Daily English Pod
Daily English Pod is a space for learning English beyond grammar and textbooks.
During the week, you’ll learn practical vocabulary, expressions, idioms, and real-life English, the language people actually use in everyday conversations, emotions, and work.
On weekends, we slow down. Through ideas from psychology, philosophy, and real human experience, we explore language as a way to better understand life, emotions, identity, and growth.
This podcast is created by Jale, an English teacher with 13 years of teaching experience and a Master’s degree in Applied Linguistics from Canada, who teaches with patience, clarity, and care, and believes learning works best when students feel seen, respected, and safe to think aloud.
The goal is simple but meaningful: to help you understand English deeply, use it confidently, and connect it to your real life. English here is not just a skill. It’s a gentle companion for clearer thinking, honest expression, and deeper human connection.
Daily English Pod
Define “good enough” before you start
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Define “good enough” before you start
Many problems don’t come from doing something badly. They come from something else. Not knowing when something is done.
Hello and welcome to a weekend episode of Daily English — where we try to grow, in English and in life. Today I want to share a simple idea that can quietly change the way you work and make decisions.
Define “good enough” before you start. Many problems don’t come from doing something badly. They come from something else. Not knowing when something is done.
So we start a task. We work on it. We adjust, improve, rethink…
But without a clear endpoint, the task keeps expanding.
We add more. We refine more. We question more.
And over time, something interesting happens. The work becomes heavier than it needs to be.
Not because it’s difficult — but because the finish line keeps moving.
This is where a small shift can help.
Before you begin, take a moment and define: “What does good enough look like here?”
Not perfect. Not ideal. Just sufficient.
It could be something simple. A message that is clear. A task that is complete. A result that works.
Once you define that, you create a boundary.
And that boundary does something important. It limits overthinking.
Now, instead of asking: “Can this be better?” You begin to ask: “Is this already enough?”
And often, the answer is yes much earlier than we expect.
This doesn’t mean lowering standards. It means being intentional about them.
Because without a defined standard, the mind tends to default to “more.”More effort. More time.
More doubt.
So this weekend, try something simple.
Before starting a task, decide what “good enough” looks like.
Keep it realistic. Keep it clear. And once you reach it — stop.
Not because you can’t improve further. But because you chose a boundary.
And that choice gives you something valuable: clarity, completion, and movement.
Thank you for being here today. Enjoy the rest of your weekend and see you tomorrow.