Change is inevitable but remember that things never change on their own.
We always tend to have a habit of thinking that situations will resume and become normal, but it doesn’t really seem to fall on the right spot. That’s where our habit of basking under the sun creeps in; we walk along the way situations offer us, a habit of complacence. But it is complacency that accepts the unwelcome change. Ending up with an unfulfilling outcome.
How many
people would have thought that change could also be accepted for reasons it was
triggered? To trigger a change means to attempt for possible outcome that possibly
will make us think it is worth it. The reason for triggering a change is evident
in the cyclical habit of partial acceptance; dissatisfaction with the outcome
continue to persist. We never get satisfied, but we feel comfortable to remain in
our own ways.
A
change is a phenomenal process that needs no external factors, but it can often
be adjusted towards specific directions. If it is for reaping paddy, then sow it.
Waiting for paddy to grow on their own would mean a complete trade off. This simple
analogy is replayed repeatedly in multiple situations in our daily lives without
realizing it. It is so childish and simple to think now, but we are profoundly bound
by the habit of getting things done on its own. Trigger a change (sow the seeds)
and it will eventually bring a result (paddy). And by not sowing it, it will
still trigger a change but this time it won’t be paddy, that’s the phenomena a “change”.
Change is inevitable but it never changes on their own.
