We All Are perfectly
imperfect
#Story Her life
Whoa,
I’m running short of words right now, but I cannot afford this because I have
to speak.Thank you so much for all the love, for all the warmth thank you for
accepting me. Well, I always start my talk with a disclaimer, and that
disclaimer is that I’ve never claimed to be a motivational speaker. Yes, I do
speak. But I feel more like a storyteller because wherever I go I share a story
with everyone.
Well, it is
a story of a woman. Who’s perfectly imperfect life. Made her who, and what she
is today. It’s the story of a woman who
in pursuit of her dreams and aspirations made other peope realize. That if you
think that your life is hard and you’re giving up on that because you think
your life is unfair. Think again because when you think that way you are being
unfair to your own self.
It’s the
story of a woman who made people realize that sometimes problems are not too
big. We are too small because we cannot handle them. It is the story of a woman
who we time realized the real happiness doesn’t lie in success, money, fame. It
lies within real happiness lies in gratitude.
So, I am
here. And I’m going to share the story of that woman.
That is my story.
The story
of gratitude. I love you too. I love you all.
I believe in the power of words, many people
speak before they think, but I know the value of word. The word can make you,
break you. They can heal your soul. They can damage you forever. So, I always
try tu use the positive words in my life wherever I go.
They call
it adversity I call it opportunity. They call it weakness I call it strength.
They call me disabled I cal myself differently
abled.
They see my
disability I see my ability.
There are
some incidents that happen in your life, and those incidents are so strong that
they change your DNA.
Those
incidents or accidents are so strong that they break you physically.
They deform
your body, but they transform yor soul.
Those
incidents break you. Deform you, but
they mold you into the best version of you, and the same thing happened to me.
And I’m going to share what exactly happened to me.
I was 18
years old when I got married, and this thing I’m sharing for the very firs time
on an international level. I was18 years old when I got married. I belonged to
a very conservative family, a Baloch family, where good daughters never say no
to their parents. My father wanted me to get married, and all I said was if
that makes you happy I’ll say, yes! And, of course, it was never a happy
marriage.
Just about
after two years of getting married, about nine years ago, I made a car
accident. Somehow my husband fell asleep, and the car fell in the ditch. He managed to jump out saved himself. I’m
happy for him, but I stayed inside the car, and I sustained a lot of injuries.
The list is a bit long. Don’t get scared. I’m perfectly fine now.
Radius ulna
of my right arm were fractured. The wrist was fractured. Shoulder bone and
collarbone were fractured. My whole ribcage got fractured, and because of the
ribcage injury, lungs and liver were badly injured. I couldn’t breathe. I lost
you renal bowel control, that’s why I have to wear the bag wherever I go, but that injury that changed me and my life
completely as a person in my perception towards living my life
was the
spine injury
three
vertebrae off my backbone were completely crushed, and I got paralyzed for the
rest of my life.
So, this
accident took place in a far-flung area in the outskirts of a very small
province Baloch, where there was no first aid, no hospital, no ambulance. I was
in the middle of nowhere in that toppled car. Many people came to rescue me.
They gave me CPR. They dragged me out of the car and while they were dragging
me out. I got complete transaction of my spinal cord.
And now
there was this debate going on. Should we keep it here she’s going to die?
Where should we go. There is no ambulance. There was this four-wheel Jeep
standing in the corner of the street, they said:
Put her in
the back of the Jeep, and taje here to the hospital, which is three hours away
from this place. And I still remember that bumpy ride. I was all broken.
They threw
me at the back of the Jeep, and they rushed me to the hospital.
That is
where I realized that my half body was fractured, and a half was paralyzed.
I finally
ended up in a hospital where I stayed for two and a half months. I underwent
multiple surgeries.
Doctors
have put a lot of titanium in my arm. There’s a lot of titanium at my back to
fix my back. That’s why people in Pakistan call me the irin lady of Pakistan.
Sometimes I
wonder how easy it is for me to describe all this all over again, and somebody
has rightlysaid that when you share your story, and it doesn’t make you cry
that means you have healed.
Those two and a half months in the hospital
were dreadful. I will not make up stories just to inspire you. I was at the
words of despair.
One day
doctor came to me, and he said: well, I heared thay you wanted to be an artist,
but you ended up being a housewife. I have a bad news for you. You won’t be
able to paint again because your wrist and your arm are so deformed you won’t
be able to hold a paint again, and I stayed quiet.
Next day
doctor came to me and said: your spine injury is so bad you won’t be able to
walk again. I took a deep breath, and I
said : it’s all right.
The next
day doctor came to me and said: because of your spine injury and the fixation
that you have in your back, you won’t be able to give birth to a child again.
That day I was devastated.
I still
remember. I asked my mother: why me?
And that is where I started to question my
existence that why am I even alive?
What’s the point of living?
I cannot
walk. I cannot paint. Fine. I cannot be a mother, and we have this thing in our
heads being women that we are incomplete without, having children.
I am going
to be an incomplete woman for the rest of my life. What’s the point?
People are
scared they think I will get divorced. What is going to happen to me?
Why me? Why
am I alive? We all try to chase this tunnel. We all do this, because we see
light at the end of the tunel, which keeps us going. My dear friends, in my
situation, there was a tunnel, but I had to roll on, but there was no light,
and that is where I realized that the words have the power to heal the soul.
My mother
said to me: this too shall pass. God has a greater plan for you. I don’t knpw
what it is, but he surely has, and in all that distress and grief somehow or
the other those words were so magical that they kept me going. I was trying to
put that smile on my face all the time was hiding. It was so hard to hide the
pain, which was there, but all I knew was that if I will give up, my mother and
my brothers will give up too. I cannot see them crying with me. So, what kept
me going was, one day I asked my brothers. I know I have a deformed hand, but
I’m tired of looking at these white walls in the hospital and wearing these
white scrubs. I’m getting tired of this. I want to add more colors to my life. I
Want to do something.
Bring me
some colors. Bring me some small canvas. I want to paint.
So, the
very first painting I made was on my death bed, where I painted for the very
first time.
It was not
just an art piece or just my passion. It was my therapy. What an amazing
therapy it was without uttering a single word I could paint my heart out. I
could share my story. People used to come and say: What lovely painting so much
color. Nobody could see the grief in it. Only I could.
So, that’s
how I spent two-and-a- half months in my hospital. Crying.
Never
complaining or whining, but painting. And then I was discharged, and I went
back home, and i realized that I have developed a lot of pressure ulcers on my
back and on my hip bobe. I was inable to sit.
There were a lot of infections in my body, a lot of allergies. So, doctors
wanted me to lie down on the bed straight.
For not six
months, for not one year, for two years.
I was
bedridden, confined in that one room, looking outside the window, listening to
the birds chirping and thinking maybe there will be a time when we’ll be going
out with the family, and enjoying the nature. That was the time where I
realized, how lucky people are, but they don’t realize. That is the time where
I realized that the day I’m going to sit I’m going to share this pain with
everyone to make them realize how blessed they are, and they don’t even
consider them lucky. There are always turning points in your life. There was a
rebirth day that I celebrated after two years and two and a half months, when I
was able to sit in a wheelchair that was the day when I had the rebirth. I was
a completely different person. I still remember the day I sat on the wheelchair
for the first time knowing that I’m never going to leave this. I saw myself in
the morror, and I talked to myself, and I still remember what I said. I cannot
wait for a miracle to come and make me walk.
I cannot sit in the corner of the room crying cribbing and begging for
mercy because nobody has time. So, I have to accept muself the way I am. The
sooner the better. So, I applied the lip color for first time, and I erased it,
and I cried. And I said: what am I doing?
A person In
a wheelchair should not do this. What will people say?
Clean it
up. Put it again. This time I put it for myself because I wanted to feel
perfect from within.
And that
day I decided that I’m going to live life for myself. I am not going to be that
perfect person for someone.
I am just
going to take this moment, and I will make it perfect for myself. And you know
hot it all began. That day I decided. That I’m going to flight my fears.
We all have
fears. Fear of unknown. Fear of known.
Fear of
losing people. Fear of losing help. Money.
We want to
exel in a career. We want to become famous. We want to get money. We are scared
all the time. So, I wrote down one by one all those fears, and I decided that
I’m going to overcome these fears one at a time. You know what was my biggest
fear?
Divorce. I
couldn’t stand this word. I was tryingto cling on to this person who didn’t
want me anymore, but I said: No.
I have to
make it works, but the day I decided that this is nothing, but my fear.
I liberated
myself by setting him free, and I made myself emotionally so strong there the
day I got the news that he is getting married I sent him a text, and I’m so
happy for you and I wish you all the best. And he knows that I pray for him
today.
My biggest
fear, number two was, I won’t be able to be a mother again, and that was quite
devastating for me, but then I realized there sre so many children in the world
all they want is acceptance. So, there is no point of crying just go and adopt
one, and that’s what I did.
I gave my
name in different organizations, different orphanages. I didn’t mention that
I’m on a wheelchair dying to have a child. So, I just told them that this is
Muniba Mazari and she wants to adopt a boy or girl. Whatsoever, but I want to
adopt a kid. And I waited patiently.
Two years
later I got this call from a very small city in Pakistan. I got a call and they
said: are you Muniba Mazari? There is a baby boy, and would you like to adopt?
And when I
say, yes. I could literally feel the labor pains. Yes, yes I am going to adopt
him.
I am coming
to take him home, and when I reached there the man was sitting and he was
looking at me from head to toe, and in back of my head, I kept thinking that:
oh my god.
He is going
to say: she’s on the wheelchair. She doesn’t deserve it.
How is she
going to take care of him?
And I
looked at him, and I said: do not judge me because I’m on the wheelchair, but
you know what he said: I kow you will be the best mother of this child.
You both
are lucky to have each other. And that day, that was two years pr two days old
and today he’s six. You will be surprised to know another bigger fear that I
had in me. It was facing people. I used to hide myself from people. When I was
on bed for wyo years I used to keep the door closed. I used t pretend that I’m
not going to meet anyone tell them that I’m sleeping. You know why? Because I
couldn’t stand that sympathy that they had for me. They used to treat me like a
patient. When I used to smile they used to look at me and say that: you’re
smiling? Are you okay?
I was tired
of this question being asked: are you sick?
Well, a
lady yesterday at the airport asked me: are you sick?
And I said:
well, besides the spinal cord injury I’m fine. I guess.
But those
are finally cute question. They never used to feel cute when I was on the bed.
So, I used to hide myself from people knowing that, oh my god I’m not going to
see thst sympathy in their eyes. It’s allright. And today I’m here speaking to
all this amazing people because I have overcome the fear.
You know
where you end up being on the wheelchair, what’s the most painful thing?
That’s
another fear that people on the wheelchair the people who are differently abled
have in their hearts but they never share. I’ll share that with you. The lack
acceptance. People thingk that there will ot be accepted by the people because
we in the world of perfect peopleare imperfect. So, I decided that instead of
starting an NGO for disability awareness, which I know will not help anyone. I
started to appear more in public. I started to paint. I always wanted to. I’ve
done a lot of exhibitions. I’m Pakistan’s first wheelchair-bound artist. I’ve
doe a lot of modeling campaigns, different campaigns for brands like Toni and
Guy. I have done some really funny breaking the barriers kind of modeling.
There was this one by the name clown town where I became a clown. Because I
know that clowns have hearts too. And then, I also decided that if I really
want to make the difference. I am not going to let people use me for their
polio campaigns, where they will make you a victim or an emblem of misery and
mercy and will say that you know what give polio drops your children or they
will became like this girl. I decided that I’m going to join the national TV of
Pakistan as an anchorperson and I’ve been doing a lot of shows for last three
years. So, when you accept yourself the way you are the world recognizes you.
It all starts from within. I became. Thank you.
I became the national goodwill ambassador for
UN Women Pakistan, and now, I speak for the rights of women children. We talk
about inclusion diversity gender equality which is a must. I was featured in
BBC hundred women for 2015. I am one of the Forbes 30 under 30 for 2016, an it
all didn’t happen alone. You all are thriving in your careers. You have bigger
dreams and aspiration in life. Always remember one thing: on the road to
success, there is always we, not me. Do nit think that you alone can achieve
rhings. No! there is always another person who is standing behind you maybe not
coming on the forefront but behind you. Praying for you when supporting you.
Never lose that person. Never!!
No matter
how much I say that I couldn’t find a hero, so became one. I still want to
recognize those three people in my life, who literally changed my life
completely, and I get inspiration from them every single day.
Walled
Khan. Many people know about the terrorist attacks in Pakistan. We have lost
many people, and I’m sharing this wit a very heavy heart because we actually
have lost a lot of people, and this huge turmoil of terrorism. These people are
barbarians. They do not see people. They are even worse than animals. They have
killed people in mosques. They have killed people in churches, temples, even in
schools. There was this terrorist attack in army public school Peshawar. Where
these terrorist entered in an examination hall, and they killed our children.
And in that attack that day this beautiful boy Waleed Khan who was my hero. My
real-life hero was the Proctor, who was taking care of the students, was
keeping an eye on the students. Those barbarians shot him three times in the
face, five times on his body and he fell down. I was asked to give a talk in the
school after a week of that terrorist attack. With a very heavy heart, I went
there and I spoke. We sang a few national songs. I thought that maybe I’ve done
my part,but deep inside it was killing me. I could see children injured. I
could see children sitting on the wheelchairs looking at me wondering: what next. What was our fault just because we
were here to give examination we have been shot. So, many people so many
children lost their friends. Their classrooms were empty the next day they went
to the classroom. So, this kid Waleed Khan. I was asked that he is in a
hospital right now, and you have to go and see him, and motivate him and tell
him that it’s going to be okay. And when I saw Waleed Khan coming on the
wheelchair for the first time in front of me. His face was all deformed. His
leg was fractured. His arm was fractured. He couldn’t talk. He lost his teeth.
He cannot sneeze. He cannot smell. He cannot eat, and I kept thinking: What
should I say? That everything is going to be all right? No! nothing is all
right. And while I was juggling with the words, what to say, what not to say,
this beautiful child Waleed Khan came to me and he said: Are you Muniba Mazari?
I sad: Yes.
He said:
Let’s take a selfie.
And with
that beautiful toothless smile of Waleed Khan. We took that beautiful selfie
that I still have with me. I don’t share that here because it was in a very bad
shape at that time. And that is where I realized that when I was thinking too
much about his deformities. He’s happy with himself. He doesn’t even care
because today he goes in the same school, and when somebody asks him that what
happened to your face. Why so many scars? You know what he says: these scars
are my medals, and I wear them with pride. And how beautifully he says: the terrorist
wanted me not to study. I am going to study. I will become a doctor one day.
And this is my way of taking revenge from those terrorist. Another like a
real-life hero, of course, my son. His name is Niele. I learned so much from
this kid. The first and foremost thing is patience. How to be patient when you
know that your mother cannot walk. When you know that your mother is different
from the other women. When you know that your mother cannot go out and play
with you. How to stay calm. He loves football, and when we got the very first
football, he was four years old, he was super excited. I still remember.
He came in
the room, and he said: Mom, let’s play football. And kept the ball in my feet,
and he said: Let’s kick it. And that day I felt disabled.
I said: I
cannot kick the ball.
And I was
down with the same face. He looked at me, and he said: well, that’s alright.
Your legs are not working, but your hands too. Let’s play catch the ball. You
know what, that day he made me realize that when you think your glass is
half-empty, come on, your glass is half-full. It’s all in here and here. Last,
but not least. The woman who made me realize that heroes have no gender. The
woman who believed in me even when I was completely at the words of despair
where everybody left. Ehe was there, and every time I looked at herwithout
saying anything, she used to look at me and said: this too shall pass.
God has a
bigger plan, and one day you will say that: oh my god, that is why God has
chosen me. She never cried in front of me. She has always said that there will
be haters, there will be naysayers, teher will be disbelievers, and then there
will be you proving them wrong. My mother.
Whatever I
am today. I’m nothing without her. Thank you, mom, I wish you wre here. Thank you
for making me who I am today.
You know
what we human beings have a problem, out many problems, teher is one more and
this is self-created one. We always expect ease from life. We have this amazing
fantasy about life. This is how things should work. This is my plan. It should
go as per my plan. If that doesn’t happen, we give up. So, my dear friends let
me tell you one thing. I never wanted to be on the wheelchair. Never thought of
being on the wheelchair. I was always aspiring to do bigger things but had no
idea that for that I have to pay the price to be where I am today. It’s a vert
heavy price. This life is a test and a trial and tests our trials are never
supposed to be easy so when you’re expecting are from life. And life gives you
lemons then you make the lemonade, and then do not blame life for that because
you were expecting ease from a trial. Trial make she was stronger a better
person. Life is a trial. Every time you realize that. It is okay to be scared.
It is okay to cry. Everything is okay, but giving up shouls not be an option.
They always say that failure is not an option. Failure should be an option
because when you fail you get up, and then you fail, and then get up, and that
keeps you going. That’s how humans are strong. Failure is and option should be
an option, but giving up is not. Never.
We have
this thing in minds. We call it perfection. We want everything perfect. We want
oyrselves to be perfect. There is this image in our head about everything,
perfect life, perfect relationships, perfect career, perfect amount of money
that we need to earn, no matter what. Nothing is perfect in this world. We all
are perfectly imperfect, and that is perfectly all right. That’s all right.
You… we were here not to become the perfect people. Those people, who tell you
how to look perfect, even those people are imperfect. Trying to fligt this fear
of looking imperfect. I used to be perfect. I still remember. I got this
compliment years ago when I used to walk. Oh my god, look at you. You’re fair.
You’re tall. You’re perfect. Look at me now. Only the perfect eyes can see
that. Only the perfect eyes will see that. So, yes. In all those imperfections,
you have to listen to your heart. You don’t have to look good for people. You
don’t have to be perfect just because other people want you to be perfect. If
your soul is perfect from within that’s all right. This is all what you want.
This is all what you need to be. Our society has made very weird. Very weird
kind of norms to look perfect and great. For men it’s different. For women it’s
different. We think too much about what people say. With we listen to ourselves
too little.
You know
what makes you perfect? When you make someone smile.
You know
what makes you perfect? When you try to do something good for the people around
you.
You know
what makes you perfect? When you feel someone’s pain, and how beautiful pain is
that it connects you with people. No other medium can connect you with other,
but the pain. That’s why I always say that : I’m in pain, and that’s a blessing
in disguise for me.
Today. Just
because I’m in pain and I’m on the wheelchair I work for children being the
head of CSR for a company. We conduct medical camps in far-flung areas of
Pakistan where so many kids die because they don’t have medical facilities. And
I personally believe just because they cannot afford to live doesn’t mean we
let them die. So, we give them money. We give yhe medical treatment. We try to
hel their wounds. Physical and emotional. And I also worked for the beautiful
people. We call them third gender, the transgender community of Pakistan. You
know what connects me with them? All my imperfections. When I go and I hug them
they never judged me, and this very good friend og mine her name is Bijli.
Bijli means electricity. She called herself electricity, and I said : are you
electricity? She says: No. I’m lightning. I’m as strong as lightning. We have a
very bad powe outage. So, she doesn’t want me to call her electricity. So, she
says: I am very strong. I’m Panda. I’m lightning. She came to me, and the first
time I hugged her she said: you are just like me, and I said: yes, I am like
you.
Because two
people we are so imperfect. So, how beautiful these imperfections are that
because of these imperfections you can connect with people then why are we all
running afte being perfect.
What’s the
point?
Every time
I go in public I always smile. It’s always a have a big smile on my face, and
people ask me: don’t you get tired of smiling all the time? What’s the secret?
I always say one thing that I have stopped worrying about the things that I
have lost, the pople that I’ve lost, tjings and people who were meant to be
with me are with me. And sometimes, somebody’s absence makes you a better
person. Cherish their absence. It’s always a blessing in disguise. I always say
that people are so lucky they don’t even realize you must be thinking: okay,
you are lucky in what sense? Well!
The breath
that you just took was a blessing. Embrace it!!
There are
so many people in the world who is dreaming to live a life th at you are living
right now. You have no idea. Embrace each, and every breath that you are
taking. Celebreate your life. Live it.
Don’t die
before your death. We all die. We live this ine routine of a day for 75 years
and we call it life. No, that’s not life. If you’re still thinking why you have
been sent here if you’re still juggling with thw concept of why you were here.
You haven’t lived yet. You work hard. You make money. You do it for yourself.
That’s not life. You go out. You seek for people who need your help. You make
their lives better. You become that sponge which can absorb all the negativity,
and you can becomethat person who can emit beautiful positive vibes, and when
you realize that you have changed someone’s life and because if you this person
disn’t give up.
That is
dthe day when you live. Always. We were talking about gratitude. Why I smile
all the time? I cry all night when
nobody sees me because I’m a human, and I have to keep the balance. And I smile
all day because I kow that if I will smile I can make people smile. That keeps
me going. Be grateful for what you have, and you will always, always end up
having more. But if you’ll cry and if if you’ll crip for the little things that
you don’t have or the things that you have lost. You will never ever have
enough. Sometimes, we are too busy thinking about the things that we don’t have
that we forget to cherish the blessings that we have. I’m not saying that I’m
not healthy and that makes me. Unlucky. But yes, it is hard.
It is hard
when I say that I cannot walk. It is hard to say when I wear yhis bag. It hurts,
but I have to keep going because never giving up is the way to live. Always. So,
I’ll end my talk in a very short note.
“Live your
life fully. Accept yourself the way you are. Be kind to yourself. And only then
you can be kind to others. Love yourself and spread that love. Life will be
hard. There will be turmoils. There will
be trials, but that will only make you stronger. Never give up. The real happiness
doesn’t lie in money or success of fame. I have this all I never wanted this. Real
happiness lies in gratitude. So, be grateful. Be alive. And live every moment.”
thank you
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