When I look back at my journey, from foster care to nonprofit leadership to banking, one truth stands out: legacy is never an accident. For years, my mindset was survival. How do I get through today? How do I stretch this paycheck? How do I push past the struggle right in front of me?
But survival thinking will only get you so far. At some point, you have to shift to stewardship, asking, “What am I building today that will outlast me tomorrow?”
Did you catch that? Legacy doesn’t show up at the end of your life. It’s being built right now, choice by choice, decision by decision.
That’s why I teach the Triple R Method™
It doesn’t just free people from being stuck. It equips them to create impact that lives beyond their years.
Legacy requires reframing work itself. Too many of us see work only as survival, a paycheck, a job, a grind.
When I pivoted into banking, I had to reframe my role. It wasn’t just about numbers or transactions. It was about expanding opportunity for overlooked communities. That shift from survival to stewardship turned daily work into generational impact.
👉 Your move: Ask yourself: “Am I working only for survival, or am I building for stewardship?”
Scripture says: “A good person leaves an inheritance for their children’s children.” (Proverbs 13:22)
Legacy doesn’t happen by accident. It’s not luck. It’s the fruit of intentional choices stacked over time.
At United Way, and later at Midwest BankCentre, I had to reclaim my agency by aligning daily decisions with long-term vision. That meant saying no to opportunities that didn’t fit the bigger picture, and yes to ones that stretched me. Agency is choosing to live in decades, not days.
One decision I made at the bank was to push for investment in communities most people overlooked. That single choice didn’t just move numbers on a spreadsheet, it created access to capital for families and entrepreneurs, shaping futures that will ripple for generations.
👉 Your move: Write down one daily habit that doesn’t align with the legacy you want. Replace it with a step that does.
Scripture says: “Teach us to number our days, that we may gain a heart of wisdom.” (Psalm 90:12)
Your legacy is shaped by the company you keep. If your circle only talks about short-term wins, you’ll never think beyond next week.
I’ve learned to surround myself with legacy builders, people who think in terms of generations, not just quarterly results. Walking with them has stretched my perspective and deepened my sense of responsibility.
👉 Your move: Identify one legacy builder you can learn from. Spend more time with them, and less with people who are only chasing temporary success.
Scripture says: “He who walks with the wise grows wise.” (Proverbs 13:20)
Legacy isn’t built by chance. It’s built by reframing work as stewardship, reclaiming your agency through intentional choices, and renaming your networks so you walk with visionaries.
Do this, and your impact won’t just outlast you, it will multiply through the generations.