Being
Wise
The Wise King
Once there ruled in the distant city of
Wirani a king who was both mighty and wise. And he was feared for his might and
loved for his wisdom. Now, in the heart of that city was a well,
whose water was cool and crystalline, from which all the inhabitants drank,
even the king and his courtiers; for there was no other well.
One night when all were asleep, a witch
entered the city, and poured seven drops of strange liquid into the well, and
said, "From this hour he who drinks this water shall become mad." Next morning all the inhabitants, save the
king and his lord chamberlain, drank from the well and became mad, even as the
witch had foretold.
And during that day the people in the
narrow streets and in the market places did naught but whisper to one another,
"The king is mad. Our king and his lord chamberlain have lost their
reason. Surely we cannot be ruled by a mad king. We must dethrone him."
That evening the king ordered a golden
goblet to be filled from the well. And when it was brought to him he drank deeply,
and gave it to his lord chamberlain to drink.
And there was great rejoicing in that
distant city of Wirani, because its king and its lord chamberlain had regained
their reason. ... Khalil Gibran
It was 7.30 pm I was at a big square at Nagpur
waiting for green. It was a long wait. Suddenly a bike rider by my side zoomed
in top gear, crossed the square and disappeared. Before I realized anything two
more followed him in seconds. I waited for almost a minute and changed gears
only when it was green. There was no traffic police around probably this
prompted those young bikers to jump the signal. Couple of days passed by I was
at a square at Nagpur waiting for the green. It was around noon and traffic was
not so dense, not many vehicles there, a holiday might be the reason. Two three
bikers swiftly jumped the signal. I was tempted to follow them. I tried to but
my body did not follow my heart it fortunately followed my mind. Though there
was an urge to move my bike stayed in neutral. I was little uncomfortable as I
could not muster up enough courage to follow them. There was no police there so
I would easily have gone my way. But simply I could not.
A same city, not my own, I was at a different
square and different timing but similar situation. Scarce traffic was tempting
the riders to jump the signal. Soon two bikers in front of me moved in spite of
red. I desperately wanted to follow but just couldn’t. The one behind me stared
honking to push me. My heart was eager but mind was not willing. One more biker
behind me honked. I finally made up my mind and moved. It was still red but I
didn’t stop. The bikers behind me followed. We crossed the square in the
desired direction. I started thinking about what happened. A simple incident,
though it took few lines to express it took seconds to happen. A thought came
to my mind that twice before that day I did not jump the signal. I resisted the
urge but third time I did it. Invited by bikers in front and pushed by bikers
behind I did break the jinx.
A win may be of my heart over my
mind. Really … surprising… I broke the rule. Twice I couldn’t but finally I did
it. All I needed was a motivation and a sense that I too have followers and yes
no police. No traffic as such four five persons were easily breaking the rule.
I had little hesitation but I followed them, though in the wrong direction. I
was part of the crowd, not alone, I had no fears, I had company rather I was
one of them.
It took time for me to realize it was
that dormant small element of the wise king in me that ultimately followed the
crowd. In the brilliant story of Khalil
Gibran the mighty king drinks from the well to survive as king for he realizes
that if he doesn’t he would lose crown. What an assessment of psychology of
leadership who believes only in survival. A small element of wise king resides
in all of us. It unknowingly comes to fore in different manifestations. In our own
life, necessities are frequently guided by comparisons. Often our needs, our
coveted life styles are mere derivatives of comparisons. We rarely decide
purely on the basis of what we want, what kind of life style we love? We just want to follow somebody else to be in
vogue. If everybody possesses it then it becomes mandatory for me to have it.
Only few can resist the pressure of being different. If only we resist the
madness of comparisons and possessions our life would be less stressful. How
often we follow society just because everybody around is doing it else we might
be labeled mad.
In the story the mighty king had
only two choices either to drink from the well and be like everybody or allow
his crown to be threatened. He wisely chooses madness to survive. When the
crowd is emotionally charged up and when individuals lose intellectual identity
anybody appealing wisdom is labeled mad. Those who surrender independent
thinking to crowd start judging the wisdom of others in the reflection of their
own madness, the obvious result is the casualty of wise men. What we see today
as character of most of the leaderships that it prefers to follow what crowd
wants and not what is good for society. We see leaders who retain power at the
cost of their own thinking of what is good for people. Why blame them people
want Wise Kings to rule. The fear of losing power itself is understandable. When
gaining or retaining power remains the sole objective, becoming one with the
madness of crowd turns into wisdom.
Societies, communities survive on the elements
of similarity. When vested interests are closely linked to rigid rules of
unity, the voice of dissent chokes. For members then the choice is to surrender
intellectual independence or get label of madness and the Leaders also are left
with two choices follow the community or get dethroned. When society is
vulnerable to emotional appeals of survival, of safeguarding its interests
challenging the rule of law becomes a tool to establish leadership. And then
even a hint of possibility of new emerging leadership tempts the established leaders
to drink from the well to be part of the crowd. The voice of dissent becomes
madness, the refusal to follow crowd disqualifies you for leadership. All along
it then is easy to manipulate and command people on their emotional
vulnerability. Wise people led by Wise Kings.
History
is replete with individuals and leaders drinking from the well. But the choice
of drinking from the well is always personal. When the King drinks from the
well he finds equivalent in Gibran’s Wise King but can never become the great King
whose legend survives for generations. In our own experience we know in the
violent madness of homicide and revenge the man preaching peace and humanity
receives bullets.
That
happened after our independence... continued in the past and present is no different.
If we seek equivalent in people of Wirani, Wise Kings are sure to rise.
Choice is ours.
If we seek equivalent in people of Wirani, Wise Kings are sure to rise.
Choice is ours.
But often we wanted Wise Kings and Wise Kings…needed us
And
that’s the tragedy…
good one sir...
ReplyDeleteThank you Vijay.
Deletethe King finds equivalent in Gibran’s Wise King but can never become the great King... Interpreted to the best !!
ReplyDeleteThank you Sweta.
Delete