Why Moving Fast Isn’t Enough
why moving fast isn't enough
estefaaano_writes
We live in a world obsessed with velocity. Faster cars, faster internet, faster results. We measure success in miles per hour, words per minute, accomplishments per year. We sprint through our days as if the finish line were just ahead, as if getting there first were the point.
But what if we're running in circles?
What if speed, untethered from purpose, is just another name for being lost?
Direction is more important than speed. I'm not saying that just to make anyone feel better about moving slow. This is something you really start to feel deep down after you’ve spent a lot of time rushing around and realized you’re not actually getting anywhere. It's a truth that becomes evident only after you've wasted enough time going nowhere fast. It’s like running on a treadmill; you’re moving fast, but when you look around, the view hasn’t changed. That’s when direction hits you as the true key.
I've watched people accumulate degrees they never wanted, climb on ladders leaning against the wrong walls, chase relationships that felt like momentum but led to emptiness. They moved with impressive velocity; always busy, always progressing, always on to the next thing. But when they stopped to catch their breath, they found themselves in unfamiliar territory, surrounded by achievements that belonged to someone else's life.
Think about it. When you don’t know where you’re going, how fast can you really go?
Without a map, a goal, or at least a clear hint of what you want, speed becomes meaningless. You can throw yourself into things all day long, but if you’re not heading somewhere, it’s just noise. It’s easy to mistake being busy for being productive, but they’re not the same. Speed without focus is just spinning wheels. It's the frantic energy of a life lived on autopilot, where busyness becomes a proxy for meaning. We mistake motion for progress, confuse activity with intention. We tell ourselves that as long as we're moving, we're getting somewhere. But the truth is darker: you can spend a lifetime sprinting and arrive nowhere at all.
Direction requires something speed doesn’t—Clarity.
I’ve learned this the hard way. There were moments when I thought speeding through life or work would get me farther, only to end up exhausted with nothing to show for it. But when I took time to pause, figure out where I wanted to go, and then move with intention, progress came naturally. Direction gave me clarity, patience, and even energy, while rushing just drained me.
This is precisely why direction matters more. A single step in the right direction is worth more than a thousand in the wrong one. You can always accelerate once you know where you're going. You cannot, however, reclaim the years you spent racing toward a destination you never wanted to reach.
Think of a writer who cranks out pages without purpose, who mistakes productivity for artistry. Sure, they move faster, certainly. They fill more notebooks, complete more drafts. But when you read their work, you feel the barrenness. The words blur together because they're not going anywhere. They're just running in place. The same principle governs how we live. You can fill your calendar, climb the corporate ladder, check every box society hands you, and still feel the gnawing emptiness of a life without direction. Or you can move slowly, deliberately, asking at each turn whether this path is truly yours. The latter takes courage. So no, direction isn’t a platitude for the slow or hesitant. It’s the real deal. The thing that turns motion into movement, making sure we don’t just go fast, but go somewhere that matters. Direction asks you to be honest about what you want, not what you think you should want. It asks you to choose a path that might be slower, harder, lonelier, but Yours. And once you have that clarity, speed becomes irrelevant. You're no longer racing against anyone. You're simply walking toward something real.
In the end, life is not a race. There is no trophy for getting there first, no medal for accumulating the most in the shortest time. What matters is whether you arrived somewhere that mattered to you, whether the journey was yours, whether you moved with intention rather than just momentum. Slow down. Ask yourself the hard questions. Choose your direction carefully, deliberately, honestly. The speed will come naturally once you know where you're going. But if you never stop to situate yourself, you'll spend your life running; exhausted, accomplished, and utterly lost.
Direction is more important than speed.
It's the only thing that determines whether you're moving forward or simply moving.
"Why Moving Fast Isn’t Enough" by estefaaano_writes, is a profound and necessary critique of modern life's obsession with velocity over vision. It’s a beautifully argued piece that resonates with anyone who has felt the deep fatigue of busywork without fulfillment.
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ReplyDeleteThis essay, estefaaano_writes, is the exact wake-up call I needed. I've been running on that corporate treadmill for five years, accumulating achievements that felt like they belonged to someone else's life. The line 'Speed without focus is just spinning wheels' is my new desktop background. Thank you for validating the feeling that being busy is not the same as being fulfilled.
The comparison to the treadmill and the indictment of those who "climb on ladders leaning against the wrong walls" are incredibly powerful and create sharp, unforgettable imagery.
ReplyDeleteI keep thinking about the idea that "Direction requires something speed doesn't—clarity."
ReplyDeleteClarity takes courage and stillness, two things society actively discourages. Your essay brilliantly exposes the frantic energy of a life lived on autopilot. A profound read that I'm sharing immediately.
ReplyDeleteThis one challenges the reader to embrace the courage of a slower, harder, lonelier, but Yours path. The final call to action is clear and resonant: slow down, ask the hard questions, and choose direction carefully. A truly insightful and essential read for our time.
ReplyDeleteThis whole essay, estefaaano_writes, is the truth. I've been running on that 'frantic energy of a life lived on autopilot' for years and just realized I'm exhausted, accomplished, and utterly lost. 'Speed without focus is just spinning wheels'—I felt that deep down.
ReplyDeleteThis is essential reading for anyone trying to build a truly intentional life.
ReplyDeleteAs a writer, I felt the pain in the paragraph about the author who 'cranks out pages without purpose.' It perfectly illustrates how productivity can mask barrenness. The words blur because they're not going anywhere. estefaaano_writes, you've shown that this principle applies to both art and life. You can't fake intention.
ReplyDeleteI left a high-speed job to pursue something slower but meaningful, and this essay makes me feel so validated.
ReplyDeleteThe truth is, 'A single step in the right direction is worth more than a thousand in the wrong one.' It's a lonely path sometimes, but it’s mine. estefaaano_writes, you've articulated the exact wisdom that came with that difficult choice.
This is so much more than a productivity essay, estefaaano_writes. It's an argument for authenticity. The final question it asks—whether the journey was yours—is the only one that matters. It’s a powerful push for intentionality over momentum. I loved how you challenged the platitude and proved that direction really is the 'real deal.
ReplyDeleteI keep thinking about the map analogy. When you're traveling, without a map, how fast can you really go? You’d just waste gas. This essay applies to every journey in life. Direction is the map; speed is just the engine. Loved this, estefaaano_writes!
ReplyDeleteMy day is all activity and little progress sometimes, and this helps reframe things. It’s about being deliberate with my time and energy, not just filling the calendar. It applies just as much to home life as it does to the corporate world.
ReplyDelete❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️
ReplyDeleteIt takes courage for clients to slow down and find that clarity.
ReplyDelete♥️ Another great work dy! Keep feeding us! 😤
ReplyDeleteThe idea of climbing 'ladders leaning against the wrong walls' is such a perfect, painful metaphor. estefaaano_writes, you nail the modern dilemma of mistaking societal goals for personal meaning. This essay is a powerful argument for radical authenticity.
ReplyDeleteI resonated so much with the writer who 'cranks out pages without purpose.' It's so easy to mistake productivity for artistry.
ReplyDeleteThank you, estefaaano_writes, for reminding me that intention is the only thing that creates something real, not just something fast.
ReplyDeleteYou summed up years of frustration, estefaaano_writes! That gnawing emptiness of a life without direction, even when you've 'checked every box society hands you.' This is such a necessary piece on the true cost of momentum without meaning.
ReplyDeletea single step in the right direction is worth more than a thousand in the wrong one.
ReplyDeleteI needed this before starting my career. Everyone pushes speed, speed, speed. But you're right, if I don't stop and figure out my direction, I'll just end up with someone else's life. I'm taking this advice to heart: slow down, ask the hard questions.
ReplyDeleteI appreciate the clarity and punch of the writing.
ReplyDeleteMan! This isn't just fluffy advice; it's a profound strategic insight for living well.
ReplyDeleteThis is a powerful message of empowerment, estefaaano_writes! It’s not about judging speed but about equipping the reader with clarity. And you're right, once you have that clarity, you're no longer racing anyone. You're just walking toward something real. Beautiful!!!!!!
ReplyDeleteW Speed 🤗
ReplyDelete'Clarity' is the engine, and speed is just the fuel. Without the engine, you're going nowhere.
ReplyDeleteExcellent insight.
You summed up my entire last five years: 'exhausted, accomplished, and utterly lost.' I’m slowing down today to figure out my map. I don't want to reclaim years; I want to start living them.
ReplyDeleteThis should be required reading in college. Seriously. Everyone tells us to move fast, but no one asks, 'What wall is your ladder leaning against?' I'm choosing the 'slower, harder, lonelier, but Yours' path. I'm choosing direction."
ReplyDeleteThe comparison to the writer whose words blur because they're not going anywhere is haunting. It perfectly illustrates how a lack of intention creates a barrenness in any life project, not just a novel. So insightful, estefaaano_writes.
ReplyDeletemistaking motion for progress. it's the difference between existing and truly living.
ReplyDeleteyour call to be honest about what you want is the hardest, but most important, step.
I've been feeling the gnawing emptiness despite checking all the boxes. our essay is the permission I needed to stop racing and start asking the hard questions. It's time to choose my own destination. Thanks, estefaaano_writes.
ReplyDeleteFinally, someone says it!!!!
ReplyDeleteThere's no trophy for getting there first!
The trophy is a life that mattered to you.
This essay is a powerful and vital counter-narrative to the toxic hustle culture.
Super love it, estefaaano_writes. :)
: "A single step in the right direction is worth more than a thousand in the wrong one."
ReplyDelete"Speed becomes irrelevant once you have clarity. You're no longer racing anyone. You're simply walking toward something real."
ReplyDeleteWhat a beautiful, empowering message, estefaaano_writes!
That image of the ladder leaning against the wrong wall is genius, estefaaano_writes.
ReplyDeleteI spent ten years climbing that exact ladder before I finally looked down.
This essay is the validation I needed for leaving that climb.
the right path might be "slower, harder, lonelier, but Yours."
ReplyDeleteYou spoke my language when you said rushing just drained you, but moving with intention gave you energy. Clarity over chaos—that's the key I was missing.
ReplyDeleteThe years you 'cannot reclaim' are real.
ReplyDeleteGreat advice.
"there is no trophy for getting there first, the only prize is arriving somewhere that mattered to you. "
ReplyDeleteThe entire essay boils down to intentionality. It asks us to stop confusing activity with intention. That distinction is life-changing.
ReplyDeleteI keep thinking about the line: 'you can spend a lifetime sprinting and arrive nowhere at all.' A profound and necessary truth for our hyper-scheduled world.
ReplyDeleteThis essay should be required reading.
The part about not being able to reclaim the years you spent racing toward the wrong destination—that hit me. It's the ultimate cost of speed without direction.
ReplyDeleteOMG, I've seen so many people climbing those 'ladders leaning against the wrong walls.' Like, did you even check the blueprints, Brad? 🙄 This essay, estefaaano_writes, is the 'Slow Down, Sweetie' memo we all needed.
ReplyDeleteThis is giving me major 'I spent $80k on a degree I hate' vibes. 😂
ReplyDeleteThis essay is the necessary slap to remind us that intention is the muse. Love the real talk, estefaaano_writes.
ReplyDelete🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥
ReplyDeletePrinting this out and hanging it above the breakroom coffee machine. If anyone asks, I'm not moving slow, I'm moving with intention.
ReplyDeleteThe only thing I want to accumulate fast is my Amazon cart. But for life? You're absolutely right, estefaaano_writes. Running fast with no goal is just called cardio. And I hate cardio. Give me direction and a comfy chair instead! 😂
ReplyDelete🏃🏻♀️🏃🏻♂️
ReplyDelete❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️
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