Slow Is Fast: Applying the Trowel With Patience
Download MP3There is a specific kind of damage that happens when someone feels genuinely seen for the first time in a while. The energy of that moment is real and biological, and it almost always produces the same mistake: trying to compress months or years of relational development into a single conversation. Brian Mattocks is direct about this pattern because most people have been on both sides of it. The person who unloads their entire emotional history in the first hour is not broken. They are just moving too fast for the mortar to cure.
Daniel Goleman's observation that with people, slow is fast anchors this episode. The trowel is a useful operative image here: applying cement too quickly, in too great a quantity, before the previous layer has set, produces a wall that will not hold. The same principle applies to relationships. Pacing is not emotional withholding. It is the thing that gives a relationship the structural integrity to bear real weight when real weight arrives.
Brian also offers two concrete diagnostic signals for catching early imbalance: consistently being the only one initiating contact, and being the only one managing logistics. Neither is automatically disqualifying, but both are worth paying attention to, especially early in a friendship when patterns are still forming.
- Why new connection triggers an urge to over-disclose and why that backfires
- Daniel Goleman's principle that slow is fast in human relationships
- The trowel as a metaphor for judicious, well-paced relational investment
- How over-sharing closes off future depth rather than creating it
- Using effort imbalance as an early signal of relational mismatch
- The difference between poor maintenance habits and genuine disinterest
Building something that lasts means letting each layer set before you add the next one.
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- Jorge