Is Success Really a Moment?
Behind every “sudden success” is a long, unseen climb.
We often assume success happens in a moment.
A young cricketer scores a century, a champion wins another title, a singer starts filling stadiums. And almost immediately the comments begin.
“How lucky.”
“What timing.”
“She was always destined for it.”
From a distance, success can look sudden, but that is only because we usually arrive at the end of the story.
When Virat Kohli walks out to bat, we see control, not the years of failure and rebuilding that came before it. When Roger Federer played, everything looked effortless, though that effortlessness was built through endless repetition. Even outside sport, Adele fills global stages today, though she once performed in small rooms where some nights ended in silence—there was little applause, if any. That is usually how life works.
We see people on the top floor, sometimes even on the helipad, but rarely the journey that took them there. Social media makes this illusion even stronger. We see the achievement, the award, the promotion, the celebration. We rarely see the years that came before.
The truth is that most of life happens there—not at the start, not at the finish, but somewhere in the middle.
It is the place where you keep showing up every day and wonder if any of it is making a difference. Where the work feels repetitive, the progress feels invisible, and the destination seems no closer than it did yesterday.
I know this because I have lived it. In my early thirties, I was already a Headmaster in a large school in Pune, India. The title sounded impressive. The reality felt very different because most days I felt I was learning as fast as I was leading.
I made mistakes. Some could have had serious consequences if I had not adjusted quickly. I learnt from people older and more experienced than me. I watched them closely, listened carefully, and absorbed whatever I could. Looking back, I probably learnt as much from observation as from formal training.
Late evenings became routine, but so did self-doubt.
There were days when I questioned whether I was ready for the responsibility that came with the role. Long before I knew the term “imposter syndrome,” I understood the feeling. Deadlines, expectations, difficult decisions, and the fear of getting things wrong all arrived together.
It wasn’t smooth, it wasn’t glamorous, and it certainly didn’t feel like success in any form. Looking back, that was probably the most difficult stage.
You keep moving forward, but there is no applause, no visible breakthrough, and no reassuring sign that all the effort is leading somewhere meaningful.
That is where frustration creeps in, and disappointment follows close behind. Some days you even wonder whether it is worth continuing.
Most people experience those moments, but few talk about them.
Perhaps that is why comparison can be so misleading. We compare our struggles with someone else’s results. We compare our beginning with someone else’s ending. What looks sudden is usually the result of years of persistence that nobody noticed while it was happening.
As an educator and a father, I have come to believe that encouragement matters most during this stage. We naturally celebrate people when they succeed, and there is nothing wrong with that. But often the greater need is earlier, when confidence is fragile and progress is difficult to see.
That is when a word of encouragement, a helping hand, or a pat on the shoulder matters. Sometimes these are the very things that keep us going.
Then, often when you least expect it, something changes.
What once felt difficult becomes manageable. What once felt unfamiliar becomes second nature.
You do not always notice the change immediately. You notice it later, when you look back and realise you have travelled much further than you thought, and there is a deep satisfaction in that realisation.
Not because you reached the top, but because you kept going when it would have been easier to stop.
The top floor gets noticed—it always does.
But what deserves equal attention are the years before that—the mistakes, the doubts, the late nights, the tiredness, the setbacks, and the moments when people almost gave up but didn’t.
Success is not the moment you arrive at. It quietly takes shape over time, long before anyone else notices, and long after you yourself have stopped wondering if it will ever happen.
When I look back at my own journey, it rarely feels like arrival—just a quiet understanding that those ordinary days were never wasted; they were simply taking me somewhere.