VISION NEEDS A VILLAGE
A call to those who build the future instead of waiting for it.
Steve Jobs once said,
“The ones who are crazy enough to think they can change the world are the ones who do.”
But he left out a crucial truth:
the “crazy ones” don’t do it alone.
The bigger the vision, the more people it takes to bring it to life.
It’s also a lonely road. That level of commitment, The sheer obsession with seeing something through, often isolates you. The journey can feel like a dialogue with the future, trying to bring ideas into a world that isn’t ready to understand them yet.
Those who live it know the experience: the loneliness, the doubt, and the relentless drive to keep pushing forward.
Obsession becomes the foundation.
It’s a relentless vision that blends intuition, insight, and imagination, fuelled by the belief that something better must exist, even when no one else sees it yet.
But vision alone isn’t enough.
You need hands that build beside you, minds that challenge you, and hearts that believe before proof arrives.
Because no matter how brilliant the idea, nothing world-changing happens in isolation.
Too many talk about change while waiting for someone else to lead.
Too many hide behind comfort, committees, and excuses.
But vision doesn’t wait. It demands courage, contribution, and action.
If you say you care about the future, prove it.
Pick up a piece of the work and carry it.
We are the village.
The ones willing to build when others hesitate.
The ones who understand that accountability is the true cost of progress.
And yes, there will be a crossroads.
A moment when you’ll question whether to keep going or let go.
That’s where most stop.
But that’s also where movements are born. When one voice refuses to go quiet and others choose to join in.
This journey isn’t for the faint of heart.
It demands resolve when the world isn’t ready, and faith when the results aren’t yet visible.
Because even the strongest obsessions can die alone.
But together—
they can rebuild industries, redefine leadership, and resurrect hope.
The question isn’t whether the world is ready.
It’s whether we are.
