Among all the qualities that we
human beings have – and are capable of invoking – the most precious one is
compassion. When we are compassionate, we are truly human!
This morning I was on a live FM radio show.
I was invited to share my views, and answers questions from listeners/callers,
on “What do you do when you hit rock bottom in Life?” The FM station had set up
this show around the enduring theme of my Book – “Fall
Like A Rose Petal – A father’s lessons on how to be happy and content while
living without money” (Westland, August 2014). One of the questions I was asked by a
caller was how do you take decisions when you are in an end-of-the-road
situation. I replied saying, there can’t possibly be too much strategic
thinking when you are surrounded by darkness and you don’t know where you are
going; and when you don’t even know if there is a way ahead. You simply keep
doing what you must do. I cited the example of having to take an auto-rickshaw
to the FM station’s studio this morning. I had barely a few hundred rupees left
with me in Life and the auto-rickshaw driver was unreasonable and demanded I
pay him fifty rupees more. I did. And I did it without anger, without
exasperation and without anxiety (over the fact that I was going to be poorer
by Rs.50 when I had only a few hundreds left with me in Life!). I said I simply
did what I had to do. Period. One of the producers at the FM station was riding
into work when my show was on air. She was apparently listening into my show
while riding. She reached the station just as I was leaving the premises (I had
almost boarded an auto to take me back home). But she came running down the
parkway, calling out my name. When I asked her what she wanted, she requested
me if I could spare five more minutes. I agreed, feeling a bit lost though. She
took me back into the FM station’s office and said: “AVIS, I heard your entire
show. I want to pray for you and your family. I don’t know what your faith is
and how you pray, but I have to pray for you.” As I looked on, surprised,
overwhelmed and humbled, she asked me, “May I?” I said that she may. She then
closed her eyes and for the next five minutes she sought, what she firmly
believed to be, a divine intervention to solve my family’s ongoing financial
crisis. Her prayer had a healing energy. All of what she said was in English.
And her words made great sense to me, they touched my soul and empowered me to
believe – not in the power of prayer or religion – but in the power of
compassion and the power we all have of being human. Both she and I had moist
eyes at the end of her benevolent prayer. I shook hands with her, thanked and
left the FM station one more time – thoroughly recharged and re-energized.
All of us are capable of compassion for all
of humanity. All our energies can heal the worst of situations that we see
around us. But we are so busy running our rat races, earning-a-living, fighting
battles with imaginary situations that we conjure up in our minds, that we are
simply not pausing to see how people around us are coping with their lives.
Often, when we see them closely, we will realize that there are so many people
out there who are stronger through their grave Life situations than we are
through our petty scenarios. To be compassionate is to be able to see and think
of someone, other than you, feel their pain and help them with your prayer and
energy.

If you can, and would like to, please invoke
the compassion within you. And unlock its potential. Pause and reflect on the
fellow voyagers through Life that are around you. Give them your love, your
understanding and send them your prayers and your positive energy. Watch them heal and watch yourself feeling blessed!
No comments:
Post a Comment