Vision costs nothing, but execution costs everything, contends LINUS OKORIE
People love to dream. They speak passionately about the mind-blowing ideas they have, businesses they want to build, and the impact they want to create. It feels good to imagine the future. It feels even better to talk about it. But the moment you try to turn those dreams into actual results, the gap between intention and action begins to show. This gap is where most people lose the plot. Additionally, it is the difference between a dreamer and a doer. Dreamers carry intentions like souvenirs. Doers have outcomes you can measure.
If we are honest, everyone has that one thing they keep promising themselves they will finally tackle. It might be a course, a project, a business, a consistent habit. It lingers in the mind. It inspires you for a moment. Then the day gets busy, the week gets chaotic, and the promise fades. Vision alone rarely survives the weight of everyday life. The question is not whether you can see the future you want. The question is why you haven’t moved closer to it.
One major reason is that many goals are not clear enough to follow. People call their vague wishes “visions.” They repeat phrases like “I want to get better,” or “I want to grow my business,” without defining what better or growth actually means. The mind cannot execute on fog. It needs clarity. It needs a target you can point at. Without that clarity, action becomes guesswork, and guesswork rarely leads anywhere meaningful.














