Someday
The first yacht Akino ever saw was a postcard from Monaco, tacked to the wall of his gray cubicle. “Someday,” he’d whisper to the gleaming hull, a word that felt like a prayer and a prison all at once. For years, “someday” was a passive currency. He wished for bonuses, envied his CEO’s sailboat in the company newsletter, and consumed lavish lifestyle content with a hollow ache. His dream was a distant, sparkling ornament. It was beautiful, inert, and utterly disconnected from the man who stared at spreadsheets for a living. The shift wasn’t born of inspiration, but of a quiet, cold exhaustion. One Tuesday, after calculating how many years of “somedays” his current savings plan equated to (forty-three), he felt the wish inside him snap. Not with a bang, but with the finality of a key turning in a lock. Wishing was over. Akino began to think in terms of acquisition, not aspiration. He broke the dream of a yacht into its brutal, constituent parts: capital, knowledge, and time. The ca...