Thought Of The Week
Today, I want to talk to you about why you can't fix something that isn't broken. Most things in life aren't broken. They're just not perfect. And not perfect doesn't need fixing. That's the wisdom. Here's the thing: we're always so obsessed with improving everything all the time. Self-help books, productivity apps, life coaches—they're everywhere, telling us to upgrade, refine, and optimise every single part of our existence. But I've learned something over time that's genuinely changed how I live: when something actually works, the smartest thing you can usually do is to just leave it completely alone. Full stop. Most tinkering just creates problems you probably didn't have before and probably also didn't need. Think about it. At work, at home, in your relationships, how many times have you actually wrecked something that was working perfectly well before, all because you thought you could make it better or more impressive? Here are some examples: 1. Your morning routine is solid. You wake at seven, shower, have coffee, eat something, and leave by eight-thirty for school or work. Never rushed. But then you read something about morning rituals being good for you, so you add things like meditation, journaling, and cold showers into your morning routine. Within a week, you're now stressed, skipping things, and late! 2. Your team has a working system. Email, spreadsheets, file management - everyone knows what they're doing and how to do it. Deadlines happen. Then management introduces new 'better' software, which it says will help and do everything quicker and make everyone more productive. Six months in, still nobody properly understands it, nothing really works anymore, and everyone, including management, are all less productive and frustrated. 3. Your finances are stable. Money comes in, bills get paid, you save a bit, you sleep well. Then you hear how you need to budget very carefully, so you try to optimise every expense obsessively. Suddenly, you're tracking everything minutely. You then sleep worse because you're constantly worrying and then enjoy almost nothing as a result. Now, I'm not saying that you can never improve anything. Obviously, if something is genuinely broken or actually failing you, fix it. Go ahead. But the thing that actually matters is knowing the difference between something that's genuinely broken and something that's simply not perfect. So, today, remember to resist that urge to tinker with what's already working properly. As people say, "If it ain't broke, don't fix it". Let the good things stay good and remember that you can't fix something that isn't broken!
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