Category Blog

Doing Something Good

I don’t know, man.

The world is getting more fucked up as it is. And I’m not going to pretend sitting here, like I have some grand answer for that. I don’t. Nobody does, I think. The people who say they do? Usually the ones making it worse.

I’ve been thinking about this though. What “doing good” actually means when everything feels like it’s falling apart. You scroll your phone, every headline sounds like a countdown to something bad. The noise is so much louder than anything real. The whole system feels designed to keep you anxious, distracted, small.

And I keep coming back to the same place.

I think it’s not some big, heroic thing.

It’s not building a movement. It’s not going viral with the right message at the right time. It’s not saving the world in some dramatic, Marvel cinematic kind of way.

It’s quieter than that.

I think the most important thing we can do is protect our family. Our kids. Not shelter them from everything. Not hide them from how messy it all is. But prepare them. Give them what they need so when the world comes at them hard, and it will, they don’t fall apart. They stand.

I want my kids to be decent people. Sounds basic, right? But it’s not. Not in a time where decency is a luxury. Not when the world rewards being loud over being real, outrage over actually understanding anything, shortcuts over doing things right. Raising someone decent in all this? That’s resistance. Real resistance.

I want them to be smart. Not just school smart or street smart. Wise. The kind of smart that knows when to talk and when to shut up and listen. That can deal with things being complicated without needing everything to be certain right away.

I want them to be composed. The world’s going to test them. People will push their buttons. Systems will frustrate the hell out of them. But the ones who hold steady without losing who they are? Those are the people who actually change things. Not the loudest person. The steady one.

I want them strong. Not the fake kind that pretends nothing hurts. That’s bullshit we feed boys especially, and it destroys them. I mean the kind of strong where you break, and then you come back. You fall, you get up. You don’t make a whole personality out of either one. You just do it. Over and over and over.

I want them to have empathy. Real empathy. The kind that actually sees people. That can sit with someone else’s pain without trying to fix it, without making it about themselves. Understanding everyone’s dealing with shit you can’t see. That the world is hard for all of us, just in different ways. 

Empathy keeps us human when everything’s trying to turn us into algorithms. Into reactions. Into tribes, groups, segments. It’s what lets you disagree with someone and still see them as a person. It stops you from turning into the thing you hate.

Here’s what I keep coming back to.

Maybe that’s all we can do.

Maybe that’s enough.

Because when I look at the state of things, the political mess, the economic anxiety, the wars, the algorithms feeding us rage every morning. I can’t fix any of that. Not really. Not in any way that matters at scale.

But I can raise people who are better than what this world is trying to turn them into.

I’m far from them most of the time now. Different city. Different timezone. Most nights I’m not there.

But when I get home, when I’m with them, I’m all in. I sit with my kids at dinner and actually ask about their day. Not going through the motions. Actually asking. Actually listening. I let them see what it looks like when a man says he doesn’t know something. When he admits he was wrong and it’s not the end of the world. When he picks patience over reacting. Being kind over being right.

Distance doesn’t let me off the hook. If anything, it makes the time count more. They need to see it, not just hear me talk about it. Watch how I handle things when they don’t go my way. How I treat people when nobody important is looking. How I deal with failing at stuff.

I can’t raise them just by being around. I have to raise them by being present. And when I’m there, I’m there.

It’s not small. Because it has ripples.

We all have been shown that doing good has to be big. That it has to be visible, scalable, shareable. We’ve been sold this version of impact that looks like TED talks and viral campaigns and million-dollar foundations. That stuff matters, sure. I’m not saying it doesn’t.

But most of the real good I’ve seen? Done by people who got zero credit. Parents who just showed up. Teachers who stayed late. Friends who called when it mattered. People who held the line when it would’ve been easier to walk away.

The world doesn’t celebrate that. But the world is built on it.

So, yeah. I don’t have a manifesto. I don’t have a five-step plan to fix everything. I’m not even right some of the time.

What I’ve got is this.

Show up for your people. Raise kids who are decent, smart, composed, strong enough to stand when everything’s coming at them. Be someone they can look at and think, “Okay, that’s how you do it. Not perfect. But real.”

That’s what we can do.

And I’m starting to believe that’s not a compromise. It’s not settling for less because the big problems are too big.

It’s the actual answer.

The world changes one dinner table at a time. One real conversation at a time. One kid who grows up knowing that strength isn’t about dominance, it’s about presence.

I don’t have this figured out. I’m still learning.

But I know this much. In a world this fucked up, raising good humans isn’t the second prize.

It’s everything. It’s the whole game.

The Builder and a Mirror

Building something has always felt natural to me. Ever since I was a kid, my mom told me that I used to use a matchbox and use it as a toy tank. Not to mention the excitement that I have after my parents game me a lego set, I could spent hours upon hours on just a small set of lego pieces. The most powerful realization is when I first got a PC. Truly a bicycle for the mind. I created programs, paintings, poems, writings, and many other things. Now, I’ve spent most of my adult life building: platforms, teams, ideas, companies, and stories.

Building gives me direction. It gives shape to my days. There’s something deeply human in creating something that didn’t exist before. A sense that our effort can turn into something meaningful.

But lately, I’ve been thinking about the cost of momentum. How moving fast and far can blur your own reflection. How the builder, so focused on what’s ahead, sometimes forgets to look at who they’re becoming in the process.

This isn’t guilt, nor self-criticism wearing the mask of wisdom. It’s more like an awareness mirror that doesn’t flatter or judge. Just quietly trying to contemplate what’s there when the noise fades.

The longer I build, the more I realise: our strength and weakness are often the same muscle, just used beyond its limit.

Possibilities always drawn me in.

I can’t look at something without imagining what it could become, a new system, a clearer strategy, a better way to connect dots that others haven’t noticed yet. It’s thrilling. And it’s exhausting.

Vision is beautiful when it guides you. But sometimes it pulls you faster than others can follow, or spreads you thinner than your own time allows.

There have been moments, usually after a long day, around midnight, surrounded by half-finished slides and half-formed ideas, when I realise I’ve built too many things at once. Each one meaningful, but all competing for oxygen. Sometimes, my wife asks me a simple question at dinner, and I have to ask her to repeat it. Twice.

Vision gives me energy. But it also tempts me to forget that even the brightest stars need gravity to stay in orbit.

It is always hard for me to leave work things as “good enough.”

If something carries my name or touch, I want it to feel alive, thoughtful, beautiful. I rewrite sentences no one will notice. I rework decks that are already done. A misaligned slide feels physical to me, like something I can’t unsee. My hand itches to fix slightly uncentered lines from the presentation.

At its best, that’s respect for the work. At its worst, it’s pride disguised as perfectionism.

I used to tell myself I was protecting the standard. Maybe sometimes, I was just protecting my comfort zone. That feeling of control that comes from fixing rather than trusting.

Excellence, I’m learning, isn’t about polishing endlessly. It’s about knowing when something already speaks clearly enough, and when it’s time to let others speak, even if not in my tone.

Solitude has always been my companion.

I think best in silence. Early mornings, when everything is still, thoughts unspooling into patterns. It’s where essays draft and outline get written, frameworks take shape, meaning gets made.

But solitude can harden into distance.

When ideas live too long in my head before I share them, they become too precious, too polished. Others then feel like visitors to something already built, instead of co-creators shaping it with me. I come back with something complete but remote. Something that feels less like ours and more like mine.

I’ve learned that shared thinking isn’t a compromise. It’s an act of trust.

Letting people into the messy middle isn’t weakness. It’s leadership of a different kind.

Sometimes I can’t help myself. Even in casual conversations, my brain starts drawing frameworks.

Patterns calm me. Systems make sense of chaos. Productivity. Platforms. How the universe works. My brain just does this, finds the pattern, draws the boxes, labels the axes.

But life, .. and people, don’t always want to be diagrammed.

Sometimes my kids just want to tell me about their day without me accidentally categorizing their feelings into mapped problem that need to be solved. Someone shares a struggle, and I’m already building the mental model, mapping the variables, offering the system. When really, they just needed me to say: “That sounds hard. I’m here.”

Maybe, the best answer isn’t a model or a process. It’s presence. It’s being still enough to listen without trying to fix or formalize.

I’m learning that not every question needs a framework. Some just need space.

I care deeply, maybe too deeply sometimes. About people, about meaning, about the quiet things that hold teams together when the metrics don’t. About whether the work matters, whether it helps, whether it leaves things better than I found them.

That care fuels me. But it also drains me when carried alone.

There’s a kind of compassion fatigue that comes from holding everyone else’s worries while quietly ignoring your own. Like carrying water for everyone, until your own cup runs dry. I’ve said yes when I meant “not right now.” I’ve absorbed team anxieties like a sponge, believing that’s what good leaders do.

Care is powerful only when it includes the self.

And learning that isn’t selfish, it’s survival.

I don’t have this figured out. I’m not writing from the other side, looking back with clarity. I’m writing from the middle, where the work of knowing yourself never really ends.

But here’s what I’m learning, gently, imperfectly:

I’m learning to finish before I begin again. To let others be imperfect beside me sometimes. To speak ideas earlier, not just after I’ve made them whole. To choose simplicity when complexity tempts me. To rest, not as escape, but as renewal.

Maybe growing up isn’t about fixing our flaws. Maybe it’s about befriending them. Learning to walk with our shadows, not ahead of them.

I’m still building. I don’t think I’ll ever stop. It’s who I am. Someone who finds meaning in creation.

But I’m learning to pause more often, to hold the mirror steady.

Every builder needs that mirror, not to question their worth, but to remember their wholeness.

I’m grateful for this remembrance for self. For the people who’ve reminded me when I drifted too far into my own orbit. For the moments of stillness that forced me to see what speed had hidden.

I’ll keep building. Just a little slower. A little kinder. And, I hope, a little wiser.