A TOXIC WASTE
In a cricket game, every bowler has only one objective: to get the batsman out as quickly as possible. Sending the batsman back on a duck, would be a mighty thrill!
And, at the other end, the
batsman, too, has only one objective: to stay there as long as possible. A
century would be a dream!
So, it takes a lot to outwit your
opponent… You have to hold your nerves!
Well, it is in a game, a sport…
where the objective is to defeat your opponent so that you can win. You can not
play the game from any other frame of mind… If you are a bowler, you need to
possess in your heart that killer instinct to get your opponent out… and, if
you are a batsman, you need to possess in you that never-say-die instinct to
stay there long, frustrating your opponent.
Let
me apply this to another familiar game – ‘Mind Game’ - called ‘Argument’.
Like the batsman and the bowler,
it takes two to play this game!
Who are these two?
When you argue as a lawyer or a
politician, your objective is to score a point… by defeating your opponent’s…
But, in all other arguments, this objective is a ‘toxic waste’. Carried
recklessly in our relationships, it can be destructive!
In any relationship, the
objective is ‘closeness’… which can be achieved only through a ‘win-win’ frame
of mind. Unfortunately, when we operate from our egoes, hurt feelings, pre-conceived
prejudices and past grudges, the sole objective of our arguments is to defeat
the other person at any cost. Period. We get so blinded by this obsession that
we forget that such a victory – by vanquishing the other person – would leave
us alone, all isolated!
It is a self-defeating victory! A
fallacy!
If ‘closeness’ is the
objective of our arguments,
then, we will
certainly learn to make our points…
get our grievances
registered…
and stay away from
the ‘verbal bloodbath’!
In fact, every
bloodbath has its origin
in some blinded
argument!
While
we have the legitimate right to voice our disagreements, disapprovals, and grievances…
we have no business to ‘slay the character’ of the other person… Whatever type
of relationship it may be. We have nothing to gain by defeating the other
person… We have only to lose!
So, before it all goes too far,
all of us have the same basket to pick from:
Should it be a ‘Win-Lose’?...
Or, should it be a ‘Lose-Win’?...
Or, should it be a ‘Win-Win’?
Any argument at the cost of our
closeness is none of the above…
It is ‘Lose-Lose’!
When
fire is burning in an oven, the worst thing you can offer is - oil!
GERALD D’CUNHA
Pics.: Manoj Nair
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- Kaajal Navani