· We enjoy simplicity but we ourselves fall short of meeting its standards.
· We never tell our customers that s/he really needs no solution.
· We know the cost of many things yet the value of nothing.
· We go to exotic locations—with bag and baggage—and yet we fail to free up our minds.
· We boast of being well connected and yet people complain of us being inaccessible.
· We know time is money and yet we fail to decipher its calculation.
· We want the right answers but get settled with the comfortable ones.
· We complain of an inconvenience even after we had willfully let go an opportunity to undo the things which made us complain in the first place.
· We hold strong positions and do great businesses but get afraid of competition from a newbie or a roadside vendor.
· We are concerned about our outward beauty but fail to cleanse ourselves from within.
· We never compete with our competitors in paying more to our staff but we surely remain competitive in paying them less than our competitors.
· When our health takes a beating we treat it as if there is nothing more important, but after regaining it, we neglect it as if there is nothing more useless.
· We wear costly watches but fail to keep an appointment.
· We watch movies more attentively than any other thing but forget its message right after it gets over.
· We get an increase in our earnings that never lead to a proportionate increase in our happiness.
· We know the cost of getting educated but lack in knowing the value of education.
· We put more hours at work but fail to realize the coordination required between the mind and hand.
· We never teach our children how to react, only not to revolt.
· We are getting richer by money but poorer by time.
THE END
© Anchit Barnwal