Sunday, July 31, 2011

Rains - Do you enjoy them or hate them?

If there is even a few days of delay in the rains hitting our streets and providing us with first smell of the wet earth from what has been predicted by the metrology department, we start panicking. A few months of the summer heat and humidity does that to us - make us desperate to get respite from the heat and rains act as our saviour. 

We look forward to that first sound of thunder, the presence of black clouds hovering in the sky, a pleasant weather, anything that gives us that glimmer of hope that we are about to get the monsoons.

But I have observed that this optimism and positivity towards the rains is very short-lived by most people. It is not that people stop enjoying the rains after a point of time completely, it is the set of problems that it brings along which makes people want the rains to stop.

The proof of this reality is evident in the popular lines that all of us are familiar with: Rain, rain go away. Come again some other day.

Let me try and explain this. There are two categories of people largely: one category is those who love the rains and the other category is of those who hate the rains. Individuals in these categories are not mutually exclusive. In fact, all of us fall into one of the two categories at some point or the other depending Ron the situation and occasion that we are in.

Following are some of the situations when different people love the rains:
* When you are sitting at home, enjoying a nice cup of tea in the balcony along with pakoras.
* When a group of friends have gone on a long drive and the rain is just making the scenery around look beautiful.
* When heavy rains would lead to an off from school for a kid who hates going to school.
* When a guy is going on a bike ride with his girlfriend.
* When a couple are sitting by the sea and enjoying a hot corn cob between them.

Following are some of the situations when the same set of people despise the rains:
* When you are headed to office and a bit of rainfall is all it takes to bring the city to a standstill and your car to a start stop start stop routine and double the time from your normal time to reach office.
* When women are all dressed up in their finery for a wedding where they are supposed to walk in the Baraat and there are puddles all around.
* When you are living in a city like Mumbai and you are heading home and your means of transport - local trains are either filled to the brim or have stopped functioning due to the heavy rains and you have no way to reach home.
* When you are headed to the airport, already running late and with the rains, your chance of reaching the airport on time looks very unlikely.

Like I had mentioned, none of these are situations happening with different people but rather situations that all of us have faced at some point of time in our lives. So the next time that you are praying for rains, pray for the rains as well as the situation you want to be in so that you can enjoy the rains rather than curse and despise such a beautiful phenomenon.

While you guys read this, let me enjoy a hot cup of coffee while I enjoy  the rain from my balcony :) 

Saturday, July 2, 2011

LETTING GO


The topic that I have chosen for today’s blog has some relevance in each and every one of our lives.  As human beings, emotions play a significant role in deciding our behaviour and in building relationships and attachments towards people as well as inanimate objects and things.

Quite often as someone or something becomes ours, we tend to get emotionally attached to it very strongly and the reasons for the same can be multifold. Some people or things bring joy and happiness to us, some others have a certain strong memory/memories attached to it, while some others have been acquired by putting in a lot of value (money or time or emotion or efforts).

From here on, I would like to talk about people and objects as two separate entities as each of the two has a separate emotion and value to it and it would be foolish to talk about the two in the same frame or with the same lens.

I will start with the inanimate objects first as they can be dealt with far easily than people. When I say that they can be dealt with far easily, what I mean is that one can let go off them far more easily. Yes, letting go…..two words which most of us hate to hear when it comes to things that we are very fond of. Letting go is a very strong action which requires one to be strong mentally and emotionally as letting go in most cases also means that you are accepting the fact that the thing will go away from you forever and you will not get to see it again in most cases. It is a very difficult act to perform and that is the reason we see a number of people holding on to a number of things dearly.

Let me illustrate what I am saying by a number of examples.

I have seen a number of mothers keeping the small clothes and toys of their kids, neatly folded/packed, occupying a large amount of space in their houses and cupboards even though the kid has become an adult and has left the home for a bright future. For that mother, there is no monetary value to any of these items but there is so much of nostalgia and memory attached to these items that asking her to let go off these can be very difficult.

Similarly, there are a number of women who still keep a size 26 jeans in their cupboard although they have outgrown that size a number of times over the last few years and they know it very well that they will never be able to reach that size again unless they decide to starve themselves. Yet if you were to ever ask them to let go of this jeans, the response that you will get is that she is keeping it so that she can wear it once again when she comes back to size 26.  Here again, when the woman looks at the jeans what she is actually remembering is that there were those days when she was really that slim. Nostalgia and memories once again play a big role in not allowing her to let go of her jeans.

You have a number of such cases of people keeping things that they won’t use again in future – books, clothes, toys, shoes and the list can go on.

It is always a struggle for them to let go of these possessions but sometimes you need to take that big step and just let it go as most of these things just occupy too much of space, which can be used to store or keep something else. Unless and until the emotion behind keeping that item is way too strong, you should just follow the rule of 6 and let go of these items.

Rule of 6 is an interesting rule that allows or facilitates letting go with some amount of ease. All you have to do is go through all the things that you have/own/possess every six months and ask yourself that which of these is something I have not used/worn/taken out in the last six months and put all those items aside. Once you have got them separated and if they are more than 6 items then what you can do is ask yourself that which of the 6 out of these is something I can let go off without feeling very bad. Select those 6 items and just discard them. You will feel better at this after sometime and you will also realise how much space you have got for new things and items in your life.

Now that the easy part has been talked about, let me talk about the difficult part which involves letting go of people.

Just look around and you will see a number of people who are holding on to another person even though there is no meaning left in holding on any more as there is no love or no happiness or no bond.  You see people holding on to companies (who I will consider as people) even though they are not happy there, people holding on to their partners even though the relationship or marriage has gone kaput, people holding on to friends who are really not friends but opportunists.

In most cases, people are holding on to other people and not letting go because of:
  1. The time and effort that they have given – Seen mostly in case of companies, relationships and friendships
  2. Kids and Social stigma – Seen mostly in case of marriages
  3. Fear of the future and the unknown – Seen mostly in case of companies, relationships and marriages
  4. Inertia or the mental strength – Seen mostly in case of companies and relationships
Almost all the people know when there is a genuine bond or feeling between people and when are they really holding on. There is just no point in dragging it for more time when you know that the result will be the same or worse. Of course, in the case of people, one has to try much harder and see if there is any merit and value in holding on or not before deciding the next step.

Yes, letting go in this case is not easy at all and it can really drain you out but sometimes when it has to be done it has to be done. Unfortunately there is no rule of 6 that can work in this case. The only rule that works here is asking your heart and your head whether it is worth continuing any more or will you be happy and better off outside and with that single approach, just go ahead and let go.