IMPATIENCE HURTS
Impatience hurts. It hurts badly.
When others react and behave
impatiently, we do not like it… We brood, cry and sulk. Mostly, when it comes
from people who are our superiors – like parents, teachers, principals, bosses
or any people in authority. We are unable to express our displeasure and
disapproval so easily with them… So, we tend to suppress our feelings, bottle
up and brood… keep the anger to boil inside, and then, blast it out somewhere
else, on some of our own soft targets!
When our doctors, teachers,
advocates, parish priests, and parents, constantly, react to us with impatience,
we think hundred times before we open our mouths before them… In fact, we avoid
them… We anticipate their reaction at slightest provocation, a small slip from
our end… and we block ourselves from them!
All of us have, at least, some
people in our lives who are chronically impatient. Most of these people are
unavoidable… and, therefore, we have no option but to learn some survival
skills to deal with them. Some of us do; and, some of us don’t.
What is interesting is this: even
though we know impatience hurts badly… make us sad, angry and sulk… yes, even
though we do not like impatience from others, we do exactly the same when it
comes to our own juniors: our children, students, staff, and patients… We react
and behave with them with similar impatience… say things which hurt, criticize
and snub. This is the time, we coolly forget how it hurts those who are at the receiving
end of our impatience… we forget that they too feel sad, angry and go into
their caves.
This is, really, a crazy cycle…
Other do, we don’t like… We do, and others don’t like… Still, it goes on and
on!
In
my own case, impatience does come up easily when I deal with my students…
Luckily, I catch myself, mid-way, indulging in it and change my course… And,
there are times, I fail, and, end up causing the damage.
For last few days, I have been
telling myself in my mind, “Look at the ‘big picture’.
Now, the phrase may mean looking
at the problem or an issue in its total perspective – from all angles – and not
just from one, from a narrow angle. But, I have been telling this to myself to
remind me not to forget my ‘Final goal’ when it comes to the one at whom I vent
my impatience: my student, my staff, my child, my spouse or any one. I remind
myself to keep the ‘goal’ in mind: “What is more important – to help your
student to develop into a fine human being, or learn to do some fast
calculations?” “What is more important: to feel close, loved and safe with my
child/spouse or to ‘overplay’ their minor mistakes?”
Yes, this introspection does come
to me via its long and bumpy road… But, it does come and save me… It helps me
to become a better human being… To really understand, how impatience hurts,
damages… It helps me empathize: Just as I show impatience, others, too, do…
and, I must give them a chance to make their own amends… while learning to deal
with their harshness, and keep my head high and move in life.
True, if I am able to keep the ‘big
picture’ in my
mind, I am not only able to reduce my own
impatience with others,
but also to reduce my
reaction to someone else’s!
Like those two goats, who had
forgotten why it was more important for them to ‘cross the narrow bridge’ and
save themselves from the deep and fierce river down below than being impatient
and stubborn and lock horns in the
middle of the narrow bridge – yes, like them, we, too, often, forget…
How wise, therefore, to keep the ‘big picture’ – the ‘goal’ – in mind!
GERALD D’CUNHA
Pic.: Mehul Bhuva
Comments
Tcare Pooja,
LOVE.