Perspective

Distance that sharpens what matters.

Perspective doesn’t usually arrive in the moment.

When you’re close to something, everything feels immediate.
Important.
Loud.

It’s hard to tell what matters most when everything feels like it does.

But time has a way of creating distance.

So does space.

You step away for a while.
You look back from somewhere else.
You return to something that once felt consuming and notice it feels… different.

Not gone.

Just quieter.

It’s subtle at first.

What once felt urgent no longer asks for your full attention.
What once felt heavy seems easier to carry.
Things rearrange themselves without you forcing them to.

You begin to see more clearly.

You might think perspective comes from having the right answers.

But more often it comes from stepping back long enough to ask better questions.

Or sometimes no questions at all.

Just space.

Just distance.

And the willingness to look again.

What remains tends to matter.

What fades tends to explain itself.

Because perspective echoes.