Don’t run away from challenges. Run over them. — Enzo Ferrari
Don’t run away from challenges. Run over them.
Author: Enzo Ferrari
Insight: Most of us have a pretty standard relationship with difficulty: we acknowledge it exists, we feel that familiar dread, and then we start looking for the exit. A detour, a delay, someone else to handle it—anything to avoid the direct collision. But there's something in that image of running over something rather than around it that shifts the whole equation. It's not about becoming fearless or pretending obstacles don't hurt. It's about momentum and direction. When you're moving forward with intent, you don't stop and negotiate with every bump in the road. The tricky part is that this only works if you've already decided where you're actually going. The person who runs over challenges isn't someone with superhuman pain tolerance—they're someone whose goal matters more than their comfort in the moment. They've made peace with the fact that the path forward includes friction. When you're genuinely committed to something, resistance becomes just part of the terrain, not a reason to abandon the whole journey. What makes this advice stick is how it flips the typical motivation speech. You don't need to become a tougher person first. You just need to want something badly enough that going through the obstacle beats going around it. That's when challenges stop feeling like interruptions to your life and start feeling like the actual route to where you're trying to go.