Skip to main content

The Toddler.




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.





                

Comments

  1. Excellent Ananth...first ball 'Six' for you!!!

    ReplyDelete
  2. Love the name of the blog. Good work. And good luck ! Happy writing.

    ReplyDelete
  3. It's awesome ant :)

    ReplyDelete
  4. Good one ! Keep it coming :)

    ReplyDelete
  5. Amazing perspective.. Great writeup..waiting for more

    ReplyDelete
  6. Great way to express how your perspective matters. Fantastic writing Ananth. Keep the great work moving

    ReplyDelete
  7. Short and sweet !
    And. . some food for thought ;) Keep it going buddy !

    ReplyDelete
  8. Excellent write up. Keep writing :)

    ReplyDelete
  9. It 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 :)

    ReplyDelete
  10. Super da:-) short and sweet

    ReplyDelete
  11. Super da:-) short and sweet

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

The Pebbles.

There are numerous people around us to tell us why we shouldn't do something. They tell us not to take risks, not to upset the balance which is imaginary. This is one incident that impacted me. As part of my job, I had to visit a person in Nagercoil and train some of his employees. After the training, I sat with him and the conversation spiralled out of the gamut of my job. This was an inspiring person who was always motivated and bubbling with energy.  He told me his story, his rise as a businessman to become one of the wealthiest men in the region. I told him I wanted to do something like that myself and I laid bare a few ideas I had been toying with. When I said, ‘This is what I want to do, but I don't know how to make money out of it’, he laughed. ‘Forget the money.’, he said, rubbing his head, ‘It will come’. This made me pay more attention to his words. ‘When you are in the dark, you don't know where the bell is,' he said, expecting ack...

The Goodwill League!

A few weeks ago, a member of the middle level management in our company called us, three new recruits, to his cabin. We expected to hear some encouraging words. ‘You are Management Trainees’, he said, ‘So which are you, Managers or Trainees?’ I found the question a little stupid. ‘So you guys aspire to be in the CXO league someday?’ he asked. We answered in the affirmative. ‘How many years do you think you will take to reach there?’, he asked. The answers were 10, 20 and 25 years. He began laughing aloud. ‘If you become CXOs in 10 years, where will I be?’, he asked, ‘I still have over 12 years of service left.’ I felt my positivity draining. He then said, ‘I have worked for 22 years in this industry. Yet I am 5 levels below the CEO. When I entered the industry 22 years back, all 37 in my batch aspired to reach the CXO league. None of them have managed to do that till now’ The three of us remained silent. I thought he was trying to motivate us in some way. ‘S...

Understanding Time

You may have come across any number of articles, speeches and books on time management. They are all spoken and written with either of these assumptions: we don’t understand time or we understand time. Unfortunately, all the people do not fit into these two categories. The perception of time is highly subjective. It differs from country to country, city to city, person to person and for the same individual, time to time. At times, we find ourselves behaving like we have no time to live. Other times we find ourselves relaxed as if we have all the time in the world. A self soothing argument would be that we have to do some tasks urgently and some others, at our leisure. And neither of these can be declared as right or wrong. What the time management experts are trying to tell us is this. (Read the italicised paragraph more than once. It contains a valuable message) This moment that you are reading this particular word is the moment you live in. Even the ‘particular ...