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We like to believe we are in control, we plan our days, map our futures, and convince ourselves that with enough effort, life will bend in our favour. This belief feels safe, it gives structure to uncertainty. But often, what we call control is only an illusion and the tighter we hold it, the more it slips.
The illusion of control is the quiet assumption that everything can be managed if we try hard enough. It shows up when we overthink outcomes, when we try to predict every turn, and when we struggle to accept what we did not choose. In those moments, we don’t just hope for results we insist on it.
To insist on it, is to place expectations above reality. It is to say, “This must happen my way,” even when life moves differently. And when life resists, as it often does, frustration follows not because effort is wrong, but because control was never fully ours to begin with.
There is a difference between influence and control, we influence through our actions, our discipline, and our mindset. But control, true control over outcomes, people, and time remains beyond us. Understanding this difference is where wisdom begins.
A teachable truth lies here, in that peace is not found in controlling everything, but in knowing what not to control. When you release the need to force outcomes, you create space for flexibility, growth, and acceptance, you begin to act with purpose, not pressure.
This does not mean giving up, it means showing up fully, doing your part, and allowing life to respond in its own way. It means trusting effort without becoming attached to results.
Because the more you insist on it, the heavier life becomes, but the more you understand it, the lighter everything feels.
In the end, control is not about holding tighter, it is about knowing when to let go and what to hold on it