Wednesday, 19 November 2014

I walk a lonely road



I remember the days when I was in school, when I was young, when I was happy. 24 hours went by in a jiffy. Before you knew it was already night and time to sleep. Things around us kept us on our toes so much so that we dint have the time and inclination to reflect within. And thank god we dint. The world that we were a part of was so small. My world was confined within my colony. School, home and play ground. That’s it. That was all I knew. Sadly then I grew up and my borders began to expand. My world grew bigger and bigger until I was done with my graduation. Ostensibly growth of borders with respect to happiness was a forward exponential graph. And therefore happiness also descends when borders starts shrinking. That was a revelation for which I was not prepared and had to face its consequences. As my world started narrowing, my inner antennas were alerted and gave me a heck of a time within. I slept every night with millions of questions unanswered and billions of random nasty thoughts that haunted. I was tired, I was exhausted and after a day’s work all I wanted was a good sleep and here I was barred from it. 

I decided to take a week off and go somewhere alone and sought things out with myself and then begin my process fervently and hope for peace. With immense resolve, I discovered that the root of all that I was feeling was the thread I tied to different people and circumstances knowingly and unknowingly. Either the thread was complexly entangled or tied to a wrong person all together. Both are equally hazardous to one’s life. And then in one of those nights in solitude I accidentally went through this poem by William Blake named poison tree and the doors of my deluded mind opened for good.
A poison tree is a very basic message for maintaining loving relationship through communication. The key is to communicate. The poem’s first lines goes “I was angry with my friend; I told my wrath, my wrath did end …I was angry with my foe; I told it not, my wrath did grow”. Such a simple way to express a profound truth. When you feel something and you have the common sense and the courage to express that feeling to our loved ones, the rage and the fury disappear, almost as if by magic.
My inclination in the past has often been to stay silent when I feel angry. I admit to wanting to stew about it, play it over and over in my mind, where I have extended dialogues with the person I feel angry towards. As long as I take this position of freezing out my loved ones or friends, the wrath persists. Yet when it finally does come out and we are able to communicate about it, expressing our authentic feelings, regardless of how absurd they may sound to the other person, magically and almost instantaneously the fury subsides. “Was angry with my foe, told not and wrath did grow” this is precisely the lesson that I have had to learn, I admit to still working on it each and every day. 

In past relationships I created foes out of those I loved the most. The moment I made them foes, I kept my wrath inside, playing intellectual games with myself, and creating an unbelievably complex scenario that only I was privy to. Thus the inclination to keep my wrath within, unexpressed, allowed me to create the poison tree. I would rather water it with my tears and sun it with my deceitful smiles. And the result? It would continue to grow it and bear fruits. And the fruits are definitely poisonous. It does not only apply to personal relationships, but in dealing with everyone in your life. Anytime you feel that spark go off inside you, and your wrath begins to grow, you are headed to a potential morass. The way out of that potential morass is to stop and make that person a friend rather than a foe. I think honesty and no nonsense statement will put the wrath aside and inhibit the growth of a poison tree that will ultimately destroy you.
Similarly in close relationships, when you feel something like anger, practice mustering up the courage to say how you feel without being abusive or loud. I have found that when I give the silent treatment the anger doesn’t subside. In fact, it grows worse because both of us are growing our own poison tree inside because we have made foes of each other. When we sit down and express how am feeling and what exactly my disappointments are, it generally leads to an open discussion in which we both get to express ourselves and ends with a hug. I don’t believe in the world famous statement that everyone use to console themselves “time will heal”. By not communicating we only nurture the wrath rather than killing it. 

The initial steps would be difficult, could be weird as well, probably the other person won’t like it and perhaps the relation could go worse. Thinking rationally about a problem will make you silent and passive and indifferent, and with distorted peace. In a relationship it’s not about of who is right or wrong, rational or irrational, it’s about who’s life and peace.  Rationality at the cost of one’s peace makes absolutely no sense. Especially with such a complex and difficult domain of life called relationship where there is no thumb rule or fixed check points to cross. Each one has his own race to run. It is a paradox. I am sure it takes courage to take the first step, but the point is you have nothing to lose, the worst that can happen has already happened. What more are you afraid to lose?

It is inevitable in any partnership for two people to have conflict. I often express my feeling that in any relationship in which two people agree on everything, one of them is unnecessary. Your soul mate is often a person who is most unlike you, the one who can push the buttons that send you into frenzy. That person is your soul mate precisely because of this power. When you find yourself in a fury, the person you perceive as causing it is your greatest teacher at that moment. That person is teaching you something that you have not yet mastered yourself, that you still do not know how to choose peace as that button is being pushed. 

The way to that absolute peace is to tell your friend or your lover or your child or your parent or your mother in law exactly how you feel. Do this from a position of being detached and honest and watch how your wrath disappears. You will have removed entirely the possibility of nurturing and producing a poison tree. The more you can create an atmosphere of open honesty, particularly regarding areas of disagreement, the less likely disagreements will become disagreeable. It is in the time of being disagreeable that a seedling sprouts and eventually nourishes a poison tree.

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