
A few weeks ago, I clicked on an article about the deteriorating condition of the Louvre, which is putting priceless works of art at risk. According to a leaked letter from the museum’s director to the French Minister of Culture, the palace is aging and worn down by the staggering number of visitors—upwards of 10 million a year. It’s safe to say that most of them, moi included, are there for one reason: to see the world’s most famous painting, The Mona Lisa.



It’s hard to believe, but around this time five years ago, Jason and I traveled to Paris for a long weekend to attend a special exhibition marking the 500th anniversary of da Vinci’s death. This time, we purposely skipped the pilgrimage to La Joconde, choosing instead to study the works that came before it—masterpieces in their own right. As we walked through room after room filled with intricate sketches, notes scrawled backwards, and countless unfinished ideas, I had a realization: The Mona Lisa isn’t just a thing of beauty. Maybe that’s the real lesson of The Mona Lisa: that beauty—true mastery—takes time, patience, and relentless curiosity. No shortcuts, no instant gratification. Only years of obsessive refinement.

I can’t help but think about something else I read earlier this year about one of the world’s most successful men admitting that his biggest regret is the loss of the relationship that saw him through it all. “There is a certain wonderfulness to spending your entire adult life with one person because of the memories and depth of things you have done and having kids together,” Mr. Gates, the billionaire co-founder of Microsoft, told The Times of London in a recent interview.
Perhaps the beauty of it all, be it a work of art or a deep connection with another living being, lies in the struggle and the commitment to keep at it for as long as possible, through all the imperfect drafts, until what you have is something priceless.
