Perfection is the biggest myth you believe. There will be no perfect time, perfect plan, perfect people to start with. Just start, it doesn’t need to be perfect, it needs to work.
@rajshamani Imperfect action is better than perfect inaction. Chasing perfectionism is a form of procrastination. Do the work. Receive feedback from it. Iterate. Repeat until you strike gold.
@rajshamani Progress beats perfection. You can’t improve what you never start.
@rajshamani Perfection is procrastination in disguise. The right time never arrives. Start messy, progress beats flawless plans.
@rajshamani Perfection delays progress. Start messy, adjust as you go. Done is always better than perfect.
@rajshamani It’s a comforting myth. But a myth nonetheless. It gives you a great excuse to avoid the boring work you know you should confront.
@rajshamani 💎𝗚𝗢 𝗙𝗔𝗦𝗧. 𝗙𝗜𝗫 𝗔𝗟𝗢𝗡𝗚 𝗧𝗛𝗘 𝗪𝗔𝗬. 𝗪𝗜𝗡 𝗔𝗡𝗬𝗪𝗔𝗬.
@rajshamani Waiting for perfection is just procrastination in disguise. Start messy, start small, start now. Results don’t need perfect, they need action.
@rajshamani To be a startup founder, you have to be somewhat delusional. If you looked at the odds rationally, you wouldn’t do it.
@rajshamani So many great ideas never see the light of day because people keep waiting for ideal conditions that never come. Progress beats perfection every time.
@rajshamani There will always be the room for improvement and it gets smaller by doing!
Starting without having all the parts figured out gives you momentum and that’s how you’re able to achieve more. While others are waiting to hit the perfect home run you’re already swinging the bat, getting better with each strike and increasing your odds of hitting more home runs than they’ll ever do waiting for one
Tbh, this myth is the one that stalls most projects. People invest time trying to anticipate every edge case, and that upfront effort is often wasted when real world usage reveals entirely different priorities. Shipping something that works, even if it's imperfect, is the only way to get that crucial data.
@rajshamani After all the books, podcasts, and courses, I realized one thing: At the end of the day, what really matters is action.
@rajshamani Perfection isn't real. But messy is. That's the reality of how you will start, how you will be further down the line, and even at the end of your journey. But having gone down that path is better than never having started. Start messy. And keep on going.
@rajshamani Progress beats perfect every time, because starting messy still gets you further than waiting forever. #5
@rajshamani Progress beats perfection, start now and adjust as you go.
The tsunami of political violence, if left unchecked, will wash away this entire republic, writes @benshapiro.
@rajshamani Perfection is P-A-R-A-L-Y-S-I-S. Chase PROGRESS.
@rajshamani Done > perfect. - Launch. - Iterate. - Adapt. Waiting for flawlessness = missed opportunities.
@rajshamani So true, taking that first step is what really matters.
@rajshamani perfection is a fairy tale told by people too scared to ship
@rajshamani Perfect time to start anything is now!
@rajshamani youtube.com/shorts/DydNYG5… Remove this clip from your channel you spreading Misinformation and hate about sc st and obc the main reason of leaving institute was financial and mental harrassment not reservation. Read that whole report first. Grow up man don't spread hate
@rajshamani I also wait perfection a lot time But now I start creating content on TikTok and Instagram reels Feel shyness on camera but now I create
@rajshamani Absolutely. The loudest opinions usually come from the cheapest seats. Filter for lived experience.
@rajshamani Without consistency, ambition is useless.
@rajshamani just starting something is usually the hardest part, and once you're moving forward you can always adjust as you go, perfection is definitely not the goal, progress is
@rajshamani Sometimes the harshest truths are the most freeing. Success rarely follows comfort — it follows consistency, risk, and relentless self-belief.
@rajshamani Progress over perfection, just start.
@rajshamani exactly, waiting for perfect just wastes time. start with what you have and improve along the way.