THE STORY OF OUR SORROW
Pics.: Mehul Bhuva
I just read this Good-Morning message shared by my FB friend, Ajit Nair, today:
“Half of our sorrows we earn by expecting good things
from wrong people;
And other half we earn by detecting wrong things in good
people.”
Nothing can be truer than
this!
Often, we hear people
advising us: “Don’t keep expectations; you will only end up disappointed and in
sorrow.”
But, if you start
your day with this paradigm – not to expect anything from anyone at anytime and
anywhere – let me tell you, we will end up with even more frustration, and
despair! It is naive to believe that we can live in this world without keeping
any expectations from people around us. It is ignorance.
So, the message I
received from Ajit, this morning, had provided the right perspective:
Don’t expect ‘good
things’ from ‘wrong people’… Half of your sorrow will end!
Stop digging for
‘wrong things’ in ‘good people’… The other half of your misery will go!
The fact is that we
do keep expectations from other people… Many times without bothering to know
who are these people: the right people or the wrong ones. If people are good,
right ones… we, invariably, do not expect anything from them. Our ‘giving’ act
was pure from the heart, with no strings attached. And, such act is a reward in
itself. Giving is receiving. Moreover, these people do respond to our goodness…
Rarely does our giving act - with these people - goes unacknowledged,
unappreciated or unrewarded.
It is when we do good
things to wrong people and keep our expectations from them, yes, it is here
that frustration and sorrow set it. True, half of our miseries come out of
these failed expectations!
The story of the other
half of our tragedy is even more interesting. I call it ‘our obsessive
behavior’: Trying to dig out wrong things in good people!
I tell you: this is
the short-cut to our own graves… It is guaranteed to bring the doom: misery…
the poverty of our soul!
Just imagine: if I
should indulge in such a behavior, my mind has to suffer from such chronic
insecurity, jealousy, and pettiness. There is no way I will be able to succeed
in my misadventure: for, what is good can not be destroyed by what is mean!
So, my obsession to find faults
in good people around me,
in good people around me,
has to bring what it has to:
the other half of my sorrow!
Thank you Ajit… The
morning was really good. Thank you.
GERALD D’CUNHA
Comments
== Lalit K
- Priya Das