"Life Moves Pretty Fast..." — A Business (and Life) Truth from Ferris Bueller
- Kim Campbell
- Jul 31
- 3 min read
“Life moves pretty fast. If you don’t stop and look around once in a while, you could miss it.”
— Ferris Bueller
As a teen, I didn’t just watch Ferris Bueller’s Day Off—I aspired to be Ferris. The confidence, the charm, the way he bent the rules of the day and somehow still made the world around him better? That was freedom. That was presence. That was marching to your own beat in the coolest possible way.
Fast forward to today—I’m no longer skipping algebra or dreaming of hijacking a parade float, but I’m still chasing that feeling. The one that says: you get one shot at this life, so make it count.

This morning, I was literally ruminating over blog ideas I’d been playing around with—one of those thoughts included Ferris Bueller (seriously). I poured some coffee, walked back into my bedroom, and—I kid you not—caught a clip on CBS, a “Mornings Memory” segment, with a very young Matthew Broderick talking about the film.
Coincidence? Maybe. But I’ve learned to pay attention to signs—especially the ones that remind me to keep showing up as myself, unapologetically.
The Ferris Mindset in Business
Being different—genuinely different—in your work, your leadership, your communication style? That’s not a flaw. That’s a superpower.
Yes, it’s risky. Especially in spaces where you're told to “act professional” (whatever that even means anymore) or play by rules that were never written for people like you. But here’s the truth: if you’re committed to doing excellent work and you tend to think outside the lines, that’s not a quirk to be stifled. It’s a gift.
Saying what others won’t—whether that means openly celebrating a colleague when no one else bothers, or gracefully addressing the elephant in the room with perspective and wit—doesn’t make you unprofessional. It makes you effective.
It makes you seen. Trusted. Known as someone who can level with you.
And most importantly? It makes you unforgettable.
People don’t remember who played it safe. They remember who brought the spark back into the room.
Funny, isn’t it? That spark—the thing that moves people most, sincerity—is still what some folks dismiss as “soft.”
Earnestness Isn’t Weakness—It’s Power
I used to worry that being earnest—being someone who genuinely cares—might get me labeled as “too much” or “not serious enough.” But you know what? There’s a quiet strength in being real. Not performative. Not polished within an inch of your soul. Just real.
Ferris wasn’t trying to impress anyone. He was embracing what it means to fully live in the now. And whether you’re building a business, managing a team, or navigating your next career chapter, presence is power.
Take the Day
So if you’re stuck. If you’re burnt out. If you’re feeling like you’ve been running in circles and forgetting why you started in the first place...
even if you're not...
take a cue from Ferris...
Take the day.
Smell the roses.
Remind yourself who you are outside the grind.
Because the most important meeting of your week might just be the one you have with yourself. And if you’re marching to a beat no one else seems to hear?
Turn it up.
Don't let them rain on your parade,
Kim