How good you are has nothing to do
with what you have go through in your lifetime.
This is one paradox that flummoxes all
of us: If being good, doing good is the essence of humanity, then why do I have
to go through pain and suffering despite being good and doing good myself?
Look around you and you may get
enough evidence of this perspective to be true. Good people are going through
troubled times __ joblessness, cashlessness, poor health, broken relationships.
And the corrupt, the unethical, the violent folks seem to be having a good
Life. Is there any fair-play at all in Life, you may wonder?
Let’s address your concerns. First,
know that Life did not promise any fair-play. It did not guarantee you anything
when you were born. It didn’t say if you are good, ethical, sincere and
hardworking, it assures you a problem-free lifetime. So, the expectation that
you should have no problems is irrational, impractical, unfounded and unrealistic.
Second, the nature of Life is that it is pre-ordained. You believe it or not.
But everything that you have gone through, are going through and will
eventually gone through, is cast. All you can do is to play the game of Life,
every single living moment of yours, even as the joystick is in Life’s hand and
so is the rule book. Life’s essence is to deal with WHATEVER comes at you! Therefore,
third, don’t wallow in shallow unjustified perceptions that the unethical and
corrupt, who in your eyes do all wrong, are
living it up! By imagining so, you cause yourself more grief. Fourth, if you
have been created, as you have been, and you are alive, as you are, then be
sure, your Life will have its share of problems. Life’s meaning is not
zero-pain. Life is really about developing the ability to deal with pain, while
learning to avoid the suffering that comes with it. Intelligent living,
therefore, is all about being happy despite your circumstances.
Today is the celebrated Tamizh poet
Subramaniya Bharathi’s 130th birth anniversary. History and the
present generation will both concur that India may well not see another poet
ever of Bharathi’s stature, brilliance and patriotic fervor. Yet, apart from
dying young at 38, Bharathi also died with so much pain. It was so irrational.
First, he was imprisoned several times by the then British rulers of India.
Then he was felled by an elephant at the Parthasarathi Temple, Chennai, which,
ironically, he used to feed regularly. He never really recovered from these
setbacks. His prolonged bouts of ailments finally took his Life on September 11,
1921. It is both a recorded and ignominious fact that ONLY 14 people attended
his funeral. Imagine, India’s most revered son and celebrated poet today, did
not have more than 14 people to see him off on his last journey! How unfair and
cruel is that?
So, stop expecting Life to be fair
and mourning the fact that it never is. To be sure, it never promised it would
be fair. So, accept it for what it is. The key is to understand this truism.
And continue being good and doing good, not expecting anything in return, and to
know that your goodness is good for your inner peace, and to know also that what’s
embedded in your Life’s design, you HAVE to face and overcome. If you learn
from that experience and, importantly, learn to be happy despite what you have
to experience, well, then you will have lived your Life meaningfully!
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