Cada momento dedicado al aprendizaje es tiempo bien invertido.
There is something quietly powerful about the idea that every single thing you learn, no matter how small or seemingly irrelevant, holds value. Richard Templar's words, "Learning is never a waste of time," carry a kind of gentle reassurance that many of us need to hear, especially in a world that constantly measures worth by immediate results and visible productivity. When we learn something and cannot yet see how it fits into our lives, it can feel pointless. But Templar reminds us that knowledge has a way of finding its purpose, often when we least expect it.
Think about the times you picked up a random skill or read about a topic purely out of curiosity. Maybe you spent an afternoon learning how to bake sourdough bread, or you watched a documentary about ancient civilizations just because it caught your eye. At the time, it might have felt like a small indulgence. But weeks later, that bread recipe became the thing that brought your family together on a difficult weekend, or that history lesson sparked a conversation that opened a new friendship. Learning plants seeds, and seeds grow in their own time.
BibiDuck knows this feeling well. Imagine a little duck who once spent an entire rainy afternoon learning how to fold origami cranes, thinking it was just a fun way to pass the time. Months later, a friend was feeling low, and that same little duck folded a tiny paper crane and left it on their desk with a note that said, "You are stronger than you know." That small, forgotten afternoon of learning became a moment of real connection and comfort. Nothing learned is ever truly wasted.
Sometimes we hold back from learning because we worry it won't lead anywhere practical. We think, "What's the point of studying philosophy if I work in accounting?" or "Why learn a new language if I never travel?" But this kind of thinking shrinks our world. Every subject we explore stretches our mind, sharpens our empathy, and quietly builds the person we are becoming. The accountant who studied philosophy might ask better questions. The person who learned a language might one day comfort a stranger in an airport who needed to feel understood.
So today, give yourself permission to learn something simply because it interests you. Pick up that book you've been curious about. Watch that tutorial. Ask the question you've been holding back. Trust that your curiosity is leading you somewhere meaningful, even if the path isn't clear yet. Learning is never wasted because you are never wasted. Every piece of knowledge you gather is a quiet gift you are giving to your future self, and that future self will thank you for it.
