Where It All Begins

From small excuses to shiny success, the climb looks bright—until a quiet question asks what was lost along the way.

A story of gain, loss, and what was left… gone

It’s fine, it’s just a small thing.”

That’s the excuse that comes first. A boy skips his chores and hides behind those words. Nobody says anything, so he learns that wrong can be covered if you say the right line.

That same excuse follows him to school. During tests, he leans over to copy answers. It feels clever, almost harmless, and soon it becomes routine. Passing without effort feels better than failing with honesty.

As he grows older, the pattern deepens. At the store, he pockets the extra coins a cashier mistakenly gives. He calls it luck, treats himself to a snack, and laughs with friends about his “free win.” By then, small wins already felt normal.

College only makes the habit stronger. He takes credit for group projects, and when teachers praise him, he learns that charm and words can get him further than hard work. Truth becomes optional—applause feels better.

When he gets his first job, it doesn’t feel much different from school. He hides errors, takes credit he hasn’t earned, and signs off papers without caring what they mean. By being polite and pleasing, he fools his boss into thinking he’s efficient, but to him it’s just the same easy trick he has always used—do less, look good, and get away with it.

With the same tricks, he climbs higher. He starts a business, bends rules, charges more than he should, and calls it strategy. Money flows, his house grows larger, the cars get shinier, and people admire his success. They call him smart, even blessed.

But when the noise fades and the doors close, a quiet question follows him: what good is all this gain if, somewhere along the way, he has traded the one thing he could never afford to lose—

gone.

Gone • Darem Placer
Indelible Imprint of Reverberation includes Gone

ᴛʸᵖⁱⁿᵍ ᴏᵘᵗ ᵒᶠ ᵗʰᵉ ʙˡᵘᵉ ᵈᵃʳᵉᵐ ᵐᵘˢⁱᶜ ᵇˡᵒᵍ

When Evil Becomes Normal

When evil takes the spotlight and good feels rare, we’re left with a choice: follow the noise or bring back what’s missing.

When people stop asking questions about life, they often end up in trouble. They act on impulse, follow only their own thinking, and drift without direction. Without questions, there is no search. Without searching, mistakes multiply.

So let’s ask.

Are we missing the values that once kept us steady—respect, patience, accountability? Do we still know how to listen, or are we only waiting for our turn to speak? Have we lost the patience to endure, the grounding that faith or conscience once gave us?

At the same time, do we now have too much of what doesn’t help? Noise that drowns out truth. Ego that pushes us to chase attention. Anger that feeds division. Freedom stretched so far that it forgets responsibility.

If this is the imbalance—what happens next?

Do we keep sinking under the excess, or do we choose to recover what’s missing?

What Road Do We Take?

One road keeps us distracted: more noise, more anger, more shallow gains.

The other road calls us back: respect, patience, accountability, grounding, and responsibility.

And here’s the harder truth: what was once hidden in the background—evil, selfishness, corruption—now steps boldly into the spotlight. Wrong is dressed up as normal, even rewarded. Goodness, instead of being the standard, is treated like the exception.

So the choice is sharper than ever.
Do we go with the flow of a world where evil plays the lead role?

Or do we stand against it, bringing back what’s missing, even if it feels harder?

Which road will we choose?
And will we be brave enough to start with ourselves?

𝚃𝚢𝚙𝚒𝚗𝚐 𝙾𝚞𝚝 𝚘𝚏 𝚝𝚑𝚎 𝙱𝚕𝚞𝚎 • 𝖽𝖺𝗋𝖾𝗆.𝗆𝗎𝗌𝗂𝖼.𝖻𝗅𝗈𝗀