Guys guys! So I was trolling for guest posts and the great Arvind Passey agreed. He is a great writer I admire . Please check out his website here --> click
Even a burglar says this. So do
politicians. Scamsters. Smugglers. Thieves. Rapists. And yet these three words
are linked not with them but with an indomitable will. They represent the power
of positive assertiveness. ‘Yes, I can’ is not a mantra to be chanted and yet
they need a person’s mind to believe in the magical message of affirmation that
they carry in their alphabets.
But wait, this isn’t the text for a
motivation workshop because I intend to explore the relationship of these three
words with everything that society always wants to despise, shun, and rebuke. So
here we take a U-turn and go back to where the corrupt, the scum, and the dregs
of society wait.
Spare a moment to enter the mind of
a plagiarist on the social media and listen to him exult as he looks at a
picture or a text and thinks: ‘Yes, I can. I can pick this up and pretend it is
mine and then the world will think I am a winner!’ He is convinced that his act
is not one of wrong-doing but of a gain that his mind perceives. Even a Natwarlal
is completely enshrouded in the belief that what he is about to do is for a
perceived gain and not necessarily aimed at harming or hurting someone. And so he
mutters ‘Yes, I can’ and goes ahead and commits his crime. Or what we think is
a crime.
I am no psychologist but something
tells me that these three words aren’t really bothered about who they are
hobnobbing with. It is in their company that all the good and all the bad
always happen though they themselves never do a thing. A babu favours a company
that offers bribe because he thinks he can. A politician threatens, bribes, or
convinces to make teachers give up their jeans because he thinks he can. A TV
anchor shouts down every voice of sanity because he thinks he can. A manager in
an office fudges sales figures assuming that the loss could be compensated in
the coming month and murmurs ‘Yes, I can’. So these three words and the mind are
the two main characters that come together to enact all sorts of dramas – some
get hailed as positive and constructive and others get labelled as malicious
and damaging. Mortals are simply a face that these two protagonists
successfully project every time. The face gets to be either the hero or the
villain and must be wondering at the sheer unreasonableness of everything. But
no one listens.
The most complex part in this
relationship between ‘Yes, I can’ and the human mind is the sheer randomness of
outcome. Look at the number of criminals who convert into model citizen and
admit that the miracle happened because they were convinced that they could.
Valmiki did it, didn’t he? On the other side are perfectly fine people who decide
to kill, elope, have extra-marital affairs, or become paedophiles all because
they think they can. So these three words are no guarantee of what to really
expect. The other day I heard a PR executive tell a blogger, ‘I’ll send you the
press release. Please copy the entire text and upload as a post. I need to send
in details by evening. Hope you can do it.’ And the blogger replied, ‘Yes, I
can!’
‘Yes, I can’ is the real stealth
bomber, if you allow me this analogy… and when it gangs up with the mind, you
can expect anything to happen. They could come together and create the most
sublime smooch, hug, and kiss or the deadliest explosion that you can think of.
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