Zoroaster — "Speak the truth. Even if your voice cracks a little."
Speak the truth. Even if your voice cracks a little.
Speak the truth. Even if your voice cracks a little.
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"And the evil ones shall be led to their ruin, but the good ones shall come to their reward."
"I yearn to know the truth, O Ahura Mazda, and to live according to it."
"He who cherishes the Lie, him Ahura Mazda will destroy."
"To thee, Ahura Mazda, and to Asha (Truth) and Vohu Manah (Good Mind), I dedicate my life, my body, and my soul."
"Always meet petulance with gentleness and perverseness with kindness. A gentle hand can lead even an elephant by a hair. Reply to thine enemy with gentleness."
Iranian prophet who founded Zoroastrianism, the first major religion of cosmic dualism between good (Ahura Mazda) and evil (Angra Mainyu). Closely associated with The Buddha (near-contemporary Eastern moral-cosmological revolutionary). For an intellectual contrast, see Friedrich Nietzsche, German philosopher of 'beyond good and evil' — Nietzsche appropriated Zarathustra's name for Thus Spoke Zarathustra (1883) precisely to invert the original's moral cosmology — the historical Zoroaster founded the good-versus-evil framework Nietzsche's character announces the end of.
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Tell the truth even when you're scared, nervous, or unsure of yourself. A shaky voice doesn't weaken honest words; staying silent or lying does. The quote reframes fear as a normal part of speaking up rather than a reason to hide. What matters is that you actually say what's true, not that you sound confident or polished while doing it. Courage isn't the absence of tremble, it's speaking anyway.
Zoroaster built his entire religion around asha, a concept of truth and cosmic right-order, and taught that humans must consciously choose truth over 'the lie' (druj). He preached a radical monotheistic reform against entrenched polytheistic priests, facing rejection in his homeland before finding a patron in King Vishtaspa. A prophet publicly challenging established religion embodies exactly this idea: speaking truth from a position of weakness and social risk, voice cracks included.
Zoroaster lived roughly between 1500 and 1000 BCE in ancient Iran, among nomadic and early-settled Indo-Iranian tribes governed by warrior aristocracies and ritual priests (the kavis and karapans). Religion was a transactional affair of animal sacrifice, intoxicants, and many gods. Questioning priestly authority was dangerous and often deadly. In that world, declaring a single supreme god and demanding ethical truthfulness as worship was a direct confrontation with power, making honest speech genuinely perilous.
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