Do You Love What You Do? Oh Yeah!
Someone asked me, “Do you love what you do?”
I said yes… mostly, really it's mostly always.
And that “mostly” is where the truth lives.
Because loving what you do isn’t constant.
It’s not a switch you flick.
It’s a relationship you manage.
Some days it flows.
Some days it fights back.
Some moments feel like purpose.
Others feel like pushing uphill.
You don’t love every task.
You love the direction.
You don’t love every hour.
You love the freedom it builds.
You don’t love the grind.
You love what it makes possible.
“Mostly” means:
You’ve chosen this.
Even when it’s hard.
Even when it’s boring.
Even when no one’s watching.
It means the bad days don’t outweigh the good ones.
It means quitting isn’t your default setting.
It means you’ve stopped chasing perfect.
And started building something real.
Because if you wait to love every moment…
You’ll never start.
You’ll never commit.
You’ll always drift.
But if you can say “mostly” with honesty…
You’re already ahead.
Because “mostly” is sustainable.
And sustainability beats motivation.
Every single time.
The Quiet Truth
Nobody talks about this part.
The part where passion looks like discipline.
The part where excitement turns into consistency.
The part where love becomes a decision.
Not a feeling.
Feelings change.
Decisions compound.
The Real Question
It’s not:
Do you love what you do?
It’s:
Do you love it enough…
to keep going when you don’t?
Why “Mostly” Wins
“Mostly” removes pressure.
“Mostly” allows bad days.
“Mostly” creates longevity.
Perfection burns out.
Consistency builds momentum.
TL;DR Quick Recap
- Loving what you do isn’t constant
- You don’t need to love every moment
- Direction matters more than daily emotion
- “Mostly” is honest and sustainable
- Consistency beats motivation





