Miles into the Palmetto 200, alone on a back road in the middle of the night, the voice said: no one can see — just walk for a bit. Another voice said: you said you wouldn’t stop.
I could barely make out the road in front of me — lit only by the headlamp strapped to my forehead — somewhere in the back roads of South Carolina in the middle of the night.
It had been hours since my team launched the Palmetto 200 from Columbia. I’d lost track of how many miles I’d run myself. Between legs of the race, we rode in the team van — trying to rest, trying not to think too hard about how sore we already were and how much further we had left to go. Then it would be your turn again. Back out onto the road. Back into the dark.
No one was around me. Not a car, not a teammate, not a soul. Just the road, the headlamp, and the quiet.
And that’s when the voice showed up.
No one can see you. You’ve run a long ways. Just walk for a bit. No one will know.
I refused to give in to it. Not because I wasn’t tired. I was exhausted in a way that’s hard to describe to someone who hasn’t been there. Not because the idea of walking for a few minutes wasn’t completely reasonable. It was. But I had made a commitment to myself before that race started. And the question being asked of me in that dark, quiet moment on that back road wasn’t really about walking or running. It was about what kind of person I was when no one was watching.
That’s always the real question.
It’s easy to show up when everyone is watching. The dark is where character gets built.
The Palmetto 200 is an arduous relay race from the midlands of South Carolina all the way to Charleston. My team finished second. I’m proud of that. But the finish that mattered most to me — the one I still think about — happened on a back road in the dark, when nobody was there to see it, when I had every justification to let up, and I didn’t.
That is what accountability actually means. Not the version that happens when your coach is watching, when your teacher is grading, when your parents are checking the portal. The version that happens when nobody is. When the only person who will ever know whether you gave your full effort is you.
I tell my students this constantly: no one knows how hard you’re really trying except you. No one knows whether you studied the material you actually needed to work on or just reviewed the parts you already had. No one knows whether you gave the essay your honest best or the version that was good enough to submit. No one knows — but you do.
And that knowledge lives with you. It compounds over time. The students who hold themselves to a standard in the dark — when no one is watching, when no one would know the difference — are the ones who arrive at the finish line with something real. Not just a result. A character.
Five ways to build real accountability — before the race gets hard
An unwritten goal is easy to revise when it gets hard. Write it down. Put it somewhere you’ll see it. Make it real. A goal that exists only in your head has a way of quietly shifting every time you need it to — and you’ll never know you moved the finish line.
Study the material you don’t understand, not just the parts you already know. Write the essay that reflects your honest thinking, not the version that’s easy to produce. Do the extra problem. Have the hard conversation with your teacher. No one will see it. You’ll know — and that’s the whole point.
Parents — when students know every grade is being monitored in real time, the accountability shifts from internal to external. They’re performing for the grade check, not building the habit of holding themselves to a standard. Give them space to develop their own internal voice. That voice is the one that will speak up on a dark road at 2 AM when no one else is around.
Students and parents — the Palmetto 200 wasn’t one impossible run. It was a series of legs, each one manageable on its own. College admissions is the same way. Break the goal into stages. Focus on finishing the one in front of you. Celebrate when you do. Then get back in the van and get ready for the next one.
Students — my team finished second. I finished my leg of that race in the dark, alone, well behind faster runners. What I finished with was the knowledge that I hadn’t stopped when I could have. That’s the win that stayed with me. In college admissions and in life, the students who keep going when it would be easier to quit are the ones who end up with the best stories.
I made it to the end of that leg somehow — sore, exhausted, and genuinely unsure whether I had anything left for the next one. I got back in the van. Stared at the dark road passing outside the window. Wondered how much further we had to go.
And we finished. Second place. As a team.
But my finish line was out there on that back road in the dark, when the voice said walk and I said no. No one saw it. No one was there to cheer it. I’m not sure I even fully understood it in the moment.
I understand it now. And it’s the thing I most want my students to find for themselves — that quiet moment in the dark when they choose who they are.
Because that choice, made when no one is watching, is the one that defines everything else.
Carpe diem.
Ready to help your student build the kind of character that shows up when it counts? Entering the Arena is the guide for families who want to do this the right way.
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For Chris Parsons, ‘the dark’ is any moment when no one is watching — the study session no parent is checking, the essay draft no teacher will grade, the mile run alone at 2 a.m. on a back road. He learned it during the Palmetto 200, when a voice told him to walk and no one would ever know. The point is simple: the effort you give when nobody can see it is the truest measure of who you are, and it’s the effort that compounds into real character over time.
Because external accountability — a coach, a grade, a parent checking the portal — only works while someone is looking. Internal accountability works everywhere. Chris tells students that no one knows whether they studied what they actually needed or just reviewed what they already knew. That knowledge lives with you and adds up. Students who hold the line in the dark arrive at the finish with something a transcript can’t show: the habit of giving their honest best whether or not anyone is keeping score.
Start by writing your goals down and putting them somewhere you’ll see them — an unwritten goal quietly shifts every time it gets hard. Then do the work no one can see: study what you don’t understand, write the honest version of the essay, do the extra problem. Break big goals into stages, finish the one in front of you, and celebrate it. The habit is built in small, unwatched moments long before any deadline arrives.
Stop watching every mile marker. When students know every grade is monitored in real time, accountability becomes performance — they work for the grade check, not for themselves. Chris encourages parents to give students room to develop their own internal voice, the one that speaks up on a dark road when no one else is around. Support, don’t surveil. The goal is a young adult who holds their own standard, not one who only works when watched.
Admissions rewards the same thing character does — work done when no one is keeping score. With most selective schools bringing back test scores, the quiet, unwatched preparation matters again, and the students who study honestly and write their real essays simply build stronger applications. At the College Planning Center, Chris and his team help families turn that internal discipline into a clear, stage-by-stage plan — so the effort done in the dark shows up where it counts.



