Every organization eventually becomes a reflection of the beliefs it refuses to question, thus I say:
There
is a quiet rebellion hidden in the phrase ‘in some instances, mud is thicker
than water’[1]. It resists the familiar proverb that elevates blood as the
ultimate bond, and instead gestures toward something messier, more earned, more
human. Mud is not inherited, it is made. It forms where elements collide; water
and earth, movement and resistance, thought and action. To say mud is thicker
than water suggests that the ties forged through shared struggle, shared
terrain, and shared endurance often outweigh those we are born into. It is not
a dismissal of blood, but a reordering of what truly binds.
Water,
in its purity, flows freely and formlessly. Like air giving life to it, it does
not discriminate; it touches everything and belongs to nothing, yet valuable.
Blood, often romanticized, carries lineage and obligation, but it can also
carry distance, expectation, memory and silence. Mud, however, is intimate,
expensive, abundant, and a mistake at times or a purposed creation. It clings
to form and shape if designed, and marks those who pass through it. You do not
encounter mud without being changed by it. The relationships formed in the
trenches of life through hardship, collaboration, failure, and rebuilding, are
thick with retrace. They do not wash away easily because they were not formed
easily.
In
communities shaped by adversity, this truth becomes undeniable. People who have
weathered storms together of economic hardships, social upheavals, and personal
losses, tend to develop bonds that transcend genealogy. These are the people
who show up not because they must, but because they overstand. They have stood
in the same storm, felt the same weight, and chosen to remain regardless. That
shared endurance creates a density in connection, a kind of loyalty that is not
inherited but constructed, layer by layer, like sediment forming something
solid and referable.
There
is also a certain honesty in mud. Water can be deceptive in its transparency by
reflecting light in ways that obscure depth. Mud reveals friction, screams
concerting, and violates dryness. It is the product of disturbance, of forces
meeting and refusing to remain separate. In this way, relationships built
through real engagement post disagreement, presided reconciliation, and mutual
growth, carry thickness that surface-level harmony cannot replicate. They
emerge tested and awarded stripes for having absorbed impact and still held
together.
In
professional spaces, the idea takes on a different but equally compelling
dimension. Teams that have navigated crises together often exhibit a cohesion
that cannot be manufactured through policy or culture decks. The shared
experience of problem-solving under pressure creates a bond that is practical,
not sentimental. Trust, in these contexts, is not declared, but demonstrated.
And once formed, it becomes a kind of institutional memory, a collective
resilience that shapes future action.
With
addition to fact, there is a danger in romanticizing mud without acknowledging
its weight. Mud can slow movement or cease it in that it can trap. The same
bonds that hold people together can also resist necessary change. Loyalty, when
unexamined, can become inertia. This is where discernment becomes critical. Not
all accounted connections are healthy. Some persist not because they are
strong, but because they are familiar. The challenge lies in distinguishing
between bonds that nourish and those that merely endure.
The
phrase also invites a reconsideration of identity. If we are not solely defined
by where we come from, then we are, in part, defined by where we have been and
who we have become alongside. The people who have walked with us through
transformation and have seen us in our unformed states and remained, become
part of our narrative in a way that lineage alone cannot capture. They are
witnesses to our becoming, and in that witnessing, they shape it.
With
reality increasingly characterized by mobility and fragmentation, the idea of
chosen, constructed bonds becomes more relevant. Families are redefined, and
same is with relationships. Communities are built across distance and
difference. The thickness of these connections is not measured by blood, but by
presence, by consistency, and by the willingness to stay when it would be
easier to leave. Mud, in this sense, is not just a metaphor but a trialed
method. It is in how we build something that holds. Inherited
ties versus earned terrain.
In conclusion: to say mud is thicker than water is not
to reject tradition, but to expand on it. It acknowledges that while blood may
introduce us, it but is shared experience that connects and binds us. It is in
the friction, the mess, and the unplanned convergence of lives that something
enduring is formed. These are the connections that carry weight because they
have carried us. Fact is, beyond any superficial rendering;
clean water forgets, mud remembers.
And
perhaps that is the quiet truth the phrase reveals: that what we go through
together often matters more than where we come from. In the end, it is not the
clarity of water that defines us, but the substance of the ground we have
crossed and the people who chose to walk it with us, even when it was thick,
uncertain, and slow, yet opted to soldier on with soles printing our trek as we
venture still into the belly of upcomes unbeknownst to mere mortals.. .dp
[1] by
Patrick Mathebe Kgaphola
_Another reflection from the intersection of commerce, power, and human behaviour.
Examining the human pulse beneath the corporate machinery, for the future rarely defeats defines of organizations, and more often, it simply waits for them to outgrow their own thinking.. .
¦KgeleLeso
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