Do you ever stop and think about your legacy? Or do you think about the time you have left to make an impact on the world?
A few weeks ago, I heard something that has stuck with me. The idea was simple: most people spend the first half of their life building things — a career, a family, financial stability — and the second half wondering what it all meant.
Legacy is a heavy word. It can feel distant or abstract when you're deep in the day-to-day grind. When you're managing your inbox and hitting your metrics and just trying to keep your head above water, the question of what you'll be remembered for doesn't feel particularly urgent.
But here's the thing about legacy — it's not built in some grand final act. It's built in the small, repeated choices you make every day. How you treat the people around you. Whether you show up when it's inconvenient. Whether you give more than you take. Whether you invest in others without expecting a return.
The people I've seen leave real legacies aren't necessarily the ones who reached the highest levels of corporate success. They're the ones who made other people feel seen. Who mentored without being asked. Who told the truth when it would have been easier not to. Who built things they believed in, not just things that were profitable.
I'm not asking you to have your entire legacy figured out right now. I'm just asking you to think about it more often than you do. Because the more intentional you are about the impact you want to have, the more likely you are to actually have it.
Legacy isn't a destination. It's a direction. Pick yours.
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