This post has also been cross published at The Speaking Tree, World of Moms, YouthKiAwaaz and My City 4 Kids.
This is a news bite from New York Times from 20 years
back. The time was April, the year, 1996. A few of the possessions of President
John F Kennedy were up on auction. His arm chair and his coffee table, for
example. One of the last items up on auction was his tape measure. And guess
what price it commanded? It sold for a whopping 42,000 USD, not allowing for
commission and procedural charges. Yes, 42000 USD, back in the year 1996.
Now, imagine this. Say, this man who won this tape
measure… Now, the same evening he'd possibly be sitting on his rocking chair by the
fireplace, oh sorry did I not say this was the month of April? Nevertheless,
he’d be sitting, rocking, on his grandfather chair made of oakwood, holding his
pipe in one hand and the tape measure in another, in the right, and looking at the thing - the thing - with
a sense of immense pride and achievement. Say, he might even be planning in his mind that he'd call the local goldsmith the very next day to order a box made of 24-carat gold
and a Belgium mirror glass topping, in which he would then house this tape measure. And maybe - who knows - some hundred years away from that evening, his great grandchildren will look at that box and talk of
him, their great grandfather, as to how he was a man of great taste.
Now imagine - just that moment, the plumber who was working to fix the
tap in the kitchen enters his room and says – “Sir, did I just leave my tape
measure here in this room? There, give it to me." And maybe then he may add: "Sir, I heard of your win. Congratulations! They say
they’ll deliver it tomorrow; the papers are with your secretary!
Now, imagine how his sentiments will change towards that
object he was holding in his hand! A fall - from the cliff, maybe? From
absolute pride to utter disgust?
But really, if you think of it… nothing really has
changed on the outside, but for a simple piece of innocent information! And for
all you know, that thing is still a tape measure. Who knows, it can even be
more accurate than the one President John F Kennedy used to use!
What do you see here? Do you see that while nothing at all changes in the
exterior, this entire upheaval of change of emotions, sentiments, feelings are
happening just inside the mind of this one person? And thus, that fall from
pride to disgust… it is all just a matter of the mind? That, how we feel, how
elated or disappointed we feel… is really, just a matter of the mind?
My enemy is a bad person. That flower is beautiful. My
manager is biased, and my parents are silly. My ex boyfriend was good when he
was, but not any good now that he is not! The hailstorm is beautiful when I am
in Kerala but not so beautiful when I am on my way to office. And when I was a
child, I used to float paper boats in rain. But you know what? That day I had
planned a terrace party for my friends, and what a terrible luck I had. It
rained!
Sounds familiar?
Now, if you just stop for a while, hold your breath and
think... you’ll know that the cause of your happiness, or the reason of your
sorrow, they both reside in the same place. Your pride and your shame, your
guilt and your hope... they all stay, just side by side, in the same place. And
that place is you!
And not just you, even. It is that invisible, little bit
of you, your mind, and your way of thinking that really makes all the
difference. And, now that you know it, don't you think that it might be a slightly better idea to perhaps try to
control the way of thinking things, than going out to the world with a whip
stick in your hand, attempting to put the things in the right order out there! There, won’t you agree?
The thing is, as it is true in most cases, I find it
rather easy to describe it to other people much more than I can get to
learn and accept it myself. But for all you know, while it will indeed take a lot of
time and a lot of effort to adopt it to your own thinking, it is not such a bad
idea to teach it to the “external” sources around you. Well you see, if
they become calm and more at peace, your job is half done anyway! And as you
can guess, my guinea pig for such exercises is…
So, just that other day, I was waiting at the bus stop to
pick her up back from school. The bus arrived, her highness alighted. Now, just
as she got down from the school bus, she started… just like every day, with a
list of complains:
“You know Mum, Anmol said that my painting is ugly, and Rahul
laughed when Simran pushed me and I fell on the ground. I will never be friends
again with Arhan, who snatched away my lunch box and ate away all my pasta. I
stop her, and ask – Okay, so tell me, how do you feel? She stops me and
continues, Aratrika is bad, and Hamid is jealous, and Adhyan is selfish. He ate
his own Oreo biscuits even when he knows I love them.”
I hear her out patiently. Then, just as she stops to catch her
breath, I interrupt – “Okay, don’t tell me what they are, okay? You tell me,
what do you feel? Angry? Sad? Jealous? Come with me.”
We walk back a few steps and stand on the divider on the
road. It is mid-afternoon and the traffic on the road is heavy. The vehicles
are all impatiently honking their horns, and the drivers are peeking out of the
windows to howl at each other some choicest of words. I ask her, “What do you
see?” “Cars,” she replies. “Well, we’ll play a game, alright? We’ll start to give these cars names. Now, look at that red one, that truck.” I tell her. “Let’s call that Angry.
Look how loud it sounds in horn! And see, that small green car, let us call
that one Jealous. It is trying to overtake other cars and push its way through.”
“But, this is just the road?” – She looks at me, confused. “Well, not really,
not in our game. In our game, we will think of this road as the mind, alright? Now,
look at that… a white car. We will call it friendship, ok? Now, let us wait and
see?”
In two precise minutes, the vehicles pass and few more
take their place… we watch the traffic for a while, get bored, and then come
back.
As we walk back our way to home from that bus stop, I
tell her that it does not matter who says or does what to her, they’re but just
outside. All they can do is make cars like those we saw. And then, inside her
mind there is this road, and all these feelings are like cars that pass through
it. Some of them are bad cars and they make a lot of noise and make us feel
sad, and some of them are good cars who make us feel good things. However, we
much know that they are just cars on the road and that, before we know, they
will pass!
“But what if there’s a breakdown?” – my skeptical
daughter asks, only just about half convinced. “Well, we’ll call a crane.
Better still, we’ll ask all the happy cars to push it clear from the road. How
about that”
“Let’s try this out the next time we’re angry or sad,
shall we? – She asks, enthusiastically. “Sure, dear!” – I tell her.
Now, the smaller task is done. The bigger task is however
left to do. To tell myself that next time I feel overwhelmed, that - It is just
a car on the road!
(This was my last speech of my ACB journey, and won me a best speaker award too!)
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