Through Daily Efforts

Hearing someone repeat the same things day after day is an experience familiar to everyone.

As children, it was often the repeated words of our parents, telling us to do our homework or hurry up and get dressed so we would not be late for school.

On television, it is the striking messages of advertisements that, through their slogans, often manage to brand our minds and push us to consume more and more.

At first glance, these are two processes that seem to have nothing in common.

Yet they are built on the very same principle: repeating things every day imprints them into our brains.

The real question we should ask ourselves is: “What do we want to become through our daily actions?”

Through daily efforts, little by little, things that seem overwhelming, or even impossible, eventually become possible, achievable, until they are finally accomplished.

These daily efforts are easy to make individually, because we constantly have the choice of our actions.

As a society, efforts can also be made to make it fairer and more just. Instead of glorifying excessive overconsumption, or individuals who are often simply “born privileged,” restoring the value of qualities such as helping others and empathy seems to be the path toward a better world, for everyone…

Little by little, even drops of water can wear away a hard stone.

Want to share?


Comments

Leave a Reply


Our latest tales

  • Consideration for the future

    Consideration for the future

    The Espers weren’t creatures made to consider the future as their first priority.They were similar to human beings in many ways: they had to eat and rest. Esperia, their planet, also had a star it revolved around, creating a cycle of day and night that influenced when they were awake or asleep. With all these

    Read more

  • Wishing for peace

    Wishing for peace

    Guruko and her platypus companion, Cha Cha, were thinking about how Esperia finally became a planet where peace prevailed. “There were wars for thousands of years. How come it never happened before?” asked Guruko. “The end of the Chaos War was the beginning of it all. When the Five Great Elements clashed all at once

    Read more

  • To the best of one’s ability

    To the best of one’s ability

    This chapter of One Daily Tale led at first to many debates among the Espers. Until then, they didn’t know about the StarDust, how to develop it, or how it could help them understand themselves better: the light created by their StarDust would enable them to see their inner Shadow, often hidden deep inside them.

    Read more

  • Excessive drinking and eating

    Excessive drinking and eating

    Kenko, the Shape of Health, knew too well that most of the Espers would not want to hear her words at first. Why? Because she knew that once one has tasted the ease of luxury, of addiction through alcohol, and forgotten the hardship of simply being able to eat every day, it requires far more

    Read more

  • A fast pace of change : Shippu Jinrai

    A fast pace of change : Shippu Jinrai

    The End of the Chaos War came when the Five Great Elements used their most powerful spell together, all at once, revealing for the first time in the history of Esperia the existence of the StarDust. From that moment on, the world finally understood the need for rapid change, having damaged its own planet more

    Read more

  • To act in one’s own favor

    To act in one’s own favor

    Now that the teachings of One Daily Tale had become the common educational writings for all the Espers of Esperia, following its principles had become evident and natural. But newborn Espers were all born as complete blank pages, shaped by their closest environment. Some Espers who had been very powerful in the past, when Chaos

    Read more

  • Accepting differences

    Accepting differences

    Now that Esperia was finally at peace, it became natural for the five different Elements to work together and share their knowledge and skills. When they were still at war, they simply couldn’t realize—blinded by hatred and fear of others—the need for the other Elements to sustain their own land. Water, through rivers, lakes, or

    Read more

  • Overconsumption

    Overconsumption

    Who hasn’t heard the term, but who has really thought about it? Guruko, who was very intrigued by the human race on Earth, was once again looking through the magical mirror at their civilization. “They are quite interesting living beings, aren’t they?” said Cha Cha, her platypus companion, who had just walked into the room

    Read more