Â
This isnât about giving up on growth. I want to be betterâIâm committed to it. But Iâm done making self-improvement a punishment. If trying to improve your life feels like a chore, youâre doing it wrong. True self-improvement starts from self-acceptance, not self-rejection.
The Art of Imperfection
The Japanese art of kintsugi captures this beautifully. When a piece of pottery breaks, they donât throw it away. They repair it with gold, highlighting the cracks rather than hiding them. The broken piece becomes more valuable, not less.
Your life works the same way. Your cracksâstruggles, flaws,
and failuresâare not something to cover up or erase. They are part of your story. They make you unique. They make you you.
Yet, society teaches us to hide those cracks. Weâre told to fix everything âwrongâ with usâour bodies, minds, and routines. But chasing perfection is like trying to capture the horizon. You never arrive. You only exhaust yourself in the process.
The
Illusion of Having It All Together
Nobody has it all together. Nobody. Not your friends. Not your idols. Not the people whose curated lives you envy on social media.
Maya Angelou, one of the greatest writers of our time, admitted to feeling like a fraud every time she started a new book. Marcus Aurelius, the Stoic emperor, wrote daily reminders to stay
calmâbecause he struggled to do so. Even the most disciplined, accomplished people you admire are still human.
The difference isnât that theyâve eliminated imperfectionâitâs that theyâve made peace with it.
The Trap of Fixing Yourself
We think we need to âfixâ ourselves to live a good life. But hereâs the
trap: the more you chase perfection, the more it escapes you. The finish line keeps moving. Thereâs always something new to optimize, something else to fix.
The Buddhists call this attachmentâgripping too tightly to outcomes, believing life should be a certain way. And when itâs not, you suffer. You become stuck in a cycle of âalmost happyââconvinced that joy is just one more improvement away.
But there is no âfixedâ version of you. You are not a project to complete. You are a story unfolding, cracks and all.
The Courage to Be Imperfect
Leonard Cohen once wrote, âThereâs a crack in everything. Thatâs how the light gets in.â I used to hide my cracksâespecially my emotions. I thought Iâd finally be okay if I could suppress my anxieties,
doubts, and flaws. But that only made things worse. The more I denied them, the more they controlled me.
Only when I accepted my imperfectionsâwhen I stopped pretending to be someone I wasnâtâdid I find peace. The cracks didnât disappear. But they stopped feeling like failures. They felt like me.
Psychologist Carl Jung said, âOne who looks inside, awakens.â Real
self-discovery happens not by hiding the darkness but by integrating it. By owning every part of your story.
The Freedom Beyond Perfection
Iâm learning that life isnât about having it all together. Itâs about showing upâimperfect, unfinished, fully human. Itâs about living now, not waiting for some future version of yourself to be âready.â Because that version doesnât
exist.
The happiest people I know arenât perfect. They arenât optimized. They arenât âfinished.â They are real. They are present. They have made peace with their imperfectionsâand, in doing so, they have freed themselves.
They keep moving, living, learning, and getting better, but they are never perfect. So, if youâre waiting for the day youâll finally be complete
âstop. Itâs never coming. And thatâs good news. Because life doesnât start when youâre perfect. It begins when youâre real.
Your imperfections arenât obstacles.
Theyâre your life, gentle reader.
Peace, love and power.
 Â
           Â