Friday, May 15, 2026

Laziness hinders human development.

   Nobody likes lazy people, and nobody wants to deal with them. While lazy people aren't necessarily bad, they can be deceiving. From an internal, personal perspective, laziness is the primary constraint; from an external perspective, it's a major influencing factor.

  Internally, or personally, laziness has a significant impact on a person. Many things that should be done, or urgently needed to be done, are left undone because of laziness. This can be divided into several situations: some things don't matter much if left undone, and doing them can bring immediate benefits. And what difference does it make if you don't do something urgent? But you must understand that it will leave hidden dangers. Smart people know that hidden dangers, like cancer, have an incubation period; for lucky people, they might not even manifest until death. But luck is accidental and unpredictable. For students, the harm of laziness is even greater. Not wanting to do homework, not wanting to get out of bed, not wanting to go to school—these are all serious problems. Once these "don'ts" accumulate, a student's learning is ruined. I think laziness has no mercy when it comes to restricting an individual. Let's compare a few people who grew up together and went to school together. Years later, the gap between them has widened, yet they themselves still don't understand why, always attributing it to bad luck. But they should think about how much luck and wealth has slipped through their fingers. Perhaps they've let small things slip by time and time again. In reality, laziness is a mindset—thinking, "I shouldn't do this little thing," always believing they're destined for great things. Yet, in their lives, no great things happen, so they have no opportunities to act. This kind of person, this kind of mindset, manifests as laziness.

  From an external perspective, laziness creates a misconception in others, making them think the person lacks ability. Therefore, they are hesitant to entrust important tasks, at most giving them trivial matters. With such arrangements, their abilities stagnate over time. Furthermore, lazy people struggle to maintain good relationships with colleagues or family. You see, when there's cleaning or overtime work, they're always the first to back out, and their reasons are perfectly plausible. This might fool others once or twice, but after a while, their reasons become lies. I don't know what some people are thinking. They often make up excuses for being sick, though they can't concoct serious illnesses. They just make up minor ailments like headaches and fevers—things that can be minor or serious, things they can control. Because they dedicate less time to their work, their professional skills, experience, and life ideals decline. But they remain stubbornly oblivious, thinking themselves clever. They slack off once, then a few times, then a lifetime. No one wants to work with them, and no one can do anything about them. In the end, they eliminate themselves.

  Is there a cure for laziness? Yes, but it depends on whether the person has the right fate. What kind of fate? It's whether they have the opportunity to meet a wise person in their life. This wise person is their destiny. Frankly, everyone has the potential for such a person; the key is how you cultivate it. Most lazy people aren't unwilling to do anything; they're not lazy when it comes to things they enjoy, and they might even stay up all night doing them. What do lazy people like to do? Of course, they have their own strengths: playing games, playing mahjong, hanging out with hiking buddies, and bragging. To put it another way, if he could channel these interests into positive energy, he would become a truly talented person.

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Laziness hinders human development.

   Nobody likes lazy people, and nobody wants to deal with them. While lazy people aren't necessarily bad, they can be deceiving. From a...