Actress Shilpa Shetty has been making headlines lately for sharing cryptic messages on Instagram amid her husband Raj Kundra’s arrest. On Thursday, Shilpa Shetty took to her Instagram to share an extract from a book that had a passage on committing mistakes and learning from them.
An excerpt by Sophia Loren reads, “Mistakes are part of the dues one pays for a full life.” Further talking about mistakes, the passage read, “We can’t make our lives interesting without making a few mistakes here and there. We hope that they won’t be dangerous mistakes or mistakes that hurt other people. But there will be mistakes.” “We can see our mistakes as things we’d like to forget or as our most interesting, challenging and stimulating experiences. Not because of the mistakes themselves but because of what we learned from them,” it read further. “I’m going to make mistakes, I will forgive myself and learn from them,” the passage concluded.
This won’t be the first time Shilpa has shared a thought-provoking passage on Instagram. Earlier, she shared a similar Instagram Story wherein she shared a passage on ‘faith’. The quote by Bertrand Russell read, “What we need is not the will to believe, but the wish to find out.” The excerpt read: “Faith involves a leap of imagination. Real faith also involves searching, a desire to find answers to life’s most difficult questions. We may have faith that follows the teachings of organised religion, or we may have faith we have acquired through our own experiences and studies. In either case, we do not betray our faith when we continue to search for meaning. Rather, we deepen and strengthen it. My faith sustains me–and leads me on a continuous search for more knowledge.”
Shilpa Shetty took a brief break from work after her husband Raj Kundra was arrested for his alleged involvement in the creation and distribution of adult content. Kundra is currently under judicial custody. He has been named as a key conspirator by the Mumbai Police and is currently booked under the following: Sections 420 (cheating), 34 (common intention), 292, and 293 (related to obscene and indecent advertisements and displays) of the Indian Penal Code (IPC) in addition to relevant sections of the IT Act and the Indecent Representation of Women (Prohibition) Act.