Life’s challenges and our response to it.

Life is full of challenges — and interestingly, these very challenges are what make life meaningful. If difficulties did not exist, life would lose much of its depth, purpose, and excitement. Our focus and interest grow when we push our limits to achieve something.

But many challenges appear without any clear reason. They arise unexpectedly. Yet even these teach us a valuable lesson: we must stay prepared. Otherwise, life will keep presenting the same lesson until we learn it.

At other times, challenges do have a clear cause. After facing them, it becomes our responsibility to identify the root reason and fix it. Once the cause is corrected, the problem is far less likely to return.

Of course, sometimes bad luck strikes. Unfortunate events happen despite our sincere efforts. We do everything we can, yet the outcome is not what we hoped for. In such moments, it feels like we have lost the battle.

This is where the Stoic idea of Amor Fati comes in — “love your fate.” It means embracing whatever happens with an open heart, trusting that everything ultimately comes from Allah, from a higher wisdom (Prajñāna Brahman), from a bigger picture beyond our control. Results are not always in our hands; only our actions are.

We feel happy when life aligns with our wishes, and unhappy when it doesn’t. But what truly matters is that we give our full effort with sincerity. When we do that, there is no regret.

Another Stoic principle reminds us to focus only on what is within our control. Whatever the situation may be, we always have a choice in how we respond, how we interpret it, and what we make of it.

Lets lit up clay lamp

I was sitting at a shrine when I saw a man lighting a clay lamp. There was already light around him, yet he still lit another. I watched him and asked myself, why?

Then it struck me: lighting a clay lamp is more than tradition.
It is the hope a person carries in their heart.

Even when life moves against our expectations…
Even when we feel crushed by circumstances…
That small flame becomes a symbol of resilience.

It reminds us that things can get better —
and sometimes, all we need
is the courage to light the lamp again
and begin once more.