The Cathedral Builder's Perspective
#perspective
Most people become immersed in the minutiae of their work, losing sight of its greater purpose. In a medieval cathedral, a stonemason sees only stones, a carver only gargoyles—while the sweeper, with remarkable clarity, declares: "I am helping build a cathedral."
This myopia extends to academia, where professors typically describe their work as "teaching partial fractions" rather than "preparing students for their futures." As Richard Hamming observed, this narrow focus is "the chief characteristic of a bureaucrat." We rarely connect our daily tasks to the larger aims we would acknowledge, when pressed, are our true goals. The difference between merely participating in a system and truly leading it lies in this distinction—the ability to maintain perspective on how individual efforts contribute to something greater. Those who rise to the top are those who, even amid details, never lose sight of the cathedral they're building.