If I
see anyone struggling with their luggage, I pick up one of the bags
and start walking with her. If I reach the ticket counter almost at
the same time with another person, I ask him to please go ahead. If I
hear someone's noise and feel like shouting back, I quell that
instinct. Even if I have sharp sarcasm at hand to respond to someone,
I try to smile instead.
It
is not like I have always been like this. Every now and then I try to
be a better version of myself. Sometimes I succeed, sometimes I am
left thinking too long and the time for action is past; at others I
just take the lazy way out and allow my ego to override my
compassion. The reason I am so desperately trying to love my
neighbour these days is because I need to reaffirm my faith in
humanity, because I don't want my basest tendencies to become my
second nature.
Governments
will come and go, having taken their turns at the carousel. People
have to live with each other. I don't want for things to take a turn
where, by the time we are able to take the beam out of our own eye,
we can't bear to meet each other's gaze. Or, in the event that we
refuse to face our fears and mistakes and decide to run away from
them by running towards each other with a gauntlet, ready to
obliterate whatever or whoever we encounter . . . in the event that I
end up, fortunately or unfortunately, surviving that day, I don't
want to find myself unable to face a mirror.
I
have never been apolitical and never will be. But I am disheartened
by and weary of a politics where wishing for peaceful coexistence is
seen as a sign of having gone soft in the head. I don't want to be
part of a populace where we don't look for
a tally of common values to strengthen collective bonds but
for homogeneity of opinions to act as life support for frail
individual egos. I refuse to accept as genuine debate any shouting
match with rhetoric and statistics whose sole aim is to score a win
and pull the other down, and doesn't care a
fig about arriving at possible solutions. I would not accept
self-righteous voices claiming to represent large sections of people
just because they have thrown in for good measure some holy cows in
their presentation.
I
would always try to inform myself over and above my predilections,
and I won't flinch from taking a stand. At the same time, I would
reject any rose tinted glasses in whose
vista refusing to see discrimination and differences is the
same as erasing them. My efforts would be to ensure that my bias does
not overcome my knowledge, and to see to it that my prudence does not
replace my courage. I will go on challenging the notion that strength
is power, or that being gentle is the same as being meek, or that the
meek can only hope to inherit and not save the earth. I will struggle
to make sense of things, and hope that some things never make sense
to me, that I never end up dismissing the method as madness. And I
shall continue, 'naively' and unapologetically, to treasure what the
mind, body and soul remember of love, friendship and togetherness,
and to keep on seeking, finding and creating for those memories
repeated moments of déjà
vu.
First published in India Resists, 5 Mar 2016.
2 comments:
It is indeed disheartening to see what the collective has come down to, Hence the need to hold on to, more strongly than ever, to everything that inspires love and beauty. Loved this.
Thank you for hearing.
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