STARS CAN'T SHINE WITHOUT DARKNESS
“Adversity introduces a man to himself.”
- Albert Einstein
Mihir*
is my student. He is in Class X1 and has been studying in one of the finest CBSE-schools.
Some months ago, when he had come with his parents for his admission in our
classes, he had expressed his desire to become a Chartered Accountant like his
dad. Now, the goalpost has been shifted… A
counselor in one of the well-known Institutes, that prepares young
aspirants for Management, Law and other competitive entrance exams, seemed to
have convinced Mihir, that he was best-suited for MBA and not CA…
“Since then, he has
become a lot casual about his goal,” Mihir’s parents said to me, this
morning, “He thinks MBA involves less
work, unlike CA.” His dad said, “I don’t think MBA has come from his heart. He
wants to do it because, he thinks, he needn’t work hard.”
Mihir was, seemingly,
annoyed. He protested, “That’s not true… I am serious about MBA.”
“Then, why do you want
to drop mathematics?” his mother asked, “You are good in it; but, you don’t
want to work hard.”
I had to intervene to
defuse the tension between the young man and his parents.
It’s
never been about CA or MBA… It’s, always, been about whether we are passionate
about what we want to do or not. Passion is something our parents or privileges
we are born into, cannot ignite in us. At best, our parents, with all the
support system they provide, can be only our cheerleaders. Similarly are our
teachers, coaches and mentors… Yes, they reach out to so many… but, only a few
shine. And, those who shine are, invariably, are those who believed in
themselves, remained focused, worked incredibly hard and long, and, above all,
went about doing against all odds…
Against all odds, I
said. Adversities in life… This is how we refer to odds in life... When we swim
against the current! Our strength,
therefore, doesn’t come from ‘what we can do’. It comes from overcoming the
things ‘we once thought we couldn’t’.
“In times of adversity and change,” says Howard Schultz, “we
really discover who we are and what we’re made of.”
Mihir loves sports. So, we spoke about India’s performance in
the on-going Asian Games. We spoke about the ones who have won Gold, Silver and
Bronze… Invariably, many of them come from families with deprivation… They live
in remote villages… Their parents are hardly literate and do odd jobs, like a rickshaw-puller
or a farm hand… Their houses are built of tin-sheets… and, they go to local
schools…
Yes, unlike Mihir and associates!
“Your parents are right, Mihir,” I told him yesterday, “If
you do not give your best, you will get what you deserve in life. If you have
passion and dedication, you can shine even as a grass-cutter or a dish-washer.”
We need to be challenged to bring the best out of us. Being
casual makes us mediocre in life. The benchmarks ought to be higher… The
Challenge ought to be greater. CA, MBA, Mathematics – these are not the issues
in life… Am I listening to my heart? Am I following it? - yes, these are the
issues.
“You need to spend a lot of time alone and in silence,” I
told Mihir yesterday, “You have to listen to your heart… and, then, just follow
it.”
Hope, our seventeen-year-old understands what I have told
him. Like many of his generation and kind, he is born into fine privileges –
highly-educated parents, great schools, a comfortable financial-cushion, the
access to best kit and coaching…
And, maybe, that’s where the things are going wrong… Maybe,
that’s why the stars are not shining…
“Stars can’t shine
without darkness,” says the anonymous quote. And, “There is no education
like adversity,” says Benjamin Disraeli.
*Name changes
GERALD D’CUNHA
Pic.: Indian Express
Videos: YouTube
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