Most people wait for clarity before they start.
I used to do the same.
The problem is—clarity rarely comes first. It shows up after you take a few messy steps.
You start something without knowing where it will go.
You learn by doing it badly.
You understand yourself while moving, not before.
Some days you’ll feel confident.
Some days you’ll doubt everything.
Both are normal.
What matters more than motivation is showing up anyway.
Even quietly.
Even inconsistently at first.
This is just a small note to remind you (and me):
You don’t need to have it all figured out to begin.
Starting still counts.
—
Hamza Saberi

