Thursday, July 2, 2026

Passion helps you reach the destination. Humility helps you become a better traveller.

 


For a long time, I believed that to achieve something meaningful in life, one had to be intense.

Be passionate.

Be aggressive.

Always stay on your toes.

Many successful people appear to live like this, so naturally we start believing that this is the only way to grow.

But over the years, I have begun to question this assumption.

What if humility is not just a moral virtue? What if it is actually a more efficient way of living?

When we work with aggression, we are constantly resisting something. We are trying to prove ourselves, defend our opinions, reach somewhere faster than others or control outcomes.

Even if nobody notices it from outside, our body does.

The mind remains alert all the time. Stress quietly becomes a part of our personality. We may achieve more in a shorter period, but our body pays part of the price.

Humility creates a different state.

It does not reduce your effort. It changes the way you make that effort.

You still work hard. You still aim high. But there is less friction inside.

You are no longer fighting every situation.

This difference may look small, but over years it compounds.

There is another hidden advantage.

Aggression makes us outcome-oriented. Humility makes us learning-oriented.

When our attention is fixed only on the target, everything else becomes secondary. We ignore ideas that don't match our thinking. We reject feedback more easily. We overlook opportunities simply because we were looking somewhere else.

Our vision becomes narrow.

Humility keeps the mind open.

An open mind learns continuously. It is comfortable saying, "I may be wrong."

That single sentence can teach us more than years of trying to prove that we are right.

Ironically, the humble person may learn much faster than the aggressive one.

And in the long run, learning usually beats intensity.

Humility also gives something that is difficult to measure but extremely valuable—freedom.

When your ego is not attached to one particular method, you can change your approach.

When your identity is not attached to one opinion, you can change your mind.

When your self-worth is not dependent on winning every argument, you can simply smile and move on.

Life becomes lighter.

You stop carrying unnecessary baggage.

There is another thought that keeps coming back to me.

Aggression usually revolves around "I".

I want to win.

I want to succeed.

I want recognition.

There is nothing wrong with these thoughts. Every human being has them.

But they also make us the centre of every story.

Humility slowly shifts the perspective.

Instead of asking, "How do I grow?", we begin asking, "How does the entire system grow, with me being a part of it?"

That small shift changes many decisions.

We interfere less.

We compare less.

We judge less.

We naturally start living by a simple principle—live and let live.

And perhaps humility has one more level beyond this.

At some point, even the "I" starts becoming less important.

You no longer define yourself by fixed identities.

You no longer keep saying, "This is me," or "This is impossible for me."

Many of our limitations are not imposed by the world. They are created by the image we have built about ourselves.

As this image becomes lighter, possibilities become larger.

You become free to learn anything.

Free to become anything.

Free to choose a completely different direction if life demands it.

That, to me, is the ultimate freedom.

Interestingly, this state is also highly efficient.

Very little energy is spent protecting the ego.

Almost all of it becomes available for observing, learning, creating and contributing.

Perhaps that is why truly wise people often appear calm.

Not because they lack ambition.

But because they have discovered a way of growing without constantly fighting life.

Maybe humility is not the opposite of success.

Maybe it is one of the most sustainable paths to it.