Is Life Really Unfair? A Different Way to Look at RealitysteemCreated with Sketch.

in Colombia-Original14 hours ago

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Many times in life, we hear people say, "Life is unfair." To be honest, I have said it myself more than once. Sometimes we work hard, stay honest, help others, and still watch someone else move ahead faster than us. In those moments, it feels like the world is not rewarding people fairly.

A few days ago, I came across an interesting idea. It challenged the way many of us think about fairness. At first, I disagreed with it, but after thinking deeply, I realized there was some truth hidden inside it.

The idea was simple: maybe life is not unfair. Maybe our expectations of fairness are different from how the world actually works.

Think about school. Two students study for an exam. One gets excellent marks, and the other fails. The student who failed may feel that life is unfair because they also worked hard. But sometimes hard work alone is not enough. The method of studying, understanding the subject, managing time, and even handling pressure can affect the result.

The same thing happens in jobs and businesses. Many hardworking people never become rich. At the same time, some people seem to move ahead quickly. It is easy to become frustrated when comparing ourselves to others. However, the world often rewards results and impact more than effort alone.

This may sound harsh, but if a person creates something that helps millions of people, society usually rewards them more than someone whose work affects only a few individuals. Whether we like it or not, this is often how things operate.

Another point that caught my attention was how we judge ourselves compared to how others judge us.

We usually judge ourselves based on our intentions.

"I am a good person."

"I wanted to help."

"I tried my best."

But the world often judges us based on actions and outcomes. People see what we do, not what we planned to do. This does not mean intentions are worthless. Good intentions matter. However, intentions without action rarely change anything.

One area where many people struggle is relationships. Sometimes we like someone, care about them deeply, and hope they will feel the same way. When they do not, we may think life is unfair.

But if we look honestly at the situation, every person has their own experiences, preferences, dreams, and choices. They are not required to choose us simply because we like them. Their decision is about their life, not a judgment of our value as human beings.

I think this lesson can be applied to many situations. Rejection does not always mean failure. Sometimes it simply means that another person has chosen a different path.

Of course, I do not agree with everything in this viewpoint. Life can genuinely be unfair at times. Some people are born into difficult circumstances. Others face challenges that they never chose. Ignoring those realities would be unrealistic.

However, I do believe that many of our frustrations come from expecting life to follow rules that only exist in our minds.

The world does not promise equal outcomes.

It does not promise that every good action will be rewarded immediately.

It does not promise that every dream will come true.

What it does offer is opportunity, growth, learning, and the chance to improve ourselves every day.

For me, the biggest lesson is this: instead of asking whether life is fair, maybe we should ask whether we are understanding reality correctly.

The moment we stop fighting reality and start learning how it works, we give ourselves a better chance to grow, succeed, and find peace.

What do you think? Is life unfair, or do we sometimes have unrealistic expectations of fairness? I would love to hear your thoughts in the comments.

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