WHAT IS TO BE DONE
There are moments in human life when
confusion becomes louder than direction. Questions multiply, but answers seem
to dissolve before they are fully formed. In such moments, the ancient question
returns again and again—what is to be done?
This question is not merely about
action. It is about clarity. It is about choosing a direction when every path
looks uncertain. It is about responsibility when
silence feels easier than response.
To ask “what is to be done” is
already the beginning of change. It means the mind has refused to remain
passive. It means awareness has awakened.
The first thing to be done is to
understand the situation honestly. Not through fear, not through hope alone,
but through clear sight. Illusions must be set aside. We
cannot solve what we refuse to see.
The second thing is to take
responsibility for what lies within our reach. Many problems of the world are
too large for one hand, but no problem is too large for one honest step. Action
does not always begin with greatness; it begins with sincerity.
The third thing is discipline. Thought without action becomes frustration. Action without
thought becomes chaos. But when thought and action walk together, even
small efforts begin to reshape reality.
Finally, what is to be done is this:
begin where you are. Do not wait for perfect conditions. Do not wait for perfect
strength. Begin with what you have, and let movement
create clarity.
Because in the end, the question was
never only “what is to be done?”
The deeper question is—will you do what must be done when the moment arrives?
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