A seagull in England made that mistake recently. It didn’t realise it at the time. It thought it had found food. That’s usually how drift starts. Small. Harmless. Almost invisible. The gull was probably doing what seagulls do best: Looking for scraps. Digging through bins. Searching for an easy meal. At some point, it climbed into the wrong container. Then the truck moved. And kept moving. Town after town. Hour after hour. Mile after mile. The strange part? Nothing dramatic happened at first. No emergency. No warning sign. No obvious danger. Just gradual movement in the wrong direction. By the time sanitation workers found the bird, it had travelled nearly 80 miles. It was exhausted. Dehydrated. And very far from where it intended to be. Thankfully, it survived.
But that story stuck with me because it feels uncomfortably familiar. Not because most people climb into garbage trucks. But because most people drift off course in exactly the same way. Not through one catastrophic decision. Usually it’s much smaller than that. One distraction becomes normal. One shortcut becomes routine. One compromise becomes “just how things are.” And because the movement is gradual, it barely feels like movement at all. That’s the dangerous part. Most bad directions feel harmless in the beginning. The seagull thought it had found free food. Instead, it accidentally signed up for an 80-mile journey. People do the same thing with: money health relationships business attention Small decisions compound quietly. Both good ones and bad ones. That’s why it’s worth stopping occasionally and asking: “Am I still heading where I actually wanted to go?” Because drift is easiest to correct early. Not 80 miles later. And this is where systems matter. Good systems keep you on track automatically. Bad systems — or no systems — almost guarantee drift. In business and life, those systems are called habits. Most people try to change direction with motivation or willpower. That rarely lasts. What works better is a practical, repeatable strategy for creating the habits you actually want… before the habits you don’t want quietly take over. That’s why I keep recommending this: Course-correct your drift here https://go.wm-tips.com/atomic It’s the most practical, easily implemented strategy I’ve found for replacing “drift habits” with deliberate systems that move you in the direction you actually want to go. Because most people don’t ruin their lives in one decision. They drift there gradually. And the right habits help stop that before it happens. Regards, P.S. The right habits rarely create overnight success. They simply stop you drifting somewhere you never intended to end up. Grab the strategy here. https://go.wm-tips.com/atomic |
