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Monday, July 13, 2026

The real reason you think of the perfect thing to say an hour too late

 

You know the feeling. You're in a meeting, someone says something, and the perfect reply, the clever line, the joke that would had everyone laughing and crying, arrives in your head at exactly the wrong time. About an hour after everyone's gone home.

For the longest time I assumed people were just born quick. Quick-witted, quick on their feet, funny in the moment without appearing to try. The rest of us, I figured, were stuck arriving late to our own best thoughts.

I was wrong about that, and I want to show you why, because being quick in the moment is a skill you can build, not a personality you're either issued at birth or you're not.

It starts somewhere that sounds completely unrelated: mastery over the foundations.

Think about a good driver. When the car in front does something sudden and stupid, the good driver dodges without thinking. They don't consult a mental checklist for where the brake is or how the steering works. All of that became automatic a long time ago, which frees up their full attention to react to whatever's happening in front of them. The nervous learner driver, still thinking about their hands and their mirrors and their feet, has no attention left over. When something unexpected happens, they freeze.

Communication works the same way. Your foundations are your voice (your pace, your volume, your melody, your pauses) and your body (your gestures, posture, eye contact, expressions). If you're standing in a meeting silently managing all of that, wondering what your hands should be doing and whether your voice sounds odd, you've got no spare attention left to actually be present. And presence is the whole game. You cannot catch the funny observation, the sharp point, the perfect moment to lighten the room, if every scrap of your focus is turned inward.

As you've likely already worked out, for most people who speak - they're not present at all. They're trapped in their own heads running a loop of worry. "I hope they like this idea. I hope I'm saying this right. I hope nobody asks me something I can't answer." When you're that deep in your own headspace, you have zero chance of picking up on what someone just said and throwing something clever back. None. Your attention is already spoken for.

Master the foundations, though, and something changes. The mechanics go quiet because they've become second nature, and suddenly you feel calm, comfortable, and clear-headed. You're finally present in the room instead of narrating your own performance from inside your skull. That presence is where quickness actually comes from.

Then there's the second part, and it's important to note, it's what almost nobody practises. The art of reviewing and reflecting.

Let's go back to school for a moment. When some kids failed a test, they'd shove it in their bag, never look at it again, and move straight on to the next topic. Other kids went back through every wrong answer to work out exactly what went wrong, so they'd never make those same mistakes again. I was very much in the first group and kept failing, and I quietly concluded I was just dumb. I wasn't dumb. I'd simply never been taught to look back and learn from what just happened. Nobody seems to teach that. Or at least, none of the teaching staff from 'back in my day' (it finally happened, I've become old) - instead, they handed me the test and said "right, on to the next thing."

So here's your one thing to try this week, and it's the habit that changes everything.

After your next meeting or important conversation, block out five or ten minutes immediately afterward, not three days later while it's stale, but right then while it's fresh. Sit down and ask yourself one question: what could I have done better in there? What did I want to say and miss? What was the joke or the point that showed up too late?

At first this will sting a little, because the great idea will still be arriving about an hour after the meeting ended, and you'll think "damn it, why didn't that come to me in the room?" Stay with it anyway. Here's what happens as the habit compounds. That gap starts to close. The idea that used to land an hour late starts landing five minutes late. Then, one day, it starts arriving while you're still in the conversation, right when you actually need it. The reflection you used to do afterward quietly moves forward in time until it's happening live. That's the whole secret. What looks like natural quick wit is almost always a well-practised habit of reflection that has crept earlier and earlier until it became 'instant'.

I walk through all of this, including the timeline of how that gap closes

And if you'd like to build those foundations properly, I run a free 2-hour masterclass where I teach the top three communication frameworks I use most, so you can speak with more clarity and stop rambling under pressure. It won't cost you a cent

Here's what I want you to leave with: You were never too slow, too awkward, or too far behind. You just hadn't been shown how this actually works. Now you have. Build your foundations until they run themselves, reflect for five honest minutes after the moments that matter, and watch what happens as those late ideas creep earlier and earlier until they land right when you need them. This is one of the most freeing truths I know: the communicator you wish you were is not someone else. It's you, a little further down a path you can start walking today. So go and take the first step. The next conversation is as good a place as any.

See you again soon!

Your Identity Is Built by Repetition, Not Motivation

 

 

If someone asked you to describe yourself, your answer would probably sound something like this.

"I'm a disciplined person."

"I'm terrible at managing time."

"I'm an introvert."

"I'm confident."

"I'm not good with money."

"I'm someone who gives up easily."

Most of us think these statements describe who we are.

I'm no longer sure they do.

I think they describe who we've repeatedly been.

There's a difference.

Identity isn't something we discover.

It's something we quietly build through repetition.


We Give Motivation Too Much Credit

Whenever someone wants to change their life, motivation becomes the starting point.

People wait to feel inspired before exercising.

They wait to feel confident before speaking.

They wait to feel ready before starting a business.

The problem is that motivation is temporary.

Some mornings you have it.

Most mornings you don't.

If your identity depends on motivation, your identity changes with your mood.

That's a fragile foundation.


Every Action Leaves a Trace

Think about learning a new language.

The first lesson doesn't make you bilingual.

The tenth lesson doesn't either.

Even after fifty lessons, you might still feel like a beginner.

But something invisible is happening.

Each lesson is adding another piece to your identity.

One day, someone asks,

"What languages do you speak?"

Without realizing it, you answer,

"I speak Spanish."

Nothing magical happened that day.

Your identity simply caught up with your repetition.


Identity Is Built Like a Wall

Imagine building a brick wall.

One brick doesn't look impressive.

Neither do ten.

But if you keep placing one brick every day, eventually a wall appears.

Identity works the same way.

Every action is another brick.

Read today.

You've placed one brick.

Exercise today.

Another brick.

Keep your promise to yourself.

Another brick.

Most people quit because they don't see the wall.

They forget they're still laying bricks.


Motivation Starts the Journey. Repetition Finishes It

There is nothing wrong with motivation.

It can be a powerful starting point.

The problem is expecting it to stay forever.

Nobody feels motivated every single day.

Professionals understand this.

Athletes train when they don't feel like it.

Writers write when inspiration doesn't come.

Musicians practice on ordinary days.

They don't rely on emotion.

They rely on repetition.

Eventually, repetition becomes identity.


Your Brain Believes Evidence

One thing I've noticed about the human mind is that it doesn't listen to affirmations as much as it listens to evidence.

You can tell yourself,

"I'm confident."

But if you've avoided difficult conversations for years, your brain has different evidence.

You can tell yourself,

"I'm disciplined."

But if you've broken every promise you've made to yourself this month, your brain believes your actions instead.

Identity isn't created by what you say.

It's created by what you repeatedly prove.


Small Actions Change Self-Perception

People often underestimate small actions because the results aren't immediate.

Reading ten pages feels insignificant.

Saving a small amount of money feels insignificant.

Walking for twenty minutes feels insignificant.

Writing one page feels insignificant.

But the value of these actions isn't today's result.

It's tomorrow's identity.

Every repeated action sends the same message to your brain.

"This is who we are."

Eventually, your brain stops arguing.

It accepts the evidence.


The Identity Loop

I've started thinking about identity as a continuous loop.

Thought

↓

Decision

↓

Action

↓

Repetition

↓

Identity

↓

Future Decisions 

The interesting part is that identity doesn't end the process.

It strengthens the next decision.

A runner doesn't debate whether to run.

A reader doesn't debate whether to read.

A disciplined person doesn't negotiate with every habit.

Their identity has already made the decision.

That's why positive habits become easier over time.

Not because the work changes.

Because the person changes.


Stop Asking "Who Am I?"

A better question is,

"What am I repeatedly becoming?"

Your identity is never fixed.

It's always under construction.

Every decision either reinforces the person you are today or introduces evidence for the person you want to become.

The process is happening whether you notice it or not.


Final Thoughts

Looking back, I don't think life changes because of one big decision.

It changes because of thousands of small repetitions that quietly reshape how we see ourselves.

The world celebrates dramatic transformations.

Real transformation is usually much quieter.

It's choosing to keep one promise today.

Then another tomorrow.

Then another next week.

Months later, people think you've become a different person.

In reality, you simply became the person your repeated actions had been building all along.

Identity isn't something you find.

It's something you practice.


Inner Architecture Rule #7

Your actions don't simply create results.

They create evidence.

And over time, your mind believes the evidence more than your intentions.