โ€œWhat you’re supposed to do when you don’t like a thing is…”

โ€œWhat you’re supposed to do when you don’t like a thing is…”



โ€œWhat you’re supposed to do when you don’t like a thing is change it. If you can’t change it, change the way you think about it. โ€œDonโ€™t complain.โ€
โ€” Maya Angelou, Wouldnโ€™t Take Nothing for My Journey Now

Maya Angelouโ€™s words are more than a motivational quote. They are a quiet compass for how to navigate difficulty, disappointment and everyday frustration with dignity and purpose. In a world full of problems we canโ€™t immediately fix โ€” unjust situations, unchangeable circumstances, and people we canโ€™t control โ€” Angelouโ€™s quote offers a simple but powerful framework: act where you can, change your mindset where you canโ€™t, and stop wasting energy on complaints that lead to no change.Stop complaining, start choosing
When something feels unfair, exhausting, or simply โ€œwrong,โ€ our first instinct is often to vent. We complain to friends, replay the situation in our heads, and sometimes let irritation grow into resentment. Angelou doesnโ€™t dismiss how real that pain can be. What she challenges is turning complaint into a habit. Complaining feels like action, but it rarely changes anything. It keeps us mired in the problem instead of propelling us toward the solution. Angelouโ€™s message is simple: emotions are real, but they arenโ€™t carte blanche to wallow for eternity. Naming a problem matters, but circling around the issue without action is exhausting.Her line invites us to pause and ask, Can I actually change this? If the answer is yes, then complaining becomes a distraction from the real work of addressing it.

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