Hayat Apr 2026

We are often told that life is a ladder. We’re taught to climb—from grade school to university, from junior roles to management, from "finding yourself" to "having it all." But what if life isn't a climb? What if it’s more like a forest?

In a forest, growth isn't just about reaching the canopy. It’s about the roots stretching deep into the dark, damp soil. It’s about the decay that feeds new life. Sometimes, the most important growth happens when you aren't moving "up" at all; you’re just thickening your bark and learning how to survive the winter. The Trap of "Someday"

But the "Someday" horizon moves as fast as you walk toward it. If you aren't practicing being the person you want to be right now—in the middle of the chaos, the laundry, and the emails—you’re not actually living; you’re just rehearsing for a play that never opens. The Beauty of the Unfinished We are often told that life is a ladder

But humans aren't machines to be repaired. We are stories being written in real-time. A story is only "finished" when it ends, and you don't want to reach the final page just yet. The tension, the unanswered questions, and the parts of you that are still under construction? That’s not failure. That’s the plot. A Small Challenge

We spend a massive amount of energy living in a mental space called Someday . Someday, when I have more money, I’ll be generous. Someday, when I’m more confident, I’ll speak up. Someday, when things calm down, I’ll finally breathe. In a forest, growth isn't just about reaching the canopy

Maybe it’s a grudge. Maybe it’s a self-imposed deadline. Maybe it’s the need to be right. Life ( Hayat ) doesn't happen in the achievements; it happens in the gaps between them.

There is a specific kind of peace that comes when you stop trying to "solve" your life. We treat our problems like bugs in a software update, hoping that one day we’ll be "fixed." Sometimes, the most important growth happens when you

Today, instead of asking "What do I need to achieve?", try asking: