One of my passions is talking about resilience. I am almost always enchanted when I discover people who have overcome barriers and turmoil and yet still manage to inspire others to be better.
In my youth, the story that fascinated me was that of the Phoenix. To me, it is the ultimate symbol of overcoming — not simply for surviving the fire, but for using the ashes to rebuild itself even stronger.
Resilience is the ability to face adversity and recover without losing one’s essence. It is finding the strength to face pain, even when it insists on tearing you apart inside. In simpler words, it is the ability to transform difficult moments into learning, moving forward in a renewed way.
Recently, I heard an illustration that made me reflect on how people react to daily stress. Imagine three elements placed in boiling water for fifteen minutes: a carrot, an egg, and coffee.
The carrot, which was hard, became soft and fragile. The egg, which was protected by a thin shell and had a soft interior, became rigid and hardened. But the coffee… the coffee is unique. It does not let itself be transformed by the water; it transforms the water itself into something new.
There are people like the carrot: they seem strong but wither in the face of difficulty. Others are like the egg: their interior becomes hard, and they turn bitter and cold after suffering heartache or conflict. But those who resemble coffee are unique because, instead of being changed by the pressure, they change the environment around them for the better, even under intense heat.
When we face our worst moments, the choice is ours. Go back to your past for a moment. Review that time when your foundations were shaken. The impact was certainly overwhelming. How did you overcome it? Were you the carrot, the egg, or the coffee?
In those moments when everything seems to have ended, perhaps that is exactly where the new begins. The Phoenix teaches us about letting go: to be reborn, we must let the “old self” burn. Sometimes, we complicate life by trying to carry ashes, when we should be flapping our wings for a new flight.









