There is a strange guilt society places on desire.
Want too little, and they call you unserious.
Want too much and suddenly you are greedy.
So people learn to shrink publicly while still expanding
privately. They apologise for ambition with nervous laughter. They dilute their
dreams so others can digest them more comfortably.
But I often wonder: is it truly greed to desire good things
deeply?
To want beauty. Rest. Influence. Excellence. Love that does
not arrive half-baked. A life with enough sunlight in it to breathe properly.
I do not think the problem is always in wanting more.
Sometimes the real danger is wanting without measure, without soul, without
pause. Hunger itself is not evil. Even the earth opens its mouth for rain.
The issue begins when acquisition becomes identity. When
“more” stops being a blessing and becomes anaesthesia. That is when people
start consuming experiences instead of living them.
Moderation is a difficult sermon to preach in a world built
like a marketplace with flashing lights. Everywhere you turn, something is
calling your name. More money. More relevance. More applause. More speed.
Yet the human spirit was never designed to swallow life
whole in one sitting.
There is wisdom in pacing joy. In allowing gratitude to
catch up with possession.
Because some people have eaten so much of life at once that
nothing tastes like wonder anymore.
And that may be the saddest poverty of all.
Nugget:
Not every deep desire is greed. Sometimes it is simply the soul refusing to
live on crumbs.
Hmmmm.Not every deep desire is greed
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