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Brent M. Jones - Connected Events Matter

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Exploring the unexpected connections that shape our lives

 

 

 

Book Reviews, Comments & Stories,       Quotes, & Poetry & More

 

 

 

"Connections and Why They Matter"

 

 

 

 

 

 

Most of what happens in our life will spark a connection.  Life connects with what has been found in books. Books connect with what happens in life. Use the connections to help you see more clearly. A love of reading and writing is what motivated the creation of this blog. Thank you for coming to the blog. 

 

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Brent M. Jones - Connected Events Matter

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    • Finding the Best Version of Ourselves: The Interview of Self
    • Why Professionals Use LinkedIn
    • Networking With a Purpose: The Informational Interview, It's Use ...................l
    • Work Matters It takes Technology..
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When You Feel Too Small to Matter

July 7, 2026 Brent Jones
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There are times when the world feels unsteady. Institutions we once trusted seem fragile. Public conversations grow louder and less thoughtful. Certainty hardens into anger. Even good people begin to wonder whether anything they do still matters.

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It is easy, in moments like these, to feel powerless. You can vote, write, speak, reach out, and try to understand, and still the world can seem to tilt toward noise, anger, and indifference.

The thought comes quietly:

I’m just one person.

But that sentence has never told the whole story.

We often think change begins with power, with large movements, influential people, or moments dramatic enough to be remembered.

Most of the time, it does not.

Change begins with conscience. It begins in moments that do not look important while they are happening: a conversation grounded in honesty, an act of restraint when others react, a willingness to listen before deciding, a sentence that clarifies rather than inflames.

Sometimes it begins with a refusal to become the very thing we are criticizing.

These are small hinges. But small hinges can move heavy doors.

Perhaps part of the problem is that we have learned to measure influence by visibility. We see the person with the largest audience, the loudest voice, or the greatest authority and assume that is where influence lives. We count followers, reactions, votes, sales, and headlines because those things can be measured.

What we cannot easily measure is what happens afterward.

We do not know which conversation caused someone to reconsider a long-held belief, which act of patience prevented an argument from becoming something worse, or which words stayed with someone after everyone else had forgotten they were spoken.

Much of what matters most leaves no record.

That can make it difficult to keep trying. When we cannot see the result of our effort, we begin to question whether the effort mattered. We confuse the absence of evidence with the absence of influence.

But those are not the same thing.

A teacher may never know which sentence a student remembers twenty years later. A parent may not recognize which ordinary moment becomes part of a child’s understanding of kindness. A friend may never learn that one conversation arrived at exactly the right time. A writer may never know where a sentence travels after someone reads it.

Influence does not always announce itself.

Sometimes it simply continues.

There is another danger in believing we are too small to matter. It can become permission to withdraw.

If nothing I do will make a difference, why speak carefully? Why listen? Why try to understand someone I disagree with? Why resist the anger everyone else seems willing to embrace?

Powerlessness can quietly become an excuse for indifference.

But we are rarely as powerless as we imagine. We may not control institutions, movements, governments, or the behavior of other people. We may not be able to change the direction of the larger world.

But we still influence the part of the world that passes through us.

Every conversation asks something of us. Every disagreement gives us a choice. Every moment of frustration reveals something about the person we are becoming.

That may seem small compared with the problems around us.

But perhaps the scale is not the point.

You do not have to fix everything. You do not have to respond to every argument, correct every falsehood, or carry the weight of every problem you can see.

But you do have to decide what kind of person you will remain while the world feels unsteady.

Will you still believe clarity matters when noise gets more attention? Will you still choose kindness when anger travels faster? Will you still protect truth when certainty is easier? Will you still listen when everyone else is waiting to speak?

These choices may not feel like action.

They are.

The way we participate in the world becomes part of the world we are helping to create. Not all at once. Not dramatically. But repeatedly.

This is easy to forget because the loudest forms of influence are usually the most visible. Anger spreads quickly. Conflict attracts attention. Outrage announces itself.

Quiet influence works differently.

Someone remembers how you treated them. A sentence stays with them. Your restraint changes the direction of a conversation. Your willingness to listen gives someone else permission to reconsider. Your refusal to add more anger to an already angry moment changes something, even if only slightly.

You may never know what continued because of something you said, or what stopped because of something you refused to say.

The steady work of integrity spreads in ways the loudest voices may never see.

Perhaps that is why small moments matter so much. We tend to wait for the important moment, the opportunity to do something significant, the occasion when our choices will clearly make a difference.

But life rarely tells us which moments those are.

We usually recognize them only afterward, if we recognize them at all. The ordinary conversation may have been the important one. The decision to remain quiet may have mattered more than the speech. The small kindness may have traveled further than we knew. The person who seemed not to be listening may have remembered.

We cannot know.

So perhaps the question is not whether we are large enough to change the world.

Perhaps the better question is whether we are willing to take responsibility for the small part of it that we touch.

So write. Speak when it is time. Listen carefully. Hold to your values even when you doubt their reach.

You may be one person.

But small does not mean inconsequential.

In a world that often feels beyond our control, how we choose to act, speak, and respond may be the most meaningful form of influence we still have.

This reflection grew from an idea I have returned to more than once, including in What Matters: We Are the Sum of Small Moments.

Learn More about the book - What Matters
if this article was of interest you might check out > Becoming Is Not a Destination
Source: https://connectedeventsmatter.com/self-imp...
In Life Meaning & Presence Tags self-awareness, meaning, personal growth, influence, small moments, integrity, kindness, communication, reflection, What Matters
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When Small Moments Start to Mean More

April 26, 2026 Brent Jones
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This reflection originally appeared in my What Matters newsletter. It explores how our relationship with small moments changes over time—and what that shift reveals about who we are becoming.

There are moments in life that feel decisive.

A job offer. A conversation that shifts direction. A loss that changes how we see things.

We tend to recognize these moments as they happen.
They feel significant because they interrupt something.

They ask for a response. But not everything that shapes us arrives that way.

Over time, something quieter begins to happen. The smaller moments, the ones we might have overlooked before, start to stand out.

A passing thought that lingers a little longer. A brief exchange that carries more weight than expected.A familiar pattern we suddenly see more clearly.

These moments don’t announce themselves.

They don’t demand attention.

But they begin to hold it.

When we’re younger, we often move quickly through experience. We’re building, exploring, reacting. There’s a sense that meaning comes from what happens next.

Small moments are still there, but they’re compressed. They pass through us without much reflection.

With time, that begins to change.

Not because life becomes simpler.

But because we begin to notice differently.

We don’t just move from moment to moment. We stay with them longer. We see connections that weren’t visible before. We recognize patterns that once felt random.

And in that shift, the small moments start to feel less like background—and more like direction.

There’s also something else that happens over time.

We let go of certain expectations.

Earlier in life, there’s often a sense that we’re supposed to keep expanding—keep becoming more.

And in many ways, we do. But there’s also a quiet movement toward something more stable. We begin to settle into parts of ourselves that feel true. Not because we’ve figured everything out. But because we’ve seen enough to recognize what holds.

That can sometimes feel like a narrowing. Like we’re exploring less. But it’s often something else.

It’s a refinement. A recognition that not every path needs to be followed in order to understand it.

And that meaning doesn’t always come from adding more.Sometimes it comes from seeing more clearly what’s already there.

The small moments reflect this shift.

They don’t just confirm what we already believe.

They reveal how we’re changing.

They show us what we’re paying attention to. What we return to. What we’re beginning to understand without needing to explain it.

Over time, identity becomes less about the moments that stood out once—

And more about the moments we continue to notice.

The ones we return to, quietly. The ones that stay with us, even when nothing about them seemed important at the time.

If this reflection resonates, you may find a deeper exploration of these ideas in What Matters: We Are the Sum of Small Moments, in which I examine how attention, interpretation, and repetition shape who we become over time.

You may also find a broader perspective on identity and personal direction in The Human Factor: Discover Yourself, Clarify Your Purpose, Create Work That Matters.

If this reflection resonates, you may find a deeper exploration of these ideas in:

What Matters: We Are the Sum of Small Moments
The Human Factor A Reflective Guide for Seasons of Change and Personal Clarity
Source: https://connectedeventsmatter.com/self-imp...
In life Meaning Tags reflective writing, meaning, small moments, identity, personal growth, change over time
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About

Brent M. Jones

Brent writes with quiet confidence and curiosity, exploring communication, reinvention, and what truly matters. His reflections invite readers to slow down, reconsider their stories, and reconnect with the values that guide them. Through books, essays, and his What Matters Substack Articles and Notes, he offers thoughtful writing shaped by observation, experience, and reflection.

Writing that doesn’t shout—but still speaks clearly.

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