Practice makes perfect, but no one is perfect, so why practise? Question raised by a classmate. We are dying to live, but we would still die, so why live? These are part of the conflicts among the principles we are living in, where one sentence is able to attack the other, causing it to be unstable, if it is not well constructed in the first place. We know we are mortals, but we still live our lives to the fullest, preventing us from having regrets in the future, that we did not accomplish what we wanted the most, that we couldn’t fill our heads with memories which can never be erased, that we failed to have our own stories to share. Why live? Because we want to, not we have to. Indeed no one is perfect, but that does not mean we shouldn’t be practising, to bring us closer to perfect, to sharpen the skills we already have, to bring the world forward. This is not an order, but the will of many; to those who want to be perfect, those who want to exceed perfection and those who are able to achieve what they think they can never be. We have been limiting ourselves, by creating our own illusions; telling us that we can no longer move further, that we shouldn’t be, that we must not be. We have new creations every day possible, to have a change in our lives, not in the sense of turning the world upside down, but to bring ourselves forward, to upgrade our lifestyle, to rescue the land from destruction of mankind, to prevent extinction of the living beings, of us. It is time to stop questioning our decisions, but to live with it, correct it, instead of putting it at the corner of our heads, to bring it out from time to time, feeling regret.