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December 5, 2025

Article of the Day

Why someone might not appear happy on the outside but be happy on the inside

People may not appear happy on the outside while being happy on the inside for various reasons: In essence, the…
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Solving problems requires more than just reacting to symptoms. It demands that we dig deeper, uncover causes, and confront the origin of what’s wrong. Surface-level fixes may offer short-term relief, but unless the root of a problem is understood and addressed, it will return. Often in new forms. Often with more damage.

A symptom is what grabs attention. The argument. The breakdown. The failure. But the root is what silently caused it. Miscommunication. Poor planning. Fear. Resentment. A long-standing habit of avoidance. The deeper cause is almost always older, more hidden, and more uncomfortable to face.

People often avoid getting to the root because it takes time, effort, and honesty. It may mean asking hard questions. It may mean admitting your own part in the issue. It may mean letting go of an excuse that you’ve held for years. But without that step, solutions remain shallow.

In relationships, this might look like arguing about small things when the real issue is trust. In work, it might mean treating burnout with a weekend off instead of addressing broken systems or lack of boundaries. In personal life, it might mean feeling constantly unsatisfied and chasing distraction, when the deeper issue is a lack of purpose.

Getting to the root involves investigation. What led to this? When did it start? Who benefits from things staying this way? What emotion or belief sits at the center of it? These are not easy questions, but they open the door to real resolution.

It also requires silence. Not every problem is loud. Some roots lie in what’s not being said, not being done, not being allowed. That’s why paying attention to patterns is critical. The same issue showing up in different forms is a clue that the root has not been dealt with.

When you get to the root of something, the clarity can be uncomfortable, but it’s freeing. You stop wasting energy fixing what’s not broken and begin strengthening what actually is. The real healing, real improvement, and real growth happen there.

There is no lasting change without root work. You can rearrange the surface endlessly, but if the foundation is cracked, the structure will fail again. Dig deep. Be honest. Stay with the discomfort until you understand it. That’s how real problems are truly solved.


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