Friday, May 22, 2015

Wish I was a little foolish...

Understanding the psyche of people and understanding the motives behind the behaviour people can be immensely insightful and helpful but can also be very disconcerting at times. Social psychologists attempt to explain human behaviour as a result of interaction between mental state of a person and social situations. Hence every behaviour that a person is exhibiting has a motive and he/she may be conscious, sub-conscious or unconscious about it.

Being a social psychology academic myself and teaching human resource behaviour and management to business students and researchers, studying these motives and behaviour becomes an effortless exercise. The result could be helpful in understanding people and their real intentions. 

This is academically a great skill to master. However what it also does is make you a bit alienated from the society. Let me explain.

Most people say, act or behave in a way that, though guided by their motives, is masked under tact, courtesy or deceit. While tact and courtesy are socially acceptable, deceit is spiteful.

Understanding those motives peels off the mask and exposes the real face of the ‘actor’. This where the problem starts, especially where motives though clever are not hurtful or resentful. Being guarded with people who can cause you potential damage or loss is rewarding; this also makes you guarded against people who though armed with clever motives, have no intention to cause you hurt. The resultant could be social alienation.

Being an academic and a researcher has its trade-offs. It can teach you to be insightful and but robs simplicity out of your life.

This where I envy my better half Vandana. She comes across as a simple person, one who I feel has a heart so clear that even the mountain stream would blush and has a natural way of mingling with people. She has a magnetic simplicity about her demeanour that makes people feel charmed and unthreatened. 

Her unassuming and unpretentious nature is her biggest strength. Perhaps this is why she receives any new person she meets with the same belief, in a completely non-judgemental fashion. She is smart to notice and recover from not so pleasant experiences with some people, but she also makes great friends. And those who become her friends have this ‘will do anything for you’ kind of attitude towards her. That is so amazing!

I don’t think I have her simple way of looking at this world. My vision is too ‘wise’.

There is a value in being able to penetrate the obvious but then it becomes difficult to run with unbridled joy, fearlessly and many times aimlessly.

I so wish if I was a little foolish...

Wednesday, May 6, 2015

The Illusion of Struggle

Everyone has a 'struggle' story...those difficult years when nothing was working right; we were young, restless and not so successful, and the world had not been conquered as yet; the people around were indifferent and at times not so kind...

Sounds familiar? Not surprising, since all of us, almost all of us have a similar story!

And most of us love remembering this story and recalling and retelling it with fondness, all our life. 

We hold on to this story and it goes with us to our graves.

Yet, many other happier and better times are not remembered with  so much effort ... 

Why?

The reason is very simple, yet intriguing. For most of us, our struggle defines us. They give meaning to our life and define our existence. They on one hand help us to self-pity  and also draw sympathy from our 'listeners'; on the other hand help us to show others how brave we have been, how we emerged from the 'ashes'. The impact is so 'romantic'.

This romanticism is something, most of us love and hence hold-on to our 'struggle years' story'. This becomes even more romantic when one makes it very big in public life. Then this story is the clincher and grabs headlines and prime-time media attention.

Everyone loves it!

However what most of us do not realize is that this story of struggle is an illusion and the more we drool over the same, the bigger & tougher it sounds. In reality everyone has to work towards something that one wants to achieve. The path is target dependent. Hence if one had no ambition, the path simply would not have been there. We chose the path, since we chose what we wanted to have in the first place. The path is unpredictable, since environmental variables keep altering. And most of us know or atleast can predict the obstacles on the way to  our goal.

In short, there is nothing like struggle.

I know, most of us will like to believe the contrary. That is understandable. After all we have grown on fairy tales, so why not have one of ours' :-)