Being in service of others is the highest calling.
It’s not about being liked, followed, or admired.
Those things fade.
What lasts is the impact you make when your actions directly improve someone’s life.
We chase applause when we should chase solutions.
A helping hand is always worth more than a standing ovation.
Impact doesn’t need witnesses; it needs intention.
Ask yourself: How many people would miss your contributions if you stopped tomorrow?
That’s the real measure of your purpose.
Living to be useful isn’t self-sacrifice; it’s self-mastery.
You stop chasing validation because you realize the value you bring is already infinite to someone.
The right mindset isn’t, “What can I get?”
It’s, “What can I give?”
Utility is the only currency that compounds forever.
Don’t confuse utility with servitude.
Serving others doesn’t mean losing yourself.
It means finding the part of you that creates, heals, builds, or solves.
It means knowing your time and effort are tools to be sharpened, not wasted.
Takeaway: Be useful to as many people as possible, not everything to everyone, but something meaningful to someone.