It wasn’t a loud moment or anything dramatic, just one of those quiet realisations that hits you when everything slows down. Timaya spoke honestly, almost like he was talking to himself, admitting that while chasing what he once called his “dream life,” he sometimes overlooks the fact that he’s already inside it. The success, the recognition, the life he once prayed for, it’s all there, but the mind keeps moving the goalpost.
He explained how the journey can become a loop. You achieve one level, then immediately set your eyes on the next. Before long, what used to feel like a dream becomes normal, and normal starts to feel like not enough. That’s when the question begins to creep in: Is this dream life actually endless? Is there ever a final point where you can confidently say, “This is it, I’ve arrived”?
For him, that question doesn’t come with a simple answer. Instead, it opens up a deeper reflection on human nature, how ambition can be both a blessing and a trap. because the same drive that pushes people to grow can also make it difficult to pause and appreciate how far they’ve come. It’s like climbing a mountain and forgetting to look back at the view.
he hinted that maybe the idea of “arriving” is not as real as people think. that feeling people are waiting for that complete sense of satisfaction might not come from reaching a certain level, but from learning to recognize the moment you’re already in. otherwise, the chase never really ends, and the dream keeps shifting further away no matter how much you achieve.





Leave a Reply