Skip to main content

The Long View — Lighter Notes #2

Things I Appreciate More Now

I’ve noticed something over time.


The things I appreciate now aren’t the things I used to chase.


They’re quieter than that.


Less about achievement.
More about experience.


A slow morning with nowhere to rush off to.
Finishing a conversation instead of checking the time.
Having fewer things to do… and actually enjoying them.


It’s not that life suddenly became easier.

It’s that certain things became clearer.


I appreciate not being in a hurry.


There was a time when everything felt like it needed to move faster. Like progress was tied to speed. Like slowing down meant falling behind.


Now I’m not so sure.


There’s something about a slower pace that lets you actually notice your life while you’re living it.


I appreciate a smaller circle.


Not because people don’t matter — but because the right people matter more. Conversations feel easier. Time feels more meaningful. There’s less noise and more connection.


I appreciate things that don’t need to be impressive.


A good meal.
A familiar song.
A conversation that goes a little longer than planned.


None of it stands out in the moment.


But over time, those are the things you remember.


Somewhere along the way, you realize that more isn’t always better.


Sometimes better is just… better.


And often, it’s quieter than you expected.


Reflection:
What’s something simple you appreciate more now than you used to?


Part of The Long View — quiet reflections on life, identity and legacy.


— — — — — — — — — — — — — — —

About the Author

W. Adam Greer is an author, storyteller and founder of Greer House Press.

Through his writing he explores the intersection of identity, faith, leadership and legacy.

Adam is also the creator of The Authority Edge™, a framework built on the belief that true authority grows from clarity, integrity and the courage to live authentically.

Whether reflecting on life lessons, spiritual perspective or the music and memories that shape a generation, his work invites readers to step back, gain clarity and consider what truly matters in the long view.

🌐 WayneAdamGreer.com

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Grandpa Rock Chronicles — Pt. 1: The Story Behind the Soundtrack

Where Memory Meets Music Before playlists were curated, music was lived — one crackle, one chord, one truth at a time.   The Story Behind the Soundtrack Before playlists were “curated” and algorithms decided your mood, there was the radio — and if you were lucky, you caught lightning between the static. The guitars were louder than the world and the lyrics hit closer than any sermon. That’s where Grandpa Rock was born. Not in a marketing meeting. Not in a focus group. But in garages, dive bars, front seats and Friday nights — in the places where real people lived real lives and the music told the truth before filters existed. This series is my way of turning that truth back up. It started with a single reflection — a previous post called From Vinyl to Visuals — I was reflecting on how we used to experience music — not as background noise, but as a moment. The crackle of the needle. The smell of the sleeve. The way a song could fill a room and silence everything else. That post wa...

Grandpa Rock Chronicles — Pt. 6: Vol. IV – Campfire Nights & Cold Ones

Stories You Can Still Hear in the Smoke Where laughter outlasts the flame and every chord carries a memory.   When the day fades, the music gets real. This volume trades arena lights for firelight, distortion for harmony and stage dives for stillness. It’s made for late-night laughs, quiet reflection and remembering that sometimes the softest songs hit the hardest. These are the tunes for porch swings and pickup beds, where truth sounds better on an old acoustic and friendship feels like harmony in the dark. 🎧 Listen while you read: Spotify Playlist – Grandpa Rock Vol. IV: Campfire Nights & Cold Ones Crack the First Beer The Eagles – Peaceful Easy Feeling Bob Seger – Against the Wind Tom Petty – Learning to Fly John Mellencamp – Check It Out Jimmy Buffett – Changes in Latitudes, Changes in Attitudes Firelight Favorites Lynyrd Skynyrd – Simple Man The Allman Brothers Band – Melissa Crosby, Stills & Nash – Southern Cross Fleetwood Mac – Landslide Neil Young – Old Man The S...

❤️ Alive Today Because Someone Said Yes

A Heart Transplant Story About Organ Donation, Second Chances and Why It Matters πŸ”Ή The Diagnosis That Changed Everything   For 17 years, I lived knowing my heart would eventually fail.   I was diagnosed in 2005. Life didn’t stop — it just changed. With the right treatment, I kept working, building and showing up. On the outside, things looked normal.   But in the background, there was always a quiet reality: At some point, my heart would run out of time.   πŸ’¬ “For 17 years, I lived knowing my heart would eventually fail.”   πŸ”Ή When “Eventually” Becomes Now   By 2022, things started to shift.   Fatigue became constant. Simple tasks became difficult. Everyday life required more effort than it should.   It wasn’t one dramatic moment — it was a slow decline. And that made it harder to recognize just how serious things had become.   Until it was undeniable.   I wasn’t managing a condition anymore. I was fighting for my life.   πŸ’¬ “It di...