json_metadata | "{"app":"musing/1.1","appTags":["life","behaviour","moral","family"],"appCategory":"life","appTitle":"There is always a saying that practice make perfect, there is also a saying that nobody is perfect. does it mean I should not practice because i can't be perfect?","appBody":"<p>\"Practice makes perfect\" and \"Nobody is perfect\" are two separate statements when one says practice makes perfect it means that taking time to actually develop yourself in a certain field would move you an inch closer to being better than you were before so the perfect inside the practice doesn't logically mean that you would be perfect without mistakes or flaws it is only a saying that encourages people two types hard in developing who they are.</p>\n<p>So the more you become better developed the more you achieve or attain a whole new level of betterment also being perfect in that statement means that, you would master your particular field and be good at them so do not take a look at the former saying logically because it's only a saying or and over statements that is used to encourage or state the importance of a point.</p>\n<p>The next one which says nobody is perfect is a statement of reality more realistic than the first one so the truth is that the first saying is like a motivational overstatement that can actually make people pursue their goals but the second statement is only a statement of fact that shows that human beings will only be human no matter how hard they strive to to attain a level of perfectness there will always be some level of humanity which will make them imperfect because that is how they are created.</p>\n<p><em><strong>So the thing is that although these statements are contradicting one of them is meant to motivate you to the better in whatever you do and the second one is meant to point you more logically and realistically</strong></em>, by telling you that you are only human after all you will only strive but you cannot handle your capacity as a human being and this is the reality of these two sayings</p>","appDepth":2,"appParentPermlink":"p32ddsnyw","appParentAuthor":"adenijiadeshina","musingAppId":"aU2p3C3a8N","musingAppVersion":"1.1","musingPostType":"answer"}" |
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