It is common to treat the start of a new chapter—a new job, a milestone birthday, or a recovery from a setback—like a sprint. We gather our resolutions, sharpen our ambitions, and wait for inspiration to carry us forward. But as many of us have learned the hard way, inspiration can burnout very quickly.
Napoleon Hill, in his timeless classic Think and Grow Rich, offers a different starting point:
“Before passing to the next chapter, kindle anew in your mind the fire of hope, faith, courage, and tolerance…”
It is a beautiful, stirring thought.
But it also assumes something difficult—that we can summon these emotions on demand.
Somewhere between that idea and the reality of daily life—with its deadlines, responsibilities, and unexpected turns—a quieter question lingers: how does this hold when the days are not so kind?
Trying harder to stay positive is a popular idea but it rarely works.
What helps instead is learning how to remain neutral.
The Trap of the Results-Driven Mindset
When we try to change—ourselves, our children, or even those around us—we often approach it like a project. Teachers set targets for their students, we set expectations for our children, and we set outcomes for ourselves. Somewhere along the way, change becomes something to be measured rather than experienced.
We spend decades building our patterns of thinking, yet expect them to shift quickly, as though they were switches waiting to be flipped.
Change is not mechanical; it is organic.
If you are standing at the threshold of something new, the first step is not action—it is space.
Real change begins quietly, many a times through conversation—sometimes structured, sometimes just the kind of casual conversation we tend to dismiss. It is in those moments that rigid patterns begin to loosen.
Why “Stay Positive” Falls Short
We’ve all heard it: “Just stay positive.”
It works—until it doesn’t.
And when it doesn’t, it often leaves us feeling like we’ve failed twice—once in the situation, and once in how we responded to it.
When life becomes difficult, forced positivity begins to feel artificial. It creates a subtle pressure—to feel something we do not—and in doing so, it distances us further from what is actually happening.
This is where Trevor Moawad introduced a powerful alternative in 'It Takes What It Takes': neutral thinking.
Neutral thinking is not optimism or pessimism—it is clarity.
When something goes wrong, instead of reacting emotionally or forcing positivity, neutrality asks:
What has happened? What does this moment require?
It brings you back to facts, to the present, and to the next step—without the noise.
Moving Forward: Process Over Perfection
If neutrality is the anchor, then how we practice it begins to matter.
Start with Clarity
Vague intentions rarely lead anywhere. Instead of saying “I want to improve,” begin with something specific:
“I want to respond more calmly when I receive feedback.”
Clarity is where neutrality begins.
Spend Time Understanding, Not Fixing
Most of us rush to change without understanding what we are changing.
Pause and question.
Why does this pattern exist?
What purpose has it served?
Before letting something go, it helps to recognise why it stayed.
Return to Neutral in Difficult Moments
When something disrupts your progress—and it will—there is a natural pull toward extremes.
Instead of:
“Why does this always happen to me?”
or
“Everything is fine.”
Ask:
What does this situation need from me right now?
This simple shift brings you back to a steady, workable space.
Don’t Do It Alone
Change rarely happens in isolation.
Whether it is a mentor, a friend, or simply someone who listens without judgment, having a space to speak—even imperfectly—makes a difference. In those exchanges, thoughts begin to settle, and patterns begin to shift—often more gently than we expect.
Ready for the Fire?
Napoleon Hill spoke of being “ready.”
But readiness is not perfection.
It is the ability to stay present when things are uncertain.
Hope, faith, and courage may spark the fire—but neutrality is what keeps it steady. It allows you to move forward without being overwhelmed by either success or setback.
You do not need to transform overnight.
You only need to take the next step—clearly, and without pressure.
Take Your Next Step
If you find yourself at the edge of something new, carrying old patterns with you—
What might change if you stopped trying to force a feeling, and instead chose to respond with clarity?
If this idea of neutrality stays with you, perhaps that is where your next step begins.
#change #transformation #neutralthinking #sumandebray #personal growth

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