“Life is a song - sing it. Life is a game -
play it. Life is a challenge - meet it. Life is a dream - realize it. Life is a
sacrifice - offer it. Life is love - enjoy it.” Sai Baba
Life is what we make of it; nothing more, nothing less. Life
is not about getting what we want; we get what we deserve. Nature takes its own
time and life is full of surprises. We are responsible for making our life what
it is in the present moment. We accept accolades and feel good about ourselves
when we are successful to the extent we start feeling ‘how great am I’.
However, when we are faced with difficulties or a failure, we look outwards and
blame the world. What happens then, where does that sense of responsibility and
arrogance of greatness go? How come we are unable to apply that greatness to
face life?
What is it that prevents us from going deeper and harnessing
that same ability to encounter difficulties and convert them into
opportunities. That arrogant ignorant mind gets caught in the delusion of ‘I
know it all’ and we forget to sit back and reflect. When we read the biography
of any leader, there are elements of adventure, risk, fearlessness, pain,
perseverance and sacrifice. They explore their boundaries and rarely stay in
their comfort zone. Many people get caught in time warps about their concepts
of how their world should ideally be. There is no ideal; there is no constant.
To keep growing, we need to stay alert to change and be aware of our purpose of
life.
“Intellectual growth should commence at birth and cease only
at death.” Einstein
Curiosity and experimentation like a scientist, is the key
to redesigning life. The way we master new information about various objects in
the external world, we can also change perspectives about ourselves by shifting
the subject of curiosity inwards. We view life through our lens of beliefs,
memories and interpretations. Over time, our life develops a defining theme –
poor me, let me be, I’m cool, I’m like that only, I’m the best, I’m no
good……and we get stuck in a vicious circle. These themes are like movies with
sequels. We keep producing film after film with the same characters and theme
and selling it to the world with a deep desire for people to buy it not once,
but repeatedly. The irony is that we sell the story repeatedly to convince
ourselves that we are right to live
the way we are living. While living from one wave of experience after another,
we forget to ask ourselves – ‘who is the author of this script and who has the
power to rewrite the script?’
In
the ancient Vedic culture, a child was sent to a Gurukul for the Guru to
identify the inherent unique talent, nurture the same and teach the rules of
exhibiting the talent in the game of life. As the Gurukul system diminished,
the joint family system came into place, wherein the elders of the family took
the place of the Guru. In a world of globalization, people live in nuclear
families and there is limited inter-action with elders or ability to learn from
another person’s experience. The society is more focused around winning rather
than nurturing and evolving and obviously no one can always win.
As a coach, I work with people to restructure their life by
creating new patterns of thinking. For instance, I worked with an executive who
grew up in a fragmented family environment and did not have a secure
upbringing. The feeling of ‘I’m unloved’
was deeply ingrained that every relationship was viewed from this sense of
distrust. This manifested as a desperate need to stay in control due to the
inability to trust, delegate, work in teams and communicate openly. Life was
caught in a circle of ‘how do I prove that I am worth it’.
When
our foundation is weak, we grow into confused and agitated adults and live in
disappointment. In the race to win, we rarely take out time to introspect and
reflect to build our sportsman spirit. It takes tremendous courage and
discipline to actually apply what is learnt and follow through. Old habits
dominate our behavior and any new habit or way of thinking takes time.
When we are young, we need external support and validation.
As an adult we have the ability to empower ourselves and seek support when
required. We also have the ability to make choices, take decisions, take
actions and manage the consequences. We are no longer helpless or incapable.
However, out of sheer habit, we keep seeking that external validation. We can
choose to be as we wish to be as long as we are willing to face the
consequences of that choice.
To
become the master of our life, we need to play it like a sport. Like any game,
firstly there is a need to understand our own strengths and limitations and
that of the other players. Also, no sportsman plays without turn. They play
from their place of strength by staying alert to such opportunities and passing
over others rather than getting out when they know its beyond their capacity.
“Don't walk through life just playing football. Don't walk
through life just being an athlete. Athletics will fade. Character and
integrity and really making an impact on someone's life, that's the ultimate
vision, that's the ultimate goal - bottom line.” Ray Lewis