Newsletter Archives
Feb 26, 2026 — Nothing Left to Take Away
What if progress isn’t about adding more—but removing what isn’t essential? A reflection on simplicity, creative influence, and why sometimes the strongest structures have space built into them.
Take Two
For people who know there’s more to life and don’t want to miss it.
WORDS TO WONDER
“Perfection is achieved not when there is nothing more to add, but when there is nothing left to take away.”
— Antoine de Saint-Exupéry, French writer and pioneering aviator (1900–1944)
PERSPECTIVES TO PONDER
In the late 1800s, building blocks were exactly what you’d imagine: solid slabs of concrete, each weighing around 100 pounds. Heavy. Dense. Impractical. Strength, at the time, was measured by mass.
Then along came an inventor named Harmon S. Palmer, who began experimenting with molded concrete blocks. Instead of adding more material, he removed it. He designed hollow cores inside the block — empty spaces that dramatically reduced the weight while maintaining structural integrity.
The result?
A block that was lighter.
Easier to handle.
More efficient.
And in many applications, structurally stronger.
The breakthrough wasn’t in adding more concrete.
It was in knowing what to take away.
Saint-Exupéry understood something similar about design — and about life. Perfection isn’t accumulation. It’s elimination.
We live in a culture that equates progress with addition:
More commitments.
More possessions.
More goals.
More hustle.
We assume strength comes from stacking more weight onto our shoulders.
But what if we’re carrying more weight than we need to?
What you leave out is just as important as what you leave in.
The structure matters more than the mass.
Maybe the reason life feels heavy isn’t because you lack effort — but because you haven’t removed what isn’t essential.
The unnecessary obligation.
The draining relationship.
The endless scrolling.
The outdated expectation.
The belief that busier means better.
When life isn’t working the way you hoped, the answer may not be to add something new. It may be to subtract something old.
Strength doesn’t come from carrying everything.
It comes from building wisely.
And sometimes, the strongest life is the one with space built into it.
WHEN THE PLAN ISN'T THE PROBLEM
You don’t need a better roadmap.
You may need the courage to change the passenger list.
I wrote about why strategy often isn’t the real issue — in business or in life.
Read the full article here.
MORE TO THE STORY — PET SOUNDS
Last week, I told you how Pet Sounds took thirty-four years to be certified gold — a masterpiece the market was slow to understand.
But that wasn’t the whole story.
Before Pet Sounds ever existed, Brian Wilson of The Beach Boys heard Rubber Soul by The Beatles.
And it changed him.
For the first time, he heard a pop album that felt unified — not just a collection of radio hits, but a cohesive artistic statement. It redefined what was possible.
Wilson later said that when he heard Rubber Soul, he thought, I’m going to make an album that’s just as good — maybe even better.
That challenge became fuel.
He stopped touring. He went into the studio. He obsessed over arrangements, harmonies, emotion.
The result was Pet Sounds.
Then the ripple reversed.
When Paul McCartney heard Pet Sounds, he was in awe. He later called “God Only Knows,” one of the album’s standout tracks, the greatest song ever written. The Beatles studied Pet Sounds carefully while working on their next project — the album that would become Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band.
Producer George Martin put it bluntly:
“Without Pet Sounds, Sgt. Pepper never would have happened. Pepper was an attempt to equal Pet Sounds.”
And Sgt. Pepper is now regarded as one of the most influential albums ever recorded — a record inspired by an album that initially few appreciated.
Think about that.
An album that felt underappreciated in its own moment helped spark one of the greatest records ever made.
Influence doesn’t always earn applause.
Sometimes it’s the spark in someone else’s mind.
You may never see the full reach of your work.
You may never know who is quietly studying it.
You may never realize who is being challenged to raise their own standard because of what you created.
But thoughtful, intentional effort has a way of multiplying.
So keep creating, regardless of the recognition.
Because your work might be someone else’s Rubber Soul.
And they might turn it into their own Sgt. Pepper.
BEFORE YOU GO
Strength isn’t always about adding more.
Sometimes it’s about carrying less.
Sometimes it’s about choosing who (and what) gets space in your life.
Build with intention.
Subtract with courage.
Trust that even quiet influence matters.
Stay inspired by the life you’re living.
Kevin
P.S.
I recently had a great conversation on the Pivotal People podcast about my latest book, Words to Wonder. We talked about courage and contentment, purpose, and the importance of living intentionally.
If that resonates, you can listen here.
Feb 12, 2026 — Unseen. Not Unimportant
Pet Sounds once peaked at #10 and was called a disappointment. Decades later, it became a masterpiece. A reminder that unseen work is not unimportant.
Take Two
For people who know there’s more to life and don’t want to miss it.
WORDS TO WONDER
“Be faithful to that which exists within yourself.”
— André Gide, French writer, winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature (1869–1951)
PERSPECTIVES TO PONDER
In 1961, The Beach Boys crashed onto the music scene.
By 1963, they were climbing the Billboard charts with “Surfin’ U.S.A.,” “Surfer Girl,” and “Be True to Your School.” Soon came three #1 singles: “I Get Around,” “Help Me, Rhonda,” and “Good Vibrations.”
They were America’s soundtrack to sunshine.
Then, in 1966, they released Pet Sounds.
It was highly anticipated but only reached #10 on the charts.
Compared to their earlier chart-toppers, it was considered a disappointment.
Fans expected more surfing, cars, and carefree fun. Instead, they got vulnerability. Longing. Emotional depth. Songs like “God Only Knows” that sounded less like beach anthems and more like prayers.
It didn’t fit the moment. But moments change.
Sometimes what feels like a miss is simply ahead of its time.
A decade later, Paul McCartney said:
“God Only Knows is the greatest song ever written.”
Then, in 2000, thirty-four years after its release, Pet Sounds was certified Gold (500,000 copies sold). Two weeks later, it went Platinum (1,000,000).
The first half-million took 34 years.
The second took two weeks.
The album didn’t change. The world finally heard what had been there all along.
Our work isn’t always recognized when it’s released into the world. Sometimes it’s misunderstood. Sometimes it feels invisible. Sometimes it feels like shouting into the wind.
It’s tempting to abandon what’s meaningful when no one seems to notice.
But greatness is often ahead of its time.
If you’re discouraged and it feels like no one is listening, don’t confuse delayed recognition with lack of value.
Trade the desire for immediate applause for the pursuit of lasting impact.
Keep building.
Keep writing.
Keep creating.
Great work is not measured by its first reaction.
It is measured by its staying power.
QUESTIONS TO CONSIDER
Am I chasing visibility—or impact?
Are the results I want the natural outcome of the actions I take daily?
If recognition were delayed for years, would I stay the course?
NOT-SO-ORDINDARY FINDS
Kindness in the Quiet
A couple of minutes that will brighten your day.
BEFORE YOU GO
Not everything meaningful is immediately noticed.
Not everything unseen is unimportant.
Press on with your purpose—even when the world doesn’t seem to notice.
Stay inspired by the life you are living.
Kevin