If you have carried it well, it will stand on its own. It will reflect the sky. And you, with your sore arms and tired eyes, will feel a quiet pride. Not the pride of a conqueror who smashed a mountain, but the pride of a steward who respected the fragile.
So, look at your hands right now. What are you holding? Is it glass? Adjust your grip. Find a spotter. Breathe.
In life, spotters are the people who walk backward through the doorways for you. They warn you about the curb you cannot see. They adjust their pace to match yours. Carry The Glass
When that happens, the most important moment is the next moment.
Who is spotting you right now? If you are trying to of a failing marriage, a financial crisis, or a mental health struggle without a spotter, you are inviting disaster. Vulnerability is not weakness; it is the second pair of hands. Law #3: The Destination Must Be Clear You never pick up a pane of glass unless you know exactly where it is going. There is no "just looking" with fragile cargo. Wandering causes fatigue, and fatigue causes drops. If you have carried it well, it will stand on its own
It falls from the truck. A child runs into your legs. The wind catches it just wrong. And in that fraction of a second, you hear the sound no one wants to hear: the shatter.
In professional settings, we often praise the "move fast and break things" mentality. But you cannot under that motto. Some initiatives (rebranding, mergers, layoffs, apologies) require glacial precision. Action Step: Before handling a fragile situation, deliberately cut your natural speed by 50%. Breathe between sentences. Pause before opening doors. The saved time from not cleaning up shattered pieces is infinite. Law #2: You Need a Spotter No one carries a large pane of glass alone. The physics don’t work. One person inevitably twists, creating torsion, and snap . Not the pride of a conqueror who smashed
The phrase is not just a literal instruction for movers or glaziers; it is a profound metaphor for leadership, emotional intelligence, and the stewardship of trust. To carry glass is to acknowledge that not all burdens are meant to be crushed. Some burdens must be cradled, protected from vibration, and delivered without a single fracture.