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Chasing success often stalls when the scoreboard refuses to register the points you know you've earned. In this solo monologue, Ben Beeri reframes that frustration through the metaphor of a 100-foot tree that begins as invisible roots beneath the soil — roots that demand more nurturing than the trunk anyone can see. The episode sits in the broader territory of mindset, delayed gratification, and entrepreneurial resilience, arguing that trust is the only fuel that keeps you watering ground that shows no sprout. "If you don't water it, there will be no tree," he says, framing belief not as optimism but as the prerequisite for effort itself. The host closes on the idea of the scorekeeper who is always watching, even when the jumbotron stays dark, and the day the display finally turns on to reveal every point was recorded.
By Ben BeeriChasing success often stalls when the scoreboard refuses to register the points you know you've earned. In this solo monologue, Ben Beeri reframes that frustration through the metaphor of a 100-foot tree that begins as invisible roots beneath the soil — roots that demand more nurturing than the trunk anyone can see. The episode sits in the broader territory of mindset, delayed gratification, and entrepreneurial resilience, arguing that trust is the only fuel that keeps you watering ground that shows no sprout. "If you don't water it, there will be no tree," he says, framing belief not as optimism but as the prerequisite for effort itself. The host closes on the idea of the scorekeeper who is always watching, even when the jumbotron stays dark, and the day the display finally turns on to reveal every point was recorded.