June 30, 2026
The sad truth is that most evil is done by people who never make up their minds to be good or evil.
Arendt wrote this while processing the aftermath of World War II and the Holocaust, having fled Nazi Germany herself in 1933. She was trying to explain how ordinary bureaucrats and citizens participated in atrocity not through passionate hatred but through a refusal to think and choose. The phrase she later developed into "the banality of evil" points to something uncomfortable: drifting along with circumstances, without deliberate choice, is itself a decision. That observation cuts directly into how most of us handle change — we adapt passively, letting momentum decide, rather than choosing who we want to become in new conditions.
Reflection
Change forces you to decide what you actually stand for. What is one habit or routine you have kept without choosing it?
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