Perspective is a Gift

The words hung in the crisp Park City air, feeling more real and significant than the mountain peaks surrounding us. “I’m cancer-free.”

My friend said it with a mix of exhaustion, disbelief, and pure, unvarnished joy. We were sitting at an outdoor table, the casual clinking of glasses and plates around us a stark contrast to the gravity of his announcement. In that instant, the light seemed brighter. The food tasted better. And every single item on my mental to-do list—the emails I needed to answer, the project deadline I was worried about, the minor frustrations of the morning—evaporated.

They didn’t just fade; they were revealed for what they were: noise.

In the face of my friend’s monumental news, my own world was instantly, and gratefully, reframed. That’s the power of perspective.

What Perspective Really Means

We talk about “gaining perspective” as if it’s some abstract wisdom you acquire with age. But it’s not. It’s a visceral, lived shift in how you see the world and your place in it. It’s the sudden, clarifying force that reorganizes your priorities without your permission.

Perspective is the invisible filter that separates what truly matters from what merely feels urgent. The overflowing inbox, the buggy code, the traffic on the way to school pickup—these things feel consuming in the moment. It’s a concept ancient Stoic philosophers embraced: we don’t control external events, only our response to them. When held up against the backdrop of life’s true milestones—health, love, family, and survival—our daily frustrations shrink to their proper size.

In Family and Life

This lesson shows up constantly at home. With my wife, Sarah, and our kids, Molly, Brooklyn, and even our late dog Phoenix, life is a beautiful, chaotic dance of college visits, late-night phone calls, and the inevitable friction of siblings navigating new chapters from afar. It’s easy to get caught up in the small stuff—the spilled milk, the forgotten homework, the argument over screen time. It’s easy to let frustration win.

But perspective is the quiet voice that asks: Is this the moment that matters? Will this argument be remembered tomorrow? Or is the real work to build a home filled with grace, forgiveness, and the knowledge that we are each other’s safe harbor?

My own health journey with my stroke a few years ago was another one of those clarifying, non-negotiable moments. It was a forced reset. Before it, my worries were scattered across a dozen different professional and personal anxieties. After it, they consolidated into one: the profound gratitude for being able to walk, to talk, and to be present with my family. The frustration of a slow-moving project is nothing compared to the painstaking work of relearning a simple motor skill. That is a lesson you don’t forget.

In Business and Leadership

This isn’t just a “life” lesson; it’s a critical leadership tool. In my role as a CTO, my world is filled with sprints, fires, and strategic roadmaps. The pressure to move faster, ship more, and solve complex technical problems is constant. It’s incredibly easy to get lost in the weeds and develop what I call “false urgency”—where every task is treated as a crisis.

But true leadership requires perspective. It’s the ability to remain calm in the chaos, to zoom out from the immediate fire and see the whole forest. It’s what allows you to distinguish between a genuine emergency and a manufactured one.

With perspective, you stop asking, “How can we fix this problem right now?” and start asking, “What’s the most important thing for our team to accomplish this year?” At a senior level, you might only make a few critical decisions a day, but those decisions have a massive ripple effect. Perspective helps you lead with empathy, recognizing that the people you work with are navigating their own lives, their own battles. It guides you to make better long-term decisions, because you’re not just building a product; you’re building a resilient team and a sustainable culture.

In this sense, perspective isn’t just a defensive tool for staying calm; it’s an offensive weapon. In the war of business, where competitors are consumed by short-term fires, a leader with perspective can see the entire battlefield. Instead of charging head-first into the mountain, you find a way around it.

A perfect modern example is the Nintendo Wii. In the mid-2000s, Sony and Microsoft were fighting a costly war over who could build the most powerful console for hardcore gamers. That was the mountain. Nintendo, using perspective, didn’t try to climb it. They went around it. They reframed the problem from “How do we make games more realistic?” to “How do we make games more fun for everyone?” With a simple motion controller, they created a new, uncontested market and outsold their more powerful competitors for years.

Historically, one of the greatest examples is Napoleon’s Ulm Campaign in 1805. An Austrian army was waiting for him in Germany, guarding the direct passes of the Black Forest, ready for a head-on fight. Instead of attacking them where they were strongest, Napoleon sent a small cavalry force to create a diversion while he marched the bulk of his army in a massive, rapid flanking maneuver. By the time the Austrians realized what was happening, Napoleon’s army was behind them, cutting off their supply lines. Their strong defensive position had become a trap. Without a major battle, Napoleon won by making the battle his enemy had prepared for completely irrelevant.

Both Nintendo and Napoleon won, not because they fought the hardest, but because they fought the smartest. They used perspective to sidestep trivial conflicts, conserve energy for the battles that truly mattered, and spot opportunities that others, lost in the fog of false urgency, completely missed.

The Beautiful Byproduct: Gratitude

When your perspective shifts, something amazing happens: gratitude flows in naturally. You don’t have to hunt for it or write it down in a journal (though you can). It simply shows up.

You become grateful for the difficult client, because they are sharpening your skills. You become grateful for the challenging project, because it’s an opportunity for your team to grow. You see obstacles not as roadblocks, but as the raw material for progress. You become thankful for the ordinary, because you’ve been reminded just how fragile it is.

Choosing to See

A serene view of layered mountains under a pastel sky at dusk, showcasing a gradient of blue and soft orange hues.

As I walked away from that lunch, the glow of my friend’s good news stayed with me. It was a powerful reminder that perspective isn’t something we should wait for a crisis to deliver. It’s a gift we can give ourselves, every single day.

It’s a choice.

It’s the choice to pause, take a breath, and look up from the screen. It’s the decision to value presence over productivity, and empathy over efficiency.

So today, I invite you to do the same. Take a moment. Look around at your life, your family, your work. Find one small, ordinary thing and see it for the extraordinary gift it is.

Let’s not wait for life-altering news to see what truly matters. Let’s choose to see it now.

One thought on “Perspective is a Gift

  1. Pingback: Grit is a True Superpower – Memory Leak

Leave a Reply