December 6, 2025: The Quiet Superpower

Want more friends than you can count?

Become a better listener.

I’m still amazed when I find someone who asks follow-up questions and actually cares about the answers. Those humans feel like unicorns.

I recently found this quote from James Clear: “Listening thoughtfully is an act of generosity.”

Giving full attention in a world addicted to notifications is a true superpower. Listening tells another person they matter. It’s love, offered through open ears.

Start with a simple belief: everyone carries info you haven’t learned yet, even the five-year-old explaining toy dinosaurs.

So, dig deeper. Since great questions beat great advice 9 times out of 10, each day turns into a grand treasure hunt.

Curiosity fuels the whole thing. World-class listening starts with wanting to discover more. Understanding a person’s story is the beginning of empathy.

One of my favorite scenes in the Ted Lasso series is when the mustache-wearing coach shuts down a smug billionaire with four words: “Be curious, not judgmental.”

That mindset changes everything.

Curiosity costs nothing yet makes you richer with every single conversation. It’s the cheapest way to grow wiser. All you need are ears and the willingness to use them.

If you want to be unforgettable, become the person who listens deeply. When you walk through life like this, something magical happens. People light up around you.

They remember you forever, not because you dazzled them… but because you let them dazzle you.

The world is dying to feel heard.

Be the unicorn.

Brian Forrester
December 5, 2025: The Everyday Boost

Admin night with friends. Hmm…

I recently read about turning life’s blah tasks into a party. In other words, invite the gang over.

Gather your favorite people for a shared session of knocking out to-do lists. Why suffer alone? After all, paperwork loses its sting with snacks and fun.

Plus, friends provide practical help (sharing tips and tricks), making the process less stressful and more social.

Apply this principle to all the things you dread.

Ritualize the mundane. Throw confetti at the boring stuff. Build creativity around hard chores, which makes them something to anticipate.

It’s possible to engineer your own motivation. Remember this: imagination beats procrastination every time.

Play is a powerful mindset you can use anywhere:

Housework becomes a dance-off.
Budget meetings over brunch.
Calling customer support while on a treadmill.
Closet cleaning turns into an 80s listening party.

Practice the simple power of reframing.

When chips and salsa are included, even better.

Brian Forrester
December 4, 2025: The Hard Days

Wisdom in strange places.

Driving I-64 to Richmond, we saw this on a truck window decal:

Don’t let the hard days win.

Struggle is a part of every great story, but not the ending. Look at today’s challenge as a chapter, not a conclusion.

Get some rest tonight. Tomorrow, begin again.

That’s how you win.

Hey, you’ve survived all the bad days so far. Remember the words of Maya Angelou: “Every storm runs out of rain.”

Your forecast: sunny skies are on the way.

Brian Forrester
December 3, 2025: The Curtain Call

Picture your life as a play.

There are some people who are essential in Act 1, but they walk across your stage only once. Soon they vanish, never to be seen again.

Others might show up in Act 2 or 3. A handful may be constant in all three.

I read a quote from Jenna O’Keefe that stuck with me: “In 5 years, most of the people you see every day will be strangers again.

I’ve found that to be mostly true. The inner circle of your 20s reshapes wildly by your 40s.

The cast list changes more than you expect. Some roles feel large until the lights fade on them. A surprise character sometimes alters your whole story. Or a walk-on role may swagger in and leave a memory that never leaves you.

These can be college roommates, co-workers, neighbors, churchgoers. Time edits your cast when you aren’t looking.

But brief appearances don’t diminish the importance of certain people in your life. They each serve a purpose and teach you something.

And oddly, sometimes you can love someone deeply and still become strangers.

But not every parting is a tragedy. Learn to accept this. The curtain rises and falls on different faces each season.

You’re the lead actor, but you can’t control all the entrances and exits. That’s okay. This lack of control isn’t a flaw; it’s the plot.

You probably have a good idea of who will be around for the finale. Pour into those relationships like time is running out.

PS: Also, be kind to others. You never know whose Act 3 you’re in.

Brian Forrester
December 2, 2025: The Shared Moments

PG strikes back.

The first theater movie I saw was a little 1977 PG one called Star Wars.

But over the years, movies trended toward adult audiences. For decades, PG-13 reigned as king, but last year PG won the box office.

With the recent success of Zootopia 2 and Wicked, kid-friendly films are now Hollywood’s most bankable hits.

Why? Those 12 and under drag their families to the big screen.

The rise of PG whispers a deeper truth: people look for reasons to sit shoulder-to-shoulder, to laugh and gasp at the same surprises.

And for the younger generation, a movie becomes more than just entertainment. It’s a cultural moment they don’t want to miss.

In your sphere of influence, create settings for togetherness. Build little theaters in your own life.

Sunday dinners where phones stay in another room. Living rooms with enough pillows for ten. Cozy coffee corners at work. Game nights and campfires. Concert lawn blankets and beach walks.

Anything that pulls people into the same space wins.

The best stories aren’t the ones we experience alone, but ones enjoyed side by side with those we love.

Connection is the real glue.

Brian Forrester
December 1, 2025: The Tenth Revision

From good to great.

I recently read about a new cruise ship undergoing a test voyage. Employees filed on board with eyes open, scrutinizing everything from the food to decor.

They studied the paint colors and tested the pillow fluffs. They even rated the cha-cha instructor. Nothing escaped their notebooks.

Their responses helped tighten the ship, so that early passengers would never notice the hundreds of tweaks behind the sparkles.

And there lies the secret: most amazing results come from sweating the details.

Amateurs mistake the first draft for the final product. But professionals view the initial creation as raw material.

The gap isn’t talent, but the willingness to keep working after many call it done.

Embrace the tedious middle. This separates you from others, because most people skip the refinement.

The magic rarely lives in the big idea, but it often hides in the tenth revision.

Going from good to great requires massive discipline compared to going from nothing to good.

The true work is in the refining.

Brian Forrester
November 30, 2025: The Inner Tug

What you can’t stop doing, even when it’s hard, is your purpose.

One of mine is writing. It’s not easy, but I’m mysteriously driven even when the words come slowly. There’s a strange magnetic pull.

That’s how I wrote two published books (with a third in progress), several short stories, and a daily blog post for the past year. I never planned any of that. But I kept showing up, on tired mornings and long evenings when my brain wanted a nap.

What you tolerate pain for is what you truly value.

When everyone else quits, what pulls you forward reveals your real lane. Maybe you can resist for a while, but eventually you drift back.

So notice the task that empties your battery and fills your spirit at the same time.

If you can walk away from it forever and feel relief instead of emptiness, it was never your calling.

The great test: what activity makes you lose track of time? That’s a big clue.

Your real purpose feels less like a choice and more like gravity. The work chooses you as much as you choose the work.

Follow the tug.

Brian Forrester
November 29, 2025: The Holiday Mishap

Today we became a statistic.

According to experts, fifteen to twenty percent of households join this club each year. And now our names landed on the list.

Our Christmas tree fell down.

I heard Jess scream and then came the noise. She watched the whole thing from a nearby couch.

Thankfully, little damage, but it took an hour to restring the lights and hang ornaments again.

Nothing says Merry Christmas like a 7-foot pine crashing onto the floor.

Brian Forrester
November 28, 2025: The Efficiency Gain

What does supersonic flight have to do with football?

It could make the NFL’s dreams come true.

High-speed travel is a game changer for the league’s global expansion, allowing for new teams across the Atlantic.

Travel times would be cut in half.

Imagine a London-based team playing at home one week and then at a West Coast contest the next. All with no jet lag.

This would unlock billions in new international broadcast rights and merchandise. Plus, tons of fresh sponsorship deals.

Efficiency creates capacity.

Reducing drains on your energy is just as important as increasing your speed.

Brian Forrester
November 27, 2025: The Norfolk Gathering

Thanksgiving Day in Norfolk.

Today we went to Mia and Papa’s house. And it just doesn’t get any better than gathering with fifteen loved ones and remembering the blessings.

The turkey came out tasty. The green bean casserole was divine. Football streamed on TV.

But family is always the greatest treasure.

These are the days we’ll talk about when we’re old.

Brian Forrester
November 26, 2025: The Waiting Trap

Don’t wait until you’re ready.

You’ll never feel 100% prepared for something that truly matters. Waiting for readiness is only fear wearing a disguise.

Sometimes your brain will whisper sweet nonsense, telling you it’s not possible. How you need one more course, or certification, or someone’s validation.

But when you leap, the net always seems to somehow appear.

Maybe you’re ready and just don’t know it yet.

Brian Forrester
November 25, 2025: The Secret Sauce

The sauce is a secret.

Raising Cane’s is a popular chicken chain with a signature sauce that keeps fans coming back.

To protect its moneymaker, they use strict security measures. The ingredients are shipped in unmarked bags and made in-store, with only managers allowed to mix it after signing NDA agreements.

Seems more like James Bond than fast food.

The recipe lives on a handwritten list created nearly thirty years ago by a co-founder. Being the only physical copy in existence, it sits locked inside a safe at a classified location. Just a handful of executives have ever seen it.

Kind of like the Coca-Cola formula, only greasier.

Keeping stuff simple is a strength. You don’t need a hundred ingredients to be unforgettable. Often, the right few will get you there.

Lean into your unique, impossible-to-copy abilities that feel like magic to everyone else: your personality, your talents, your integrity.

Find your secret sauce and lock it down.

Brian Forrester
November 24, 2025: The Musical Glue

A Thanksgiving week tradition.

Tonight our family piled into a local spot and played Music Bingo. A simple concept: listen to song snippets and mark your card.

There’s something about tunes and competition that creates a good time. Plus, it’s fun having teammates who show their expertise in different genres. Hello, power ballads and hip hop.

We formed a well-rounded team, filling in the gaps for the others. The perfect mix of rivalry and nostalgia.

Recently, I learned that even people with memory loss or dementia can play. The brain stores music in implicit memory, much like riding a bike, and the game becomes a therapeutic tool.

But there’s another important takeaway: everyone contributes value.

Even if it’s just knowing all the Backstreet Boys songs.

Brian Forrester
November 23, 2025: The Tree Tradition

Tonight, we selected our 2025 Christmas tree.

Growing up, we used an artificial one lined with tinsel and colored bulbs. Vintage 1970s. A beautiful, psychedelic sight.

But then I met Jessica.

Since then, we’ve only had live trees with white lights. And I have to admit, she’s converted me, mostly. Kinda like trading in heavy metal for an acoustic guitar.

This evening, we picked out our favorite pine. After roping it to the car roof, we hauled home seven feet of holiday magic.

And now it stands proudly in our living room. Next step… lights and ornaments.

Maybe I’ll place a disco-ball star on top.

Brian Forrester
November 22, 2025: The Returning Years

It happened tonight for the first time in months.

Everyone, all together, in our living room. Now that the kids live in different cities, our gatherings require plane tickets and coordination.

And these moments become sacred to me.

The bittersweet truth of parenting: our greatest success is their independence, which often creates geographical distance. But when they walk through that door, the years collapse and the miles fade and we're whole again.

For now, the house is full. The way it used to be every night. And I revel in the small things… where they sit, how their voices overlap, the laughter.

This is what Thanksgiving means now, not the meal, but everyone coming home.

Our walls will be quiet again soon, but tonight it's exactly as it should be.

And I am thankful.

Brian Forrester
November 21, 2025: The Memory Feed

Vine is coming back.

The short-form video app closed its doors in 2017, and all those six-second clips disappeared into the internet wormhole.

Now it’s returning as a revamped version named diVine and will restore thousands of preserved segments.

Millennials have responded with excitement… and dread. Like finding your old flip phone and discovering it still holds every embarrassing video you ever shot.

Remember, your children will discover your posts someday. What dies on the web never truly stays dead.

Content has a sneaky way of resurfacing, and yesterday’s “fun” can become tomorrow’s evidence. What seems funny at 15 feels mortifying at 25.

Maybe some things should stay in the wormhole.

Or in your head.

Brian Forrester
November 20, 2025: The Honest No

The urge to please.

Many of us learned early on to be “good.” Good kids said yes to parents and teachers.

Somewhere along the way, pleasing everyone became a default setting, even when not always in our best interest.

Saying Yes is a beautiful and generous thing, at times.

But every Yes is a No to something else.

So, learn how to decline someone, politely and firmly. Without the guilt.

Above all, avoid the Maybe. It’s just a delayed No, like pulling off a band-aid slowly, while everyone watches in horror. Rip that thing away. It’s quicker, and folks can move on with their lives.

Accept this truth: sometimes you’ll disappoint others when their requests don’t line up with your priorities or purpose.

And you know what? You will survive.

So will they.

Brian Forrester
November 19, 2025: The Cart Test

Do this every time you go to the store: return your shopping cart.

I know, it sounds preachy. But hear me out.

Loose carts cause car scratches and dings. Plus, scattered ones make life tougher for staff.

Empathy means thinking beyond your immediate convenience.

But there’s a bigger reason: it’s the difference between “no one will know” and “I’ll know.”

It does something to your spirit when you do helpful things when no penalty exists for skipping the effort. Little unseen acts build character and inspire others.

I call it “anonymous goodness.”

Consider the humble grocery cart a perfect place to start.

Brian Forrester
November 18, 2025: The Guarded Gates

I’m thinking about time.

The great philosopher Taylor Swift once said, “Your energy is expensive. Stop handing it out like it’s free.”

I’ll change that a bit.

Your time is expensive. Stop treating it like it’s free.

Every sunrise is a withdrawal from the bank of your limited days. Your time is your life, so guard both.

If you don’t use your hours with intention, others will claim them for you. Your calendar is a nightclub and you are the bouncer. You don’t need to let everyone in.

Instead of spending your time, invest it. The returns compound into the life you eventually lead.

At the end, you won’t regret the busy days, but the times you were occupied with the wrong things.

Value your true wealth.

Brian Forrester
November 17, 2025: The Wisdom Curve

I came across this quote recently: Ignorance breeds confidence. Mastery breeds humility.

There’s actually a name for this mindset — the Dunning-Kruger effect.

Stated simply:

The less you know, the more you think you know.
The more you know, the more you realize you don’t.

Usually, the loudest voice in the room is the emptiest head.

It’s the person who just watched a YouTube video and now argues with a surgeon. Or the guy who takes a few guitar lessons and believes he could challenge Jimi Hendrix in a duel.

Low skill + high confidence = bad karaoke.

True mastery is balanced by the awareness that there’s always more to learn. You’ve seen the iceberg under the water.

A little knowledge makes you dangerous. A lot makes you teachable. Admitting how much you don’t know is the first step toward genuine wisdom.

Stay curious and humble.

Brian Forrester