I remind myself a drink too many turns laughter into clumsy shame, the sweetness into sting and regret,
I remind myself the body pays first, the mind after, the spirit last… and sometimes we don’t even notice until too late,
I remind myself what they call enjoyment too often wears the mask of punishment, quiet but heavy.
I confess I tried to change people by force, only to find them shutting the door harder, leaving me more tired than them,
I confess I forgot that self-interest—that small question of “what’s in it for me?”—is the only lever strong enough to move a heartbeat,
I confess wisdom is not shouting “wrong,” but showing, “look, this way could hurt less… maybe better for you.”
I believe the wise don’t scream “stop,” they whisper, “is this really serving you? or is it just hurting slow?”
I believe temptation loses its fire once you see the ashes in your hands, the hurt that stays longer than the thrill,
I believe persuasion isn’t control, it’s just a mirror you place near someone so they see their own wound without you pointing.
So I choose to measure not what is “bad” but what drains me, what is no longer worth my hours,
So I choose to let practice, not speeches, shape me—example louder than avoidance,
So I choose not drunk on pleasures, not drunk on words, but steady, proportionate… sober in truth.
Show, don’t moralize
Begin with yourself first
Temptation punishes on its own
Steady, sober, simple
Example speaks louder than words