Some people made deals with me a decade and a half ago...
Looking back at deals or agreements made a decade and a half ago offers a unique opportunity for self-reflection and growth. From my experience, such moments often serve as pivotal turning points that define our personal and professional paths. When I reflect on agreements made so long ago, I realize that many of them involved not just contracts but trust and expectations that shaped subsequent decisions. One vital lesson I learned is the importance of maintaining integrity not only in fulfilling promises but also in how we negotiate and communicate terms. Deals from the past often carry lessons about patience, resilience, and adaptability — qualities necessary to keep relationships healthy and productive over time. For example, initial terms that seemed fixed might have needed re-evaluation as circumstances evolved, highlighting the importance of flexibility in long-term commitments. Additionally, those old agreements remind me how crucial insight into the other party’s expectations is. Successful collaborations often depend on understanding intentions clearly, which helps avoid misunderstandings decades later. When you commit to a deal, the clarity of your intentions and the authenticity of your engagement can determine how fruitful or challenging the relationship will become. For anyone reflecting on their own past deals or promises, I recommend a few steps: review the original agreement carefully, assess how well each party lived up to their commitments, and consider what changes time has brought to your perspective. This exercise can be both humbling and enlightening, offering a roadmap to improve future negotiations and agreements. Moreover, it reveals how much personal and professional growth happens over time, influenced by those earlier commitments. In summary, the passage of 15 years since making deals can act as a mirror reflecting where we've grown and where we still have opportunities to improve. It’s an ongoing journey — one where honesty, self-awareness, and willingness to learn remain core values. Whether personal or business-related, these reflections help reinforce the understanding that past agreements are not just historical facts but living lessons shaping our ongoing story.







































































