Journey to becoming better human being - 36
I thought I knew ….
In our
pre-meeting chat Sonali recounted how we have been meeting regularly every week
for many months and how by now, we knew each other well. Rajesh responded
jokingly that perhaps we know each other more than what we know about ourselves.
What started as a joke took a serios turn and we wondered whether we knew
ourselves well. It was proposed as a topic for the weekly meeting.
“Most people do not know much about themselves.”
We decided to
check by noting down few points about what we knew about ourselves. I am easy
going. I am introvert. I am lazy. I am clever. I am hard working and so on, we
started describing ourselves. I tend to procrastinate. I tend to go in details.
I tend to feel nervous and so on, we started describing our tendencies.
“Is it what you
are or is the way of you behave?”
I was taken aback
by the question. I had never thought about it that way. I thought that I knew
myself. But now I realised that what I knew of myself was more about how I
behave. And that Is not the same as knowing about me.
“What is
important is to understand why we behave the way we behave.”
We can observe
how we behave. We are also told by others about how we behave. But how to know
about what is driving this behaviour? We checked with each other and realised
that none of us knew how to do that.
“Most people are unclear about
themselves because they do not have
a good system with which to study themselves.”
As the statement settled within us, we
realised that we have learned a lot about knowing the world, but we have been
never taught about how to know ourselves. We have learned about physics and
chemistry, about history and geography but almost nothing about ourselves. It
dawned on us that what we thought we knew about ourselves was not knowledge but
our opinion about ourselves. We had taken it for granted that we knew ourselves
but none of us had studied it systematically.
“The system of Self Knowledge is a fundamentally important tool.
With that you will discover areas of self-deception when faults are brought to light that you formerly considered to be outstanding
merits.”
I always believed that one of my strengths was my insistence on perfection.
I was proud of it. Now am I to learn that perhaps that was not a strength, but
could be an area of weakness? This possibility was unsettling enough to get me
excited to find out more about the system of self-knowledge.
“You should not believe that to know
yourself you have to sit
and meditate.”
This
clarification pre-empted my guess about the system.
“To know yourself, you must
study yourself in relation to the actual
situations of your everyday life. You must consider the events that have happened to you in the past, your actual
situation at present, and what you want to achieve in the future.”
I was
beginning to get a glimpse of the system. As I understand I will need to study
about my life. About the events in the past and about how am I am living today.
What was even more interesting, was to learn that I would know about myself
also from what I want to achieve in the future. I thought this was going to be
easy.
“Most people would have considerable difficulty in answering these
questions seriously and accurately; they do not really know
what things have decisively
influenced
their lives in the past, they do not
understand the situation they presently live in, nor do they have a clear image of what they want to achieve in the future.”
So, it would not be as easy as I
thought. It seemed to require serious work – reflections about the past,
present and future in a systematic way and to draw learning from that about
myself. Do I need to do that?
“In this
you will study your negative aspects, and more importantly, you will discover positive qualities you may not have known about, that you should strengthen and develop.”
That was enticing. Learning about
myself is not only going to be interesting but also a very important
realisation in my journey to becoming better human being.
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