Meeting Challenges with the Lotus Effect


Meeting challenges with the Lotus effect

For thousands of years, the lotus flower has been famous for its cleanliness, a symbol of purity throughout Asia. This amazingly beautiful flower grows in muddy water. The muddier the water, the more the blossom shines. You might think that this is a romantic illusion. But in 1975, a botanist, Wilhelm Barthlott used an electron microscope to discover the real, scientific basis for the legendary cleanliness of the lotus leaves. Every lotus leaf is covered by tiny spikes to make a rough surface on which nothing sticks (not even honey). Dirt particles remain on the surface and become attached to drops of water which roll off the leaves. This means that the leaves stay dry and clean. Barthlott named this self-cleaning process the Lotus Effect and after twenty years of research, it has been effectively used to make self-cleaning outdoor paints, glass, sprays and textiles.

We human beings can learn from nature, how to apply the Lotus Effect in our own lives. The question is whether we allow our problems to stick to us like mud and weigh us down in negativity, or we transform the "mud" in our environment into challenges, so our lives expand and flourish as we bravely and successfully meet these challenges. If we have a clear picture of what we want to achieve in life and are highly motivated, the obstacles in our lives will be washed away, as we move forward with persistence.

Am I exaggerating? Thomas Edison wouldn't think so. He became deaf at an early age and quit school at the age of 12 where he had been labeled a misfit. Like everybody, he had a clear choice : whether to join the world's victims blaming the environment for their failure or whether to push forward with courage. Edison's deafness provided the motivation for many of his inventions and he became one of the world's greatest inventors, with 1093 US patents to his name. For example, he developed the first practical electric light bulb, the, phonograph and the alkaline storage battery. Responding to the idea that he had failed after ten thousand experiments to develop a storage battery, he is quoted to have said " If I find 10,000 ways something won't work, I haven't failed. I am not discouraged, because every wrong attempt discarded is another step forward."

We don't have to be a famous inventor to make the lotus effect work in our lives .We just need to remember that our attitude to our circumstances is vital in determining our future.
This is well expressed by the following anonymous quotation.

"Courage does not always roar. Sometimes courage is the quiet voice at the end of the day saying: I will try again tomorrow."


 

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