Stagnation has a price. My father paid it in his forties

The cost of stagnation is higher than most people realise, and it rarely announces itself until you are already paying it. My father Maurice understood this from a hospital bed. A corporate economist whose ten-year plans were dismantled by governments every few years, who reached the ceiling of what his career could offer, and who then made a decision that changed everything: he left. Not because he was forced to. Because he felt his life lacked meaning when he couldn't progress. If you feel held back, or you sense that staying comfortable is quietly costing you more than moving would, this film is for you. We look at how external environments and internal mindsets shape your ability to adapt and what it actually looks like to stop stagnating and build something new, even in the most difficult circumstances. Subscribe for weekly videos on personal growth and reinvention, and comment below: which area of your life feels the most stagnant right now? For a further video exploring the joys of Portobello Road, see    • Why Coaches Struggle to Sell Their True Value  .