Mario Benedetti He is one of the writers dearest of the latin american literature. Poet, novelist and essayist, He built a work that knew how to combine simplicity, depth and an enormous ability to talk about human emotions.
Born in Paso de los Toros, Uruguay, in 1920, he published more than eighty books including poetry, fiction and essays. Works such as La tregua, Gracias por el fuego and numerous collections of poems made him a reference for several generations of readers.
Much of his production revolves around themes such as love, the passage of time, memory and the small experiences of everyday life. He also dedicated many of his reflections to the human condition and the way in which people face their own limits.

Among those phrases remains a particularly well-known one: “Perfection is a polished collection of errors.” In a few words, Benedetti questions the idea that success is the result of a smooth journey.
A different way of understanding perfection
The phrase breaks with a traditional conception of perfection, understood as the absolute absence of mistakes. Instead, Benedetti proposes an image much closer to the real experience.
Talk about a «collection of errors»that is, a path formed by attempts, learning and constant corrections. What finally seems perfect does not arise spontaneously, but after going through numerous difficulties.

The verb «polish» also plays an important role in the metaphor. Just as a stone acquires shine after being worked for a long time, people also grow from the mistakes that they manage to understand and transform.
From that perspective, making mistakes stops being a definitive failure and becomes a necessary stage of learning. Each experience provides information that allows us to improve in the next attempt.
Teaching is especially applicable to any creative, professional or sporting discipline, where achievements are usually the result of years of practice and countless corrections invisible to those who observe only the final result.
A reflection that remains relevant
The phrase continues to be shared because it challenges a very present reality. In a time where Social networks tend to only show successes, many people develop the feeling that making mistakes means being left behind.
Benedetti suggests exactly the opposite. It suggests that errors are part of the process and that, far from hiding them, It is advisable to recognize them as a source of experience.

His reflection also invites us to be more patient with ourselves. No skill is developed immediately and no important project is built without moments of uncertainty or difficulty.
That’s why perfection it appears as a point of arrival and not as a precondition. What we admire in other people is usually the result of a long journey of learning that remains hidden.
Decades after writing these words, Benedetti continues to offer a simple and deeply human teaching. Excellence does not come from avoiding mistakes, but from learning from them, correcting them and continuing to move forward. In that sum of attempts, falls and new opportunities, what begins to be built that, over time, may seem perfect.



