How can you climb a mountain, by fate or by work? Your work carries you apart from mediocre and makes you think infinite. Your fate can ignite you, no doubt, but this ignition is sustained by work. Work and fate are two different things, but both are very strongly interconnected to each other. If you work hard, you can definitely have faith in your fate, and if you do not, your fate will betray you almost every time. Either you make your fate stronger than before by being diligent, or you blame it for not being workable. The choice is yours. 


It is not that you should not believe in fate since some get success earlier, some get it later. This difference is, therefore, created by fate, not by work, as you might have worked as much as the one who gets success earlier than you. But, here is the truth. Your fate does not define your future; it works with your work, which then defines your future. You can not trust your fate every time, but your work is always going to be trustworthy. Your fate stops you from being productive as soon as you start being a servant of it, whereas your work encourages you to be more productive every time. Fate can create a worriment on the road to your destination, but work is going to be a weapon to eradicate this worriment created by your fate. Things are made complex by fate which is then brought back to normal and simple by work.



There is one more hidden aim behind your real aim. Like, your aim is to be a teacher, but why do you want to be a teacher? If you find this answer, you will surely become a teacher one day by any means. Finding that hidden aim puts you on a road where you see as many ways as your brain triggers you to think. And this is made possible by work, not by fate. You work, you make your fate. There is no one in this world who has achieved big with his fate. Fate definitely works, but only when you work by yourself and become independent of fate.


     Fate works only when you work.