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Your greatest asset is knowing why you were born.

I didn’t always have language for that, but I’ve been moving toward it for a long time.

 

Around the age of fourteen, I developed a deep love for the Bible and for Scripture. Not out of obligation, but out of curiosity. I wanted to understand truth for myself. I wanted to know who God actually was, not just who He was described to be. That search shaped how I think, how I listen, and how I pay attention.

 

At the same time, I was asking a quieter question beneath it all: Why am I here?

 

As I grew, opportunities started opening up especially as a creative and a musician. Those opportunities were real. They helped me develop discipline, skill, and confidence. But they also introduced tension. I was active, visible, and productive, yet still unclear. I was doing meaningful things without fully understanding the thing I was meant to do.

 

I began to notice how easily opportunity can replace clarity.

 

Performance can create momentum, but momentum without direction eventually leads to distraction. I saw it in myself, and I saw it in others talented people moving quickly, but not intentionally. Gifted people becoming busy without becoming aligned.

 

That’s where the shift happened.

 

I stopped chasing value through performance and started prioritizing purpose through people. I became less interested in proving what I could do and more focused on helping others understand why they do what they do. Not to limit them, but to orient them.

 

Because what’s at stake isn’t just productivity.

It’s potential.

 

When clarity is missing, people don’t fail loudly they drift quietly. They carry ideas, insight, and futures that never fully arrive. And when a person leaves this world without clarity, something else leaves with them too.

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Purpose doesn’t need pressure. It needs direction.
 

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