The phrase, who will pay for the broken dishes? Our parents have used it for decades in the face of any family and business problem, but it can also be taken to the political sphere. I pause, I look back -past- and it’s impossible for me to stop thinking about a fractured piece, Sinaloa.
Sinaloa needs to be restored, we could apply the Japanese kintsugi philosophy, with which we can all rebuild ourselves and focus on our strengths. Making an analogy, just as they use gold dust or lacquer to recover broken ceramics and exalt fractures, here we can promote self-esteem, discover and enhance our abilities and be generous with those who have less.
Obviously, not even economic fractures, let alone social ones, can be healed with gold dust, history is unalterable and irreplaceable. Rebuilding the social fabric and the economic model will take time and will be uphill, but the beautiful piece -Sinaloa- is already being restored with the arrival of the new governments of transformation, let’s take care of them and keep their shape, let’s make them shine in the exhibition.
Future generations do not have to pay the piper, political disasters have to end, let’s put an end to bad practices, eliminate corruption and actions that harm society. The valuable piece has to pass from parents to children, be a source of family, social, professional and political pride.
Our society dreams of those wise minds and hands that think about the exit -at the end of life’s path, at the end of a management or a legislature- and not only about the entrance -at the arrival-, we cannot deliver broken pieces, we cannot fail, we have an ethical and moral commitment to our state.
If this beautiful piece called Sinaloa continues to break, the time will come when no one can repair it. We are in time and form, we have the necessary talent -our people-, applying the will, together we will achieve it.
#pay #broken #dishes