As we conclude our week on resilience, one lesson stands above all the others.
There will be disappointments.
There will be setbacks.
There will be failures.
There will be moments when quitting feels reasonable and perhaps even justified.
Yet when we look back on the people we admire most, the teams we respect most, and the leaders who have made the greatest impact, we discover a common thread.
They kept going.
Not because the path was easy.
Not because success was guaranteed.
Not because they never doubted themselves.
They kept going because they believed the goal was worth the struggle.
Margaret Thatcher reminded us to keep fighting.
J.K. Rowling taught us that adversity can become a foundation.
Babe Ruth reminded us not to quit three feet from gold.
Robert Jordan showed us the importance of adapting.
Ernest Hemingway taught us that we can become stronger at the broken places.
Albert Einstein challenged us to see opportunity in difficulty.
And Jim Valvano left us with perhaps the simplest and most enduring lesson of all:
“Don’t give up. Don’t ever give up.”
Whatever challenge you are facing today, whatever dream you have placed on the shelf, whatever goal seems too distant to achieve, remember this:
The next attempt may be the one that changes everything.
Keep going.

