🚢
When the Sea Tests You: Why Shipping Professionals Must Choose the Hard Watch
At sea, there are no shortcuts.
The 0200–0600 watch when the bridge is
silent…
The port call where cargo ops stretch beyond schedule…
The office desk where emails pile up faster than tides change…
Shipping life does not reward comfort. It
rewards character.
Recently, I reflected on the powerful
lessons from Do Hard Things by Alex Harris and Brett Harris
— and I realised something:
👉
The philosophy of this book is exactly what shipping life teaches us every day.
Let me share what this means for us — at sea
and ashore. ⚓
1️⃣ Failure at Sea Is Not
Weakness — It Is Experience Earned
Onboard, things don’t always go as planned.
A miscalculated tide window.
A delayed berthing schedule.
A PSC observation that stings your pride.
But here’s the truth every seasoned Master
understands:
Failure is not incompetence. It is exposure
to complexity.
Even Thomas Edison failed thousands
of times before success. Imagine if he stopped at the first setback. Similarly,
if the Wright brothers feared crashing, aviation would have stalled for
decades.
At sea, every near-miss, every corrective
action, every audit remark — if analysed properly — sharpens judgement.
The only real failure in shipping?
Repeating the same mistake without reflection.
As officers and operators, we must ask:
- What
did this delay teach me?
- What
system failed — and how can I strengthen it?
- How
do I turn today’s setback into tomorrow’s seamanship?
Growth at sea is earned, not given. ⚓
#ShippingLife #Seamanship
#MaritimeLeadership #ContinuousImprovement
2️⃣ Start Small, Train Hard —
Even in Shipping
Many young officers tell me:
“Sir, I want to become Master.”
“Sir, I want to run operations.”
But leadership does not begin with rank. It
begins with daily discipline.
Onboard, it might be:
- Double-checking
cargo calculations.
- Studying
COLREG cases for 30 minutes.
- Learning
charter party clauses consistently.
You don’t build competence in one leap.
You build it in watch after watch.
Athletes call it progressive overload.
In shipping, we call it structured learning.
Start with:
📚 30
minutes technical study daily.
🧭 1
procedural improvement per week.
📊 1
operational metric review every Friday.
Small improvements compound into
professional authority.
Competence creates confidence.
Confidence builds command presence. 🚢
#MaritimeTraining #ProfessionalGrowth
#DeckOfficerLife #ShipOps
3️⃣ Discipline Over Mood — The
4th Day Rule
Day 1 onboard: Motivation high.
Day 4: Fatigue kicks in.
Day 20 at anchorage: Irritation grows.
Shipping tests emotional stability more than
technical skill.
Motivation fluctuates.
Professional discipline must not.
When you wake up for the 0400 watch despite
exhaustion — that’s character.
When you maintain paperwork accuracy after 12 hours cargo ops — that’s
leadership.
As James Clear wisely says:
“We do not rise to the level of our goals.
We fall to the level of our systems.”
At sea, systems save lives.
Routine, checklist culture, proper handovers
— these are discipline tools.
Emotion says: “It’s fine.”
Discipline says: “Verify once more.”
That extra verification may prevent an
incident report.
#ShipDiscipline #SafetyCulture #BridgeTeam
#OperationalExcellence
4️⃣ No Great Voyage Is Sailed
Alone
Shipping is the ultimate team sport.
Engine and deck coordination.
Bridge and shore office communication.
Charterers, agents, managers — one ecosystem.
History proves no movement succeeds alone.
Even Mahatma Gandhi had collective strength behind him.
Onboard:
If the Chief Engineer and Master are misaligned, tension rises.
If office and vessel communication lacks clarity, efficiency drops.
Right company matters.
Choose:
- Mentors
who challenge you.
- Crew
who value standards.
- Teams
that hold each other accountable.
Strong culture reduces risk.
A ship with unity feels different.
Calmer. Focused. Professional. ⚓
#TeamworkAtSea #MaritimeCulture
#ShipManagement #CrewLeadership
5️⃣ Hard Choices Build Maritime
Leaders
Taking the easy path in shipping is
tempting.
Ignore minor defect.
Delay documentation.
Avoid difficult conversation.
But leadership is built in uncomfortable
decisions.
- Reporting
near misses honestly.
- Addressing
crew underperformance respectfully.
- Challenging
unsafe practices.
These are hard choices.
And they build trust.
Shipping doesn’t need more comfortable
professionals.
It needs accountable ones.
Every time you choose:
👉
Short-term ease
or
👉
Long-term credibility
You shape your career trajectory.
#MaritimeIntegrity #LeadershipAtSea
#Accountability #ShipOpsInsights
6️⃣ Calculated Risk &
Long-Term Maritime Growth
Shipping is risk management.
Weather routing.
Charter decisions.
Investment in new tonnage.
Career transitions.
Hard things are not reckless things.
A Master evaluates:
- Weather
forecast
- Vessel
condition
- Crew
capability
Before deciding.
Similarly, professionals must:
- Assess
downside.
- Prepare
backup plans.
- Then
execute with courage.
Short-term comfort may delay your growth:
Avoiding promotion exams.
Avoiding shore transition learning.
Avoiding new technology adaptation.
But calculated risk, combined with
preparation, builds authority.
Growth at sea is never accidental. 🌊
#RiskManagement #MaritimeStrategy
#ShippingCareers #LongTermGrowth
🧭
Final Reflection for the Shipping Community
We were not drawn to shipping because it is
easy.
We were drawn because it is demanding.
Because it tests character.
Because it builds resilience.
Every day, ask yourself:
⚓
Am I choosing the easy watch — or the hard one that builds me?
Hard routes build strong mariners.
Strong mariners build safe ships.
Safe ships build a trusted industry.
If this resonated with you:
👍
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your toughest lesson at sea in the comments
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Let’s keep learning.
Let’s keep growing.
Together — as a global shipping family. 🚢