Last year, something shifted in how I see complaints.
Before, it was easy to focus on what wasn’t working — slow days, small frustrations, things that felt unfair. But over time, I started to notice that every complaint was really pointing at a problem asking to be solved. And every problem carried a chance to grow.

Now, I honestly find it difficult to find a main complaint in my day.
When something feels off, my mind no longer stops at frustration. It moves quickly to questions like:
What can I do about this? What can I learn here? How can this improve me?
Complaining used to drain my energy.
Solving gives it direction.
Growth didn’t come from having fewer problems. It came from seeing problems differently. What once felt like obstacles now feel like invitations — to think better, act smarter, and become stronger.
These days, when I look for something to complain about, I usually end up finding something to fix instead.
And that simple shift has made all the difference.
Till next time.
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