The Cracked Pot

K

Kingsley Asuamah

Guest

Why Your Imperfections Might Be Your Greatest Gift​

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Photo by Quang Nguyen Vinh: https://www.pexels.com/photo/woman-making-clay-pot-2166456/

Have you ever felt like you’re not enough?

Not smart enough.

Not talented enough.

Not as perfect as the people around you.

We’ve all been there. And sometimes, those doubts whisper so loudly that we start to believe them.

But what if the very thing you see as your flaw is your greatest contribution?

Let me tell you a story.

The Potter and His Imperfect Creation


Once upon a time, in a quiet village lived an old potter named Ramesh. He was known for shaping the most beautiful clay potsβ€Šβ€”β€Šsmooth, strong, flawless.

But among his creations was one that was… different. A small pot with uneven edges and a tiny crack near its handle. Compared to the others, it seemed clumsy. Useless.

One day, the villagers asked Ramesh to make pots that could carry water from a river far away. When he chose the cracked pot along with two perfect ones, the little pot trembled inside.

Why me? It thought. I’ll only mess this up.

The Burden of Comparison

On the journey back from the river, the cracked pot tried to hold on. But as they walked, water dripped through its crack, leaving a trail of droplets behind.

It felt ashamed.
I can’t even hold water properly. I’m letting everyone down.

The next day, it tried harder. But again, water leaked out. This time, it apologised to Ramesh.

β€œI’m not like the others,” it said. β€œI’m broken. You should leave me behind.”

The Unexpected Purpose

But Ramesh didn’t scold it. Instead, he smiled.
β€œCome,” he said, β€œI want to show you something.”

He led the pot down the same path they had walked every day. And to its surprise, both sides of the road were lined with blooming flowers.

β€œYou see,” Ramesh explained, β€œI knew about your crack. So I planted seeds along this path. And every drop of water you thought you wasted was watering those flowers. You didn’t fail me. You created beauty and life for this village.”

The Moment of Realisation

For the first time, the little pot felt something it had never felt before: pride.

It realised that its value didn’t lie in being perfect. Its value lay in being itself.

From that day on, the pot no longer compared itself to the flawless ones. Because it finally understood that what it thought was a flaw was actually its gift.

The Lesson for Us​


So, let me ask youβ€Šβ€”β€Šwhat cracks do you see in yourself?

Do you apologise for them? Hide them?

Do you believe they make you less valuable?

What if those very cracks are watering someone else’s life?

What if your imperfection is the thing someone else needs to bloom?

We live in a world obsessed with perfectionβ€Šβ€”β€Šperfect bodies, perfect careers, perfect Instagram lives. But real impact, real connection, real beautyβ€Šβ€”β€Šit often comes from the cracks.

The moral is simple: we all have cracks.

They don’t make us broken. They make us human. And sometimes, they make us extraordinary.

So instead of asking, What’s wrong with me? Try asking, What flowers might be growing because of me?

Because your imperfections aren’t holding you back, they’re carrying life to places you may never see.

You’re not broken. You’re watering flowers you don’t even know exist.

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The Cracked Pot was originally published in Long. Sweet. Valuable. on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.

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