An artistic, sepia-toned flat lay featuring an open vintage journal with a black-and-white photo of a smiling WWII-era soldier. A gold-trimmed fountain pen, an antique compass, and a pair of worn combat boots surround the journal. Overlaid text reads "Throwback Thursday: Lessons That Stick" and includes the Arbor Vitae Voiceworks logo with a soundwave graphic.

Slow is Smooth...Smooth is Fast

Control Your Pace - Speed Follows Precision

Rushing feels productive.

It feels like progress.
Like urgency.
Like you’re moving faster than everyone else.

But most of the time…

It’s just noise.

There’s a phrase you hear often in disciplined environments:

Slow is smooth. Smooth is fast.

At first, it sounds backwards.

Because when something matters – when there’s pressure – you want to move quickly.

You want to react.
To speed up.
To get through it.

But speed without control isn’t efficiency.

It’s instability.

I’ve had moments where I rushed through something I knew how to do.

Skipped steps.
Cut corners.
Tried to move faster than I was actually prepared to move.

And it always led to the same result:

Mistakes.
Corrections.
Doing the same thing twice.

That’s the trap.

Rushing doesn’t save time.

It creates rework.

The moments where things actually went well – where everything felt controlled – looked different.

Slower at the start.
Deliberate.
Focused on doing each step correctly.

No wasted motion.
No guessing.
No scrambling to fix something halfway through.

That’s what “smooth” looks like.

And once you reach that point…

Speed shows up on its own.

Because when your actions are controlled:

  • you don’t hesitate
  • you don’t second-guess
  • you don’t have to stop and correct

Everything flows.

The problem is, smooth doesn’t feel impressive.

It doesn’t look urgent.
It doesn’t feel fast.

So people abandon it too early.

But the reality is simple:

You don’t get faster by rushing.

You get faster by removing mistakes.

That lesson shows up everywhere.

In work.
In communication.
In anything that requires consistency.

When you slow down enough to:

  • prepare properly
  • execute deliberately
  • focus on getting it right the first time

You stop wasting time fixing what didn’t need to go wrong.

And that’s where real speed comes from.

So take a moment and think back, not years, but recently.

  • Where did rushing actually slow you down?
  • What did you have to redo that could have been done right the first time?
  • Where would slowing down have created a better outcome?

Be honest.

Because the pattern is usually clear.

The goal isn’t to move slower.

It’s to move with control.

Carry it forward.

Throwback Thursday is about learning once and applying it moving forward.

If this resonated, come back next Thursday and keep building lessons that stick.

Before you go:
Where do you need to slow down to actually move faster?

If you need a voice that delivers clarity, consistency, and a message your audience understands, listen to my demos here.

Every project I take on is approached with one goal: make your message clear, natural, and easy for your audience to connect with.