Every field remembers some people who become more than just an idea, not because they were flawless, but because they chose courage when it was inconvenient.
As a builder IRL and who's trying here, I’ve learned that having a vision doesn’t always look like triumph. Sometimes it looks like restraint. Sometimes it’s giving up what you want most, so something greater can exist after you.
Building anything meaningful asks for sacrifice, of comfort, of certainty, of ego. And yet, in those moments, something quietly steady appears: a belief that what we’re creating is bigger than us.
I don’t think heroes are rare. I think they’re made in the ordinary decisions to keep going, to stay honest, and to choose purpose over applause.
And if we do it right, what we build outlives us, not as an achievement, but as a reminder that we tried to make things a little braver than we found them.
Am I an Extraordinary man?
Yes
Am I am Ordinary man?
Yes
I'm both , I'm neither
But aren't we all?