Don’t expect everyone to be like you and to agree to
everything you say or do. Simply accept the diversity in people around you!
Last evening I watched Yeh Jawaani Hai Deewani (Ayan Mukerji, 2013, Ranbir Kapoor, Deepika
Padukone) one more time. In one scene in the movie, Padukone, while examining
her relationship with Kapoor, tells him: “Tum
galat nahin ho; bas mujhse alag ho!” It means: “You are not wrong, you are
just different from me!” I thought that’s a wonderful way to relate to people
that we have relationships with.
Much of your strife in relationships comes from
wanting people to understand you, from wanting them to see your point of view
and from wanting them to agree with you on everything. Now, this isn’t really
ever going to happen. So we go on piling this impractical, unreasonable
expectation on people around us and, therefore, we continue to wallow in grief
and suffering when our relationships fail.
I have learnt this lesson the hard way.
Initially, I used to have a huge problem in an all important relationship with
my own mother. This caused me enormous grief and inner strife. But when I
learned this lesson, I found my whole attitude change to one of acceptance – of
our diametrically opposite ways of looking at and dealing with Life and of our
different outlooks to how it must be lived. The day I stopped wanting to be
right and stopped demanding that only my view be respected, I became peaceful. When
I made my peace – over the way things were – I discovered how simple Life
really is. I realized that we complicate it by expecting people around us to be
a certain way.
Every relationship, in fact any relationship,
is stressed when we try to apply labels of right and wrong or impose dos and
don’ts to whatever’s happening in it. The best way to avoid that stress is to
accept that people are, and will be, different. That there’s no right or wrong
– there’s just a different point of view. And through such a
simple, relatable framework, you build and sustain beautiful, ever-evolving
relationships.
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