Guy Reams (00:00.846)
This is day 192. Start with the end in mind.
There is a quiet nobility in starting something from nothing. A seed of an idea, the courage to act, and the willingness to learn along the way. This is the fuel behind many great achievements. We have come to celebrate this method. We encourage each other to begin, to fail fast, to learn, to try again. And in many ways, rightly so. But there is a danger here, one that hides in plain sight. You can begin with noble intentions.
iterate with energy and pour countless hours into refining. Only to find years later, you have crafted a beautiful ladder leaning against the wrong wall. You have solved problems with great elegance, but never asked if they were the right ones to solve in the first place. You have moved with speed, but no direction. Without a vision, motion becomes just noise. So I suggest something different, or rather, something in addition. Begin, yes.
but begin with the end in mind. There is gravity behind having a clear vision. A compelling vision is more than a lofty idea. It is a gravitational force that shapes your decisions and draws your actions into alignment. It helps you prioritize what truly matters, long before distractions can steal your time. It allows you to say no, not to everything, but to the wrong things, the shiny things, the almost right things.
It allows you to persevere when the middle gets messy, because it always does. Most importantly, it helps you answer a foundational question. Is this journey worth it? If the end you envision is not worthy of your sacrifice, then find a better destination. Do not climb just for the sake of climbing. And also, don't wait for the whole map.
Guy Reams (01:59.67)
Vision gives meaning, but it's not a map with every twist and turn marked out. If you wait for perfect clarity, you will never begin. The road always looks different once you are on it. This is where iteration earns its place. Iteration is not aimless. It is humility in motion. It says, believe in the destination, but I willing to learn how to get there. It allows you to test, to explore, to adapt. It keeps you flexible, honest, and engaged with the present.
So we need both. A clear vision and the courage to take the first and perfect step. So how do you hold on to both? Well, you start by seeing the summit. Picture what success would look like. Not vaguely, but clearly. Is it meaningful? Is it worth building? If not, do not build. Choose again. Then work backwards. Identify what must be true for the end to become real. What assumptions are you carrying?
What are the early signs of progress? Where can you begin right now, today, and then just begin? Not perfectly, not completely, just begin. So my final thought, vision without movement is just fantasy, but movement without vision is wandering. So start with the end in mind, not because you will reach it exactly as you had imagined, but because it gives meaning to your movement.
It allows you to change direction without losing your way. It gives purpose to your progress. And when you do arrive, after all the pivots and setbacks, all the revisions, you will not be surprised. You will know you were meant to be there all along.