Growing up every summer, when we would visit our
grandparents, my brother and I would hear our grandfather narrate his tales from
the partition time. He was the eldest son to a father with two wives, many
siblings and a large extended family – and relocating the entire “tabbar” from
Pindi to Delhi was a responsibility squarely on his shoulders. Even in the
final years of his life, when Dementia almost took away all his memory and he
would confuse me for my father, these tales still remained ever so deeply
etched and got retold at every visit.
My father himself fondly narrates stories of his armed
forces days – tales of Emergency, of the 1971 war and of his field postings in
Ladakh and Kashmir.
Here is a fact about life - we live it every moment but
it is remembered and defined by certain crucible moments. These are those
milestone events of our lives which test our values by confronting us with our
own versions of “Sophie’s choice”, challenges so unusual that our response to
them leads to a discovery of who we really are and what truly matters to us. Once
passed, these moments forever live as fables of our lives. An interesting thing about these crucible
moments is that when people talk about them, they often wish in hindsight that
they had acted somewhat differently during these moments. As an HR
professional, I often hear leaders narrate their crucible moments in leadership
workshops and when you ask them what would you wish you had done differently?
Their answers could be summed up in this statement – I wish I had acted with
greater courage, gratitude and humanity.
As days and weeks roll by and the full impact of COVID is
felt in India, times will become more bleak, scary and tough – people tested
positive will no longer be someone far away but those in our vicinity, our acquaintance,
our rations will deplete, working from home will start annoying us and this
curfew will play on our nerves. This is our crucible moment, and one
that impacts every walk of our lives - as a family member, as a boss, colleague
and a member of the larger civic society. How we respond and react to
situations that evolve in the next 3 weeks (or more) will frame our fable of
this crucible moment. As a boss, lets be conscious that our subordinates are
currently very concerned about the well being of their family, as a fellow
citizen while we may store groceries for our families but let’s equally watch-out
for poor families around us who have not the resources to buy in bulk or as the essential services like garbage collection weaken, we be patient instead of losing our temper at
them. Remember, we are drafting the narrative of not just our crucible moment
but someone else’s too, how would we want to appear in their narrative? And
even if we were to ignore these narratives, we cannot ignore that this
experience will shape the person we will be hereafter forever – what sort of a
person would we want to be?
We need to be choice-ful of our responses. In every action,
when we have a choice, lets choose the response which requires greater courage,
allows us to demonstrate more gratitude and be more human. There is every
chance that when we look back at this time in distant future, we will be glad &
proud of ourselves to have made that choice.
#stayindoorsstaysafe.
Ankush Punj

Very nicely put, Ankush! Strongly resonates with my own personal beliefs. I loved the way you drew parallels from your personal stories, crucibles of leadership and the current situation to reinforce how our response to conquer adversity could be so life-defining. Your suggestions do put me in a mode of reflection on life in myriad forms – both ideal and deprived – and how I want my stories to be narrated in the coming times. Yes, as you strongly pointed out, we need to be ‘choice-ful’ of our responses. Thanks for infusing positivity in these trying circumstances. Sharing your thoughts with my loves ones :)
ReplyDeleteLovely Ankush,reminds us to be mindful of the more vulnerable, like Gandhi's quote -
ReplyDeleteRecall the face of the poorest and weakest man you have seen, and ask yourself if this step you contemplate is going to be any use to him.
❤️. True that
DeleteLoved the blog and I have had similar childhood spent with grandmother and her sisters sharing tales of partition and 1971 war and tales of Mecca..and the way they narrated to me made me even visualise the times :) one thread that is common across all the stories is survival instinct in humans and of course survival of the fittest mind..so will remember their victories and how we will share our tales of survival in futures to come inshallah ..
ReplyDeleteVery well written Ankush. Simple and deep <3
ReplyDeletethanks Baljeet.
DeleteLovely article.. I can completely relate to first half of the article. I keep hearing my dad talk about emergency time and considering he is born during independence he keeps sharing my grandparents transition stories and how life was then and now. My favorite line of the article is how would we want to appear in their narrative. Quite powerful thought.. we need to behave more and more humane in this testing times.
ReplyDeleteVery Inspiring. keep the inspiring thought pouring. Cheers
ReplyDeleteLife as we know it. It makes us stronger after every hardship. Storytelling is effective way of reminiscing the past and keeping it alive. And it's always inspiring.
ReplyDeletewhat you wrote is really amazing!
ReplyDeleteyou inspired me. thank you for that
“ There is every chance that when we look back at this time in distant future, we will be glad & proud of ourselves to have made that choice.”
I think this is what we need as evolving beings. nice article ✨
Sensitive projection of the situation...very beautifully you make us think over our conduct in this trying times & redefine our priorities.luv it.
ReplyDelete