Journey to becoming better human being – 23
Everything has a limit
On my visit to my
sister’s place, I was chatting with my nephew when my sister entered the room.
Looking at my nephew sitting in a bad posture, she told him to sit straight. He
obeyed. After a while he again sank in
the bad posture. Noticing this my sister taunted him again. He got wild, rose
and left the room.
I knew that my
nephew was a very good boy and he respected his mother. Then why did he behave
in this manner? When I checked with him, I could notice frustration in his
tone. While he was ashamed of his behaviour, he also told me that his mother
taunting him all the time was annoying.
I was wondering
what was going wrong. My sister wanted to teach him, and he was also
respectfully obeying. Then at what point the things changed? I took up that as
a point for discussion in our next meeting.
“When you force something towards and end, you
produce the contrary” This is one of the twelve principles of Valid Actions.
Does it mean that
in my sister’s case, she was pushing my nephew towards an end and instead of
teaching him, she was ending up in building rebellion?
“Things, people and situations around
us, each has its own limits. If we blow a balloon it becomes bigger, looks
good, but when we keep on blowing, it grows up to a point and then it bursts.”
I was baffled.
Afterall what is the limit? There is bound to be resistance even if we try to
do even a smallest thing so should we give up? Does it mean my sister should
not try to teach my nephew at all? This is too hard to digest.
“We must put efforts in the desired
direction. We must stretch, going beyond what we thought was the obvious limit.
Often, we underestimate the capabilities and therefore the limits. In fact,
when we stretch, new capabilities come out. Yet there is a difference between
stretching, putting efforts and forcing beyond limits. One needs to know where
to put a stop.”
Now the idea is sinking in. I realise
that often I worked long hours and have to manage with little sleep. I can
manage like this for some time, but if it goes for too long it results in
break-down. A friend had started dieting and virtually given up eating. She
lost weight quickly but also fell sick.
I realised that this applies in other
field of life as well. To increase production, a friend kept operating the
machine at a faster speed. For some time, the production went up but then the
machine broke down. The soil has capacity to produce certain amount of grains.
A friend used more and more fertilizers to increase the crop but after some
time the soil itself turned infertile.
“There is another dimension of limit, that is
in terms of required process and minimum time.”
To cook fast, we may raise the flame
and the dish may get ready but not with the right taste. Any relation building
takes time and if we try to do it overnight, it doesn’t work. Similarly
teaching children also take time and one can’t do it at one shot.
“Even in relations, it is also
important to understand that if one keeps persisting, the other may tolerate
for a while, but later it may backfire.”
It is good to try with our best
capacity to explain things to others, by putting out facts and information. But
beyond that if we try to convince the other person that our point of view is
the only correct option and that he should agree with us, instead he may reject
us.
“The Principles of valid actions are
laws of behaviour. If you break the principles, you will invariable cause
suffering in yourself and in those around you.”
I recollected that how often we break
this principle. And whenever we do that, we invariably end up getting disturbed
ourselves and often disturbing others too. I could verify that breaking this
principle, how my sister and nephew are not only disturbed but their relation
is also strained.
Simple and yet a profound learning on
my journey to becoming better human being.
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