The Power of Showing Up Again
There are days when you don’t feel like showing up.
After a tough week. After a lost client. After a mistake you can’t stop replaying in your mind. You wake up tired, not physically — but mentally.
I’ve had mornings where I sat in my car for a few extra minutes before walking into a meeting. Not because I didn’t care. But because I felt drained.
Life will test your consistency more than your talent.
The truth is, most breakthroughs don’t happen in dramatic moments. They happen because someone kept showing up. Even when the results were not immediate. Even when the recognition wasn’t there.
Jim Collins wrote in Good to Great, “Greatness is not a function of circumstance. Greatness, it turns out, is largely a matter of conscious choice.” One of those choices is simple: show up again.
Not louder. Not flashier. Just present.
On hard days, I narrow it down:
Make the one important call.
Finish the one key task.
Encourage one person.
Improve one small thing.
You don’t need a perfect day. You need a faithful one.
There is quiet strength in consistency. It builds trust with others. More importantly, it builds trust with yourself.
If you feel behind, discouraged, or uncertain, don’t disappear. Don’t withdraw.
Get up. Get dressed. Take the next step.
Momentum often returns to the person who refuses to quit.
Sometimes the most powerful decision you can make is not to win big — but to show up again.
