What resonated with me in this article is the idea that sometimes what looks like a setback is actually a preparation.
Many of us spend years trying to force outcomes, only to discover later that the real lesson was not in what we were building, but in what we were becoming.
The strongest foundations are often built after everything we thought was secure has been tested.
That applies to people.
It applies to families.
It applies to communities.
And it applies to infrastructure.
Perhaps the future is not built by those who never struggle.
Perhaps it is built by those who endure the struggle, learn from it, preserve the lessons, and then use that knowledge to build something stronger for those who follow.
Your story reminded me that rebuilding is not failure.
Sometimes rebuilding is the beginning of the real work.
Thank you.
For what?
Sharing wisdom.
Hilarious
I guess the ultimate elevator speech for what I’m trying to explain is that God doesn’t usually give us what we ask for if we’re retarded.
Dude. I’ve had some interest in making a leather bracelet that says, “Forgive me Lord, for I am sinful and retarded.”
Lol.
Halo,
What resonated with me in this article is the idea that sometimes what looks like a setback is actually a preparation.
Many of us spend years trying to force outcomes, only to discover later that the real lesson was not in what we were building, but in what we were becoming.
The strongest foundations are often built after everything we thought was secure has been tested.
That applies to people.
It applies to families.
It applies to communities.
And it applies to infrastructure.
Perhaps the future is not built by those who never struggle.
Perhaps it is built by those who endure the struggle, learn from it, preserve the lessons, and then use that knowledge to build something stronger for those who follow.
Your story reminded me that rebuilding is not failure.
Sometimes rebuilding is the beginning of the real work.
Strong communities create strong futures.
MJ 🐝