However unpalatable the truth may
be, once you accept it, you can work on changing it. This applies in all
contexts to all of us.
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Image Courtesy: Outlook Magazine Website |
In a recent issue of Outlook, Tarun Tejpal, founder-editor of Tehelka and a former Managing Editor of Outlook, pays a beautiful tribute to his former boss Vinod Mehta
who passed away earlier this month. Tejpal is facing charges of rape in a Goa
court filed by a former colleague, a young lady who was also his daughter’s
best friend. I have always been a great admirer of Tejpal the writer and the
journalist. He was a senior colleague of mine when I was in India Today between 1990 and 1992. So,
naturally, I was keen to read what he had to say about another man I greatly
admired – who doesn’t? – Vinod Mehta. The tribute was vintage Tejpal –
carefully chosen words to describe a man that few people can claim they knew
personally and closely; each sentence painting a mental picture of the ‘last
great editor’ in the reader’s mind. But what I liked most was Tejpal, with brutal
honesty, referring to the six months he spent in prison (in Goa, on account of the
rape charges levelled against him). He referred to his incarceration as he
would refer to any other aspect of his Life – very matter of fact, ‘you-know-what…it-happened’
type. Now, given the salacious overtone that a rape charge invokes, it is
possible that people may rush to conclude that Tejpal is brazen, that he is
pig-headed and that he is being cold-blooded in his approach to his Life and
the charges he faces. But I see in Tejpal the rare ability to confront and
accept a brutal reality – that he is accused of rape; that he has to prove his
innocence and until then public and popular sentiment will hold against him;
yet his other Life – as a writer, a journalist, a family man, a father, son,
husband and brother – must go on. What’s remarkable is that Tejpal, it appears
to me, is both ready and willing to face Life squarely and deal with each aspect
of it on the merit of the reality that lies in front of him!
To be sure, not many can do that. Most of
us, when under pressure in Life, prefer to hide behind the shadows. We are
either refusing to accept our realities or even if we accept them, we are
unwilling to face people – and Life. When you don’t accept what is, and either
keep justifying why things have happened the way they have or keep running away
from facing the reality, you suffer. Tejpal teaches us that no matter what,
Life has to be faced. In a way, your past actions do cause your realities. Or
circumstances, events and people conspire to create them. But no matter how or
why things happen to you, unless you accept what has happened as your current,
final, non-negotiable, reality, you cannot hope to change it. What comes
between you and acceptance is an imagined fear of social judgment, reprisal and
ostracism. What- will-people-say almost always clouds the
what-can-and-must-I-do-now thinking! The only way to deal with such fears and
feelings is to know that no matter who created the mess, the one on whom the
mess has arrived alone has to clear it up! And, without doubt,
all change, all clearing up, begins with first accepting the mess for what it is.
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