You’re sitting there, hoping to one day “discover your talent.”
Hoping that God, the universe, or one random event will reveal your destiny.
Meanwhile… time is passing. Life is moving. Bills are stacking.
Here’s the uncomfortable truth:
Waiting to find your gift is a luxury you cannot afford.
Let’s talk sense.
1. Talent Is Overrated
Nobody is born with the ability to write sales copy.
Or run Facebook ads.
Or sell affiliate offers on WhatsApp.
They learned it. They struggled at first. Then they got better.
People don’t win because of “natural talent.”
They win because they put in reps.
Over and over. In public. In private. Without applause.
2. Action Reveals Strengths
You will never discover what you’re good at by sitting and thinking.
- Try writing
- Try selling
- Try designing
- Try organizing
- Try explaining things to others
The more you try, the more clues you gather.
That’s how winners move.
They don’t wait. They test, refine, and adapt.
3. Purpose Is Built, Not Found
The people who say “this is my purpose” didn’t find it in a vision.
They picked a path, committed to it, and built meaning around it.
Don’t get stuck asking, “Is this my calling?”
Start with what pays.
Then grow into what impacts.
4. Being Broke While “Searching” Isn’t Noble
Too many smart Nigerians are wasting prime years chasing clarity.
You don’t need clarity. You need cash flow and consistency.
Get a money-making skill. Learn to market it.
You’ll gain confidence, build a track record, and earn the right to explore passions later.
Because guess what?
It’s easier to find your calling when your rent is paid.
5. If You’re Still Lost — Serve Others
Still don’t know what to do?
Then help someone who does.
- Intern for a smart person
- Promote someone’s product
- Volunteer for a project
- Ask how you can help
You’ll learn. You’ll build relationships.
And you might just stumble on your path in the process.
Final Words
Nobody is coming to tell you what your gift is.
And nobody owes you clarity.
You create direction by moving.
You create mastery by working.
You create wealth by solving problems — not waiting to feel inspired.
So stop asking, “What’s my talent?”
Start asking, “What can I do today that adds value and builds skill?”
Follow Money Pavilion — I don’t motivate. I liberate.