The Perfect Idea: There Is No Such Thing as Perfection | Teen Ink

The Perfect Idea: There Is No Such Thing as Perfection

October 19, 2014
By all_personal SILVER, Springfield, Missouri
all_personal SILVER, Springfield, Missouri
6 articles 0 photos 0 comments

This is a protracted disquisition that will appear scintillating but it is really just one person’s view and opinion on the polemical topic that there is not anything as perfection. The requirements for that person’s perfect concept of the idea above will be elucidated throughout. First, to comprehend that it is literally impossible for every person to agree that a noun, including thoughts and ideas, is the living definition of perfection. Everyone has different things they would consider to be perfect. There is a reason the explication of impeccability is an explanation instead of an example.        

 

To respect others’ rules and axioms of perfection is another. An illustration of this would be a person envisioning the immaculate relationship as spending every single moment together, while someone else would detest such clinginess. That represents the difference between the two beings, but how they would handle it is the point. Instead of requisitioning for each other to go by their opposing preferences, they should respect and comply with how their views vary. Realizing one cannot act in a perfectionist state relentlessly is necessary. Part of being human is making mistakes in life. It is unrealistic to expect someone to transact exactly as someone else is conceptualizing and them externalize it without any indication. For even a hint of that requires tenacious communication over periods of time. Sometimes that still does not happen.


Personality is more definitive than how a person looks or even act some times. Someone’s mistakes should not be veracious of their personality, nor should a flaw in charisma. Humanity needs to learn to look past what is on the outside, and incorporate the lifestyle of forgive and forget. More often than not these days it has become herculean for a person to admit that they are not okay. Not being okay does not mean they are weak. It is not a defect, and it won’t last forever unless the person allows it to. In a world with the absence of a concept of ideal perfection, maybe society would acknowledge life could be similar to the prospects listed.  Body positivity is enormous in this formula. Accepting that every body is perfect the way it is, something society is struggling to comprehend. Although, the concept is progressing, the stereotype for woman and men’s bodies still linger. A woman’s stereotypical body is long, full hair, bulging breasts, and a tiny waist with protruding hips, a large booty, a thigh gap, and legs that go miles. Guys’ have a similar one, but every person’s body is exquisite as it is. There is no need to change, yet if they want to their reasons should be for them, and not for anyone else.  Every kind of love is beautiful. For some people it is onerous to concur with all types of love. No one has the right to asseverate that another’s love is fallacious, even though they act like they do. The cynics can say their reason for rejecting others’ ways of life is because it is a sin in Bible, or because the outsiders made a scornful choice. Neither of those are necessarily true. God is said to love everyone and being gay or lesbian or bi is not a choice, a person is born like that. Love is perfect because of all of its imperfections.      In conclusion this superfluous scrutinized, protracted disquisition is apropos of how the world could be if there was the vacancy of idealistic versions of perfection. There is not a solitary thing that has been labeled as so. People will believe there is though, for let that be their choice. “Freedom is not worth having if it does not include the freedom to make mistakes.”



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