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Perfection


There are lots of quotes out there about how imperfection is the true perfection and how having some imperfections makes one better .But like the fox and the grapes (don’t ask me why a fox would want grapes), I think that we just find it hard to appreciate what we can never reach.

For a long time, even I never liked perfect things. For instance, I disliked traditional rangoli designs because they were perfectly symmetric. I couldn’t draw them, so I decided that I preferred free hand drawings. 
However, my attitude has changed lately. The change started when we began to study circles in class nine. Circles are just so… perfect. Think about it- from the fact that every single point on it equidistant from the same single point, to the fact that the ratio between circumference and diameter is always constant, there are so many amazing results that can be obtained from that simple shape! That’s probably why I love mathematics too. It is a perfect subject. If a law exists, it always holds good. There are no exceptions.

Of course, when I talk of perfection, I must mention nature. It’s practically synonymous with the word. Spider webs, bilateral symmetry, the delicate ecological balance…
Every single organism, from the crawling ant to the leaping antelope (as Mufasa puts it) or, to be more accurate, from the swimming bacterium to the warm blooded mammal, helps to maintain that perfection. So although we are not perfect in ourselves, we form a part of the perfect whole.
Sadly, we took that perfection for granted, and now we will have to work hard to keep it. And so, for the earth and for all things perfect- fight! ( non-violently- of course J )

Comments

  1. I wanted to say I liked your blog
    But now I will say I have liked it.
    The use of the present perfect
    Will improve my comment a bit.

    ReplyDelete

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