Monday, April 6, 2015

Post No. 086: "You don’t need to fix everyone else..."


(Image from Pinterest)

"You don’t need to fix everyone else..."
(Or, "You need to fix yourself!")

You don’t need to fix everyone else—the next time that you need something to fix—you need to fix yourself! In other words, don't fix everyone else; fix yourself.

-Paul Whiting
(a.k.a., Poet, Artist and Philosopher)
"I am the poet who thinks that he knows it!"

My Writing About 'The Great Flaw' In The System Of Life: If your goal is to fix "The Great Flaw" in the System Of Life, please feel free to fix yourself in order to do so. –Paul Whiting (written February 7th, 2012 and revised October 6th, 2022)

My Writing About You Needing To Fixing Yourself: You don’t need to fix everybody else—the next time that you need something to fix—you need to fix yourself! –Paul Whiting (written April 6th, 2015, revised April 29th, 2022 and revised September 1st, 2022)

My Writing About Comparing Yourself To Others: Do not compare yourself to how others are: instead, compare yourself to how you used to be. –Paul Whiting (written April 12th, 2016 and revised August 25th, 2022)

My Writing About You Not Fixing Everyone Else: Don't fix everyone else; fix yourself. –Paul Whiting (written September 18th, 2021, revised April 29th, 2022 and revised September 1st, 2022)

My Philosophical Notes:

The reason that I wrote this prose can be summed up with the following statement: You don’t need to fix everyone else...you need to fix yourself!

And this prose was also published on my "Paul Whiting — A Creative Writer" blog (please see the hyperlink below for the blog), since I feel that the message in this prose applies to the message that I am trying to convey through "Paul Whiting — A Creative Writer."

This prose was written in Portland, Oregon.

-Paulee

https://paulwhitingwriting.blogspot.com

This "Poet, Artist and Philosopher" Post No. 086 was edited on January 31st, 2023.

"Prose is using all of the words that are necessary in order to describe all that is necessary to describe." –Paul Whiting [June 1st, 2022]