# Give it back
Why we don't succeed?
`Let's think together:`
`The favourite restaurant you order your dinner from sends a note attached with today's packaging, asking you to kindly rate their place on the food ordering app. You read the message, but you do not respond and get back at unpacking your dinner. The following weekend, after a week full of work, you finally settle down, open the app, search for the same restaurant just to find out that hey, "This delivery outlet has shut down permanently!".`
All we are today is a potful of inherent knowledge which we have acquired from this world. Learning albeit seemingly personal, is a communal effort. We would not have been able to communicate globally or even personally without the shared and evolving knowledge of linguistics.
The more I have dwelled in the depths of understanding design and product, all the while developing a [[code of work]], I have lately realised that there's so much to learn and what good will all this learning be if I was to one day take it all to the grave with me.
In a world which operates in a transactional nature, sharing knowledge is one such act which creates immense value and costs nothing, and instead in return treats you with the joy of giving. Let's not let the blessing of wisdom go in vain.
`Now to answer the question:`
`Had the review been shared as requested, the restaurant's organic sustainability would have increased, resulting in more recommendations and a mutually beneficial outcome.`
Knowledge resides at the abode called abundance. Share. you can never outrun it.
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`P.S. the story used was just to draw context, there could've been "n" reasons for the restaurant's closure. Mentioning this cause I don't want to keep your thoughts dangling :)`