Some "Perspective", My Child!
A Monologue:
What a parent might want to
tell a child, but find it very difficult
My dear child!
You are a young teen, right?
Do you have a job? No, you don’t? Ha! I knew that. So you don’t work help
support your family, right?
Have you ever worked, earned and contributed to your family,
until now? No? You have not?!! I see! I knew that already!
I see that you still have a lot of things you claim as your
own – your own clothes, your own computer, your own room, shelves, jewellery,
shoes, books, games, radio … Your room is chock-full of stuff. More stuff than
you will ever use. You realise that all of it has been practically given to
you, with some excuse of love – as a gift, as a ‘necessity’ or purchased with ‘your’
money, which itself was given to you under a pretext of pocket money, money for
some simple chores or some occasion – Christmas, birthday, Easter, New Year…
You are fed, clothed and taken care of every day, right? You
are given more than what you really, really need, right? You are given that
with love, much love. You play tennis, learn to dance and have memberships on
websites. They are all paid for, right? You are taken out for treats, eating
out, movies, shopping for gifts for your friends’ birthdays, all paid for and
done with love, right? Do you feel the love?
Do you think you are better off than the child of a refugee
in a camp fleeing from persecution or violence in some part of the world?
Oh, You DO think you ARE better off? Good! I am happy you can see that!
Oh, You DO think you ARE better off? Good! I am happy you can see that!
Do you know that the father of that child in the refugee
camp loves his child, just as much as your father loves you – not an iota less!
That child’s real needs are not less than yours. Really! To survive and thrive,
you both need exactly the same amount of food, clothes, shelter, care and love
at a minimum.
The poor refugee father cannot provide even that minimum. Your
father is able to do better. Can you see that? You do? Good!
Do you believe you should appreciate what you have and be
thankful for that? And be happy? And be cheerful? And grateful that you are so
much better off than hundreds of millions of children around the world?
Are you? Are you appreciative? Are you thankful, grateful,
cheerful and happy? How do you show it? Do you show it to your parents?
Maybe your father is not so rich that he can provide all
that you want. Maybe your friend’s parents are richer and give her more than
you have. Maybe she has better clothes, fancier shoes or T-shirts, the newest
electronic game and a better room, all to herself. Maybe you feel miserable
when you compare yourself to her. Maybe you don’t feel like sharing something
of yours with your own parents or siblings at home, because you feel it belongs
to you and you should have absolute control over it.
Are you miserable? Are you sad? Do you feel like sharing or
not sharing with others?
There is so much your parents want to do for you and to give
you. There is really no end to what all they would give you if they could. They
would grant your every wish, almost.
But do you know what they MOST wish to give you? What they
would rather give you even if they had very little? Or what they would like to
give you especially if you had a LOT of stuff?
My dear child, the following is what your parents would most
like to give you:
-
They would like to give you a sense of
appreciation and gratitude for what you have.
-
They would like to give you sense of grace to
accept that they cannot give you everything you like and that you may never have
all that you desire in life.
-
They would like to give you a perspective in
life so that you can still share what you have with others willingly, with
grace and good cheer.
-
They would like to give you the maturity of not
being upset when they ask you to do with less than you would like.
-
They would like to give you their best and most
unconditional love! Sometimes, that means giving you a perspective in life so
that you become a better person and free yourself from a lot of avoidable
misery.
Do you feel the love, my child? Do you feel it? Don’t be
miserable, be happy!
Copyright (c) Kannan Narayanamurthy 2014
All rights reserved
Copyright (c) Kannan Narayanamurthy 2014
All rights reserved