Every once in a while, something comes along that makes you stop scrolling, stop multitasking, stop thinking about the 47 things on your to-do list… and just watch.
For me, that was the Winter Olympics this year.
There’s something oddly therapeutic about watching athletes from all over the world come together to compete at the highest level, while also cheering each other on, hugging after races, and showing the kind of sportsmanship we don’t always see in everyday life. In a time where the world can feel divided, loud, and honestly a little exhausting, it felt refreshing to watch people push themselves to the limit — and still show kindness to the person standing right next to them.
Also… the talent. Absolutely unreal. It’s wild to think that years — decades — of training can come down to a few seconds. One tiny mistake. One bad landing. One edge of a skate catching the wrong way. One moment that just isn’t your moment.
And yet, what stood out to me most in all the interviews wasn’t the medals.
It was the way the athletes kept talking about the process.
They talked about being present. About enjoying the experience. About gratitude — just for being there, just for making the team, just for getting the chance to compete.
Not the outcome.
Not the score.
Not the podium.
The process.
And that hit me, because how often do we rush past the process in our own lives? We want the result. We want the finished product. We want the moment where everything feels successful and tied up with a nice little bow.
But the reality is… most of life is the training.
Most of life is the practice.
Most of life is the part where it’s hard, uncomfortable, repetitive, and not very glamorous.
And that’s exactly the part we tend to wish away.
Watching the Olympics reminded me that the people who get the most out of the experience aren’t the ones who only focus on the medal — they’re the ones who learn how to be in the moment while they’re working for it. To show up even when it’s hard. To stay in it even when it’s not perfect. To keep going even when the outcome isn’t guaranteed.
So I’ve been asking myself this lately: Where can I be a little more present? Where can I stop rushing to the result and actually live in the process? Where can I lean into the hard things instead of trying to skip past them?
Maybe that’s at work. Maybe that’s in parenting. Maybe that’s in training. Maybe that’s just in the everyday moments we usually don’t think twice about.
Wherever it is — that’s the work.
Enjoy the process. Show up for the hard parts. That’s where life actually happens.
And as always… do what makes you happy.
But don’t forget to be there for the part where happiness is being built.
