
Classy Problems is a daily post of thinking in motion by Dan T. Rogers. Each post stands alone as a thought-provoking piece, yet together, they create a puzzle of ideas. They invite you to see things from a different angle, rethink what you thought you knew, and explore what’s beyond your current understanding.
Classy isn’t just a read: it’s a practice. Read, listen, and join us for Classy Problems Live, a 15-minute, live virtual conversation held Monday through Thursday at 12:15p PT, where we gather to reflect on the Classy Problems post of the day. No need to prep. Just connect, explore, and reflect.

Special Snowflake Syndrome
I thought my experience was unique.
Like no one had ever felt this before.
Like my pain was deeper.
My confusion more complex.
My situation, one-of-a-kind.
I wanted it to be special.
I wanted to be seen.
Understood.
Validated.
That’s the lie of my ego
thinking my experience sets me apart
instead of connecting me in.
The human experience isn’t unique.
It’s completely ordinary.
Boringly consistent.
One flavor.
Straight vanilla.
We all hurt.
We all hope.
We all search for meaning,
and get stuck in our own heads.
On details that keep us stuck.
Our biology loops the same patterns,
dressed in different details.
What makes us different
isn’t what we feel.
It’s how we respond.
Or we don’t.
Do I perform in my pain?
Or participate in my experience?
Do I default into reaction?
Or choose contribution?
We don’t get to opt out.
Even silence contributes.
Everything is a contribution.
It’s not a matter of choice.
It’s a matter of awareness.
A withdrawal still sends a message.
The loop of specialness separates.
The story that says
“I’m different”
is often a way to avoid
“What now?”
or
“What else?”
What helps me shift is asking:
If my experience isn’t special
how might my response be?
We’re not here to have special experiences.
We’re here to make meaningful responses.

Before I’m Ready
I want to feel ready.
Certain.
Settled.
Like I’ve thought it through.
Planned it well.
Earned my peace with the risk.
That feeling never comes.
Not really.
When it does,
it usually means the move was too small.
Readiness is a myth
I use to delay the decision.
To avoid the discomfort
of what might happen.
I say I’m being wise.
Measured.
Mature.
I’m waiting.
Waiting for what?
Permission?
A sign?
A guarantee?
My experience has revealed
if there’s no concern,
it might not be the right move.
It’s probably not a real move.
The loop of waiting for readiness
is how we avoid.
Avoid risking what matters.
Avoid leaving the comfort of the known.
What helps me shift is remembering:
Fear is part of the process,
of entering the unknown.
It means start here.
Start scared.
Start small.
Start before I’m ready.
Ready isn’t real.
It’s a preference.
Action is what my clarity is ready for.

Make Room for the New
I say I want new.
New perspective.
New outcomes.
New level.
There’s a catch.
I have to make space for the new.
Otherwise I’m full.
Full of assumptions.
Full of past versions.
Full of patterns.
Full details that keep me stuck in place.
New can’t enter where there’s no room.
Not in my schedule.
Not in my system.
Not in my relationships.
Not in how I see others.
Or how I let them see me.
The loop of asking for change
while holding on to the past version
is repetition.
Making room for the new
means releasing the old.
The old view.
The old idea of what’s possible.
The old way I’ve defined people.
Even how I’ve defined myself.
Every new level
requires a new way of seeing.
New comes with a new view.
A new way of relating.
A new way of being seen.
What helps me change
is remembering:
I don’t need more new information.
I need new space.
I need new ideas.
I need to see you new.
Let you see me new.
When I make room for the new
I’m expanding the whole.

Judgments Are a Part Of
My judgments don’t come out of nowhere.
They’re part of something.
Part of a story I’ve told myself.
About what’s right.
What’s good.
What’s true.
I don’t judge what is.
I judge what I think should be.
Based on what I believe.
Been taught.
Been rewarded for.
Been hurt by.
Judgment is the tip of the story.
The visible part.
The loud part.
It’s built on a foundation
I didn’t question.
This is the loop of assuming judgment is neutral
when it’s inherited.
Of thinking my view is the view
instead of a view.
When I react to what I’m seeing ,
what I’m reacting to
is what I believe I’m seeing.
What helps me change
is remembering:
Judgments are part of the pattern.
They’re part of a story.
If I want different outcomes,
I don’t just need to change my mind.
I need to examine the story it’s built on.
Then I can decide
if I believe if that story is still true.

Success Is a Squiggly Line
I was told success was linear.
Set the goal.
Make the plan.
Follow the steps.
Progress in a straight line.
Turns out, theboss doesn’t draw in straight lines.
The path isn’t straight.
It’s not clean.
It’s not obvious.
It doubles back.
Loops around.
Pauses.
Accelerates.
Stalls.
Skips steps.
Then circles the same lesson again.
The squiggly line isn’t an occasional setback.
It’s the experience.
I mistake the highlight reel
for the process.
I watch the players
and think it looks easy.
I confuse my observations as part of the audience
with the reality of the experience of the players.
The line looks messy from the inside.
Confusing.
Uncertain.
Full of pivots and failures
and lessons disguised as setbacks.
Success is a pattern of returning to the next right move.
Again and again.
The loop of mistaking progress requiring polish.
Believing the story is supposed to have a certain shape.
What helps me change is remembering:
I’m not behind.
I’m in the squiggle.
This is what success looks like from the inside.
The squiggly line is the path to success.

Good for You, Better for Me
I offer grace easily to others.
Their mistakes. Their shortcomings. Their stuckness.
I call it patience. Understanding. Compassion.
Not with myself.
I hold myself to a higher standard.
Which means I think I’m better than them.
Better than you.
Guess I’m not so patient and understanding after all.
I’m harder on myself by insisting on believing
I should be
past this
know better
be better.
Better would be one standard.
The human standard.
I raise the standard to hide the loop of less than.
Less than them.
Less than you.
The loop of thinking harder standards will make me good enuf.
For them.
For you.
When I even think about lowering the standard,
it feels like pity.
Like weakness.
The loop of mistaking pity for grace.
The paradox is clear:
When I don’t extend grace to myself,
what I offer others isn’t grace either.
It’s pity.

Opinions Don’t Matter Outside My Own Head
It’s easy to confuse
facts and opinions.
It’s easy to forget
that opinions don’t matter outside my own head.
Precious thinking encourages life without opinions.
Stay neutral.
Objective.
Above it all.
That’s not possible.
Not for me.
Probably not for you either.
It’s impossible to observe something and not form an opinion.
My mind is always deciding what I think and how I feel.
Opinions and judgments aren’t optional.
Its not a matter of choice.
It’s a matter of awareness.
They’re necessary.
They make navigating reality possible.
They tell me why I believe something is true.
My troubles start when I confuse why I think it’s true
for the truth itself.
When my belief becomes fact
in my own story.
That’s when I stop listening.
That’s when I stop learning.
The paradox of opinion is:
The moment I treat my opinion as fact,
I lose the truth I was observing.
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Classy Problems is a daily post of thinking in motion by Dan T. Rogers. Each post stands alone as a thought-provoking piece, yet together, they create a puzzle of ideas. They invite you to see things from a different angle, rethink what you thought you knew, and explore what’s beyond your current understanding.
What is a classy problem? A classy problem is when we’ve been afforded the opportunity to figure out what to do. Time to figure it out. Time to practice. Time to discern. When faced with the time to figure out a classy problem, it is more effective to focus on what NOT to do than trying to figure out what to do. In a word: restraint. JOIN US in exploring the distinction between what to do and what not to do in the pursuit of clarity.

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