Tuesday, November 11, 2008

Small experiences....Massive generalization!

This is one tendency among most humans that is not highlighted too often - we tend to generalize our opinions about anything and everything based on what we experience in life.

I come across people everywhere who talk about the behavioral aspects of a particular community, one strangely different group of people in office, complications in relationships, things that make us happy, good and bad practices, the rules of attraction and so many other things. It is almost addictive. I meet someone else another day and hear another version of the same stuff with one added fact. Then, in a month's time, the buzz about this new fact is everywhere.
The addiction comes from the fact that people don't keep their concepts to themselves but make it a point to let them grow through others which in turn get imprinted even on a little kid who hears his mom and dad discussing it at home.

Generalization is a disease, a virus that spreads over days, years and generations.

Even as we usher into this super advanced age in a rapidly developing country like India, it hurts when I see people living as per rules (generalizations) that have been ingrained in them so deep that however hard one may try, its impossible for him to open up and use his own mind in dictating terms for his life. I have a few friends who have totally given up trying to get their point across to their families about how things have changed with time, how a few things that seemed to be of utmost important in their generation have absolutely no meaning in the world today.
Its difficult for the old guns to come in terms with any change in those things that have worked well for years. But isn't it the job of the new generation to educate them from what they experience and see around? And isn't it expected that atleast some of the many new life concepts would pass those steel gates built for themselves by the experienced folks? Experience comes by learning, so did these people actually stop learning once their kids grew up and started experiencing the new world?

Anyway, upbringing is just one of the mediums for the propagation of generalizations. A few of my college friends would tell me that love marriages are unacceptable in their families. Period. I ask them, "Any reason?". Then they talk of all they have heard about the instability arising out of love marriages as they read about everywhere, about their parents telling them about that distant relative whose wife left him in troubled times etc. Some are pretty optimistic that the system has worked great always and there is no reason to disturb it. Love would develop after marriage as it always does. At times i feel they are trying to justify something that they themselves don't believe in. They have all the education behind them that tells them to free their mind but they are too afraid to break the shackles, the system.

Generalizations are not limited to families, they go on to affect big entities like communities, states and countries. We are all divided because of generalizations about a particular segment being the good community and the other being the nasty one. I have heard people talking about how cunning people from a few states can be and how one particular community can not be trusted because of the numerous cases running against members of that community for bloodshed. One is made to believe that it is better to maintain safe distance from the person living even next door belonging to that community. "How does it matter if our kids have grown together and go to the same school and take the same bus home? Its time to maintain caution n let our naive kid know too." In most of these cases, most of us don't even care to learn from our experiences. "Afterall, all our people couldn't be wrong". One fails to spare a thought that most of these people they have learnt from have in turn heard things from other people.This is the worst form of generalization that I have observed. It only propagates hatred in a world that is hungry for love. As one of my very close friends once said "But all they write in newspapers can't be wrong". I could only say, "Yes my friend, but tomorrow if my community is in news for something bad, would you start doubting me too?". It is common sense but more often than not, it goes unheard.

There are going to be occasions when people experience something bad, there would always be people who feel betrayed and helpless, there would be marriages that would go bad, there would be breakups and wars. If these are experiences that are shared that lead to all the generalizations, all we are doing is propagating hatred and misconceptions. There is nothing in the world that can be generalized in the true sense. Every person has a right to be his own self, lead a life that he finds appropriate. The need for education is not limited to the ones who haven't attended school. There is no school that runs a course on 'Common sense'. Staying happy and satisfied is an art and spreading that little bit of happiness in your life with your loved ones and that neighbour next door is the human nature that the Creator might have actually imagined. If every person just makes a conscious effort to overpower the forced misconceptions brought through the system into his family with that sheer human power to think and act in the right, uninfluenced and constructive way, our short lives could actually be much more merry!

Sunday, July 27, 2008

Stage Fright


It seems fear comes naturally to us. It also seems fear grows with maturity. The more we mature, the more scared we are. Sounds funny, doesn’t it? Imagine a kid who has never fallen and got hurt, one who’s never got a scolding or heard a horror story. What would scare him? His growth (maturity) starts with school, where he is taught what good people are like. The kid learns that the good people are the ones who are respected by society and he ought to be like one of them one day. In other words, it’s the beginning of him getting scared of becoming anything else. Even the smartest of the lot who are loaded with ‘Distinctions’ and have topped for years together are scared that they might not top in the coming year. They get used to being loved by friends and family for their ‘Distinctions’ so much that the very thought of losing it anyway anywhere scares the hell out of them. In my opinion, if one has a defense mechanism at that tender age that could beat that fear off, he would never ever face something like “stage fright”. Alas, many of us haven’t been that strong or lucky in those years. Its just because we are among the fortunate ones to have received the right education that has taught us that being good is synonymous with being successful.

We commonly associate the term stage fright in a literal sense. A schoolboy might be reluctant to stand up in a morning school assembly to read out something as simple as the 'Thought of the day'. A singer could be sweating at the thought of messing up the lyrics or a high note on stage. A dancer who has practiced the same steps 'N' number of times could find his leg shaking out of fear even before getting on the stage. The list is endless. Yet I feel this physical 'stage' is not the 'stage' that worries the kid, the singer or the dancer for that matter.
A famous Shakespearean quote says "All the world's a stage". I don't feel there's any better interpretation of a stage. A new born has no fear since he hasn't experienced the 'stage'. But before he comes to his senses, he is already being moulded into becoming a reflection of his parents. Then follows school and college and work and the various 'stages' of his life and he is constantly 'frightened' at each 'stage' of him turning out to be anyone but the loved and cherished person he is at that 'stage' of life.
I recently had the privilege of competing with a few top notch singers in a reality show. I also got to share my room with this superbly talented guy from Himachal Pradesh who has performed on stage since he was a kid and had also made it to the top 12 of Sa Re Ga Ma (another reality show) in some previous season. He oozes confidence and his singing is flawless. He has years of training in classical music and wishes to make a career in music which he most certainly would sooner or later. Everything was fine till the day came when we were supposed to sing in front of the judges. Of all people, I saw this very experienced stage singer falling prey to stage fright. Before getting on stage, he told me that every single time he sets feet on stage, he has that fear of failing. The fear of not being admired as much as he is now and deserves to be. What I learnt from him is that its certainly not about being alien to a 'staged atmosphere' that freaks out people, the fear is innate. It cannot go just by years of practice or performance. If it is within you, it would stay forever unless you deliberately kill that fear.
The only way I feel stage fright can be eliminated is by introspection. This would sound much easier said than done but I feel it is not that tough either. As you step on any stage, just look around at a few faces in the crowd and tell yourself that these are the people who have come all the way to watch you perform. The very thought that you might have been sitting in the audience rather than standing there on stage had you not dared to showcase your talent should make you feel very proud. This proud feeling can eliminate most of that fear. It is pessimistic behavior to think of all the ways things could go wrong for you. A stage gives you the opportunity to fight out of that web of fear. Once you succeed in eliminating that fear, you have won more than just that one battle. You have brought that kid in you back to life who isn't scared of trying something new, something that makes 'him' happy.

Thursday, January 17, 2008

The Canine Connection

I have always wondered what makes dogs so lovable. What is it about a dog that makes it man's best friend? The breeds of pet dogs may vary from the rich to the poor but the reasoning given by most people is the same. They say a dog is very faithful to you and remains by your side throughout its life. There is certainly no doubt about that. But is it that simple?
I have always been very fond of animals, especially dogs. Very often I wonder whether the pet needs the man more or is it the other way around. A man who has picked up a stray from the street and takes care of it providing food and shelter might feel he's done a favor on the little unprotected thing that could easily have been trampled by a speeding truck. But why is this poor thing so very often a dog? Why not a poor person without shelter and food? My understanding to this is that there is a definite connection between man and the canines. We just love this species. We love these four legged creatures which follow us when we walk, which somehow manage to relate to your feelings without uttering a word and without fail are the first to reach the door when you come back from work.
People who haven't kept pets find it 'amusing' how a family grieves the death of a pet. Its like losing a child for the grown ups and like losing his best friend for a kid. I have experienced both these feelings. As a kid, when a neighbour broke my adopted stray friend's leg while reversing his car, I kind of developed a huge hatred for him even as a kid. The poor thing had to go because the injury was very severe. When another of my pets, Zen passed away, the absence of the four legs made home look so dull. When you ring the bell and suddenly when there's noone to greet you with wild celebration that you've got used to, that's the time you truly realize the importance of that little creature.
Dogs don't take much time to judge you. Either they like you instantly, or you are a reject straightaway. I still don't understand why one of my pets doesn't like the subziwali's loud voice and the other which can still not tolerate just one of the servants at my nani's place. In that little head, they have a big enough brain to form opinions about people it seems. You simply can't give a dog a bath or touch its tail if it doesn't like you.
Another thing, you may be possessive about your pets but they are much more possessive about you. They just don't like other people getting closer to them and diverting the owner's attention from them. The best thing about dogs and the biggest difference between them and humans (according to me) is that they never crib. They might be a little choosy when it comes to food but you won't see a dog giving you a dirty stare because of that. They are surely among the most adjusting species known. Humans should actually learn to stay happy from animals. Alas, little pretty things in life don't seem to satisfy us smarter beings.
This blog is actually dedicated to all my canine friends with whom I've shared a relation which I can never express entirely. Thank you friends for all the energy you brought into my life and the immeasurable sweetness that I'll always cherish.