Without even realizing it, we compare ourselves to other people every day. Someone seems to learn faster. Someone else appears to reach success earlier. Social media feeds are filled with milestones, achievements, and highlights that slowly become the standard we use to judge our own progress. But what we see is rarely the full story. We can see where someone has arrived, but we rarely see how they got there. We don't know how many setbacks they experienced, how long they stayed consistent, or how many invisible hours were invested before the result became visible. That makes comparison incomplete from the very beginning. More importantly, no two people start from the same place. Everyone grows with different experiences, learns in different ways, and performs under different conditions. Two people may share the same goal while taking completely different paths to reach it. That's why speed alone is a poor measure of progress. Real growth is often quiet. Small improvements that seem almost invisible today can become meaningful changes over time. On the other hand, progress that appears fast isn't always sustainable. The moment you begin measuring yourself against someone else's pace, you also risk losing your own. Your attention shifts away from learning and toward catching up. But growth has never been a race. Every new skill, every habit, and every meaningful change develops at its own pace. The most valuable comparison isn't between you and someone else. It's between who you are today and who you were yesterday. One of the things people notice when using Witmina is exactly this. As they gain a deeper understanding of how they think, learn, and develop, they become less focused on competing with others and more focused on recognizing their own progress. Because the most meaningful growth doesn't happen when you try to become someone else. It begins when you understand your own pace.