The goal never had edges. It was something I assumed I’d recognize the moment I reached it.
I didn’t need to define what I was working toward because it felt self-evident. Effort implied direction. Direction implied arrival.
The lack of specificity didn’t seem like a problem—it felt like trust.
The destination that was never named
The goal lived in implication. It showed up as confidence in conversation, as reassurance in moments of doubt.
I assumed clarity would come with proximity.
This assumption sits inside The Promise vs. The Reality, where working hard is treated as synonymous with knowing where you’re headed.
How effort replaced definition
As long as I was busy, the question didn’t surface. Momentum made intention feel unnecessary.
I measured commitment instead of direction, assuming the two would converge on their own.
When the endpoint stayed abstract
Over time, I noticed I couldn’t describe what “getting there” actually meant beyond relief and validation.
I knew what I was avoiding more clearly than what I was moving toward.
This recognition often appears alongside the early cracks, when motion continues but orientation fades.
The quiet cost of an undefined goal
Without a clear destination, it becomes hard to tell when enough is enough.
Working toward something vague can last indefinitely, not because it’s meaningful, but because it’s never finished.
I thought I was working toward something concrete, but what I was really chasing was the promise that effort would eventually explain itself.

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