Why We Must Exhaust Our Potential Before Time Runs Out.

A Dedication to the Late GUTTABINGI MARY PRISCA.

A Young Poet’s Legacy: Her life was brief, but her voice lives on through powerful poems that inspire us to exhaust our potential before time runs out.

A Life Brief, a Voice Eternal.

GUTTABINGI lived young. She carried great gifts. Though her time on earth ended painfully soon, her words breathe, speak, and inspire. This young lady, a poet by calling and conviction, grasped what many realize too late: unused talent wastes a legacy. Through her poems, she poured out her soul and exhausted her creative potential while she still had breath.

Her passing came early, shocking those who admired her brilliance. Yet, even in death, her life delivers a powerful message—we must live, create, and give fully, because none of us knows the date of our departure.

She lifted her words and filled the world with poetry.

From a tender age, she found refuge in words. Poetry was not merely a hobby; it was her language of truth, healing, and resistance. Each poem reflected depth beyond her years—exploring love, pain, hope, identity, and the fragile beauty of life.

Unlike many who delay their dreams, she wrote relentlessly. She believed that every unwritten poem was a voice lost forever. Even when illness, hardship, or discouragement pressed in, she continued to write. She chose expression over fear, creation over postponement.

Exhausting Potential: A Lesson from Her Life.

Her story teaches a vital truth: potential is perishable.

Too often, people assume there will be more time—more tomorrows to write the book, start the project, share the idea, or pursue the calling. But her life stands as a reminder that time is not guaranteed.

She did not wait for perfection, permission or for “someday.” Instead, she exhausted her gift while she could.

She Lives Through Her Poems.

Though her body rests, her poems live on—quoted, shared, read, and felt by people she never met. This is the quiet power of creative legacy.

Her words now do what she no longer can: They comfort the grieving, inspire young writers and challenge readers to live intentionally.

In this way, she achieved immortality—not through years, but through impact.

Why We Must Act Now, Not Later.

The death of this young poet was not only a tragedy; it is also a call to action.

We are reminded that: Gifts are meant to be used, life is uncertain and time is fragile.

Waiting is often the greatest enemy of purpose. Whether your talent is writing, teaching, building, healing, leading, or creating—it deserves expression now, not someday.

Let Her Story Awaken Us.

She may have lived briefly, but she lived fully. She showed us that legacy is not measured by age, but by how completely we pour ourselves into what we were born to do.

Let her life urge us to write the poem, start the dream, speak the truth, and exhaust our potential while we still can.

Because the truth remains:
We do not know the date of our death—but we can decide the depth of our legacy.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *