No matter how hard the past, you can always begin again.
— Buddha
The radical part of this teaching isn't that second chances exist—it's the claim that your history holds *no veto power* over your next moment. Most of us carry our failures like luggage, convinced they define our trajectory, but Buddha suggests something stranger: that you're not chained to your yesterday in any binding way. When someone leaves a difficult job or ends a relationship that had gone sour, they often feel relief precisely because they've intuited this truth—that the weight of what happened doesn't automatically crush what comes next. The hardest part isn't believing in renewal; it's accepting that you don't need permission from your past to try differently right now.
“The only person you are destined to become is the person you decide to be.”
Ralph Waldo Emerson“We delight in the beauty of the butterfly, but rarely admit the changes it has gone through to achie...”
Maya Angelou“The wound is the place where the light enters you.”
Rumi“A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step.”
Lao Tzu