You know, I was re-reading some Coelho the other day and this line just jumped out at me: “Each human being was given two things…” It perfectly captures that beautiful, frustrating tension of being human—we’re blessed with incredible visions for our lives, but then we’re cursed with the hard work of actually building them. It’s the ultimate setup.
Share Image Quote:The core message is simple but profound: our greatest gift and our heaviest burden are one and the same—the imperative to turn our inner dreams into outer reality.
Look, I’ve worked with enough entrepreneurs and artists to see this play out again and again. The “blessing” is the intoxicating part. It’s that 3 AM idea that jolts you awake, the vision board, the business plan that feels like a sure thing. It’s pure potential. But the “curse”… that’s the Monday morning after the inspiration. It’s the grind. The rejection. The thousand tiny, unsexy tasks that separate a dream from a done thing. And here’s the real kicker—the curse isn’t a punishment. It’s the mechanism. It’s the universe’s way of making us earn the dream, of forging us into the kind of person capable of actually holding it. The friction is what gives it value.
| Context | Attributes |
|---|---|
| Original Language | Portuguese (369) |
| Category | Success (341) |
| Topics | determination (14), dreams (28), purpose (186) |
| Literary Style | philosophical (434) |
| Emotion / Mood | motivating (311) |
| Overall Quote Score | 86 (262) |
This one is correctly sourced to Paulo Coelho’s 2005 novel, The Zahir. You’ll sometimes see it floating around unattributed on social media, but it’s pure Coelho—that classic theme of a spiritual journey intertwined with a physical one. No need to fact-check this one beyond the book itself.
| Context | Attributes |
|---|---|
| Author | Paulo Coelho (368) |
| Source Type | Book (4032) |
| Source/Book Name | The Zahir (25) |
| Origin Timeperiod | Contemporary (1615) |
| Original Language | Portuguese (369) |
| Authenticity | Verified (4032) |
Paulo Coelho(1947) is a world acclaimed novelist known for his writings which covers spirituality with underlying human emotion with a profound storytelling. His transformative pilgrimage along the Camino de Santiago inspired his breakthrough book, The Pilgrimage which is soon followed by The Alchemist< which went on to become the best seller. Through mystical narratives and introspective style, Paulo Coelho even today inspires millions of people who are seeking meaning and purpose in their life
Official Website |Facebook | Instagram | YouTube |
| Quotation | Each human being was given two things: a blessing and a curse. The blessing is our dreams, and the curse is that we must make them real |
| Book Details | Publication Year: 2005 (Brazil); ISBN: 978-0-06-083281-0; Latest Edition: HarperCollins 2006; 336 pages. |
| Where is it? | Approximate page 237, Chapter: The Dual Gift |
In the novel, this idea surfaces as the narrator, a famous writer, grapples with the emptiness that can follow achieving your dreams. He’s living the “curse” part—he’s made his dreams real, but now he’s lost his wife and is questioning everything. It’s a powerful reminder that the journey doesn’t end at success; the curse and the blessing are a lifelong cycle.
I use this quote all the time. Seriously. When a client is in the “trough of sorrow” after a launch didn’t go as planned, I remind them they’re just experiencing the curse—and that it’s a necessary part of the process. It’s perfect for:
| Context | Attributes |
|---|---|
| Theme | Wisdom (1754) |
| Audiences | entrepreneurs (1006), leaders (2619), seekers (406), students (3111) |
| Usage Context/Scenario | career development (33), life coaching (109), motivational events (92), personal growth workshops (49) |
Question: Is the “curse” meant to be a negative thing?
Answer: Not at all. It’s only a curse if you resist it. Think of it like weightlifting—the resistance is what builds the muscle. The “curse” is the resistance that builds your capability.
Question: What if my dream feels too big?
Answer: Then the curse feels bigger, right? The trick is to break the dream down. The curse isn’t about achieving the whole thing in one go; it’s about the next small, tangible step. The next email, the next sketch, the next conversation.
Question: Does this mean we’re doomed to be unhappy until we achieve our dreams?
Answer: That’s a great question, and a common misinterpretation. The joy isn’t just in the achievement; it’s in the alignment. It’s in knowing you’re on the path, doing the work. The misery comes from ignoring the call, from letting the dream stagnate. The curse, when embraced, is actually a source of purpose.
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