This week's mentors have one thing in common: they care about the details other people skip.
Martha Stewart is blogging about lawn mowers. Sadhguru is talking to policymakers about dirt. Ryan Holiday found new lessons in a book he's read ten times.
The theme? Mastery hides in the boring stuff.
MENTOR SPOTLIGHT
Martha Stewart
Lifestyle entrepreneur and media mogul who built a billion-dollar brand on the belief that details matter
Last week, Martha Stewart published a blog post about mowing her farm with STIHL lawn mowers. She named specific models — both gas-powered and battery-operated. She talked about why her gardeners have trusted the brand for years. Most people would find this unremarkable. That's exactly the point.
Stewart has spent decades being specific in public. Not vague and inspiring — specific and useful. The blog post about a lawn mower is the same instinct that built Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia into a publishing, broadcasting, and merchandising empire. She treats every task, including grass cutting, as something worth doing correctly.
For a 25-year-old building a career, this is easy to dismiss. Brand partnerships and tool recommendations feel small. But Stewart's attention to craft is what made her brand credible enough to survive a federal conviction and a prison sentence and still come back. Substance outlasts spectacle.
The lesson isn't about lawn mowers. It's about the habit of caring about your tools, your process, and your output — even when nobody is watching and especially when the subject seems too mundane to bother with.
IN THE NEWS
Sadhguru Sadhguru addressed policymakers at the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) in Washington D.C., connecting soil degradation to national security — a framing that got the attention of people who don't usually think about agriculture. His Save Soil Movement organized walks across 70+ cities on four continents around Earth Day, with thousands of participants pushing for soil health policy changes. He also launched the Miracle of Mind app and continues his daily YouTube sessions, including a May 4 live stream on personal growth that drew 2,000 viewers. The throughline in his recent work: large-scale change starts with convincing one room of decision-makers at a time.
Ryan Holiday Ryan Holiday dropped a new episode of The Daily Stoic podcast this morning, focused on lessons he missed in a book after reading it once, twice, and even ten times. It's a quietly useful idea: the depth of a book isn't fixed — your ability to receive it changes as you do. Holiday has built his entire platform on this premise, that ancient philosophy keeps paying out new dividends the more you return to it. If you've been meaning to go back to something you read years ago, this episode is a good reason to do it today.
QUICK WISDOM
"Life is too complicated not to be orderly." — Martha Stewart Stewart built an entire media empire on this belief — that structure isn't a constraint, it's what makes creativity possible.
"If you resist change, you resist life." — Sadhguru From Inner Engineering , and relevant to anyone watching their industry shift and waiting for things to stabilize before acting.
"The obstacle in the path becomes the path. Never forget, within every obstacle is an opportunity to improve our condition." — Ryan Holiday The central idea of The Obstacle Is the Way , drawn from Marcus Aurelius — the problem you're avoiding is usually the work you need to do.
FROM THE BLOG
AI Mentor App vs. Human Mentor A human mentor is expensive, hard to schedule, and sometimes unavailable exactly when you need them most. This post breaks down what an AI mentor actually does differently — and when each option makes sense.
I read every reply. If something hit home this week, just hit reply and tell me.
— Jesse Krim Founder, Get Mentors