The tingling in my fingers to write more and the inspiration from other makers led me to create this website and be part of the “Building in Public” movement for the first time. Butterflies!!! ཐི༏ཋྀʚїɞ
Migrating all my content spread around the web to here.
This is my first “/now” update, and I’m absolutely in love with this concept. I can see this reducing a lot my need for publishing stuff on social media.
Big thanks to Rich Tabor for this WordPress template and inspiration.
Learning Korean, Hangul is so, so beautiful. And also quite hard. Thank you, Ryan Estrada for these mnemonic drawings.
Saturdays you can find me having a delicious Omega at Rooted Poets Corner, at the beautiful PH Library or riding with Wildcats as Training Ride Leader for ALC 2025
I used to think goals were private, write them down, forget about them, repeat. Turns out, saying them out loud can flip everything upside down, sometimes painfully, but mostly for the better.
But I realized that when I shared my goals publicly, something happened…
1. The Kombi Adventure
A few years ago, I told a friend, “I’m going to buy a Kombi (VW Bus) and travel South America.” It was the kind of confident nonsense you say after a beer, then immediately forget.
Except my friend didn’t. A year later, they asked, “How’s the Kombi trip?” Panic. I didn’t even own a Kombi. Instead of admitting defeat, I blurted out, “It’s happening soon!”.
Next week? I bought one, quit my job, and hit the road. No clue what I was doing, but that trip became one of the best decisions of my life, all because I ran my mouth to the wrong, or right, person. It wasn’t to prove anything to my friend, it was in respect of my young self dreams.
Besides traveling, I occasionally served as the lunch bus driver.
2. The 100 books challenge
In 2022, I let Goodreads peer pressure me into being a better reader. I set a goal, and that little progress bar guilted me into finishing more books than the past three years combined. I didn’t hit 100 books that year, but it left me motivated to keep going in the years after.
3. The 500-mile bike ride
Then came a fundraiser and a 500-mile bike ride from San Francisco to LA. Fundraising and training sucked, so I built Sf2.la, a site that publicly displayed my Strava data and helped me raise money. Suddenly, skipping rides wasn’t an option when people could see my stats or lack of them. I hit my fundraising goal, completed the ride, and met amazing people along the way.
How to set goals that stick
I’ve learned that vague goals die quietly. The trick is structure.
Instead of “read more,” I set “Read 101 books in 2025, 50 of them graphic novels.”
OKRs (Objectives & Key Results): Break big goals into measurable steps.
Objective: Ride SF to LA
Key Results: Ride 300 miles in training, complete two 80-mile back-to-backs
Make it public (and embrace the chaos):
Whether it’s a close friend, a family member, or even a social media post shared with your wider network, openly sharing your goals makes them feel more tangible and real.
By putting your intentions out there, you invite accountability from others who can help keep you on track. You’ll also gain valuable support, encouragement, and motivation from those who want to see you succeed.
Sometimes, this support comes in the form of a cheer squad that celebrates your progress and milestones with you. And when things don’t go as planned, having people who can laugh with you and help you bounce back makes the journey much more manageable and enjoyable.
Why this works? Or maybe it doesn’t?
Some studies say sharing goals can decrease motivation by tricking your brain into thinking you’ve already accomplished something. Maybe. But for me, it’s about the process. Whether I’m fumbling through 101 books or sweating through a ride, the magic is in the doing.
So I’m leaning into Open Goals. Science may disagree, but it keeps things interesting.
What about you?
Got a goal you’ve been keeping quiet? Say it out loud. Post it. Tell a friend who will hold you to it. It might just change everything.
I believe in a world where communication flows effortlessly, where words can heal, connect, and inspire. But let’s face it, not all barriers are visible. They appear in misunderstandings, cultural divides, and language struggles.
Even the toughest walls can crack, and in those cracks, there’s a chance for empathy to grow and real connections to form. Whether it’s walls between people, cultures, or even borders between nations, I believe we’re better when we work to break them down instead of building them higher.
If your organization is focused on breaking barriers, helping people express themselves, fostering inclusion, or bridging divides, we would love to partner with you. We’re offering Smart Keys for free to organizations and their communities to make communication easier, smoother, and more inclusive.