293 : The Year Nothing Happened

The least glamorous career advice I have ever written, and some of the most important.
293 : The Year Nothing Happened

Everyone talks about their career breakthrough. The big pivot. The moment everything just clicked.

Almost nobody talks about the year that nothing happened.

The truth about careers worth envying is less inspiring and more useful than any origin story: they were built on accumulation. Showing up on a Tuesday that felt exactly like the last one, and the one before that. Not one good week. Fifty of them.

Five things compound when you do this consistently. None of them are dramatic and they share one uncomfortable feature: the gap between effort and evidence can last months before anything visible changes. You keep depositing and the account balance looks unchanged.

Most people quit somewhere in that gap. Letting standards slip from excellent to fine. This slip is the enemy of compound growth.

I wrote about what actually compounds, why the gap defeats most people, and a practical test to know whether your consistency is aimed at something worth building.

Read : The Compound Effect of Showing Up

Stuff I'm Reading

Finally. Headlines. Test your memory on important events, surprisingly frustrating and addictive.


Below the Fold

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Journal Prompt: What's one area of your work where you've been coasting on "fine" instead of compounding? Start Writing Now.
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