Two men were given equal plots of land on the same day.
The first man didnβt overthink it.
He looked at the soil, rolled up his sleeves, and went to work.
He planted what he had, repaired what was broken, and returned every dayβwhether he felt motivated or not.
Some days were slow.
Some days felt pointless.
Still, he worked the ground in front of him.
The second man studied his land from a distance.
He talked about what he would plant once conditions were right.
He listened to voices promising easier harvests and faster results.
He waited for certainty before committing effort.
The field remained untouchedβbut full of plans.
Time passed.
The first manβs field responded.
Not all at onceβbut steadily.
Shoots broke through the soil.
His family ate.
Others benefited from his consistency.
The second manβs field stayed quiet.
No harvest came.
His intentions were sincere, but hunger doesnβt respond to sincerityβit responds to work.
And the land taught this lesson:
βThe field answers action, not intention.
What you work will feed you.
What you only imagine will not.β
π Be honestβright now, are you working your field,
or are you still standing at the edge waiting to feel ready?