integrity

  • A House Without Foundation

    A House Without Foundation

    They cultivate an aura of ambiguity,
    leaving the truth cloaked in fog
    that bends with every breeze,
    ever-shifting to suit
    the whims of convenience.

    This being vague is
    no deception of others,
    but a self-delusion, you understand,
    and a refusal to stop
    drifting aimlessly above
    the solid ground of principle.

    By leaving the truth open
    to interpretation,
    they reserve the right to pivot,
    to rewrite and to redefine,
    thereby not only betraying
    others’ trust
    but also their own being.

    For in the depths of
    their own hearts,
    they know that to stand
    for anything is like being
    bound by conviction,
    and so they trade firm ground
    for the fleeting shelter
    of a passing cloud.

    Their words wind through
    labyrinths of mirrored reflections,
    refracting meanings that
    splinter and distort,
    making it possible
    for one person to speak
    several truths at once.

    But eventually,
    this kind of impotence reveals
    something deeper:
    it shows that these individuals
    are willing to betray the roots
    of their integrity
    to avoid the weight of discomfort—
    when perhaps it
    would have been better
    if they had just stated clearly
    what they meant instead.

    Those who engage in such pretenses
    do not lie before others,
    but rather lie before themselves,
    undermining their own character
    with each evasion.

    Filed under: 🜁 Self – tracing the inner landscapes of thought, feeling, and becoming.