“It feels different now,” I said quietly as we sat stuck at a traffic signal, horns blaring all around us. “I don’t feel like I’m just dealing with people anymore. I feel like I’m transacting with God.”
He turned toward me, listening carefully.
“When you see life that way,” I continued, “every moment becomes an opportunity—sometimes easy, sometimes painfully difficult—but always meaningful.”
He nodded. “And once that awareness settles in,” he said, “it becomes a powerful source of motivation.”
I thought about how true that felt. There was a time when I measured my growth only through the reactions of others—praise lifted me, criticism crushed me. But recently, something inside had shifted.
“I’ve started realizing,” I said, “that I don’t need to wait for people’s approval to know whether I’m improving. Sometimes the only witness to my progress is God.”
He smiled slightly. “That realization takes courage.”
“Especially when people comment,” I added. “Their words still sting sometimes. But now I try to ask myself one question before reacting: Am I being conscious right now?”
He looked at me with quiet interest. “That question changes everything.”
“It really does,” I said. “Let me give you a very real example. My anger—especially on the road. Road rage used to own me. A wrong turn, a careless driver, a delayed signal—and I would explode. It took time. A long time. But slowly, I began noticing the moment before the anger burst.”
He leaned forward. “That’s where real change begins.”
“Yes,” I said. “At first, the anger still came. However, I could now see it arriving. And once I could see it, I could pause.”
I remembered a recent incident clearly. A motorbike nearly struck my car. My body reacted instantly—tight chest, heated breath, words rushing to my tongue. But then, something interrupted the chain. That same silent question echoed inside: Who am I responding to right now—this person… or God?
“For the first time,” I told him, “I chose silence over shouting.”
He smiled. “That’s not a small victory.”
“But here’s the strange part,” I said. “No one noticed. The driver sped off. The passengers in my car were busy on their phones. There was no applause. No validation.”
“That’s how most real progress looks,” he replied. “Invisible.”
“That’s what surprised me,” I said. “The development is happening—I can feel it. But the people around me may still see me the way I used to be. And that’s not in my control.”
He nodded slowly. “Growth that depends on recognition becomes fragile. Growth that happens before God becomes steady.”
I sat with that thought.
“You know,” I said after a pause, “there was a time I would have been discouraged by this. I would have asked: What’s the use of changing if no one notices?”
“And now?” he asked.
“Now I realize,” I said, “that the fact I can notice it is enough. The fact that God knows is enough.”
He leaned back against the seat. “That’s a powerful shift—from performing for people to progressing with God.”
I felt a quiet strength settle in my chest.
“This journey isn’t dramatic,” I said softly. “It’s slow. Layer by layer. Slip by slip. Sometimes I do better. Sometimes I fall back. But a process is unfolding.”
“And that process,” he said, “is the real gift.”
I watched the traffic finally begin to move.
“So, the motivation,” I reflected aloud, “doesn’t come from being perfect. It comes from seeing that God is still giving me chances to improve—again and again. Sometimes with ease. Sometimes through difficulty.”
He looked at me and said gently, “And you must learn to draw strength from that alone.”
The signal turned green. Cars moved forward. Life resumed its ordinary noise.
But inside me, something remained still and clear. Progress was happening. Quietly. Gradually. Sometimes only between God and me.
And for the first time, that felt more than enough.




