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The notification flashed across my screen early that morning—bright red, insistent, impossible to ignore.
I hadn’t even finished my coffee. Its words promised prosperity, favorable timing, and doors about to open. But instead of excitement, I felt a quiet hesitation. I’d seen messages like this before—confident, absolute, designed to pull attention outward. This one did something different. It made me stop.
The word attention stayed with me, not as an order, but as a question. What was I really paying attention to in my own life?
So many people are drawn to signs and predictions because they offer comfort. They suggest clarity where uncertainty lives. They imply that success will arrive suddenly, announced loudly, wrapped in certainty. But real progress rarely works that way. It doesn’t burst into existence. It accumulates—slowly, almost invisibly—through discipline, patience, and small decisions repeated over time. The image on my screen felt less like a forecast and more like a symbol of how easily hope can be outsourced.
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Too real
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