DAY 250

What Good Is a Book Without Wisdom of Your Own?

Subhashita (Traditional Sanskrit Maxims)
기원후 3~12세기경 편찬(구전 격언시)
ORIGINAL
यस्य नास्ति स्वयं प्रज्ञा शास्त्रं तस्य करोति किम् । लोचनाभ्यां विहीनस्य दर्पणः किं करिष्यति ॥ (yasya nāsti svayaṃ prajñā śāstraṃ tasya karoti kim, locanābhyāṃ vihīnasya darpaṇaḥ kiṃ kariṣyati)
📜 THE VERSE

What can a book do for one who has no wisdom of his own? What can a mirror do for one who has no eyes?

❓ TODAY'S QUESTION

Am I only accumulating information, or actually turning it over in my own mind until it becomes wisdom?

📝Reflection

A mirror only shows the face; without eyes to see, it is useless. In the same way, a book only holds meaning; without a mind willing to chew on it and make it one's own, it is just paper. In an age flooded with information, this verse stings all the more — reading much and becoming wise are entirely different things.

— ONGO · Curator

🌱Apply It Today

Take one thing you read today and rewrite it in your own words, not the author's.

📖 Source: Subhashita (Traditional Sanskrit Maxims). Sanskrit original with public-domain translations consulted; rendered independently by ONGO.
This verse is read as universal humanistic wisdom, not religion — no faith is promoted, and the reflection is 100% original ONGO content.

Threads woven through this verse

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