CLARITY COMES FROM CHOOSING THE FAR TARGET
The nearest problem is rarely the most important one. Clarity sharpens when you anchor yourself to the long-range objective — the work that will still matter when the noise has faded. Once the far target is chosen, the foreground stops dictating your direction. Urgency loses its power. The path steadies. Clarity is less about eliminating distractions than outgrowing them by committing to something larger than they are.
Identify the far target — the one that matters a year from now — and take one step toward it today.