How Far We’ve Come

The last six months have been truly amazing. From the moment we stepped through those doors, there was no turning back or backing out. It was a commitment that was going to stick for the next half year or so. I didn’t even know a single person in the room then. But during these six months, I met a great bunch of people and along with them, invaluable life lessons.

Looking back, if I had another chance, I would choose to do it all over again. Yes, the journey was tough, and at times, even on the verge of ending prematurely but it was an experience like no other. We’ve been through the worst of the days and the best of times, and when the going got tough, we rallied each other on. Never once did anybody thought of giving up while everyone else was hard at work.

So, execution wasn’t that perfect but even the best planners fail sometimes. The key behind success is not having the best plan on paper but taking the best course of action on the ground, and that doesn’t necessarily come with the best plan. Although things do botch offstage, what happens onstage must be flawless.

As the event successfully draw to a close, there’s both joy and relief. I was particularly heartened that everyone accomplished what they set out to do despite having to overcome several hiccups to achieve their goals. There was a time when our plans wouldn’t have even materialized, but thanks to all the hard work put in by everyone behind the scenes, we made it happen.

Comments

3 responses to “How Far We’ve Come”

  1. zj

    “Although things do botch offstage, what happens onstage must be flawless”

    Shakespeare once wrote,”As in a theatre, the eyes of men, after a well-graced actor leaves the stage, are idly bent on him that enters next”(King Richard II, Act V Scene 2). As actors on stage, we desire to be well-graced, to be flawless, to be all but the next actor who is “idly bent on”, but how often do we realize that we are essentially just another dispensible part of theatre, just another fleeting episode in the “eyes of men”?
    “The eyes of men” demand perfection, I prefer self-gratification:)

  2. Okay. Wrong choice of word!

    What I was trying to say is that while we can mess up our plans, what we present to the outside world ought to be respectable and professional.

  3. zj

    Haha, i see i see, but such an attitude is admirable especially when you need to go through so many presentations.

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