00:00There is this fascinating Japanese art called kintsugi which consists of repairing broken ceramics with
00:04gold.
00:05The philosophy behind it is not to hide the cracks, but on the contrary, to highlight them.
00:09because it is precisely the fact of having been broken and repaired that gives it all its beauty
00:13'object.
00:13We all know at least one person like that, someone who's had a really rough time in the
00:16life,
00:17which was broken by trials that most people wouldn't even be able to imagine
00:20and yet it's still there, we don't even know how, but still standing.
00:23This is the person who has gone through breakups, betrayals, and sometimes bereavements that have brought them to their knees.
00:27but who each morning find the strength to get up and move forward.
00:30The craziest thing is that it's often the same people who are the first to help you when
00:33You need it
00:34when they might need it even more than you do.
00:36We tend to think that someone who has been broken is someone who is fragile, whereas
00:40It's exactly the opposite.
00:41The strongest people you know, that I know,
00:44those who have gone through the worst ordeals and are still here to talk to you,
00:47Like kintsugi, their cracks, far from being a sign of weakness,
00:50These are proof that they are stronger than anything they have been through.
00:52So if this message reminds you of certain people, the kind of silent warriors like the ones I call them, then you might be thinking of them.
00:57call,
00:57Share this video with them to remind them that their scars are worth their weight in gold.
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