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When was the last time somebody asked you, not how much you are working, but whether the work you are doing is actually taking you where you want to go?
There is a question most high-performing professionals have not been asked in years.
Not by a mentor. Not by a colleague. Not even, honestly, by themselves.
The question is simple. But it is the most important question a thinking professional can sit with.
“Is the work I am doing actually moving me toward where I want to be — or am I simply doing more of what I have always done, hoping the direction will sort itself out?”
Most of us have been trained, carefully, over decades, to answer a different question entirely.
We have been trained to answer: “Are you working hard enough?”
And so we measure ourselves in hours. In volume. In output. In how full the calendar is. In how tired we are at the end of the week. We take pride in the intensity of the effort, because the culture around us has made effort the visible proof of seriousness.
But effort is not direction.
And somewhere along the way, often in our mid-thirties, sometimes earlier, sometimes later, a quiet recognition begins to form. A suspicion. A sense.
The sense that despite the hours, despite the commitment, despite the intelligence being brought to bear, something is not compounding the way it should be.
Let me name this clearly, because most professionals carry this sense without the language to describe it.
You are not lazy. You are not incompetent. You are not underperforming in any conventional measure.
You are simply misaligned. The effort is real. The direction is uncertain. And when effort runs in an uncertain direction, it produces exhaustion rather than advancement.
This is the beginning of what I call orientation work.
Orientation is not time management. Orientation is not goal setting. Orientation is something more fundamental.
Orientation is the discipline of reading the terrain you are actually operating in — the real one, not the one you have assumed — and asking, with honesty, whether the path you are on is taking you toward your place of advantage, or simply away from your current discomfort.
Here is a small exercise. Not for today. For this week.
Take a blank page. Write one sentence at the top: “In five years, if I continue on the exact trajectory I am on right now, not an improved version, not a better-resourced version, the actual current trajectory, where will I be?”
Do not rush the answer. Let it arrive.
Most professionals, when they sit with this question honestly, discover something uncomfortable. The honest answer is not the answer they would write in a professional bio. It is not the answer they would say out loud in a meeting.
It is quieter. And it is closer to the truth than almost anything else they have written about themselves in years.
That gap — between where you say you are going and where you are actually headed — is the terrain I work in.
It is not a motivation problem. It is not a confidence problem. It is an orientation problem.
And it has a solution. A precise one.
But the solution begins where most professionals refuse to begin.
It begins with seeing the terrain honestly.
I will show you exactly what that means in the next conversation.
Reinvention does not begin with what you do.
It begins with the state from which you do it.
People do not primarily act their way into a new life. They enact the future permitted by their dominant state.
As you go into the rest of your year, resist the urge to rush into more activity. Instead, pause and ask yourself one honest question: How am I showing up and what needs to shift? Let me know what you think in the comment session. Enjoy
By Martins ToluhiWhen was the last time somebody asked you, not how much you are working, but whether the work you are doing is actually taking you where you want to go?
There is a question most high-performing professionals have not been asked in years.
Not by a mentor. Not by a colleague. Not even, honestly, by themselves.
The question is simple. But it is the most important question a thinking professional can sit with.
“Is the work I am doing actually moving me toward where I want to be — or am I simply doing more of what I have always done, hoping the direction will sort itself out?”
Most of us have been trained, carefully, over decades, to answer a different question entirely.
We have been trained to answer: “Are you working hard enough?”
And so we measure ourselves in hours. In volume. In output. In how full the calendar is. In how tired we are at the end of the week. We take pride in the intensity of the effort, because the culture around us has made effort the visible proof of seriousness.
But effort is not direction.
And somewhere along the way, often in our mid-thirties, sometimes earlier, sometimes later, a quiet recognition begins to form. A suspicion. A sense.
The sense that despite the hours, despite the commitment, despite the intelligence being brought to bear, something is not compounding the way it should be.
Let me name this clearly, because most professionals carry this sense without the language to describe it.
You are not lazy. You are not incompetent. You are not underperforming in any conventional measure.
You are simply misaligned. The effort is real. The direction is uncertain. And when effort runs in an uncertain direction, it produces exhaustion rather than advancement.
This is the beginning of what I call orientation work.
Orientation is not time management. Orientation is not goal setting. Orientation is something more fundamental.
Orientation is the discipline of reading the terrain you are actually operating in — the real one, not the one you have assumed — and asking, with honesty, whether the path you are on is taking you toward your place of advantage, or simply away from your current discomfort.
Here is a small exercise. Not for today. For this week.
Take a blank page. Write one sentence at the top: “In five years, if I continue on the exact trajectory I am on right now, not an improved version, not a better-resourced version, the actual current trajectory, where will I be?”
Do not rush the answer. Let it arrive.
Most professionals, when they sit with this question honestly, discover something uncomfortable. The honest answer is not the answer they would write in a professional bio. It is not the answer they would say out loud in a meeting.
It is quieter. And it is closer to the truth than almost anything else they have written about themselves in years.
That gap — between where you say you are going and where you are actually headed — is the terrain I work in.
It is not a motivation problem. It is not a confidence problem. It is an orientation problem.
And it has a solution. A precise one.
But the solution begins where most professionals refuse to begin.
It begins with seeing the terrain honestly.
I will show you exactly what that means in the next conversation.
Reinvention does not begin with what you do.
It begins with the state from which you do it.
People do not primarily act their way into a new life. They enact the future permitted by their dominant state.
As you go into the rest of your year, resist the urge to rush into more activity. Instead, pause and ask yourself one honest question: How am I showing up and what needs to shift? Let me know what you think in the comment session. Enjoy