Nothing Is | Everlasting
Don’t be afraid of the fade. The ending of one thing is always the prerequisite for the beginning of the next. Embrace the temporary, hold it while it’s here, and let it go with gratitude when it’s time.
When we accept that seasons change, we stop white-knuckling the present. We realize that a difficult chapter isn't a permanent state of being—it’s just a page. Conversely, the "golden eras" of our lives become even more precious because we know they won't last forever. The fleeting nature of a sunset is exactly what makes you stop the car to look at it. If the sky stayed pink and orange 24/7, you’d eventually stop noticing. Letting Go of the "Forever" Pressure
A tree isn’t a failure because it drops its leaves in autumn; it’s simply preparing for what’s next. When we stop demanding that things last forever, we give them the space to be exactly what they need to be for the time they are with us. The Only Constant Nothing is Everlasting
Instead of mourning the fact that things end, what if we celebrated the fact that we got to experience them at all? The goal isn't to build something that lasts forever; it’s to build something that matters
The irony of impermanence is that the only thing that does last is the cycle of change itself. Energy shifts, people grow, and life moves on. Don’t be afraid of the fade
The "forever" myth creates a lot of unnecessary anxiety. We feel like failures if a project ends, a friendship fades, or we lose interest in an old hobby. But if nothing is everlasting, then
At first, that sounds heavy—maybe even a little bleak. But there is a profound freedom in realizing that everything has an expiration date. The Power of the Pivot When we accept that seasons change, we stop
Nothing is Everlasting: Finding Beauty in the Fade We spend a lot of time trying to build monuments. We want careers that peak forever, relationships that never change, and a youthful glow that defies the calendar. But if you look at the world around you, there’s a quiet, persistent truth: