Clarity

See what is already here.

Opportunity usually appears before it announces itself. Clarity is the practice of noticing what is present, where energy is moving, and what capacity is waiting to be connected.

The first distinction

Opportunity is not scarce. Our attention is.

Most people are surrounded by more possibility than they can use: a recurring conversation, an unused room, a skill no one has named, a customer question that will not go away, or a frustration with energy inside it.

Not hustle. Not hype. Not someone else’s plan. A cleaner way to see what is here.

Clarity notices

Look for living signals.

Energy

What keeps asking for attention?

Curiosity, frustration, joy, repeated conversations, unfinished ideas, local demand, and natural momentum are all clues.

Capacity

What is hiding in plain sight?

People, skills, spaces, relationships, tools, land, memory, and trust often appear ordinary before they become powerful.

Need

What nearby need is already legible?

Good opportunity often begins with a need people already understand and a capacity already close enough to help.

Energy as fuel

The best opportunities do not begin with force.

Energy is not only a clue. It is fuel.

When something keeps returning with curiosity, frustration, joy, or care attached to it, pay attention. That energy may be the beginning of a path.

The question is not, “How do we push harder?” The better question is, “What is already alive enough to return to?”

Constitutional framing

Attention coordinates cognition.

Attention decides what becomes available to thought. When attention is scattered, opportunity remains blurry. When attention becomes clean, hidden capability begins to organize.

Clarity question: What would become visible if we gave this field better attention?