In a
bank, while waiting for our turn to meet the manager, I noticed my father watching
something keenly. I followed his gaze and saw a toddler sitting on the floor.
The kid looked around for a while and then began to crawl under the chairs in
the waiting area. She bumped her head on some chairs but she kept going. She
stopped and smiled when she neared a piece of shiny paper. She sat, picked the
paper and began exploring. She looked around momentarily; probably searching
for her parents, then went back to exploring her new-found treasure. Nobody
disturbed her. She often smiled to herself.
Suddenly,
the mother appeared, lifted the kid from under the chair and carried her to one
of the counters in the bank.
The kid
fiddled with the paper she had picked. The mother noticed the paper, gently
took it from the kid and dropped it on the floor.
The kid
looked at the mother for a moment with a confused expression and then began to
wail.
The
mother was embarrassed as she got the attention of everyone in the bank.
My
father smiled. I smiled too.
‘Why are
you smiling?’ he asked me.
‘Nothing’
‘Tell
me. What did you see?’
‘The kid
picked a paper. The mother took the paper away. The kid is crying now’
‘Is that
all you saw?’
‘Yes.
That’s what happened right?’
‘Let’s
review it in detail. The kid sat on the floor and looked around. She set her
eyes on the shiny piece of paper. She went after it. She bumped her head into
many chairs. It must have hurt but she did not care. She went on and did not
stop until she had that shiny piece of paper in her hand. She smiled to
herself.
‘Her
mother came and picked her. She didn't cry. The paper was snatched from her.
She didn't cry.
‘She
cried’, I butted in.
‘No she didn't cry when the paper was taken away. She looked at her mother for a moment
and then began to cry, rubbing her head.
I looked at the kid immediately. She was still crying and was vehemently rubbing
her head.
‘So’, I
said, ‘when the thing she desired was taken away from her, she felt the pain in
her head’
‘Well,
that is one way of seeing it’
‘What
other way can there be?’ I asked.
‘Can you
not also say that the pain did not stop her from getting what she wanted?’
I saw
the same incident as my father. But he saw something more. He saw something
inspirational in what I saw as a mere incident. Perspective matters.
There is
something to learn from every incident and every person.
‘Well’
he said, ‘when we have a goal and we are after it with all our heart, the
obstacles don’t matter.’
‘But the
baby began crying when she lost the paper’, I said.
‘That’s
what most of us do. We cry when we fail.’
He
smiled. I did not.
Excellent Ananth...first ball 'Six' for you!!!
ReplyDeleteLove the name of the blog. Good work. And good luck ! Happy writing.
ReplyDeleteIt's awesome ant :)
ReplyDeleteGood one ! Keep it coming :)
ReplyDeletesuper da..,
ReplyDeleteNalla ah iruku da!!!!
ReplyDeleteAmazing perspective.. Great writeup..waiting for more
ReplyDeleteGreat way to express how your perspective matters. Fantastic writing Ananth. Keep the great work moving
ReplyDeleteShort and sweet !
ReplyDeleteAnd. . some food for thought ;) Keep it going buddy !
Excellent write up. Keep writing :)
ReplyDeleteIt was a really good read. The language was simple , thus making it easy to comprehend. I wish you the very best for all your writing venture. God Bless amigo :)
ReplyDeletekeep it up
ReplyDeleteSuper da
ReplyDeleteSuper da
ReplyDeleteSuper da:-) short and sweet
ReplyDeleteSuper da:-) short and sweet
ReplyDeleteAmazing :)
ReplyDelete