Mission Brief 038: The Long Game
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Mission Brief 038 – The Long Game

Grit isn’t about dramatic effort or heroic bursts — it’s about showing up, especially when the outcome is uncertain. This steady rhythm is what transforms effort into achievement. Sustainable progress favors pace over push, rhythm over rush.

The Japanese concept Kaizen means “continuous improvement.” It celebrates micro-progress and favors consistency over perfection — a reminder that small steps, taken daily, can lead to profound transformation.

In the long game of life, pace protects us. Consistent effort builds resilience, prevents burnout, and honors the reality that growth is rarely linear. When we shift from urgency to endurance, we create space for sustainable strength.

I’ve completed Hustle Up the Hancock twice — a charity stair climb in Chicago involving 1,632 steps over 94 floors. I didn’t train by sprinting. I started with just two or three flights at a time. Eventually, I worked up to climbing ten floors ten times, taking the elevator down between rounds. I succeeded both times not by rushing, but by staying steady. That’s what endurance looks like: quiet, persistent, and paced.

Choose one goal and identify the smallest, most non-negotiable step you can take daily. Shift your focus from “finish” to “continue.”  Let the rhythm carry you.

“It does not matter how slowly you go as long as you do not stop.” — Confucius

Where can you replace pressure with patience this week?  In your work?  Your healing? Your relationships?

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