When a cup of tea is full, it starts to spill. Not loudly. Not dramatically. It simply has no room left to hold what is being poured. And still, the pouring continues. We live like overfull cups. We hold our worries close, stack our responsibilities high, carry the weight of words we should have spoken and silences we should have kept. We absorb the emotions of rooms we walk into. We collect the opinions of people who may never think of us again. And then one ordinary morning, over one ordinary conversation, we spill. Not because that moment was too much, but because every moment before it was already too much, and we never stopped to pour anything out. There is an old Zen story of a scholar who visits a master seeking wisdom. The master begins to pour tea. The cup fills. The tea rises to the brim. And still, he pours. The scholar watches in alarm as tea floods the table. "Stop! The cup is full. No more will go in." The master smiles. "You are like this cup. Already full of your own ideas, your own certainties. How can I show you anything new until you first empty your cup?" This is not just a lesson in humility. It is a lesson in survival. The bravest thing we can do is not to hold more. It is to release. To set down the cup, let the tea cool, and make space for what the next moment wishes to bring.
Fullness is not strength. Space is.
Alka Thakur
Leadership Communication & Soft Skills Consultant Bangalore,
Fullness is not strength. Space is.
Alka Thakur
Leadership Communication & Soft Skills Consultant Bangalore,




