Time’s Not Coming — You Move First!
By Emeka Chiaghanam
The Illusion of Perfect Timing
and Why Action Can’t Wait
A single match struck behind closed doors. It flares, shadows leap across cold walls, and it's gone. Darkness returns. That’s how the “right time” works. It glows. Then smothers.
You
waited. It passed.
The Illusion of Perfect Timing
You're
in your workshop, metal, wood, dust. The smell of saw and oil. You want to
launch a side hustle. You tell yourself, “When the kids are older… when I
save an extra ₦200k…” But you're here now,
with tools at hand and fire in your chest.
That’s
the lie: there is no right time. Just the time you act.
Stanford research shows, well, it implies, that people who begin with imperfect planning succeed faster than those who wait for perfection. Waiting reduces momentum. It kills projects.
2.
History Proves It
Look
at Churchill. He won WWII. Not when conditions were easy. He spoke into war. He
spoke into bombed skies. He used what he had.
Nelson
Mandela? He waited years in prison, sure, but he didn't wait for Team Democracy
to be perfect. He moved when he could. Slowly. Still.
Timing
isn’t a waiting room. It’s a battlefield.
3.
Risk Isn’t the Enemy—Inaction Is
You
sit in traffic. In a cubicle. On repeat. You look around. Everyone waits, for a
raise, a tour, that call back. Meanwhile days melt into months. Confidence
diminishes.
Psychologists
call this “analysis paralysis.” Overthinking locks you into your chair. But
decisions, small ones, break the chains.
Start
with a single action. Learn. Adjust.
4.
Incremental Progress Beats Hesitation
Imagine
building a bridge plank by plank. You don’t build it in your head, you build it
in the river. Wet wood, nails bent, workers halting. But the bridge grows.
Ryan,
a Lagos tech worker, wanted to shift into freelancing. He waited until his
savings were “enough.” News flash: they never felt enough. Then one night he
wrote two lines of code for hire. That’s it. Just two. Then four. Then eight.
Six months later, he left the cubicle behind.
That’s
how you begin, not when you feel ready, but when you move your feet.
5.
Fear Hides in “Someday”
Fear
isn’t just the thought of failure. It’s the glow of imagined future failure.
Someday masks grief. The grief of not trying. The grief of what might’ve been.
A
2019 Northwestern study found that people who frame projects with deadlines,
even arbitrary ones, have greater follow-through. Funny, right? By marking
“begin now,” you trick your mind into showing up.
6.
If Not Now… Then When?
Here’s
the secret: now is good enough. Tomorrow brings new storms. A job may shift.
Life interrupts. That message could come at 9 p.m. tonight. Or 9 a.m. tomorrow.
There’s
no orbiting your purpose. You land on it, or you drift away.
7.
Turn “When” Into “Now”
- Define
one step today. A text. A draft. A purchase. Make it
tangible.
- Set
a short deadline. One week. Not six months. Real
pressure fuels action.
- Share
your intent. Tell someone. Accountability is a gust
of wind.
- Celebrate
the small. Two lines of code. One page of prose.
You visited the gym. You called your mother. You started.
8.
Real Lives, Real Starts
I
met Ada in Enugu. She baked cakes. Always waited for the “perfect recipe.” I
told her: “Bake one imperfect cake. Sell it on.” She laughed. She baked. It
flopped. She learnt. Today she fulfills 50 cakes a week.
I
met Emeka in Jos. He loved woodworking. Waited for a bigger workshop. I told
him: “Find one plank. Carve something.” He did. Then two. Then a small
business.
They
didn’t wait. They just started.
9.
The Emotion You’re Really Chasing
It’s
not timing. It's control. It's meaning. You want the satisfaction of your own
creation. But you stand at the edge, watching life pass.
Start.
You prove to yourself you can. And that truth? That’s the light that
won’t snuff out.
10.
A Simple Call to Arms
- Strike the match
today.
- Launch that
page.
- Have that
conversation.
- Build that
plank.
- Bake that cake.
- Write that
paragraph.
The
river’s waiting. The plank floats. You just lay it down.
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