Los cambios intencionales y deliberados en el comportamiento son los verdaderos motores del avance personal.
There is a quiet kind of waiting that many of us know all too well. We sit with our hopes tucked close to our chests, looking out at the horizon, half-expecting that one fine morning everything will simply be different. The job will improve, the relationship will heal, the sadness will lift — all on its own, like clouds parting after a storm. Robin Sharma's words cut gently but clearly through that waiting: "Your life does not get better by chance, it gets better by change." And the moment you really let that sink in, something shifts inside you.
Chance is a beautiful, romantic idea. It is the stuff of fairy tales and lucky lottery tickets. We love the idea of chance because it asks nothing of us. It lets us stay comfortable, stay still, and still dare to hope. But if you look honestly at the moments in your life that truly transformed you — the ones that made you feel more like yourself, more alive, more free — almost none of them happened because the universe simply decided to be generous. They happened because someone made a move. Most of the time, that someone was you.
BibiDuck thinks about this often, waddling through life with a heart full of big dreams and small, wobbly steps. There is something deeply freeing about realizing that you are not at the mercy of luck. You are not waiting for a golden ticket that may never arrive. You are, in fact, holding the pen that writes the next chapter. That is not a burden — that is the most beautiful kind of power there is.
Imagine a woman named Clara. For three years, Clara told herself she would start painting again once things calmed down, once the kids were older, once work got less hectic. She was waiting for the perfect conditions to arrive at her door. One afternoon, almost on a whim, she bought a small set of watercolors and sat at the kitchen table for twenty minutes while dinner was in the oven. It was messy. It was imperfect. But something woke up inside her that day — not because life handed her a gift, but because she chose to reach out and take one for herself. That tiny change cracked open a door she had kept shut for years.
The beautiful truth about change is that it does not have to be enormous to be meaningful. We often paralyze ourselves by thinking that real change means quitting your job, moving cities, or completely reinventing who you are. But change can be as quiet as choosing a different response in an old argument, as small as waking up ten minutes earlier to sit with your thoughts, as simple as saying yes to something that scares you just a little. Every one of those small pivots is a declaration that you are not leaving your life up to chance.
Of course, choosing change is not always easy. Sometimes it means admitting that the way things are is not the way things have to be, and that can feel uncomfortable. It asks you to take responsibility — not in a harsh, self-blaming way, but in an empowering, gentle way. It asks you to believe that your choices matter. And they do. They matter enormously. Every decision you make is a small vote for the kind of life you want to live.
It is also worth remembering that change does not demand perfection. You do not have to get it right the first time, or even the fifth time. What matters is that you keep moving, keep adjusting, keep showing up for the life you are trying to build. The path does not need to be straight. It just needs to be yours, and it needs to be in motion.
So today, wherever you are, whatever you have been waiting on — consider this a gentle nudge. Not a push, not a demand, just a warm little reminder that the life you are dreaming of is not going to wander in through the front door on its own. But you can go out and meet it. You can take one small step, make one small change, and let that be enough for today. Because better is not a matter of luck. Better is a matter of you.
