Wednesday, December 24, 2014

Things our way


“The Beginning of love is to let those we love be perfectly themselves, and not to twist them to fit our own image. Otherwise we love only the reflection of ourselves we find in them. “
                                                                                                -  Thomas Merton

This man has put it in a beautiful way. I totally agree with these words. There is actually more to it. This statement is true for every kind of relationship.  

We meet a stranger (In train, bus ….) and find him (her) very helpful. So we start being friendly with them. The moment they try to do the same, an alarm rises instantaneously. “Is he trying to be over friendly?”, “Is she trying to exploit my resources?”,” Is he flirting?”,” Is she acting?”,” Is she saying that just to feel included? “, “Gosh! He is different. Not what I thought he would be? “, “Oh my god! That’s not what I expected from her. Maybe I should step back and cool it off. “.  Our Habits and the nature of meeting also play a great influence in it.  We create our own impression of how we want that person to be. Any reaction, text, chat response deviating from it makes us ponder over it and rethink things through. We set our own expectations with every person we want to get to know further. These expectations are totally based on our own characteristics. I experienced this personally.  I never share my personal routine with “not so close” people.  The other day when a recently acquainted friend of mine shared theirs with me, I was taken aback.  I couldn’t decide if it was for good or bad.

The indecision when things don’t happen the way we wanted it to, shows how much we are addicted to having things our way.  Society could be blamed as a root cause for it. It has thought us a stereotypical way of how things have to be. Or rather we have created our own versions of how we want things to be from our learning’s from this society. We set our benchmarks and cover everything we do around it.  Differentiation between good and bad has always been nurtured into us. We have to decide and classify every thought, relationship and action in to the good or bad categories. It doesn’t stop there. We need constant indications and proofs to justify our own classification. We keep looking for things amiss to redo our classification.  We are less exposed to the grey area – where we play the field and get to know better and then decide.

No two humans can be of equal wavelength. What one mean when he/she say “we two are of equal wavelength and we have a great rapport” is “I have imposed my characteristics on him/her and he/she has accustomed to it approvingly well. Hence we have built a good rapport” or that he /she has truly understood the meaning of the above quote and is from Utopia.

Can this be changed? I don’t think so. Its in our blood to set expectations and to classify things. But would this change be for the better? Definitely. If a relationship is based on what we want the other person to be, then that relationship is never going to giving us satisfaction (Unless the other person turns into us with all our negative characters removed. Oh Yes! These should be both addition and removal). This greedy nature will eventually vain out and that’s when the break happens.  

To be continued!