There is an age-old proverb in the
villages. Making a child laugh and playful might not earn you a good name, but
if she cries while under your care, it will surely earn you a bad name. Negative
experiences leave a far bigger impact on us than the positive ones. One sour
word very easily undoes the sweetness of hundreds of beautiful words. This
proclivity to lock the ‘negative’ in our mind while filtering out hundreds of
‘positives’ is the cause of strife, tension, anxiety and discomfort within. It
also very easily sours relationships.
We simply judge people for the ‘exceptions’
in their behavior, ignoring the common ‘mundanities’ of their demeanor. We
simply catch the black dot on the otherwise white board. It even seems that we
are operating as watchdogs looking and sniffing for the chinks in the walls. I
sometimes wonder whether we are actually companions while walking with someone
or are we spies going with a mission to catch the other person on the wrong
foot. No wonder we feel so vulnerable and insecure most of the time. A spy on a
secretive mission will of course be on his toes and full of tension.
It becomes so easy to blame others for
all the problems in our lives. But why would we always go searching for the
tiny black dot on a white canvas? Why would we simply forget the rest of the
white sheet? We are always looking, peeking, searching for those chinks in the
armor. It just shows how insecure we are. What breeds this insecurity? It’s
caused by the conflicts squirming inside us: the friction caused by our quest
for the eternal ease of ‘being’ and the poor ‘becoming’ that we are molded into
by conditioning, roles, stereotypes, expectations.
Most of
the time we are self-charged on the grand mission of aggravating our own
miseries. We are suitably helped all along by our ability to hold onto the
master illusion that others are responsible for all the shit flying around in
our lives.
We are always pulled in two
directions. Then we get scared. We are a scared species. We put the blame on
others in order to somehow clear our guilt for not being what we are supposed
to be. To have that conflict-free ease of being, we have to learn to retain our
vision spread out to still see the surrounding white even though the black dots
appear here and there. We have to accept and view situations and people in
totality. We have to accept this law that an all-white scenario is impossible
to sustain as per the laws of nature. It’s a dynamic canvas. Things and people
change and shift in shape, size and color. They aren’t stones that they will
retain the same appearance. They aren’t dead. They too are evolving and
growing, shifting and changing as much as we are doing the same.
It’s very easy to theoretically
discuss, write and understand this fact. But it’s very difficult to bring it
into practice. Anything that requires rewiring the habitual network needs a
regular exercise. So we can remind ourselves regularly that people aren’t stone
idols cast in the mold of our expectations. They are an evolving life. They will
grow and change and come out of the mold we have created for them to fit our
needs and desires. Accept this fluidity and sanctity of change in a living form
and most of the judgments will drop of their own. We then accept the black dots
on a white canvas.
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