Saeed Al Mehairi

Weather changing mood

It’s often comforting to perceive ourselves as unyielding entities with convictions and attitudes as resilient as stone, as steadfast as the mightiest tree, or as indisputable as the written word or solved mathematical puzzles.

But as we journey through life’s labyrinth, this impression of immutability meets a surprising contradiction. We discover that we are not composed of static elements but instead embody the fluid characteristics of water. We are ever-evolving creatures, persistently moving, continually transforming, and as unpredictable as a river charting its path. This insight reveals our deep vulnerability to life’s relentless oscillations.

Despite our brave efforts to maintain an image of consistency, life’s intricate paradoxes often compel us to reassess our beliefs. Promises we once believed would stand the test of time become faint echoes. The grief we once deemed impossible to overcome gradually transitions into a softened sorrow we can carry. Even our claimed understanding of life’s complexities is eventually unmasked as a mere fragment in the vast compendium of human wisdom.

Ultimately, we are choreographed by our changing moods, often misleading ourselves into believing we are figures of unwavering resolve. But, realising this needn’t be a harbinger of despair. It instead encourages us to welcome our dynamism, to move with the flow of our emotions, and to recognise that our humanity isn’t about reaching a permanent state but about evolving and maturing amidst life’s perpetual transformations.

Essentially, we resemble rivers more than rocks, and seas more than trees. It’s this intrinsic fluidity, this capacity to adapt, adjust, and move with life’s ever-changing circumstances, that characterizes our profoundly beautiful human nature.