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It was small, simple, and maddeningly hard. One tap too light — you fall. One tap too strong — you crash.
And yet, somehow, we couldn’t stop playing. We’d promise ourselves “just one more try” and end up sitting there an hour later, staring at that little yellow bird like it held the secrets of the universe.
The Art of Letting Go: What Flappy Bird Really Taught Me
The Illusion of Control
When I first started playing Flappy Bird, I wanted control. I wanted perfection. I wanted to beat the game, conquer it, master it. But the more I played, the more I realized something simple yet humbling: you never really control Flappy Bird. You just guide it — moment by moment, tap by tap, breath by breath.
And that’s not just true for games. It’s true for life.
You can plan everything perfectly, calculate every move, and still hit a pipe out of nowhere. Life, like Flappy Bird, doesn’t follow your script. The trick isn’t to control it — it’s to flow with it.
The Rhythm of Failure
Flappy Bird doesn’t give you time to think. It just keeps moving forward. You’ll crash hundreds of times, maybe thousands, before you find your rhythm.
At first, that feels frustrating — even unfair. But soon, you realize that each failure is part of the music. Each fall teaches your fingers a little more about timing, your brain a little more about patience, your heart a little more about calm.

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