- Not that the above image was AI generated
By Roshan Jayasinghe
Why peace is not found in perfection, but in the steady return to balance.
Sometimes joy does not come from life being perfect, but from realizing we are whole even in the midst of its imperfections. This reflection is a meditation on returning to balance, and finding peace in the simple truth of being alive.
reflections on awareness, balance, and the quiet art of living
This morning, I woke simply feeling good. Not because everything in my life has neatly arranged itself, not because the challenges have gone away, but because I could open my eyes, breathe, and accept myself as I am.
I looked at my body, my health, my reflection, and instead of wishing it were different, I felt a quiet joy in saying: this is me. For years I wrestled with wanting things to be other than they were, but today I feel something different, a steadiness, as if life is enough just as it is.
It doesn’t mean my problems have disappeared. They’re still here. I carry questions, uncertainties, even disappointments. But they no longer drown me. I see them now as ripples in the current, they appear, they disturb, and then they pass, leaving the deeper flow untouched.
Over the years, I’ve come to understand this flow as a wheel. Just as a rider feels every bump in the road but keeps the wheel steady, I too have learned to let the jolts of life pass through me without losing balance. Discipline holds me in one moment, compassion in another, joy in another still. The spokes are different, but the hub is the same: awareness.
My relationships have taught me this most clearly. I have lived through marriage, through divorce, and now into companionship. I have been a father, a son, a relative, a friend. At times there has been closeness, at other times distance. There have been hurts and reconciliations, love and silence. These are the bumps. And yet, the wheel turns. Beneath the unevenness, there is always something steady: the current of love that doesn’t depend on conditions.
That love has become the spoke that steadies the wheel. Even when there is tension or misunderstanding, I have found that returning to love keeps me upright. It is not fragile; it is the quiet strength that runs underneath everything.
And then there is the larger world, politics, conflicts, voices arguing, opinions colliding. For years I let these things shake me. Now I see them differently: as sudden gusts of crosswind on the ride. They blow hard, they unsettle, but if I don’t tighten against them, they pass. The wheel rolls on.
So I sit here today with a song in my heart, not because life is perfect, but because I am alive. Because I can breathe, feel, love, and ride through it all.
I don’t know what joy looks like for you. It might be in laughter with your children, in the quiet of morning light, in the rhythm of a walk, or the sound of music that makes you smile. For me, it is this simple realization: the road keeps going, the wheel keeps turning, and at the hub there is always silence, always balance.
And that, for now, is fulfilling. My journey unfolds with my own becoming.
The wheel turns, the road unfolds, for now life is fulfilling, and my journey continues.
Author’s Note
This reflection is not about perfection, but about presence. It is my own lived account of how life’s ups and downs rise and fall against a steady current of awareness. The wheel, the road, the hub, they are my metaphors, but the rhythm they reveal is universal. For me, feeling good comes not from fixing everything, but from knowing that for now life is fulfilling, and that my journey continues to unfold. My hope is that in reading this, you find your own way of touching that same quiet balance in your life.
Editor’s Note
In Feeling Good: Returning to Life’s Steady Center, Roshan Jayasinghe writes not as a distant observer but as one sharing his lived experience, of relationships, challenges, and the enduring joy that arises from balance. His reflections invite readers to pause, not to adopt his path, but to discover their own ways of touching the quiet steadiness at the heart of life.
About the Author
Roshan Jayasinghe writes about consciousness, nature, and the unfolding of human experience. His reflections invite readers to pause, question, and return to the quiet clarity within. He contributes regularly to Morning Telegraph.

