“Just remember, they’ll criticize the process but praise the results.” – Jas Waters
They’ll Criticize Your Process, But Praise Your Results
When you’re in the middle of building something great, expect voices from the sidelines. People love to question your methods, your schedule, your priorities—even your sanity. It’s easy to feel discouraged when others don’t understand why you wake up at 5 AM, why you decline social invitations, or why you’re pouring money into something they can’t yet see. Remember that criticism often comes from those watching from a distance, not those in the arena with you.
What these critics don’t realize is that meaningful results require unconventional processes. The path to extraordinary outcomes rarely looks organized or makes sense to outsiders. Your messy notebooks, your seemingly random research tangents, your failed attempts—these aren’t signs you’re doing it wrong. They’re evidence you’re doing the real work that success demands. The very things people question today become the “genius methods” they’ll admire tomorrow.
The truth is, people judge processes in real-time but results in hindsight. When you finally cross that finish line—when your business becomes profitable, when your book gets published, when your health transformation becomes visible—suddenly those same critics will ask for your “secret.” They’ll wonder how you “got so lucky.” The journey that once looked foolish to them will be reframed as brilliant strategy once they see where it led.
So keep going, even when nobody gets it. Let their criticism roll off your back while you focus on the next step in your process. Document your journey if you can—not to prove critics wrong, but to remember your own resilience when those same people eventually come asking for advice. Your validation isn’t found in their approval of your methods, but in the results that even they won’t be able to ignore when you’re done.

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