DO WE NEED TO WIN THE ARGUMENTS WITH OUR DEAR ONES?
I was helping a group of young boys and girls,
today morning, in the art of ‘Group Discussion’. They know why, where and when
GDs are held; and, in sessions like ours, they learn how to be effective in
this art. Why not to decry another participant, and not to become ‘personal’
during GDs, and, how to tactfully deal with extremely opposite view-points,
without sounding either aggressive or submissive – yes, these are some
important lessons the young ones learn during our GD sessions.
But, what is interesting is this: many of
us, including me, do not apply these basic lessons in our day-to-day dealings… at
home and with friends, in particular. We can see the way the arguments with our
spouses and children go… And, I believe, we almost become immune to it.
Why is that the rules of GDs are thrown out
of the windows of our personal lives?
Maybe, because we take our personal relationships
for granted… We know, for sure, that nobody is going to ‘fail’ us or ‘reject’
us. So, unlike in GDs, we are not afraid or worried about getting rejected in
our personal discussions – aka ‘arguments’. It’s funny - and even silly – that,
most of us don’t listen to each others’ views at all… We are impatient,
critical, mean (savage!), too judgmental and bias. As they say, about such
discussions – we don’t ‘talk to’ each other, we ‘talk at’ each other! It’s truly
ironic, that we seek strange pleasure – almost sadistic – when we see our own
dear ones ‘defeated’ – wounded and hurt – in this peculiar warfare!
Yes, it happens regularly in our daily
lives! Often, we leave our dear ones wounded and hurt… and, often, they leave
us so.
Is winning an argument really more important
to us than not losing our dear ones?
Many times, right in the middle of such
mindless arguments, I have realized the futility of it all. I have become
strikingly aware of our ‘clouded’ thinking, stemming from silly egoes… I have
become aware of the consequences: winning an argument but losing a dear one…
and, I have abruptly decided to quit the ‘battle ground’…
What is important ‘is’ important. Winning an
argument with a significantly dear one is not at all important. It’s not worth
at all.
As I write this, here, I am outside the
battle zone… I can see this truth so clearly. An argument in which I am
hell-bent to defeat my own parent, spouse or child… yes, in order to ‘win’ it…
is not a sign of healthy self-esteem. We may pass in the ‘GD’ test… but, fail
in this one!
GERALD D’CUNHA
Pic.: Suresh Bagrodia
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N kumar