"YOU FOOL, DID I EVER TELL YOU NOT TO HISS?"
Pic.: Rajiv Sharma
“We are injured and hurt emotionally, not so much
by other people or what they say and don’t say,
but by our own attitude and our own response.”
– Maxwell Maltz
Kapil* is a wonderful person – very respectful,
warm and soft-spoken. After completing his studies in Engineering, he did an
MBA from a reputed institute and started working. Presently, he is working with
an IT giant, his second company since he started working.
Incidentally,
Kapil had done a two-month PD course with us during his Engineering- college days,
and, had loved it immensely. But, then, his predominantly soft-spoken-and- mild
nature has been causing some trouble for him at his workplace. Last night, he
had come to me to discuss about it.
Yes,
Kapil has problem in asserting himself at his workplace. As a team head, it is
the basic requirement, and he needs to exhibit it badly. Because he is mild and
non-assertive, his subordinates do not take him seriously and, even, make fun
of him... Just the way students do to a non-assertive teacher in their class.
Initially, being a faithful and respectful soul, Kapil found support and
protection from his bosses. But, as he is unable to assert himself and show the
needed spine, there is pressure on him from his bosses, now. Understandably,
Kapil is anxious, and wants to do something about it. “I had seen in my school
and college, the Principals never coming to the rescue of bullied teachers,”
last night, Kapil told me, “I am sure, my bosses would never shield me
permanently.”
“Why
should they?” I conveyed my feelings gently to Kapil, “You have to shield yourself.”
The
worst thing some of us do to ourselves is being nice to others at the cost of
our own well-being. We need a healthy self-esteem in order to love and care for
our own well-being first. It is from this, that we can love and care for
others. Learning to be assertive in life, therefore, is the most valuable
lesson in life... In fact, it should start early. It should start from our
daily little things... The more and more we show assertive behavior, the
healthier becomes our self-esteem. Again and again, we need to remember on our
way to healthy self-esteem: “I respect your rights; and you respect mine. I
will never say ‘Yes’ when I want to say ‘No’.”
That’s
enough to show enough love, care and respect to our own selves!
Many
years ago, during our Workshop on ‘Assertiveness’, Kapil had heard this popular
story. Evidently, he had forgotten it. So, I told him the story, all over again.
THE COBRA’S PROMISE
Once, there lived a Swamiji in a village
temple. People from the village came there to pray. On the way to this temple,
there was a large banyan tree, under which, in a hole, lived a cobra,
peacefully.
One evening, while
the children were playing around the tree, one of them stamped on the
snake-hole. The cobra, in his self-defense, attacked the child. The poison
quickly spread in child’s body and he died.
A panic spread
through the village. “A poisonous cobra lives on the way to temple... He
attacks every one,” people started spreading the rumor across the village.
Soon, they stopped venturing out of their houses, and the temple looked
deserted.
The worried Swamiji
went out into the village to find out as to why no one visited the temple. When
people explained to him what had happened, he went to talk to the cobra. He was
a holy-man and was blessed with the power to talk to animals and snakes. So, on
reaching the spot, he asked the cobra, “My friend, why did you kill that child?
People are, now, sacred to come out of their houses... Promise me, that you won’t
bite anyone, anymore.”
The faithful cobra,
with great respect to the holy-man, immediately gave the promise.
Now, the word went
around in the village saying that the Swamiji, with his power, had taken away the
poison from the cobra and turned the snake docile... That, the creature was now
helpless and harmless...
So, one by one, the people
from the village came out of their houses... and went about their routine work.
When they came near the tree, they saw the cobra lying there, coiled up...
looking defeated. Some teased him, some abused him, some spat on him and some
kicked him. Some children held him by his tail and dragged him all around...
and, some tossed him in the air... But, in spite of all this, the cobra did not
react. He kept his promise...
Some days later,
when Swamiji was passing by the tree, he saw the cobra in a horrible condition.
“What have you done to yourself, my friend?” he asked in disbelief.
“Sir, you had asked
me not to bite,” the battered and bruised snake complained to the holy-man, “now
look, what they have done to me!”
‘You fool, yes, I
did tell you not to bite,” the Swamiji screamed at the cobra angrily, “But, did I
ever tell you not to hiss?”
True. During our ‘Assertiveness’ sessions, we do
remind all our Kapils not to stamp on others’ rights – their snake-holes - purposely...
But, we, also, remind them, with the cobra story, as to what happens if they
forget to ‘hiss’ when others abuse our rights!
* The name is changed
GERALD
D’CUNHA
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-- Pranay Das