Share a proverb you think is completely wrong and make your case.
The Proverb That Failed—And Yet Saved Me

When a Wrong Saying Led Me to the Right Life
Proverbs are curious little travellers. They journey through generations, crossing borders and centuries, carried on the tongues of grandparents, teachers, neighbours, and strangers. Some are wise as ancient oaks; others are as stubborn as weeds. We repeat them so often that we seldom pause to ask whether they are true.
One such proverb that shaped my life was this:
“Good things come to those who wait.”
At first glance, it sounds comforting. It promises that patience will eventually be rewarded, that time itself is a silent servant working on our behalf. It encourages stillness and trust. Many people cherish it.
Yet, as life unfolded before me, I discovered that the proverb was only half true—and half-truths can be more dangerous than outright lies.
For years, I waited.
I waited for opportunities to knock on my door. I waited for recognition to arrive. I waited for circumstances to improve. I waited for people to understand my worth. Like a passenger standing endlessly on a deserted platform, I expected a train that had no intention of stopping.
Then one day, life taught me a lesson that no proverb had mentioned:
Good things do not merely come to those who wait; they come to those who prepare while waiting.
The difference is enormous.
A farmer may wait for rain, but he first ploughs the field.
A sailor may wait for favourable winds, but he repairs his sails beforehand.
A musician may wait for an audience, but he practises long before the curtain rises.
Waiting alone changes nothing. Waiting with preparation changes everything.
That realisation altered the course of my life.
I stopped treating patience as a substitute for action. I began to understand that destiny is not a postman delivering parcels at the correct address. It is more like a sculptor handing us a block of stone and asking what masterpiece we intend to carve from it.
The world is filled with people waiting for the “perfect moment.” They wait to write, to travel, to forgive, to learn, to love, to begin. Yet perfection is a horizon; no matter how far we walk, it remains in the distance.
Meanwhile, those who dare to start with imperfect tools often accomplish extraordinary things.
The irony is delightful. The proverb that turned out to be incorrect became one of my greatest teachers. By questioning it, I learned to question many other assumptions.
I learned that:
– Silence is not always wisdom.
– Busyness is not always productivity.
– Popularity is not always success.
– Comfort is not always happiness.
– Waiting is not always patience.
– Life seldom rewards spectators. It applauds participants.
History itself confirms this truth. Great discoveries were not found by those who sat beside the road expecting miracles. They were made by people who walked into uncertainty, stumbled, learned, and continued moving. The river reaches the sea not because it waits, but because it flows.
As the years pass, I have grown fond of flawed proverbs. They remind me that wisdom is not something to inherit blindly; it is something to examine carefully. Every generation must polish old truths and discard old errors. Even a mistaken proverb can become a signpost if it encourages us to think rather than merely repeat.
Today, if someone asks me whether good things come to those who wait, I would smile and answer:
“Sometimes. But the best things usually come to those who wait with purpose, work with courage, and move with faith.”
For life is not a waiting room.
It is a workshop.
And the clock on its wall was never meant to be watched—it was meant to inspire us to begin.
Do not sit counting distant stars, While dreams grow old in silent jars; The dawn belongs to hearts that rise, Not merely those who scan the skies.
The road rewards the willing feet, The fields reward the hands that meet; And fortune seldom knocks by chance— She favours those who join the dance.
So question words grown faint with age, And write your wisdom on life’s page; For even errors, strange though they seem, May guide a soul towards its dream.





