As humans, we tend
to point out the blemish in others. This is one of the easiest things in life
that comes very naturally to us. It is our perception about blemish that makes
us grade people’s character. We treat people according to what we think their
blemish levels are.
We are busy in finding out the blemish in others without
realizing that this quality grooms as a major blemish in our own character.
Blemish, in reality,
is nothing but imperfection. We identify imperfection related to worldly things
easily since they are measurable in nature. For instance, being poor is considered as a blemish depriving many rights for the deserving ones rather
than being characterless.
We blame people at
home for not keeping things in place. In reality, this blame game turns them into
responsible adults as they grow up.
A teacher punishes her
students when they do not complete assigned work on time. This punishment
teaches them the importance of time pulling them out of the habit called procrastination.
A parent who chides
his child for his imperfection is not actually washing his hands off him. He is
teaching the child to do things in the appropriate manner.
Dried faded petals
of flowers increase our awe on seeing fresh colorful flowers. Imperfection teaches what perfection is in reality.
A tiring mode of journey makes us choose the real comfortable one the next time we travel. Losing a friend to treachery emphasizes the importance of honesty in relationships.
Imperfection, in reality, makes us experience an astounding perspective when we start pushing ourselves towards perfection.
A tiring mode of journey makes us choose the real comfortable one the next time we travel. Losing a friend to treachery emphasizes the importance of honesty in relationships.
Imperfection, in reality, makes us experience an astounding perspective when we start pushing ourselves towards perfection.
We are a bundle of
compromises and reservations. We keep toggling between logical brilliance and emotional
trauma. Our wisdom gets controlled by our inherent fears. We point out the
blemish in others just to feel secured ourselves.
Learn to embrace your imperfect self. Being imperfect is acceptable
as long as we constantly thrive to achieve perfection. This is how mankind has
evolved from the stone-age to what we are today. Let us transform ourselves
from blemish to perfection.
After all, we cannot choose to be invisible just
because we are not beautiful.
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