Stop Making Excuses. Someone Is Already Doing What You Think Is Impossible
While you wait for the perfect moment, someone else is already turning the impossible into

The Brutal Truth About Excuses :
Right now, somewhere in the world, someone with fewer advantages than you is doing the exact thing you believe is impossible.
They might have less money.
Less education.
Less support.
Yet they are moving forward while many others remain stuck in the same place — not because they lack potential, but because they are trapped in a cycle of excuses.
Excuses are comforting. They protect us from failure and embarrassment. But they also quietly steal our potential.
The uncomfortable truth is that the biggest obstacle for most people is not lack of ability. It’s hesitation.
The Myth of “Perfect Timing” :
Many people wait for the perfect moment to begin.
They say things like:
I’ll start when I have more time.
I’ll try when I feel more confident.
I’ll do it when everything is ready.
But the reality is simple: perfect timing rarely exists.
The people who accomplish extraordinary things usually start when conditions are far from ideal. They start when they are unsure, inexperienced, and sometimes even afraid.
Action creates momentum. Waiting creates doubt.
Every day spent waiting is a day someone else is gaining experience, learning lessons, and moving closer to success.
Someone Else Is Already Doing It :
Think about something you believe is extremely difficult or unrealistic.
Maybe it’s:
Starting a successful online business
Becoming a writer or content creator
Learning a complex skill
Building financial independence
Achieving a big personal goal
Now consider this: someone somewhere has already done it.
Not once. Thousands of times.
History is full of people who achieved things others believed were impossible. At one point, flying across the world in a metal machine sounded ridiculous. Today, it’s normal.
What changed?
Someone decided not to accept the word impossible.
The Difference Between Dreamers and Doers :
Dreamers and doers often start with the same idea.
The difference is what happens next.
Dreamers spend their time imagining success, thinking about plans, and waiting for the right moment.
Doers take small steps immediately.
They don't always feel ready.
They don’t always know what they’re doing.
But they start anyway.
And that single decision — to begin — separates them from the majority of people who never try.
Fear Disguised as Logic :
Excuses often sound reasonable.
People say things like:
The market is too competitive.
I don’t have the right connections.
Someone else is already better.
But many times these reasons are simply fear wearing a logical disguise.
Fear of failure.
Fear of judgment.
Fear of discovering our own limits.
Ironically, avoiding action guarantees the very outcome people fear most: never knowing what they were capable of.
Progress Beats Perfection :
One of the biggest mistakes people make is believing they must be perfect before they start.
In reality, progress always looks messy at the beginning.
Every expert was once a beginner.
Every successful writer wrote terrible drafts.
Every athlete struggled with basic skills.
Every entrepreneur made mistakes.
Improvement only happens through practice, feedback, and persistence.
Perfection is not the starting point — it is the result of consistent effort.
The Power of Small Steps :
Achieving something big rarely happens overnight.
Instead, it happens through small actions repeated consistently.
Writing one page a day becomes a book.
Learning a little every day becomes mastery.
Saving small amounts regularly becomes financial stability.
Small steps may seem insignificant at first, but over time they create powerful momentum.
And momentum is what turns difficult goals into achievable ones.
The Choice You Face Every Day :
Every day presents the same simple choice.
You can continue telling yourself why something cannot be done.
Or you can start moving in the direction of your goal, even if the steps feel small.
The difference between success and regret often comes down to that single decision.
Because while you are deciding whether something is possible, someone else is already proving that it is.
Final Reflection :
The world does not reward the people who have the best excuses.
It rewards the people who take action despite uncertainty.
So the next time you catch yourself saying “That’s impossible,” remember this:
Somewhere, someone is already doing it.
And the only real question left is whether you will keep watching — or start climbing too.
About the Creator
The Bridge He Almost Never Crossed
In a small riverside town in northern Europe, where winter stayed longer than welcome and the sun often hid behind gray clouds, lived a young man named Elias. His town was famous for its old stone bridge — a bridge that connected the quiet residential streets to the busy industrial district where most people worked. Every morning, hundreds of workers crossed it without thinking.
By Iazaz hussain5 days ago in Motivation



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