When a loop is completed, we can talk about full circle. The term is especially popular in personal development, about closing loops and tying up lose ends.
A good way to complete a full circle is to fight the [[Zeigarnik effect]] by brain dumping unfinished business into a reliable system. You may not close the loop immediately, but finishing a project ten years ahead of now will feel awesome, and you'll be like:
'Yeah, that's full circle.'
I heard the idea in a podcast from [[Chris Williamson]], who also came out with another ineteresting idea in one of his articles:
![[What you have today]]