One day, a reporter asked Terry Fox how he kept going. At that point, he had already run thousands of miles across Canada. On one artificial leg. Through rain. Through pain. Through exhaustion. Most people assumed he must have been thinking about the finish line. The massive goal. The thousands of miles still ahead. Instead, Terry gave a surprisingly simple answer: “I just keep running to the next telephone pole.” That’s it. Not the next province. Not the Pacific Ocean. Not the millions of dollars he hoped to raise for cancer research. Just the next telephone pole. If you know Terry Fox’s story, you know how extraordinary it was. After losing his leg to cancer, he spent months training before beginning what he called the Marathon of Hope. His goal was to run across Canada and raise one dollar for every Canadian. A goal so large it sounded almost impossible. Yet every day he got up and ran. Not because he focused on the entire journey. Because he focused on the next small step. Then the next one. And then the next. Eventually those small steps added up to 5,373 kilometers over 143 days. (Terry Fox Foundation) This is what the Japanese call Kaizen. Continuous improvement through small, consistent actions. Most people fail because they become overwhelmed by the size of the mountain. They focus on losing 50 pounds. Writing a book. Growing a business. Saving for retirement. Learning a new skill. The goal becomes so big that it creates resistance. Terry Fox understood something powerful: You don’t conquer a continent. You conquer the next telephone pole. The next workout. The next page. The next sales call. The next healthy meal. The next day. Success rarely comes from giant leaps. It usually comes from tiny actions repeated long enough that they become impossible to stop. So here’s a question: What’s your next telephone pole? Not your five-year goal. Not your dream outcome. Just the next small step. Take that one today. Tomorrow, find the next one. That’s how extraordinary achievements are built. One telephone pole at a time. If you’re looking for a simple system to create steady progress without overwhelm, that’s exactly what Atomic Habits is designed to do. No giant leaps. No complicated strategies. Just small actions that compound into remarkable results. Regards, P.S. You don’t need more motivation. You need a closer telephone pole. |
