Friday, June 26, 2026

Your Invitation

So here is my invitation to you. Stop worrying about whether people are listening to your advice. They probably are not.

Worry about whether they are watching your life. Because they definitely are.

Be kind when it is easier to be grumpy.
Be patient when it is easier to snap.
Be brave when it is easier to hide.
Show up when it is easier to stay home.

And do not worry about the ones who call you lucky. They are not your audience.

Your audience is the one person who is watching quietly, (your grandchild, your neiibours friend, your youngest child) learning silently, and getting ready to take their own first step because they saw you take yours.

That is why you keep going.

That is why being a senior is not a retreat from leadership.

It is the purest form of it.

Thursday, June 25, 2026

What Role Models Actually Do

Let me clear up a misconception.

Role models are not perfect. They are not saints. They are not people who have it all figured out.

Role models are people who keep trying. Who fall down and get back up. Who admit when they are wrong. Who apologize when they have hurt someone. Who show up even when they do not feel like it.

That is what your grandchildren need to see. Not perfection. Persistence.

They need to see you struggle and keep going. They need to see you fail and try again. They need to see you face hard things with dignity, not because it is easy, but because it is right.

That is how they learn resilience. Not from your sermons. From your scars.

I once knew a man, I will call him Frank, who lost his wife after fifty-seven years of marriage. He was devastated. He stopped coming to the centre. He stopped answering his phone. He stopped living.

And then one day, a volunteer called him. Not to fix him. Just to say, "We miss you. Your chair is empty."

Frank came back. Not all at once. Slowly. Hesitantly. He sat in the back. He did not talk much. But he came.

Over time, he started talking. Then he started helping. Then he started greeting new members at the door. The same door he had been afraid to walk through himself.

Frank never gave a speech about resilience. He never wrote a book about grief. He just showed up. And every person who watched him come back learned something that no lecture could teach.

That is what a role model does. Not teach. Show.

Wednesday, June 24, 2026

The Small Events Are the Real Events

Here is something I think the world gets wrong. We think the big events matter most. The elections. The disasters. The dramatic moments that make the news.

But the small events? The daily choices? The quiet conversations? The way you treat a cashier, handle a disappointment, or show up for a friend who is struggling? Those seem insignificant. They are not.

They are the building blocks of a life. And they are exactly what your children and grandchildren are watching.

They will not remember your opinions on the economy. They will remember whether you were kind when it was inconvenient.

They will not remember your advice about money. They will remember whether you seemed peaceful or panicked about your own.

They will not remember your lectures on honesty. They will remember whether you told the truth when a small lie would have been easier.

You may not affect the outcomes of big events. None of us really can. But by your actions, you can influence the people you love as they face the small events of life. And the small events, stacked one on top of another, are what a life is made of.

Tuesday, June 23, 2026

Dreams

Here is a funny thing that happens when you start moving toward your dreams.

Your friends will call you lucky.

They will watch you take a risk, work hard, fail, get back up, try again, and eventually succeed. And they will say, "Must be nice to be so lucky."

They will not see the early mornings. They will not see the fear you swallowed. They will not see the small, daily acts of courage that no one ever celebrates. They will just see the outcome and call it luck.

Let them. It does not matter.

Because somewhere in that crowd of people calling you lucky, there will be one person who sees differently. One person who notices that luck had nothing to do with it. One person who is drawn, quietly and irresistibly, to move toward their own dreams.

That one person is why you keep going.