Saturday, February 10, 2007

Believe in You

Who has not experienced trying times at some point during their journey of life, times when one wonders why their hard-work is not paying off, why all odds are turned against them and why there is nothing really they can do about it? Life really seems like a vicious circle of misplaced situations and torrid results. It only hurts to look around you and see others in seemingly better situations. At such times, I hear my parents' voices telling me to “try your best and leave the rest to God”. Life is full of ups and downs, twists and turns. What goes down can only come up!
How else do you explain the manner in which Shilpa Shetty came out of sheer oblivion to become the most-talked about entertainer of the past month, owing to her classy conduct (or rather her tormentors' behavior) on Celebrity Big Brother? Or how Sourav Ganguly defied his harshest critics to make a stunning comeback in international cricket, when even most of his ardent supporters wouldn't dare to imagine him in the World Cup team later this year. After his performance against the West Indies recently, this might just be a strong possibility. Another inspiring story is that of Serena Williams in the recently concluded Australian Open tennis championship. Lack of match practice, injuries and a low ranking did not deter this gutsy woman from thinking big, believing in herself when almost no one did. Did you see her thrashing of Maria Sharapova 6-1, 6-2 in the finals? I wish I had!
Here's some of the advice I used when I felt down and out:
Talk to your parents. They sure believe that you are no loser in life. You are unique and you are special.
Talk to a close friend. Most good friends like to play the intent listener and help in some way.
Take pride in your past successes and draw inspiration from them. You can do it!
Read inspiring stories and biographies.
Believe that it is never too late for anything.
Try not to compare yourself with others around you. You don't know their real story.
Enjoy practicing your hobby.
Remember you'll truly appreciate the 'good' only if you experience the 'bad'. There's probably something you can learn from your hardships.
And however philosophical it might sound, finally, there is no one thing that is cosmically significant in the larger scheme of things. Just move on!

4 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

well,
That must be true in your situation. There are majority of parents who are forced to compare and nag, though their concern is rightly placed. It is such a complex issue, which would never be solved by talking to parents, friends, reading few books, remembering good times. However, the one thing which we never tend to do is to find our trueself.

Sun Feb 11, 01:08:00 AM  
Blogger Unknown said...

A lot of it sounds like "psychobabble" but it's true, and it works, and it helps to hear it again and again. Thanks for that list. :-)

Sun Feb 11, 08:07:00 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

may be i have such karma..or what else i do not know. my folks have never ever encouraged me or supported me mentally, morally, emotionally.
the fact that i am in my forties and a single parent living in a floor in their house even though i pay a rent is still license for them to cast aspersions on my character.
makes me wonder how much of them am i imbibing in me and how will i deal with my own child ?
scary. very scary.

Mon Feb 12, 08:58:00 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Really well written, and served well to cheer me and my friend up for the day from our low-down moods! Normally such stuff that comes in forwards doesn't interest me, for they don't have the touch of the writer's originality, but this one, even though carrying the same message, had the honest "from the mind" tone rather than a well-known monotone.

Fri Feb 23, 12:16:00 AM  

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