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Being untruthful to Truth

 Being untruthful to Truth

Many people wake up to the truth, but only a few get up to stand beside it. After a long sleep, anyone can open their eyes. It’s a passive act, a simple reaction to the light. But to get up—to rise and begin the day—requires commitment, which in turn requires inner drive.

Truth and life share this fundamental principle. Knowing the truth and failing to act upon it is like opening your eyes while remaining in bed. It is a state of paralysis, a conscious choice to remain inert. In what situation is it acceptable to lie in bed with your eyes wide open? Only when you are sick. Only when your body lacks the strength to rise.

In the same way, to know the truth yet passively accept the flawed data presented to us is a form of deficiency. It is an intellectual sickness, a failure of will. This inertia is not innocent; it is blended with personal biases, and at its core, it is a lack of integrity. To see clearly and choose to remain still is not just a missed opportunity—it is a quiet betrayal of what you know.

M.L. Narendra Kumar

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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