THE WINGS OF FAITH
There is no need to fear another human being.
But,
we all do…
We
fear our superiors, people in authority… we fear those who constantly try to
intimidate us, criticize or condemn us… who keep drawing our attention to our
flaws and ignore our fine traits… We fear those who manipulate, harass, or
conspire against us.
So, to
accept the statement, “There is no need to fear another human being,” is to accept
a ‘lie’!
At
least, that’s what it sounds like.
Karan*
is a well-brought up young college kid. I have been teaching him for almost
five months now. He comes from a fine family and goes to a very reputed
college… has his big circle of friends, comes by his car or a motor bike…
speaks fluent English and everything seems fine with this young man. But, I have
been observing that his self-confidence level in the subject I have been
teaching (and other subjects, too, I guess) is very low. He comes out with
doubts, which makes you feel that he hasn't understood anything at all… But, not
always. Ask him a question, he surprises you with his best answer… the next
moment, ask him the same question, perhaps, in another context, he is either
blank or ends up giving something stupid.
It
leaves you irritated and annoyed. After five months, you expect him to show
confidence… When he doesn’t, you lose your own!
You,
now, give him a sermon…
It doesn't help. It only makes him more nervous, guilty… diffident.
This
morning, I was going through all these… I knew, somewhere along, this young man
had lost faith in his abilities… that, he could do a lot, lot more. That, he
had to get hold of himself… not allow himself to be intimidated by anyone,
including his teachers and parents… Yes, he had to take charge of himself and
quick…
I
started acting kindly towards him,
make him feel relaxed.
I wanted the fear to
go…
openness and ease to come.
“Karan,
do you find what I teach difficult to understand?” I gently inquired.
“No
sir, I very much follow what you teach,” Karan told me, “I only get scared
whenever you ask me something!”
I
turned cold, all of a sudden!
What
was important? To teach him the subject (which he says he understands) or to
teach him how to have self-belief, the faith in himself.
There
were other students around him. I felt it was important to address this issue.
I told them what I had heard from my friend, Mr. Manjeet, last morning. He had
told me this to convey the same point: how, so often, we forget about our own
powers!
There is an old way
of catching a parrot or a pigeon. A string is tied loosely around the windows.
It is a trap. The bird comes and sits on it, mechanically… and the lose string
suddenly takes the bird down… the bird doesn't know what is happening, it
panics and tries to get hold of the string desperately… In the process, it gets entangled, trapped!
In that moment of desperation and panic, the bird has
forgotten that it possesses wings… that it can fly!
I
lovingly narrated Karan and his friends this tragic story of a bird’s life…
“Karan,
why should you be afraid of me, or any one?” I asked him, “Don’t you have
powers, the wings?”
Nothing
more was taught after that…
It was
a very, very important lesson, not only for Karan and his friends… but, to me,
as well.
* Name changed
GERALD
D’CUNHA
Pic.: Ronald Fernandes
Comments