Journey to becoming better human being - 35
If only I had done that….
While walking
towards our weekly meeting, Rajesh recounted a wrong decision of his life and
how adversely it had affected his life. Listening to him, I also recollected a
major mistake of my life. I went into a tailspin. Had I not made that mistake
how different my life could have been! Both of us realised that though the
incidences were in a distant past, the regrets about them remained with us even
now. How we wished we could turn the clock back! We proposed that as a topic
for our weekly meeting.
“Let’s do a
Guided Experience.”
By now we knew
the technique of Guided Experience. One of us reads a story and all others
follow with closed eyes. The story is in first person and we are to imagine
ourselves in that person. In between, there would be pauses allowing time to
imagine more about that specific stage of the story.
“I am standing
before some sort of court. Breaking the tremendous tension that fills the room,
the court clerk solemnly pronounces, “It is the sentence of this court that the
accused shall be put to death. Accordingly, you will be abandoned in the desert
without food or water.”
Soon I find myself dropped in the middle
of a desert.
Now the sun has set. In the
twilight I see before me a whitish dome several stories high. I get to my feet
and make my way toward it. As I draw closer, I see that the structure is made of
a smooth material, a shiny plastic that seems to be inflated with air.
A man dressed in Bedouin garb
greets me. A door slides open, and I feel a refreshing rush of cool air. Once
inside, I notice that everything is upside down—the ceiling is like a smooth
floor from which things are suspended. Noticing my astonishment, the Bedouin
hands me a pair of glasses. When I put on the glasses, everything is restored
to its normal appearance.
I see the court clerk coming
toward me. With a sigh he says that he has been searching for me to explain
that there has been a most deplorable mistake, and I’m not the person who
should have been put on trial at all. Immediately he leaves through a side
door.
Walking a few steps, I find myself
with a group of people seated in a circle on cushions. They are elders of both
sexes, with varied racial features and attire. “We are the hours, we are the
minutes, we are the seconds. We are the various forms of time. Because a
mistake was made with you, we will give you the opportunity to begin your life
anew. From what point do you wish to start again? Perhaps from your birth, or
perhaps from just before your first failure. Reflect on this.” (*)
I try to determine exactly when it
was that I lost control of my life, and I tell the elder what
happened. (*)
“Very well,” he says, “and what
are you going to do, if you return to that moment, in order to follow a
different course this time? Bear in mind that you still won’t have any way of
knowing what lies in your future.
As the elder falls silent, I see
everything around me reversing in light and color, as if changing into the
negative of a film. Then everything returns to normal, except that now I find
myself back in time at the moment of the greatest mistake of my life. (*)
Here I am, driven to make this
mistake. But what is compelling me to do it? (*)
Aren’t there other factors
influencing this? What things are steering me toward this decision? (*)
In this situation, this is the
best decision that I can take. The circumstances surrounding this moment cannot
be changed, and I accept everything that happened as if it was a natural
disaster. (*)
I strive to accept that in such
accidents, no one is to blame. My weaknesses, my excesses, the intentions of
others—in this case none of these can be changed. (*)
I know that if I don’t make peace
now by reconciling with this mistake, my future life will only be filled with
more of the same frustration. And so, with all my being, I forgive the others
involved, and I forgive myself. I accept everything that happened as something
beyond my control, and beyond the control of others. (*)
The scene begins to transform,
light and dark again reversing as in the negative of a photograph. At the same
time, I hear a voice say, “If you can make peace with yourself, reconciling
with your greatest mistake, your frustration will die, and you will be able to
change your destiny.”
The story ended
there, and we shared our experiences.
“Past is not
forgotten. It has to be reconciled”. “A set of Guided Experiences contain
stories to reconcile with the past.”
Realising the
importance of reconciling with the past and the technique of Guided Experience,
I moved ahead in my journey to become better human being.
Happy Birthday Sir 🙏 You have become 60 years young 🙏 ( Sanmaya )
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