Kaizen Thought:Â The gifts we give always comes back. Not always as recognition or moneyâbut as growth, clarity, fulfillment, and opportunity.
To quote Seth Godin on the audiobook Linchpin; “The gift is to the giver and comes back to him.â
In a world conditioned by âIâll do this if you do thatââthis idea reshapes how we approach work, life, and contribution. It reminds us that the greatest value doesnât come from getting, but from giving.
When we show up generously, not for praise or reward, but because WE choose toâbecause it’s in us to giveâsomething changes. We grow. We refine our craft. We build trust. We leave behind a trail of impact that goes far beyond what any resume could document.
This is the essence of a linchpinâsomeone who doesnât wait to be told what to do or who to be.
A linchpin leads, gives, and creates value where none existed before.
Linchpins are not fueled by the systemâs rewards; theyâre fueled by purpose and the internal satisfaction of making a difference.
They are not bound by job descriptions. They lean in, offer solutions, take emotional risks, and invest in the people around themânot because they have to, but because they know itâs the right thing to do.
And the beautiful part is: generosity always comes back. Not always as recognition or moneyâbut as growth, clarity, fulfillment, and opportunity.

Being generous becomes a form of self-transformation. The more we give, the more we realize that the person who benefits the most isnât just the receiverâitâs us. Our capacity expands and our influence deepens. And our work stops being just a job and starts becoming our art.
Thatâs the shift we should be embracing.
Not trying to become perfect, or to meet some pre-written spec of âsuccess,â but choosing to give, contribute, and create from a place of intention.
Because in the end, as Seth Godin reminds us, “the ones who change the worldâthe true linchpinsâdonât hoard their gifts. They give them freely”. And by doing so, they become indispensable.
Choose to leave people better than you found them.
Let what you do be the art of generosityârooted in care, fueled by purpose.

