Today we talk about the fact that only you have to understand why you do what you do.
ADVENTURE WITH ME
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Yeah, the Building Better Humors Project Podcast. Welcome, be motivated and be inspired.
Let's go. Heyteendnesa here, Welcome back to The Building Better Humans Project podcast day. I want to talk about something we don't really talk about enough, and that is doing what you do not for applause, not for likes, not even for legacy, but because you know why you're doing it, even when nobody else gets it, even when the world questions your every move. And I'm going to frame this message to a story. It's a Michael Jordan story that rarely gets a spotlight, but when you hear it, it'll change the way you see the goat forever. Now, if you're an MJ fan, you know the date. June fourteenth, nineteen ninety eight, Game six of the NBA Finals, Chicago Bulls for the Utah Jazz. With six point six seconds on the clock, Jordan drives, crosses over by Russell, st its back and hits the last shot. Six championships, six appearances, six wins, zero losses. That shot was supposed to be the perfect ending, the flawless mic drop, the ride into the sunset, moment that every athlete dreams of and for a while it was, Jordan retired for the second time in nineteen ninety nine, goat status, absolutely locked in nothing more to prove, nothing left again. But three years later, something unthinkable happened. He came back, and not in the red and black of Chicago, but in Wizards of Blue and Gold. And for a long time people hated that. Critics said it tarnished his legacy. That said it looked desperate, said he couldn't let go of the spotlight. But none of that was true because almost no one talks about the real reasons he returned. See. After his second retirement, Jordan became the president of basketball operations for the Washington Wizards. The franchise was struggling, bad on the court, in the locker room, and especially at the box office. Then came September eleventh, two thousand and one, a tragedy that stopped America and the world in its tracks. People were hurting, scared, lost, and something inside Michael Jordan, that rarest kind of leadership, told him it was time to do something, not for his brand, but for others. So, at thirty eight years old, he laced up again. Mj didn't come back for the glory, not for the headlines, not for another ring. He came back to give hope. He donated one hundred percent of his wizard's salary to the victims and families affected by nine to eleven. Every game, every check, every dollar that comeback wasn't about fame. It was about character, about giving something when people needed it most. He played one hundred and forty two games over two seasons, aboriginally forty minutes a night. He didn't need to, he chose to. And yes, people judged him, said he looked older, said the magic was gone. But what they didn't see was that he was doing what he did for reasons that only he understood. And if you've ever been in that position, when you're making a move from your heart and not your ego, you know how lonely that space can feel. Everyone celebrates the highlight reel, the six rings, the buzzer beaters, the MVPs. But this, this quiet, humble, almost forgotten chapter, is what real greatness looks like, because greatness isn't just about the stats. It's not about going out on top. It's not about pleasing the crowd. It's about showing up for others, even when the cameras aren't kind. It's about giving everything you have because someone else needs it more. That comeback, it didn't taint his legacy. In my opinion, it to find it. So here's the thing. You might be working on something right now that people don't get. You might be chasing a goal that doesn't make sense to the outside world. You might be making a comeback of your own, not for glory, but because something deep in your gut says this matters. And if that's you, let me say this, keep going. You don't need everyone to understand, you just need to know why you're doing it. The world doesn't always reward quiet sacrifice. But character isn't built for attention. It's built in the background when no one's clapping, when you're showing up anyway, Michael Jordan didn't come back for himself. He came back for others. And maybe that's your mission too. Maybe your greatest moment won't be your high lot real but the time you showed up when no one expected you to, the time you gave you all when it wasn't cool, easy, or popular. That's leadership. That's legacy. That's being the goat, not just on paper but in spirit. That's today's episode. Team, If you're on a journey that no one understands, stay the course. If your motive is a question, stay grounded, and if your heart says go, then go unapologetically. You were born to leading your own way and you never need permission to follow purpose. So until next time, keep striving, keep rising, and above all, keep building better humans.
Thanks for listening to this episode of The Building Better Humans Podcast with your host Glenn a'ser for feedback. To stay up to date or go back and find an old episode, head over to one ady dot net dot au.
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