A Question I Asked Myself

If the life I am living feels right to me…
should it feel the same for everyone?

If my way of thinking seems correct to me…
should everyone think the same way?

What I eat, my habits,
my way of living—
is that the only “right” way for all?

If “what feels good to me”
starts getting imposed on others,
is that wisdom… or simple foolishness?

The truth is—
every person is shaped by their own perspective, circumstances, and experiences.
Then why do I expect
the world to be the way I like it?

If someone lives differently,
what real loss do I suffer?

Perhaps the biggest mistake is this—
seeing everything only from my own point of view.

The essence of life is not that
everyone becomes like me,
but that I become broad enough
to accept everyone as they are.

Yet, the mind plays a subtle trick—
deep within, everyone believes:
“There is no one better than me.”
Their thoughts feel superior,
their actions feel perfect.

And then…
everything others do feels wrong,
every different way becomes uncomfortable.

From here arise—
jealousy, hatred, ego, and harshness.

We hesitate to be humble,
thinking society will crush us.
But the truth is different—
humility is not weakness,
it is a sign of understanding and maturity.

In such moments…
for me, my Satguru’s life is an ideal—
the true way of living—
free from hatred, enmity, or ego,
embracing everyone with love and humility,
and seeing all with equal vision.

In the end, the question is not—
“Why isn’t the world the way I like it?”
But the real question is—

“Am I able to accept the world as it truly is?”