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Learning From Three Worlds

Abhijit Bhaduri

If something bothered you enough to wake you up at 2 am, would you have someone you could talk to, whose counsel you could trust, who would listen to you and keep your secret safe?

How many such friends do you have?

When you make plans to celebrate a major milestone in your life, say your wedding, how many friends do you call for the celebration? If you are on Facebook, how many friends do you have there?

Chances are, you have just described the three categories of friends. I have asked these questions to several groups of friends and colleagues.

The word ‘friend’ has undergone a big shift. Most count the number of close friends in single digits. The number of “friends” on Facebook is the largest. The number we would call for a celebration is somewhere in between.

We all live in three worlds simultaneously. The virtual world of friends we make on the net, the friends we keep in touch with in the physical world and the handful of friends we trust that make up our inner world. If the three definitions coincide, so will the numbers.

I have often asked groups of people how they would draw a picture to represent the word “learn”. Most draw a book or a teacher in a classroom with a blackboard. This drawing represents the inner world’s definition of what makes us learn. The inner world is within our control. The school in the physical world needs access to resources someone else may control.

The course content in most schools and colleges is slow to change. At a gathering of management educators, the dean of a well-known college lamented that it takes them three to four years to design the curriculum of a new subject, design assessments and find professors who can offer it to students.

That often makes the content obsolete even before it has been taught. The basic textbook used in marketing by Philip Kotler has remained unchanged over the past 30 years. That may be testimony to how timeless the book is. Then again it could mean how long it takes the physical world to change. In the virtual world, we can learn from many sources. Anyone with a mobile phone and a net connection can access free content that we can use to learn anything from anyone around the world.

The Massive Open Online Courses make it possible for anyone to take a course offered by some of the best known Ivy League professors in any subject for free.

Twitter is my favourite source of learning. It lets me “follow” the smartest people who are continuously sharing everything from breaking news to ideas, insights and treasure troves of information. The virtual world makes learning “whenever, wherever and whomever”.

We may not always be able to influence the physical world. Your employer may need to nominate you to a class that you have waited for the past two years to join. That involves training and travel budgets.

If we only value learning in our inner world, we will miss out the continuous learning that the connected world offers. We will wait to learn from experts and not value the wisdom of the novice.

In a world that is changing constantly, the inner world is often a comfort zone because it is familiar and remains unchanged. The virtual world and physical world are often what we cannot influence readily.

Though it is easier to influence our inner world, it is often the slowest to change. The virtual world can often provide us resources that we may be denied in the physical world. All we need is to do is to decide to connect our inner world occasionally to the virtual world.

The writer is chief learning officer at Wipro
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@B@R_0_0_D wrote:

Grudges and Forgiveness
======

Dr. LeslieBeth Wish



If you’re like myself and many of my clients, you find forgiveness a difficult prospect. Big questions such as “When is it too late to ask for an apology?”, “Is forgiveness necessary for personal and spiritual growth?”, and “Should someone apologize for being truthful?” complicate the process.

Of course, most of us do not hold grudges and ask for apologies on such a grand scale. Yet, we certainly can tell stories about the rifts in our families. For example, brothers don’t speak to brothers because business ventures went belly up. Or, siblings squabble over inheritances. Even worse, families break up when they take sides over the guilt or innocence of an abusing parent.

The offended and the offenders present compelling explanations, but the offended are often the ones who feel that they are left holding the hot potato question: Should I forgive-or forgive, forget or forsake the relationship forever. My clients suffer long-term anguish over this dilemma.

Most religions promote forgiveness. The message is that forgiveness heals wounds, brings people together, allows for human error and advances each party’s emotional and spiritual growth.

As you read this, you might be pondering whether to forgive your mother, sibling or colleague. And, like most people, you might also be feeling a mix of guilt and outrage at the same time. I wish I could give you a definitive answer about what to do. Even in my profession of mental health, there is division about the better approach. In my many years of counselling people, I’ve seen leaps in personal and family growth occur from both positions. The best I can offer is this guide. Ultimately, you must decide, based on your circumstances and religious beliefs, whether to forgive or not.

Grudge Guide: To Forgive or Not to Forgive

1. There can actually be benefits of holding a grudge and withholding forgiveness. If you are the kind of person who rarely speaks up or who always thinks that he or she is usually wrong or undeserving, then holding a grudge can forge a new way of thinking about others and their responsibility for a given situation. For example, you might find some untapped strength in yourself. Use your “grudge time” to review the situation. Talk about it with others, including counselling or religious professionals. Test your viewpoint.

Ask yourself: What lesson have I learned about not speaking my mind? Why do I let others disrespect me?

2. Get a perspective. The feeling that someone has done you wrong may be justified, but just because you feel something doesn’t mean your behaviour has to match your feelings. We make similar assessments all the time. For example, wise parents know to pick their battles with their teenager. If the hurt is deeper, then think about how you want to handle it. Here are some steps to take after you’ve got a more level head.

Ask yourself: Did I contribute to this problem? Why did this person do what they did? If you aren’t sure about what happened, tell the story to a trusted friend, partner, counsellor or religious leader. Write out the incident and see what emerges. Sometimes, the act of writing can yield surprises.

3. Consider your position temporary. People grow and change. Hindsight, time and a fresh view, for instance, might soften your previous stance. You don’t have to maintain your old view. There’s no point or benefit of holding a grudge for the sake of being angry. Don’t hold onto to past hurts in order to protect and justify your actions or feelings.

4. Develop a strategy. Forgiveness is a very personal decision, and few situations are identical. Here a few of the approaches that worked for my clients.

Identify your religious beliefs. For example, some people believe that forgiveness, rather than diminishing your sense of self-worth, actually enhances it. Forgiveness, in their eyes, is a higher order of human relating. There is a famous story about a family in Italy who encountered bandits who robbed them and murdered family members. The parents forgave the robbers—and even donated an organ to save one of their lives.

Decide whether this person or issue is important enough for you to “open that can of worms.”

Weigh the pros and cons of discussing the issue. Decide whether you still want a relationship with this person. Confronting the person can end in several outcomes: It might end the relationship, solidify your negative assessment of the offender, leave you without a resolution or foster a better relationship and help the person to grow.

Think about how you might change your interactions. For example, some people limit or shorten their visits. Other people decide to “step back” in their hearts and choose to continue the relationship but not be as close.

Discuss the issue with the offender and offer this person the opportunity to change or apologize. Ask the offender: How would you feel if I did the same thing to you? What would you do about it? Often, the person’s response will guide you.

5. Don’t be afraid to open old but serious wounds that you haven’t acted on. Sometimes we look back and can’t figure out why we never dealt with an issue; however, delayed action is not necessarily unwise behaviour. Sometimes, people are not even aware that someone has actually hurt them!

Battered women, for example, may come to the realization that they are not the cause of the battering until later. Battered women are often too willing to offer forgiveness to their abusers and not expect or ask for change in the abuser’s behaviour. Years later—and perhaps many counselling hours later, the woman sees the light and is finally able to be angry.


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@B@R_0_0_D wrote:

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