Our story, our ending.
The thing about stories is that when you read them, you often find echoes of your own life within them. That's how a story truly comes alive—through the uncanny resemblances that compel you to picture it in your mind, like a film rolling before your eyes. The only difference being that it stars a version of you, shaped by your imagination, an essence of you. Does that mean you can reshape it as you wish? It does, doesn’t it? But here’s the catch—it’s written by someone else. It’s a strange feeling, isn’t it? Watching a film play out in your own imagination, only to remember that its script belongs to another. So, how does one create a film thought and written purely by their own? Well, the answer is still to be found.
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Or maybe the answer lies in not just about doing the “right
things” to be admired for being “good.” It’s also about the things society
labels as “wrong.” These so-called wrongdoings might seem unacceptable to those
still searching for answers. But for those who have truly lived through those
experiences, they often reveal the real meaning of what’s right. Sometimes,
it’s only by stepping outside the lines drawn by others that we understand the
truth. What’s seen as wrong in the eyes of society can teach us lessons that no
“right” path ever could.
It’s ironic, isn’t it? The very people who judge others for
their so-called wrongdoings often live within the safe confines of rules
they’ve never dared to question. But those who step into the gray areas, who
make mistakes, and who take risks—they’re the ones who truly grow. They’re the
ones who see life from a perspective most people fear to explore. Because
sometimes, doing what feels wrong to others might just be the right thing for
you. It might teach you courage, empathy, or strength—qualities that no
rulebook can ever define. It might even bring you closer to understanding
yourself.
In the end, isn’t that what life is about? Not living by a
checklist of right and wrong, but finding your own truth? The world will always
have its opinions, its judgments, its rigid ideas of what’s acceptable. But
your journey is yours alone. And the lessons you learn—whether through right or
wrong in the eyes of others—are what shape you into who you are meant to be.
So, let the world say what it will. Make your mistakes,
learn from them, and keep moving forward. After all, life isn’t about living up
to others’ expectations—it’s about finding meaning in your own.
And also, when you decide to write your story, let the stories of others inspire you, but don’t let them define you. Add your own touch, your own voice. Because the best stories—the ones that truly stay with us—are the ones that reflect what it means to be human. For, "it’s our own story; we’ll change the ending accordingly”, won’t we?
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