Men, Stop Asking for Permission to Excel

1,731 words, 9 minutes read time.

Built, Not Borrowed

Competence is no accident. It is sweat, time, and obsession. My foundation isn’t corporate training or performative social media curation. It’s thirty years of trench warfare in software development.

It’s mentorship, late-night study, and the brutal humility of knowing what you don’t know. I built this structure to hold under pressure. If yours is collapsing, it’s because you built it on sand, not stone.

I’m currently in an environment that demands risk. It demands I step out of the comfort zone. I’m executing moves that would have been blocked, neutered, or silenced in my last position. It’s refreshing. It’s also a hard reminder: when you are managed by people afraid of your potential, you are already dead. You don’t need a hall pass to be excellent. You need the guts to stop asking for one.

Thirty years of code gives you a cold eye for system rot. It’s the same eye I use to capture figure skating. You’re in a dark arena. The light is flickering. You have a fraction of a second to frame a skater at the apex of a jump. That isn’t luck. It’s shutter speed, aperture, and raw, technical calculation. The spectators see the photo. They don’t see the war fought in the viewfinder. That’s the work. Reclaim the craft. Strip away the noise.

The Call to Step Out

If your circle—family, peers, or management—calls you irrelevant, they are lying. They need you small because your growth highlights their own stagnation. Being a man of substance means ignoring their labels. They are artificial. They are meant to keep you in the pen.

Think of the military cry: “Hoorah.” It’s not a request. It’s a statement of resolve against an impossible objective. Excellence is an arduous climb. You will carry the load, and others will step in to take the credit. It has happened to me repeatedly. It is a tax on the spirit. Pay it. Keep moving. You endure the theft because the mastery you gain is yours alone. They can steal the credit; they cannot steal the competence.

I have walked away from “leaders” who built empires on my back. I watched those organizations rot and fold because the men at the top lacked the discipline to lead, let alone execute. Today, they still cling to the title of “Leader,” presiding over hollow shells with two or three members. They are too proud to step aside and let the mission change. They’d rather watch the structure burn than lose their hollow title. Let them hold the titles. I took the expertise. The theft of your work is a temporary setback; their terminal incompetence is a death sentence.

The Gatekeepers

For three decades, I’ve watched the pattern repeat: the builders—the men who understand the architecture and the logic—are hunted by the performers. The performers build nothing. They manage optics. When they tear down a high-performer, they aren’t protecting the system; they’re protecting their vanity.

My mind isn’t wired like theirs. I navigate this with a neurodivergent perspective—traits like ADHD and dyslexia that others call deficits. In rigid, broken systems, they were liabilities. In high-stakes development, they are my edge. I see patterns in data and behavioral anomalies that stay hidden from the “performers.” I don’t always get it right on the first try, but I see the blueprint of the problem while they’re still struggling to read the manual. Their hostility is your badge of honor. It proves you’re operating at a frequency they can’t reach. Quit trying to win them over. They are the rot. Ignore them.

Sovereignty Over Optics

The man marked “unsuccessful” by failing systems waits for validation that never comes. He waits for the organization to admit error or for the critics to recant. Stop waiting. Stagnation thrives on the wait. Excellence is not a committee vote. It is an internal standard. Whether you are debugging a system, capturing a high-speed maneuver, or securing an organization, your work is the only standard that matters.

I once had a manager document in my review that I “stayed too comfortable in technologies I already understood.” It was a lie, and he knew it. Out of a team of four, I was the only one capable of writing code in multiple languages. The others were content to rot in the shallows of ColdFusion tags. He omitted the fact that I was fighting to implement an open-source, LAMP-based project, while others forced impossible, insecure requirements into our pipeline—pushing for a Windows and MS SQL stack they knew would fail a vulnerability scan. They were engineering a collapse.

They even tried to ignore the record of my progress. My HR file held every certificate and training I had earned on my own time and on my own dime. I kept those records ironclad. When the review went on the record, I didn’t beg. I stood up, laid out the facts, and held the line until management called my manager out for his dishonesty. The lie was removed.

People will put you in no-win situations to protect their own narrative. Accept that. Then, detach your worth from their assessments. We are conditioned to seek feedback loops, but those loops are controlled by the very gatekeepers trying to sabotage your output. Break the loop. Focus on the technical requirements. Solve the problem regardless of their interference. When you stop navigating their hierarchy and start building your own domain, you regain your agency. You stop being a managed asset and start being an operator who produces results they cannot control.

Excellence is a Declaration

The modern world hates competence. It is a threat to the established, failing order. They don’t want masters; they want consumers. They are pushing a steady stream of trash-worthy products and calculated lies, and they need you to buy it all without question.

They want soft, ineffective men; they certainly don’t want masculine men who stand for something, and to be honest, they don’t want feminine females, either.

They want “average”—the baseline of mediocrity—because average people are predictable, compliant, and easy to sell to. To accept their terms is to choose obsolescence.

The only way to win is to keep building, keep refining, and keep demonstrating mastery. Look at the life of Jesus; his existence is the ultimate proof that the prevailing culture has no use for a strong man of conviction. He is our example. He did not seek the world’s applause, and he did not bow to its gatekeepers. Validation is for the insecure. The work stands. The man who performs with relentless intensity, rooted in that kind of truth, renders the critics irrelevant.

Excellence is not a request for permission. It is a declaration of capability. Build your foundation, own your friction, and reject the gatekeepers. I do not care about the legacy the world attempts to write for me. The only legacy I worry about is the one I will carry when I stand before the Judgment Throne. I want to hear two words: “Well done, good and faithful servant.” Stop waiting for their approval, stop navigating their mediocrity, and start building your own domain. The work is waiting.

Call to Action

The world will continue to push for the average, the insecure, and the compliant. They want you distracted. They want you seeking their validation in a system designed to fail you. Do not give them that satisfaction.

This is your mandate:

  • Audit your surroundings: Identify the gatekeepers who profit from your stagnation and cut them out of your decision-making.
  • Invest in your craft: The skills they want you to abandon are the exact tools that guarantee your autonomy. Master them.
  • Build in silence: Stop announcing your intentions to those who don’t understand the mission. Let your output do the talking.
  • Own the accountability: When the system pushes back, do not fold. Stand on the facts. The truth is your armor.

You were not built to manage optics. You were built to execute. Stop waiting for a seat at their table—build your own. The time for excuses is over. The work is waiting. Go finish it.

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D. Bryan King

Sources

Disclaimer:

The views and opinions expressed in this post are solely those of the author. The information provided is based on personal research, experience, and understanding of the subject matter at the time of writing. Readers should consult relevant experts or authorities for specific guidance related to their unique situations.

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