At the bottom of all pain there
is only one trigger; to be loved and to be accepted. As a child it is our first
and foremost desire to be approved of by our parents. We compete with our
siblings and constantly try to push ourselves to gain approval, needless to say
herein lay all our deepest psychological problems. You can become a world
renowned whatever but If your dad didnot approve of you as a child; the whole
world will chant and you will never believe it. Deep down your feeling of
unworthiness will never abate. We carry this longing to be accepted as a cross throughout
our lives and this loneliness is a barren land. I have seen people punish and
push their selves to the hilt; so that they can conform to what their families
and society at large expects them to be. Not being accepted for who you are
creates a weird hollowness in your life and you continue to berate yourself;
albeit unconsciously in most cases.
Is there a way to overcome any
hurt that you may have experienced intentionally or unintentionally?, to
accept who you are and appreciate yourself in a different mindful light?
“There
is” as Khaild Hosseini says in The Kite
Runner “a way to become good again”. The answer lies in a phenomenon we
call “Sila Rahmi” or “unconditional
forgiveness”. What it means is that you forgive the hand that hurts you without
any expectation. “Sila Rahmi” is a
reward in itself, since it takes you to a much higher plane in the realms of
the soul. The unconditional forgiveness
frees of you of the immense burden of hate and negativity; it frees you from
the cumbersome emotions of disappointment and resentment. It means that you
mindfully forgive the people who have caused you pain; made you feel unworthy
of love and acceptance. Does that sound weak? I fear not. Only the strongest
heart and mind can accomplish a feat as amazing and great as forgiving
unconditionally.
The first step to “Sila Rahmi” is kindness, random acts of
kindness. Once you start tuning yourself to be kind to random strangers you will
have crossed the first barrier towards the highly protected road leading to your
ego. The second step is kindness to people connected to you, this process is in
reverse only because years of conditioning otherwise makes it hardest for us to
be vulnerable to the ones that we care for the most; where we are afraid we
will get hurt the most. So we start with the people in the larger periphery of our
existence, visiting the elderly relations, sending a kind message to the old
school friend you haven’t spoken to in years, visiting a sick colleague, taking
time out for volunteering for a good cause, It is astounding the effect these
random acts will have on your well-being, how light you will feel, how full of
joy.
It may take a moment or may take a lifetime but the journey is worth much more than any castle that we may build on our insecurities, the freedom it entails too intoxicating to be given up by surrendering to base emotions such as fear and control.