I am good friends with a septuagenarian. Despite an age
gap that exceeds 30 years, I have often found that he and I can strike meaningful conversations about family, friendships, films, politics and so on. But most importantly, there is a kindred
spirit, shared values and similar perspectives on the relationships that matter
most. I have shared his anger against
hypocrisy and his lack of tolerance for unprincipled people. When I would sometimes reflect on my
conversations with him, I would sheepishly grin at myself. For sensing loads of righteousness in the way he
spoke and wondering whether I was seeing a bit of myself in him and vice versa! Three decades on, would I want to be
perceived by a 38-year old the way I perceive him now? The answer is certainly more nuanced than a
simple yes or no.
A double-edged sword that I take out of my mental scabbard often is my inflexibility with certain
core values. Just like how obsessive-compulsive
people get a comfort out of a certain routine, I find tremendous inner comfort
with the familiar rhythms of my mind. There
are certain beliefs that I have on topics like honesty, gratitude, empathy, relevancy
and priority where I haven’t quite changed with age. I embrace change, ambiguity and uncertainty
in my professional life in an equanimous manner – I know that and have received
enough positive feedback on the same. But
there are things in my personal life that I value so passionately and guard so
vociferously that the ‘comfort’ I mentioned earlier comes at such a great cost
that any inward-facing victory would seem pyrrhic.
As I have mentioned in several
write-ups, professor Sheena Iyengar did me a great service by urging me to “be
choosy about choosing” in order to choose well.
As a result, I know that my obsessions are few but deep. I have seen some people admire the constancy
of character that they have witnessed in me over the years. I have equally witnessed others - or sometimes, the same people! - driven to frustration
that I have stayed put when the sizes of the circles of trust and relative
positions have evolved over time. And I find
that okay because I know that for my part, I am making an effort to “choose” my
priorities or inflexibilities in a reasonably thoughtful manner. And there are
several elements of personal development such as anger management, listening
empathetically and acting with purposeful awareness where I know that constant
evolution is a must. I don’t let mental
inertia stymie personal growth in those aspects.
So, a refusal to change, in essence, is something that I restrict to a
few areas. And I am almost certain that the
elderly gentleman thinks of himself this way!
I am sure that he wonders, in silence and aloud, why people begrudge his occasional refusal to budge when in fact, he moves with much mental alacrity most of the
time. But having interacted with him, I know
the one area where I want to be different from him. I want to be happier with the choices I make. I don’t think he quite is at the level of
peace where he wants to be. As he takes gingerly
steps in the twilight of his life, he looks back at the path traversed and the
people that have disappeared from sight with a mixture of sadness and anger.
As a result of looking back too much, his steps forward are a lot less
surefooted than his intelligence deserves.
In essence, a corollary to what Professor Iyengar says would be, ‘Be
choosy about choosing. Once the choices
are made, be choosy about how you react to the consequences of those choices.’
When I reach his age, I hope to make
the world brighter in a small way for the ones that have trusted me enough to
spend time with me, listen to me, share my pains with generosity and theirs with graciousness. And along the way, we hopefully share some
laughs too. After all, a soul rests in
peace only when the life that preceded it is lived with inner harmony.
6 comments:
Very well written in crispy and flowery English
I like how you ponder and find ways to make yourself better. The conversation you had with the elderly gentleman made you think about the similarities you have with him and how you can chalk a plan from now on so you don’t end up like the disgruntled person that he is. As usual, very well written and it is very thought provoking.
Ram : "the ‘comfort’ I mentioned earlier comes at such a great cost that any inward-facing victory would seem pyrrhic. " Ppaah ! What a line !
Appo unakku 38 years aaduthaa ?? paarthaa theriyalaye LOL
Beautiful ruminative piece. I admire your structured reflection which doesnt meander. No mean feat.
I met with an old friend of mine,a trip I was unable to make for the last 2 years. My friend is 35 years older than me. And it makes me so joyful to see the way she ran in to her kitchen to make me a cup of tea.
For the large part her conversation was full of sweetness, light and GRATITUDE for all her young friends who clamour to see her. But there was also a chunk of bitter remembrance of the school management committee and her successor who were unfair to her (she was the incumbent principal of the school).
But it was enjoyable to hear that part too since it was laced with sarcastic humour.
It made me think that probably like arusuvai unavu we have a need for resentment also (maybe you can phrase it better than I can). I've tried myself to banish episodes about which I feel resentful knowing fully well whatever was done was logical and with no personal approach involved. But I find it very hard and will probably stay with me to the grave.
The need to crib seems to be a need too.
Thank you all for your kind comments :) I am glad that the piece held resonance.
I'm glad you warned me about the Halo meter. :)
LoL, Anu. Thanks for reading anyway :)
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