Dr. Reyaz Ahmad
A bottle of Coca-Cola is an ordinary object. We see it in grocery stores, small shops, restaurants, cinemas, and airports. The liquid inside remains the same. The bottle does not become bigger, sweeter, healthier, or more powerful when it moves from one place to another. Yet its price changes dramatically. In a supermarket, it may cost one dollar. In a restaurant, it may cost three dollars. At an airport, it may cost four or five dollars. The bottle has not changed, but the environment around it has changed.
This simple example carries a powerful lesson for human life: sometimes our value is not low; we are simply standing in the wrong place.
Many people lose confidence because they are not appreciated where they are. A talented teacher may feel ordinary in an institution that values paperwork more than classroom impact. A hardworking employee may feel invisible in an office where favoritism is stronger than merit. A student may feel weak in a classroom where marks are valued more than curiosity. A writer may feel discouraged because one editor rejected an article. A young entrepreneur may feel defeated because one investor did not understand the idea. In each case, the person may begin to believe, “Perhaps I am not good enough.” But the real question may be different: “Am I in the right environment?”
The tragedy of modern life is that many people measure their worth through the eyes of those who never had the vision to see it. They accept the judgment of a small circle as if it were the verdict of the whole world. One rejection becomes a life sentence. One failure becomes a definition. One insult becomes an identity. But a person’s value cannot be decided by one workplace, one classroom, one society, or one opinion.
History repeatedly proves this. Many great scientists, writers, artists, leaders, and reformers were misunderstood in the beginning. Their ideas were rejected not because they were worthless, but because their surroundings were not ready. A seed cannot become a tree if it is thrown on concrete. The problem is not always with the seed. Sometimes the problem is with the soil.
Consider a diamond. If it is lying in dust, someone may mistake it for an ordinary stone. But when it reaches the hands of a jeweller, its brilliance is recognized. The diamond did not become valuable only when the jeweller saw it. It was already valuable. Recognition came later. Human beings also carry abilities that may remain hidden until they meet the right opportunity, the right mentor, the right institution, or the right platform.
This is especially important for young people. Many students compare themselves with others and quickly conclude that they are behind in life. They see classmates scoring higher marks, friends getting jobs earlier, or social media influencers displaying success, and they begin to doubt their own future. But life is not a race on a single track. Each person has a different field, different pace, different strength, and different timing. A fish should not judge itself by its ability to climb a tree. A bird should not feel inferior because it cannot swim like a fish. The question is not whether you are valuable. The question is whether you are developing your value in the right direction.
The workplace offers another powerful example. There are employees who remain average for years in one organization, then suddenly shine after moving to another. The person is the same, but the culture is different. In one place, creativity may be punished; in another, it may be rewarded. In one office, initiative may be seen as arrogance; in another, it may be seen as leadership. In one institution, a person may be treated as a burden; in another, the same person may become an asset. This is why people must not confuse lack of recognition with lack of ability.
However, this lesson should not be misunderstood. It does not mean that every criticism is wrong or every failure is caused by the environment. Self-improvement is essential. A bottle of water cannot demand the price of medicine unless it has the quality required for that value. Similarly, a person must continue learning, improving skills, correcting weaknesses, and developing discipline. Self-worth does not mean self-deception. Confidence must be supported by competence.
But competence also needs context. A brilliant mathematician may not be valued in a place that has no respect for analytical thinking. A sincere journalist may struggle in a system that rewards sensationalism over truth. A compassionate doctor may feel suffocated in a profit-driven medical setup. A principled leader may be ignored in a society addicted to shortcuts. The fault may not lie only with the individual; sometimes the environment itself has become too small for the person’s purpose.
This message also applies to societies and nations. Countries lose their best minds when they fail to value them. When researchers are not supported, they migrate. When teachers are underpaid and disrespected, education declines. When honest officers are sidelined, corruption grows. When youth are not given opportunities, frustration spreads. A nation that does not recognize the value of its people forces them to search for value elsewhere. Human talent is like water: if blocked in one direction, it will find another path.
Parents and teachers also need to understand this lesson deeply. A child who does not excel in one subject may have extraordinary ability in another. A student weak in mathematics may be strong in communication, design, sports, business, or social leadership. Unfortunately, many children are labelled too early. They are told they are “slow,” “average,” or “not capable.” Such words can damage confidence for years. Instead of fixing permanent labels on young minds, we should help them discover the field where their ability can breathe.
Social media has made this problem more complicated. People now seek validation from likes, views, comments, and followers. A meaningful thought may receive little attention while a shallow trend becomes viral. Does that mean the meaningful thought has no value? Certainly not. The digital world often rewards speed, shock, and entertainment more than depth, truth, and wisdom. Therefore, we must not hand over the measurement of our worth to algorithms.
The lesson of the airport Coca-Cola is not about price alone. It is about positioning. The same product becomes more valuable where demand, need, and context are different. Human beings too must learn to position themselves wisely. If your talent is ignored in one place, improve it and search for a better place. If your voice is not heard in one room, do not stop speaking forever; find the audience that needs your message. If your efforts are not respected, do not immediately conclude that your efforts are useless. Perhaps they are being invested in the wrong soil.
Life demands patience, but it also demands movement. Waiting in the wrong place forever is not patience; it is self-neglect. Loyalty is noble, but loyalty to a place that continuously destroys your dignity becomes dangerous. Respect others, but do not allow their limited judgment to become the boundary of your life.
The world is full of people who discovered their worth only after leaving the place where they were underestimated. Their success was not magic. They simply moved from a place that priced them cheaply to a place that understood their value.
So, when life makes you feel ordinary, remember the bottle at the airport. It did not change its contents. It changed its context. Sometimes, you do not need to become someone else. You need to become better, stronger, and wiser—but you may also need to stand where your value can finally be seen.
Author Can Be Mailed At reyaz56@gmail.com

