
Dear Reader,
Where do you imagine yourself five years from now? Who will be celebrating your achievements with you? Where will you be living? What kind of routine will you have built? I sincerely hope you reach many of the things you dream of. Still, today I’d like to reflect on the anxiety that often surrounds our goals.
A new year brings new goals. Joining a gym. Writing a book. Reading a challenging work. Running a marathon. Learning a new language. The list seems endless. But at what point do we stop merely completing tasks and start truly living experiences?
The more goals we accumulate, the more pressure we feel to achieve them — and, paradoxically, the less joy we find along the way. We live in a culture shaped by instant feedback and immediate rewards, which makes it easy to abandon anything that doesn’t show quick results. Goals that require time, consistency, and patience are often the first to be left behind.
When I started Data S2 in 2018, I believed the project would mature quickly. Over time, I learned that some paths take longer to unfold — and that adjustment is part of growth. The company evolved, found operational balance, and became a space for research and continuous learning. What kept me moving forward was not urgency, but meaning.
Not everything allows us to predict the outcome in advance. Still, having a deeper purpose often sustains the journey. If the goal is better health, perhaps the first step isn’t restriction, but a simple walk. If the goal is financial stability, small and consistent habits may matter more than drastic measures. Time, when respected, does its work.
Some things need room to mature. Don’t give up simply because results take longer than expected. Many meaningful constructions move at their own pace.
Warm regards,
Augusto Machado

