A Limit to Willpower

Faya, the Shape of Willpower, often used comparisons to explain the principles she had to teach.

For willpower, her element of fire offered an easy image to grasp—one that clearly showed how willpower has its limits.

To keep a fire alive, you need the right amount of fuel. If the fire burns too fiercely, it will consume everything too quickly. If there’s too little, it will eventually fade away.

This time, Faya wanted to emphasize the limits of one’s willpower, and how it is used for many different things, regardless of their nature. It might be resisting temptation, or pushing yourself to study or exercise.

The pool of willpower has its limits, but it can be replenished daily—through sleep, rest, or time spent with friends and family.

Willpower alone has its limits, and that is why all the Shapes are so important.

Want to share?


Comments

Leave a Reply


Our latest tales

  • Step by step

    Step by step

    Thinking about how to solve climate issues, global inequalities, or the potential threats caused by new technologies was not enough for the Seven Shapes. They had understood that, for things to change, these topics had to become natural subjects of discussion. Because to solve problems, one must first become aware of them. Little by little,…

    Read more

  • Simple As Hello

    Simple As Hello

    Reflecting on societal problems, the environmental crisis, and the frantic race toward new technologies, once again promising control over the world, plunges anyone who truly examines them into a deep sense of despair in the face of global and systematic inaction. Taking action in response to these problems nevertheless allows one to ease their own…

    Read more

  • Taseki, the Conquering Emperor

    Taseki, the Conquering Emperor

    Under the reign of Taseki, known as the Conquering Emperor, the Espers of Fire were subjected to the most vehement propaganda against the other elements. The others were portrayed as potential threats and demonized in order to strip away every trace of empathy toward them. Under the pretext that the other elements would be able…

    Read more

  • Zeiniku the Sedentary

    Zeiniku the Sedentary

    Even in the land of the element of Earth, which was supposed to represent Health above all else, comfort and changes in lifestyle since the beginning of the use of magic had transformed the daily lives of the Espers. Zeiniku was probably the typical example of a sedentary person, seeing himself above all as free…

    Read more

  • Fiction and Reality

    Fiction and Reality

    The Age of Magic had given life to new machines, which were also capable of creating, writing, or speaking. Just like the Espers, they were capable of inventing stories and creating virtual worlds. For the Espers, distinguishing fiction from reality was becoming increasingly difficult in a world where the virtual and the real were blending…

    Read more

  • Camaraderie and Solidarity

    Camaraderie and Solidarity

    Cha Cha, our platypus friend, had a vision for a world finally at peace. Like the Seven Shapes, who had joined their forces in an attempt to make the world fairer for everyone, he had understood that, for this to work, the values that needed to be brought forward were camaraderie and solidarity. But not…

    Read more

  • An Ideal of Kindness Toward All

    An Ideal of Kindness Toward All

    Lune Lune, our little cat friend of the Water element, had been taken in by Guruo. Guruo, who was trying to do his very best, appeared to some of the others as if he were deliberately trying to be the teachers’ favorite. There was, of course, a great deal of jealousy, which also revealed a…

    Read more

  • A Forgotten Value Called Humility

    A Forgotten Value Called Humility

    The widespread use of magic had changed the landscape and the way of life of the Espers across the world. Magic had also paved the way for the creation of new technologies that allowed them to remain active even at night and operate machines far more powerful than their own muscles. Thus, the Espers were…

    Read more