Seelig’s words made the whole experience feel like sitting in on a wise classroom session, her voice upbeat, clear, and just playful enough to make hard lessons feel like invitations rather than admonitions. The cadence made the examples stick, the small laughs landed like nudges, and by the time a chapter ended I found myself replaying phrases and jotting down action ideas, because the narration turned general advice into immediate, doable experiments.

Lessons I took, how Tina drove them home, and how they can help you

1. Treat curiosity as currency, spend it generously
Tina layers stories, puzzles, and quick exercises that made curiosity feel like a muscle you can build, not a fixed trait. Gwen’s narration emphasized the playful experiments, so I could hear the invitation to try small, strange things without fear of looking foolish. I started asking more questions at work, prototyping silly ideas, and paying attention to what excited me, and those small moves led to unexpected opportunities. For readers, this lesson reframes curiosity as actionable, it gives permission to explore, to prototype, and to accumulate surprising knowledge that becomes advantage over time.

2. Reframe problems as opportunities, the mindset shift is immediate
She teaches simple mental shifts that turn constraints into creative prompts, and the concrete classroom examples made each reframe feel testable. Listening, I learned to ask what resource is hidden in the constraint, rather than focusing on what is missing. That practice made projects I thought were blocked suddenly playable again. For anyone else, this lesson is a practical tool for getting unstuck, it converts obstacles into starting points for innovation rather than reasons to quit.

3. Prototype relentlessl

7 lessons from "Believe in Yourself" by Joseph Murphy:1. Power of Thought: Your thoughts shape your reality. Positive th...
19/11/2025

7 lessons from "Believe in Yourself" by Joseph Murphy:

1. Power of Thought: Your thoughts shape your reality. Positive thinking can lead to positive outcomes, while negative thinking can bring negative results.

2. Self-Confidence: Believing in yourself is crucial for success. Confidence in your abilities allows you to tackle challenges and pursue your goals fearlessly.

3. Subconscious Mind: Your subconscious mind influences your behavior and decisions. By feeding it positive affirmations, you can change your mindset and habits.

4. Overcoming Fear: Fear is a major obstacle to success. Confronting and managing your fears can help you unlock your potential and achieve your dreams.

5. Visualization: Visualizing your goals as already achieved can boost your motivation. This mental practice helps in making your aspirations feel more attainable.

6. Affirmations: Regularly affirming your goals and capabilities reinforces your belief in them. Positive affirmations can reprogram your mind for success.

7. Persistence: Consistent effort and perseverance are key to overcoming setbacks. Persistence helps you stay on course and eventually reach your objectives, no matter the difficulties.

We don’t go to church to prove we have it all together. We don’t walk through those doors because we’ve got it all figur...
22/09/2025

We don’t go to church to prove we have it all together. We don’t walk through those doors because we’ve got it all figured out or because we’re perfect people. In fact, it’s the opposite. We gather because we know we’re imperfect. We know we fall short. And we know how much we need grace, truth, and love that only come from God.

Church is not about showing off our goodness—it’s about worshiping a good, faithful God who meets us in our weakness, lifts us in His strength, and reminds us that we are deeply loved, no matter what.

Today, I’m thankful for the chance to pause, worship, and realign my heart with His. Not because I’m good, but because He is. 🙏🏻🤍

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08/09/2025

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