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The ‘Near Enemy’: The Subtle Corruption That Makes Good Acts Fail

July 13, 2026 By Nagesh Belludi Leave a Comment

Buddhist Concept of Near Enemies: Virtue's Counterfeit That Corrupts Acts While Preserving Appearances There’s a failure mode that feels exactly like success—and that’s what makes it dangerous.

We’ve all been there. You listen to a friend in crisis, offer considered advice, and walk away feeling you showed up for them. They walk away feeling managed. You tell someone a hard truth and call it honesty; they experience it as a point being scored. You hold back from a difficult conversation and call it giving someone space; they call it distance. The pattern scales. A parent pays for every advantage—tutors, coaches, curated opportunities—and the child grows up unable to tolerate difficulty. After a visible incident, a company rolls out sensitivity training and a public statement, and the people who raised the original concern quietly leave. In each case, the act looked like the virtue it claimed to be. The intention felt genuine. The outcome was the opposite of the intent.

Buddhism has a precise name for this mechanism: the Near Enemy.

In the fifth century, the Sri Lankan monk Bhadantācariya Buddhaghosa wrote the Visuddhimagga (The Path of Purification,) a systematic map of the mind for serious practitioners. His central observation was that as people eliminate the obvious vices—cruelty, greed, contempt—the ego doesn’t concede. It adapts. It learns to dress itself in the form of the very qualities it’s resisting. Buddhaghosa called these imitations Near Enemies: states that look like virtue from the outside and feel like virtue from the inside, but serve an entirely different purpose. Not the opposite of the good. Its counterfeit.

The distinctions are finer than they first appear. Compassion’s Near Enemy is pity—feeling for someone from a safe elevation rather than with them. Generosity tips into grandiosity when the act is really about the giver’s self-image. Honesty shades into one-upmanship when the point isn’t to illuminate but to win. Boundaries—one of the more weaponized words in contemporary life—quietly become avoidance when the real discomfort isn’t workload but conflict itself. Equanimity, much admired in today’s vogue for Stoicism, has indifference as its shadow: the appearance of calm that is, on closer examination, just checked out.

None of these are the Far Enemy—the obvious opposite. Nobody mistakes love for hatred. The Far Enemy triggers conscience. The Near Enemy triggers satisfaction. It feels virtuous because, from the inside, it is.

Virtue’s Shadow: When Good Acts Serve the Actor

'The Path Of Purification' by Buddhaghosa (ISBN 9380688482) The Near Enemy does its deepest damage in relationships and organizations that believe they’re doing well—because that belief is exactly what stops them from looking.

A friendship in which one person has become the permanent adviser isn’t a friendship of equals, but both may describe it as close. The vocabulary of virtue stays intact. The relationship it describes has changed shape. That pattern scales in organizations too. A company launches a wellbeing program with evident sincerity, and the workload doesn’t change. The metrics of goodness—a program launched, a role created, a CEO who spoke at the launch—become decoupled from any actual outcome. The initiative closes the question without answering it.

Psychologists call a related pattern moral licensing: treating a good act as credit against a future lapse. The Near Enemy goes further. It doesn’t follow a good act with a bad one—it replaces the good act entirely, while preserving the feeling of having performed it. The diversity initiative becomes not a step toward genuine culture change but a reason not to take one.

What makes this hard to see is that the costs don’t arrive suddenly. In relationships, the Near Enemy presents as a gradual cooling—a sense that something’s off that neither person can name. The relationship looks intact and feels hollow, and because no single moment caused it, no single moment can fix it. In organizations, employees who’ve learned that the vocabulary of care bears no relationship to actual conditions eventually stop believing any of it, including the parts that are true. That kind of cynicism is almost impossible to reverse, because every subsequent genuine initiative arrives already discredited. At the largest scale—when accountability becomes process and reform becomes announcement—people lose not just trust in specific actors but confidence in the possibility of good faith itself. That’s not fixed by the next election cycle.

When Self-Knowledge Isn’t Enough

Buddhist Concept of Near Enemies: How Virtue's Imitations Deceive Us Into Believing We Did Good Most people, confronted with this idea, reach for the same tool: examine your motives. It’s a reasonable instinct and a limited one.

The Near Enemy is what happens when the mind has learned to produce convincing internal accounts of its own virtue. The person in grandiosity doesn’t experience grandiosity—they experience generosity. The person avoiding conflict doesn’t experience avoidance—they experience consideration for the other party. Introspection surfaces the story the mind has already composed. It rarely reaches the motivation the story was composed to conceal.

So the more useful signals are behavioral, not psychological. Genuine virtue tends to cost something—not always dramatically, but noticeably. It requires presence rather than administration, staying with a situation rather than resolving it on paper. When an act labeled as virtuous involves no friction at all, that ease is worth examining.

Related: does the care persist when no one’s grateful for it? Genuine compassion extends to people who don’t appreciate it. If the warmth stops when the acknowledgment stops, that’s informative.

The most demanding version of this test is asking who actually carries the cost afterward. In genuine compassion, the person suffering bears less weight after the encounter. In pity, the one who felt compassion walks away lighter—having discharged a feeling. The encounter happened. The weight moved in the wrong direction.

Idea for Impact: Test Your Virtue Against Evidence

The Near Enemy isn’t a moral accusation. It’s an observation about how the self operates when it’s learned the language of virtue but hasn’t given up the need to stay comfortable.

The practical test is simple enough: Who did this actually serve? Not in intention—in effect. Did conditions change for the person this was supposed to be for? Would this continue if no one was watching, and no one said thank you?

A virtue that can’t survive those questions probably wasn’t one. It was the ego doing what it does best—finding the most elegant available costume and wearing it with complete sincerity.

That gap between what we think we’re doing and what we’re actually doing doesn’t close on its own. It closes when we’re willing to look somewhere less comfortable than our own intentions.

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Filed Under: Effective Communication, Health and Well-being, Leadership, Living the Good Life Tagged With: Biases, Buddhism, Decision-Making, Ethics, Introspection, Leadership Lessons, Relationships, Values, Virtues

Inspirational Quotations #1162

July 12, 2026 By Nagesh Belludi

Astronomy has revealed the great truth that the whole universe is bound together by one all-pervading influence.
—William Leitch (American Sports Journalist, Author)

Before the beginning of great brilliance, there must be chaos. Before a brilliant person begins something great, they must look foolish in the crowd.
—I Ching (Ancient Chinese Divination Text)

Some folks rail against other folks, because other folks have what some folks would be glad of.
—Henry Fielding (English Novelist)

A strange thing is memory, and hope; one looks backward, and the other forward; one is of today, the other of tomorrow. Memory is history recorded in our brain, memory is a painter, it paints pictures of the past and of the day.
—Grandma Moses (American Folk Artist)

Happiness is the sense that one matters. Happiness is an abiding enthusiasm. Happiness is single-mindedness. Happiness is whole-heartedness. Happiness is a by-product. Happiness is faith.
—Sam Shoemaker (American Clergyman)

Destiny is no matter of chance. It is a matter of choice. It is not a thing to be waited for, it is a thing to be achieved.
—William Jennings Bryan (American Statesman)

Difficulty is a nurse of greatness—a harsh nurse, who rocks her foster children roughly, but rocks them into strength and athletic proportions.—The mind, grappling with great aims and wrestling with mighty impediments, grows by a certain necessity to the stature of greatness.
—William Cullen Bryant (American Poet)

We were made to receive and give away way more love than we’re tempted to just settle for. Go for broke.
—Bob Goff (American Philanthropist)

Beauty is a precious trace that eternity causes to appear to us and that it takes away from us. A manifestation of eternity, and a sign of death as well.
—Eugene Ionesco (French Dramatist)

Never forget the power of silence, that massively disconcerting pause which goes on and on and may at last induce an opponent to babble and backtrack nervously.
—Lance Morrow (American Essayist)

Filed Under: Inspirational Quotations

The “Empty Vessel” Effect: Why Insecurity Speaks the Loudest

July 10, 2026 By Nagesh Belludi Leave a Comment

The We often mistake loudness for certainty, but it is usually fear in disguise. The most insecure people you meet are often the loudest in the room. Confident individuals don’t need to draw attention to themselves; insecure ones do. Their noise is not a sign of strength but a cover for fragility.

This pattern plays out everywhere, from boardrooms to social circles. It’s rarely about genuine dominance. More often, it’s a performance designed to mask inadequacy. By monopolizing airtime and dictating the narrative, insecure individuals create distraction powerful enough to keep others from looking too closely. The aim is to project an authority so imposing that no one dares ask the questions that might expose them.

The louder the display, the greater the fear driving it. As the old saying goes, the empty vessel makes the most sound, and the least sense. Authentic confidence works differently. It is internally validated and doesn’t depend on an audience. Secure individuals don’t hoard credit or silence dissent. They see their worth as a given, not a fragile status to be defended at every turn. Where the insecure performer uses the spotlight as a shield, the genuinely confident person uses it to elevate others.

Idea for Impact: When you encounter this “empty vessel” effect, the most telling moment comes not during the performance but after a mistake. True confidence admits error and moves on. Insecurity simply raises the volume. Once you know what to listen for, the noise becomes easy to see through.

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Filed Under: Effective Communication, Managing People, Mental Models, Sharpening Your Skills Tagged With: Assertiveness, Biases, Conflict, Conversations, Critical Thinking, Humility, Manipulation, Psychology, Social Dynamics

Persuasion’s Oldest Trick Isn’t the Promise of More—It’s the Threat of Loss

July 8, 2026 By Nagesh Belludi Leave a Comment

Persuasion's Oldest Trick Isn't the Promise of More---It's the Threat of Loss The fear of losing what you own hits harder than the prospect of gaining something new. Persuaders who understand this don’t sell upside. They make the downside impossible to ignore.

Insurance companies don’t tell you you’ll be richer with a policy. They warn that without one, everything you’ve built could vanish overnight. Political campaigns run on the same wiring: “Don’t let them take away your healthcare.” “Protect the jobs in your community.” Apple’s iCloud doesn’t sell you extra gigabytes; it sells peace of mind with “never lose a photo or contact again.”

The loss framing works because pain outpunches pleasure, dollar for dollar, every time.

Netflix knows this cold, nudging subscribers with alerts like “Watch before it’s gone” or “Don’t miss your last chance to watch.” Airlines and retailers follow the same playbook: loyalty programs aren’t designed to excite you with new perks—they’re designed to scare you with expiration dates. “Your miles expire after 12 months of inactivity.” It’s not an invitation. It’s a countdown.

The psychology runs deeper than economics. Gains feel abstract, negotiable, something you can chase later. Losses feel immediate and personal—a wound to identity, not just to the wallet. We protect assets, sure, but we’re really protecting our sense of who we are and what we’ve earned. That’s why loss-framed messages hit harder than any promise of upside ever could.

Idea for impact: Don’t just promise people more. Show them what’s already slipping away if they don’t act.

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Filed Under: Business Stories, MBA in a Nutshell, Sharpening Your Skills Tagged With: Assertiveness, Biases, Creativity, Customer Service, Marketing, Parables, Persuasion, Psychology

Efficiency vs. Effectiveness: Activity Without Outcome as Self-Indulgent Futility

July 6, 2026 By Nagesh Belludi Leave a Comment

Efficiency vs. Effectiveness: Activity Without Outcome as Self-Indulgent Futility

Most people treat efficiency and effectiveness as synonyms. They’re not. Conflating them produces organizations that run smoothly while failing completely, and the confusion tends to go unnoticed until the damage is already done.

Effectiveness asks whether an organization is delivering the outcomes that justify its existence. A hospital exists to heal patients. A school exists to educate children. A government program exists to solve a real problem in people’s lives.

Effectiveness is graded externally, by the world the organization is supposed to serve. The patients, the students, the citizens render the verdict. Their condition, their progress, their wellbeing is the measure. No organization gets to declare itself effective. Only the people it serves can do that.

Efficiency is a different question. It asks how well the organization uses its time, money, staff, and materials to produce its outputs. A factory measures efficiency by how much raw material it converts into finished product. A government office measures it by how many cases each staffer processes per day.

These ratios come from inside the organization, assessed against the organization’s own processes. An organization can score at the top of every internal efficiency measure and still be failing completely at its external purpose. The two things don’t belong on the same scorecard.

A Hospital Without Patients, but Overworked Administrators Is the Perfect Metaphor for Efficiency at Producing Irrelevance

Yes Minister (1980–84,) the British sitcom about Whitehall and the civil service, illustrated this distinction with uncommon precision in the episode “The Compassionate Society.” Minister Jim Hacker learns that a brand-new hospital in his district, built in the language of its founding mandate for healing the sick, employs over 500 administrative staff but has no doctors, no nurses, and not one patient. Budget constraints delayed the official opening, but the administrative apparatus had already come fully online.

'Yes Minister' by Antony Jay (ISBN B00008DP4B) Sir Humphrey Appleby, the senior civil servant responsible, doesn’t concede an inch. He argues that the staff are overworked with genuinely vital tasks, that the volume of administrative work is substantial and unrelenting, and that by any honest measure of activity the hospital is performing well. He adds that they’re, in fact, about 150 people short of full staffing given everything the work demands. The labs are clean. The equipment sits in perfect condition. The paperwork is current.

Appleby grounds success entirely in activity levels, and on that basis the argument is coherent. The fact that the hospital has never treated a single patient doesn’t register as a failure in his accounting.

That argument is worth taking seriously, because it exposes something important. A hospital with no patients is, from a resource-utilization standpoint, genuinely well-run. Staff stay occupied. Equipment accumulates no wear. Supplies go unconsumed. No costly complications arise. No emergency situations generate unplanned expenses. Every internal ratio points toward order and control.

Sir Humphrey isn’t wrong that the organization is efficient. He defines efficiency on the organization’s own terms, and on those terms the numbers hold. What his accounting excludes entirely is the question posed from outside: is this hospital making anyone better?

Judged by internal measures, the operation looks excellent. Judged by the community it was built to serve, it has produced nothing. The hospital consumes public funds, carries a full payroll, and generates substantial administrative output, while delivering no healthcare whatsoever.

That’s not a minor shortfall in effectiveness. It’s total ineffectiveness running alongside high efficiency, and the efficiency is real precisely because there are no patients to complicate things. The absence of outcomes is what makes the internal numbers look so good.

The Obsession with Metrics Over Meaning Is a Modern Malaise

This pattern isn’t unique to British satire. Myles J. Kelleher, in Social Problems in a Free Society: Myths, Absurdities, and Realities (2004,) documents an example from the Soviet archives that follows the same logic. A shoe factory produced 100,000 pairs of boys’ shoes rather than a range of men’s sizes, because smaller shoes allowed workers to cut more pairs from their leather allotment and qualify for a performance bonus.

The factory hit its targets. The manager received his bonus. Internally, the operation registered as a success. Externally, the Soviet Union accumulated a large inventory of children’s shoes with no buyers and faced a shortage of the men’s sizes people actually needed. The factory had organized itself around a metric that had nothing to do with serving the people it existed to supply.

Hospital emergency rooms have produced a sharper and more troubling version of the same problem. In documented cases across several health systems, administrators pursuing better scores on timely patient admission metrics discovered they could improve their numbers by holding patients in ambulances outside the facility. Admitting a patient started the clock. Leaving a patient in an ambulance did not.

'The Tyranny of Metrics' by Jerry Z. Muller (ISBN 0691174954) Staff under pressure to hit admission time targets chose the option that protected the statistic. Patients in serious distress waited outside functioning facilities while the organization managed its numbers. The metric improved. Patient welfare declined. The organization measured what it could control internally and optimized for that, regardless of what was happening outside.

Idea for Impact: The Optics of Efficiency Often Serve as a Shield Against Accountability

These cases share a common structure. Effectiveness requires organizations to look outward and ask hard questions: are patients leaving in better health, are students developing real capability, are citizens’ problems getting solved? Those questions take time to answer and resist easy quantification. Efficiency produces numbers quickly from data the organization already holds. The pull toward internal metrics is persistent and, from inside the organization, understandable. But it consistently points in the wrong direction.

Management scholar Peter Drucker identified the core problem when he wrote that efficiency is doing things right, while effectiveness is doing the right things. The hospital in Yes Minister did things right by every process it ran. It simply didn’t do the right things. Because internal metrics stayed strong, the organization had no mechanism to surface that failure.

None of this argues against efficiency. Organizations that waste resources while doing good work still cause unnecessary harm through that waste. The objective is to achieve both: use resources well in pursuit of outcomes that actually matter to the people being served.

But when the two come into conflict, the sequence matters. First, confirm that the organization produces the results that justify its existence. Then work on producing them at lower cost. Running a tight operation that delivers nothing of value to the people it was built to serve isn’t a management achievement. It’s an organizational failure that presents as competence.

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  3. Master the Middle: Where Success Sets Sail
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  5. When Work Becomes a Metric, Metrics Risk Becoming the Work: A Case Study of the Stakhanovite Movement

Filed Under: Leadership, Mental Models, Project Management, Sharpening Your Skills Tagged With: Decision-Making, Efficiency, Goals, Governance, Management, Parables, Performance Management, Peter Drucker, Productivity, Quality, Strategy, Targets

Inspirational Quotations #1161

July 5, 2026 By Nagesh Belludi

Suffering by nature or chance never seems so painful as suffering inflicted on us by the arbitrary will of another.
—Arthur Schopenhauer (German Philosopher)

Appreciate the constructive; ignore the destructive.
—John Douglas (American FBI Agent)

When you hold resentment toward another, you are bound to that person or condition by an emotional link that is stronger than steel. Forgiveness is the only way to dissolve that link and get free.
—Catherine Ponder (American Clergywoman)

This is the artist, then—life’s hungry man, the glutton of eternity, beauty’s miser, glory’s slave.
—Thomas Wolfe (American Novelist)

As you would not bark back at a dog, do not waste your time arguing with foolish people.
—Yogaswami of Jaffna (Sri Lankan Hindu Religious Leader)

Float like a butterfly, sting like a bee.
—Muhammad Ali (American Sportsperson)

All autobiography is self-indulgent.
—Daphne du Maurier (British Novelist)

Every man of genius is considerably helped by being dead.
—Robert Staughton Lynd (American Sociologist)

I have lived to know that the great secret of human happiness is this: never suffer your energies to stagnate. The old adage of “too many irons in the fire,” conveys an abominable lie. You cannot have too many—poker, tongs, and all—keep them all going.
—Adam Clarke (British Methodist Theologian)

Science and technology multiply around us. To an increasing extent they dictate the languages in which we speak and think. Either we use those languages, or we remain mute.
—J. G. Ballard (English Novelist)

Why should you be content with so little? Why shouldn’t you reach out for something big?
—Charles L. Allen (American Minister)

It is hardly surprising that children should enthusiastically start their education at an early age with the Absolute Knowledge of computer science; while they are unable to read, for reading demands making judgments at every line. Conversation is almost dead, and soon so too will be those who knew how to speak.
—Guy Debord (French Philosopher)

Filed Under: Inspirational Quotations

How “Shoulds” Trap You into Catastrophic Thinking

July 3, 2026 By Nagesh Belludi Leave a Comment

Irrational Beliefs: the Tyranny of Musts and Shoulds

We inflict most of our own pain by demanding that life conform to rigid “shoulds” and “oughts.” When reality deviates from our blueprint, catastrophic thinking rushes in—our minds leap to worst-case scenarios, convinced disaster’s just around the corner. This relentless effort to control every outcome breeds anxiety, as if molding the world to match our expectations were the only path to peace.

Suffering starts to ease the moment we revise those demands. Instead of “This must happen or I’m ruined,” try, “It’d be wonderful if X occurs, but I can accept Y—or even live with Z.” By entertaining alternatives, we loosen the grip of absolute expectations. We still hope for the best, but we don’t have to equate disappointment with devastation. This subtle cognitive shift transforms “inevitable disaster” into “manageable setback.”

Ancient philosophies offer a map. The Stoics tell us to focus on what’s within our control—our judgments and actions—and accept everything else as indifferent. Buddhists teach the value of non-attachment and remind us that everything’s impermanent. When we adopt these perspectives, even the worst-case scenario loses its sting. By surrendering the illusion of total control, we free up emotional energy—for resilience, for creativity, and for peace.

We suffer most not from fate, but from the fiction of our “oughts”—ever demanding, always disappointed. The world doesn’t bend to our will, and that’s perfectly fine.

Idea for Impact: Once we stop insisting reality follow our script, we discover something unexpected: the freedom to work with what actually is, rather than what we insisted should be.

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Filed Under: Health and Well-being, Living the Good Life, Sharpening Your Skills Tagged With: Anxiety, Attitudes, Buddhism, Emotions, Introspection, Mental Models, Mindfulness, Perfectionism, Philosophy, Psychology, Resilience, Stress

The Friend You’ve Never Examined

July 1, 2026 By Nagesh Belludi Leave a Comment

Boris Becker Discusses Fair-Weather and Foul-Weather Friends Last weekend’s Telegraph interview with Boris Becker, the tennis champion who won Wimbledon at seventeen, includes a line that lands with more weight than he seems to intend.

Asked what remained of his friendships after bankruptcy, criminal charges, and eight months in a British prison, he answers plainly: “Ninety per cent of my former circle is gone. Probably even ninety-five.”

There’s no anger in it. Just recognition.

For years, Becker moved through a rare orbit. Six grand slam titles. Heads of state, actors, sporting icons. Then came the concealed assets, the hidden accounts, the undeclared shares. When the scrutiny intensified, the crowd around him thinned. He talks about the people who left.

He says less about the obligations he abandoned long before any of them walked away.

“In prison, you lose everything,” he says. “All that’s left is your personality, your character. You have to ask, ‘Who am I? Will this break me or make me stronger?'”

His account echoes something quieter and more common. We all have fair-weather friends, and most of us have been one. Most of us have stepped back from someone whose life grew heavy. A colleague’s business failed and we meant to check in. A friend’s reputation took a hit and we let distance form. Not out of cruelty, but discomfort. The erosion is slow, almost polite, and easy to justify.

Someone’s name is probably already in mind. Someone you once meant to call.

We like to think loyalty is a trait we carry, but it’s a record of behavior, kept over years, shaped by moments when showing up required effort rather than convenience.

In the Nicomachean Ethics, Aristotle described three kinds of friendship: pleasure, usefulness, and virtue. The first two shift with circumstance. Only the third endures. He also noted that people with status often struggle to find the third kind, surrounded as they are by the first two. Becker learned that dramatically. Most people learn it in smaller, quieter ways.

Modern life complicates the picture. Visibility creates a sense of connection that doesn’t hold up under strain. We treat relationships like services we renew only while they’re delivering something. The numbers grow. Real friendship thins.

Loyalty isn’t measured by who stayed with you. It’s measured by the moments you chose not to step away.

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Filed Under: Great Personalities, Health and Well-being, Leadership, Living the Good Life Tagged With: Character, Integrity, Interpersonal, Relationships, Resilience, Social Life, Stress, Values, Wisdom

Complexity Is a Hiding Place

June 29, 2026 By Nagesh Belludi Leave a Comment

Complexity Is Ego Armor: Why You Must Conquer Sophistication To Expose The Truth When American playwright and diplomat Clare Boothe Luce wrote that “simplicity is the ultimate sophistication,” she wasn’t praising minimalism. She was naming a failure: complexity often masks unfinished thinking, a refusal to do the harder, clarifying work.

It also asks very little of us. Add every caveat, hedge every claim, and call it thorough. But thoroughness isn’t clarity. There’s a subtler problem too: complexity protects the person who made it. When a tangled system fails, you blame the system. When something simple fails, the maker is exposed. This is why bureaucracies grow—not from inefficiency, but from rational self-interest. Complexity is ego armor.

We make it worse by confusing density with depth. Dense prose feels serious, even rigorous. But in most institutions—academic, legal, corporate—that feeling is the point. Complexity signals effort and expertise in ways that clear thinking doesn’t always get credit for. Simplicity is countercultural in those environments, which is why it takes courage as much as skill.

Real clarity means cutting what’s comfortable and accepting that some nuance won’t survive the compression. But it also demands honesty about what you don’t yet fully understand. When you find yourself reaching for complexity, that’s usually the signal—not that the subject is difficult, but that your grip on it isn’t firm enough. Clarity isn’t what you aim for after understanding something. It’s how you know you’ve got there.

Idea for Impact: Simplicity isn’t the absence of complexity. It’s its conquest—earned, not assumed. To reach it is to show respect: to your reader, to your subject, and to the truth.

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Inspirational Quotations #1160

June 28, 2026 By Nagesh Belludi

The moment the slave resolves that he will no longer be a slave. His fetters fall… freedom and slavery are mental states.
—Mohandas K. Gandhi (Indian Hindu Political leader)

Our minds can shape the way a thing will be because we act according to our expectations.
—Federico Fellini (Italian Filmmaker)

Conscience is the spiritual, supernatural principle in man, and it is not of social origin at all. It is rather the perversion and confusion of conscience that is of social origin.
—Nikolai Berdyaev (Russian Philosopher)

A man might pass for insane who should see things as they are.
—William Ellery Channing (American Theologian, Poet)

I cannot take human beings seriously. They seem to me to have been created solely to amuse those who regard them in a certain way.
—Eugene Labiche (French Dramatist)

Art does not lie in copying nature.—Nature furnishes the material by means of which to express a beauty still unexpressed in nature.—The artist beholds in nature more than she herself is conscious of.
—Henry James (American-born British Novelist)

Castles in the air – -they are so easy to take refuge in. And so easy to build as well.
—Henrik Ibsen (Norwegian Playwright)

Leaders are visionaries with a poorly developed sense of fear and no concept of the odds against them. They make the impossible happen.
—Robert Jarvik (American Scientist)

We are what we do to change what we are.
—Eduardo Galeano (Uruguayan Journalist)

The only valid censorship of ideas is the right of people not to listen.
—Tom Smothers (American Comedian)

You demand universal suffrage,—I demand universal education to go with it.
—William Edward Forster (British Statesman)

It is easy to ignore responsibility when one is only an intermediate link in a chain of action.
—Stanley Milgram (American Psychologist)

Our questions and answers are in part determined by the historical tradition in which we find ourselves. We apprehend truth from our own source within the historical tradition.
—Karl Jaspers (German Philosopher)

Filed Under: Inspirational Quotations

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About: Nagesh Belludi [hire] is a St. Petersburg, Florida-based freethinker, investor, and leadership coach. He specializes in helping executives and companies ensure that the overall quality of their decision-making benefits isn’t compromised by a lack of a big-picture understanding.

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RECOMMENDED BOOK:
Made in America

Made in America: Sam Walton

Walmart founder Sam Walton’s very educational, insightful, and stimulating autobiography is teeming with his relentless search for better ideas.

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Recently,

  • The ‘Near Enemy’: The Subtle Corruption That Makes Good Acts Fail
  • Inspirational Quotations #1162
  • The “Empty Vessel” Effect: Why Insecurity Speaks the Loudest
  • Persuasion’s Oldest Trick Isn’t the Promise of More—It’s the Threat of Loss
  • Efficiency vs. Effectiveness: Activity Without Outcome as Self-Indulgent Futility
  • Inspirational Quotations #1161
  • How “Shoulds” Trap You into Catastrophic Thinking

Unless otherwise stated in the individual document, the works above are © Nagesh Belludi under a Creative Commons BY-NC-ND license. You may quote, copy and share them freely, as long as you link back to RightAttitudes.com, don't make money with them, and don't modify the content. Enjoy!