I’m
Perfect
Have you
noticed that the word ‘imperfect’ splits up to make “I’m perfect”?
As the years go on and society advances far beyond our general knowledge, we, as humans, have forgotten one simple inevitable fact of life: we are not perfect. With the goal to have the perfect life, the perfect career, the perfect recommendation letter from the perfect teacher who will love us.
As the years go on and society advances far beyond our general knowledge, we, as humans, have forgotten one simple inevitable fact of life: we are not perfect. With the goal to have the perfect life, the perfect career, the perfect recommendation letter from the perfect teacher who will love us.
For being perfect and nothing short of that, we have
seemed to forget that we were created to be imperfect, to make mistakes. We have
wrongly shamed ourselves into thinking that we must always have the most
honorable careers, major in the respectful majors, get into the highest ranked
colleges, and achieve that perfect.
And if we don’t, which most likely we won’t, we view ourselves as failures. We label ourselves stupid when we don’t get a 100 on an ‘easy’ test. We grumble and moan when someone else scores higher on a test when they didn’t study as much. Words such as “stupid” and “moron” are thrown around a lot more than “smart”, “brilliant”, or “talented”. Yes, you should strive. Yes, you should try as hard as you can to achieve your goals. But you shouldn’t be so pressured to the point when you lose all happiness and joy in life, when you stop seeing the good and starting lamenting on the bad. Who established that a score of a 100 means you are competent and a 90 means you are not? Who created the law that if you don’t get into Harvard, you are not as worthy as the person who did?
And if we don’t, which most likely we won’t, we view ourselves as failures. We label ourselves stupid when we don’t get a 100 on an ‘easy’ test. We grumble and moan when someone else scores higher on a test when they didn’t study as much. Words such as “stupid” and “moron” are thrown around a lot more than “smart”, “brilliant”, or “talented”. Yes, you should strive. Yes, you should try as hard as you can to achieve your goals. But you shouldn’t be so pressured to the point when you lose all happiness and joy in life, when you stop seeing the good and starting lamenting on the bad. Who established that a score of a 100 means you are competent and a 90 means you are not? Who created the law that if you don’t get into Harvard, you are not as worthy as the person who did?
Society did. We did. Our parents did. We deny it
sometimes, but it is always there, the rules looming over us. Slowly, but
surely, society controls everything we do. Money has value and worth only
because society says it does. We follow rules only because society has implanted
into our heads that this is right and that is wrong. People who wake up at 12
are considered lazy no matter what they were doing the night before. And why?
Because society has already generalized waking up in the afternoon as an act of
the lazy and unmotivated.
As people we are meant to be different, to make different choices and lead different lives. One of the best things about life is learning. And learning only comes from foolishness and experiences. What does the perfect person have to learn? Why live if you already know everything? Those who say that life is not measured by the number of breaths in one’s life, but by the number of moments that take one’s breath away are right. And the only way to have those breathless moments is to take risks, be foolish, and learn wisely. Why is it so wrong to make mistakes? No one is perfect; everyone makes mistakes. So why is it viewed so negatively to be imperfect?
If you think about it, all of the happy moments in our life come from those so-called mistakes. If you hadn’t screwed up on that one question, you wouldn’t have learned such a valuable mistake.
As people we are meant to be different, to make different choices and lead different lives. One of the best things about life is learning. And learning only comes from foolishness and experiences. What does the perfect person have to learn? Why live if you already know everything? Those who say that life is not measured by the number of breaths in one’s life, but by the number of moments that take one’s breath away are right. And the only way to have those breathless moments is to take risks, be foolish, and learn wisely. Why is it so wrong to make mistakes? No one is perfect; everyone makes mistakes. So why is it viewed so negatively to be imperfect?
If you think about it, all of the happy moments in our life come from those so-called mistakes. If you hadn’t screwed up on that one question, you wouldn’t have learned such a valuable mistake.
We view our ‘flaw’ as something to hide, always
wanting to prove others wrong by achieving what we view as greatness. Society
views that to be mistaken is to be incompetent and incompetency is unattractive.
However, a robot is perfect, but do you view a robot as attractive? Coffee
machines are perfect—with perfect conditions, they perform their job with 100%
accuracy—to make coffee. But all these perfect things don’t emote, they don’t
write, they don’t smile, they don’t fight. They don’t live. They perform their
jobs, perfectly, until it is their time to go and then they silently leave, only
to be replaced. People are meant to make mistakes, learn from them, and grow and
flourish. You ARE your mistakes. They create the layers that define
you.
So in a sense,
because of our imperfections, we are, truly, perfect. Perfection leads to
consistency. Think about the happiest moment of your life. I’m willing to bet
that you didn’t get that memory from being perfect. Imperfections and mistakes
make us better people, we feel and emote from the imperfections in life. And
emotions are what separate us from robots. So you see, the
imperfections make us who we
are—humans.
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