The Best Scenario Also Exists

We are trained to think about what can go wrong or what is most likely to happen. It is a defense mechanism. It prepares us, protects us and keeps us in control. But it also limits us. When we only consider negative or realistic scenarios, we reduce our ability to act freely. We start making decisions from fear, not from possibility. We move to avoid losing, not to win. And that changes everything. The mind executes what it believes is possible. If you never consider the best scenario, you will never act in that direction.

Imagining the best scenario is not deceiving yourself. It is expanding the range of what is possible. It is allowing your behavior to align with a positive outcome. It is talking to someone without assuming rejection. It is presenting yourself to an opportunity without assuming failure. It is trusting that things can go well, even without guarantees. Sometimes, the best scenario happens. And when it happens, it changes your perception of what is possible. From that moment on, the way you act is no longer the same. Because you no longer move only to protect yourself. You also move to live.