Wisdom is simply the capacity to follow your own advice. — G. Campbell Morgan

Wisdom is simply the capacity to follow your own advice.

Author: G. Campbell Morgan

Insight: We all know people who sound brilliant when talking about other people's problems. They're generous with counsel, clear-eyed about what someone else should do. Yet somehow they can't seem to follow their own guidance. They tell their friend to set boundaries, then stay resentful in a relationship where they don't. They coach someone on the importance of rest, then burn themselves out. The gap between knowing and doing is where most of us actually live. It's easy to spot the solution when you're not the one feeling the weight of it. Wisdom, in this view, isn't about having more knowledge or better insights—it's about having the discipline and courage to act on what you already understand. You don't need another self-help book or podcast. You probably already know what would help. This reframes wisdom as something closer to integrity. It's the alignment between what you believe and how you live. That's harder than being smart. It requires sitting with discomfort, resisting shortcuts, and doing the thing you've already decided matters. Most of us have the advice down. The real work is becoming the kind of person who actually takes it.

Source: Wisdom: The False and The True

The gap between knowing and doing

Wisdom is simply the capacity to follow your own advice.

G. Campbell MorganWisdom: The False and The True

We all know people who sound brilliant when talking about other people's problems. They're generous with counsel, clear-eyed about what someone else should do. Yet somehow they can't seem to follow their own guidance. They tell their friend to set boundaries, then stay resentful in a relationship where they don't. They coach someone on the importance of rest, then burn themselves out.

The gap between knowing and doing is where most of us actually live. It's easy to spot the solution when you're not the one feeling the weight of it. Wisdom, in this view, isn't about having more knowledge or better insights—it's about having the discipline and courage to act on what you already understand. You don't need another self-help book or podcast. You probably already know what would help.

This reframes wisdom as something closer to integrity. It's the alignment between what you believe and how you live. That's harder than being smart. It requires sitting with discomfort, resisting shortcuts, and doing the thing you've already decided matters. Most of us have the advice down. The real work is becoming the kind of person who actually takes it.

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G. Campbell Morgan

G. Campbell Morgan (1863–1945) was a renowned British preacher and pastor in the Baptist denomination. He is best known for his powerful and insightful expository preaching, as well as his numerous written works on biblical studies and theology. Morgan was a key figure in the early 20th-century religious landscape, influencing many with his passionate teaching and devotion to the Christian faith.

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