A world without envy and strife
Few weeks ago, I was in Abuja for a national assignment. Whenever I
went for an official or professional assignment, it was customary for me not to
share a room with anyone – I needed all the space and comfort possible. So I
was eventually checked into a hotel room. The room was spacious and beautiful,
and the bed was massive and wide. That was exactly the type of comfort I
needed, so, I was psychologically good to go.
One fateful night, I was weak and I knew I needed some sleep. Unfortunately
for me, sleep was a luxury I couldn't afford. I switched from one position to
another in a bid to find sleep, but my frustration got worse. I eventually made
up my mind to be calm and sleep whenever possible. Suddenly, I noticed that I
occupied a small corner of the bed. The space left could comfortably accommodate
three more macho men – to say the least. I was disappointed at myself, how can
I have all this space and just occupy a smaller section? I immediately switched
to the centre of the bed, and I looked even smaller. My chagrin triggered
thoughts on three realities:
- The bed was actually too big to be filled
by me alone.
- I could actually share a bed with one more
person and sleep as comfortably as I would if I slept alone.
- Having a large bed all to myself doesn't increase
me, at best, it isolates me and incurs avoidable expenses.
Lost in introspection, I compared the large bed to the world and my
personal crisis to the conflicts of men. I discovered that the envy, tension
and strife in this capitalist world is attributable to the following
subconscious deceptions:
- We fight because we feel threatened by the
successes of others.
- Unhealthy competitions exist because we
believe resources are so scarce that you have to fight or suppress others
to succeed.
- Sharing our opportunities with people
cripples the little edge we might have over them.
- The way to be so rich and influential is
to frustrate possible competitors.
- It’s possible to have all the wealth on
earth if no other person competed for it.
- We don’t help others because we would
rather be in charge than share the attention etc.
In our world for example, old professors do all they can to frustrate
younger academics who aspire to become professors, consultants frustrate
resident doctors, resident doctors frustrate other medical personnel in the
hospital, huge businesses take advantage of the coercion of state to frustrate
new businesses, lecturers want few or no students graduating with first class,
church leaders transfer prospective leaders to the most frustrating terrains, course-mates
avoid opportunities to teach their colleagues, entertainers sponsor false
rumours against their competitors, the old do all they can to frustrate the
young, mentors demand everlasting subservience from protégées, Preachers
bastardize other churches on their pulpit, xenophobia is on exacerbation, nations
fight tariff wars, religions are at war etc.
Have you noticed that billionaires like Bill Gate, Warren Buffet, Jeff
Bezos and Mark Zuckerberg are more of friends than competitors when it comes to
their social interaction? Have you noticed that their closeness doesn't stop
either of them from getting wealthier, wiser or more influential? Have you
noticed that the most successful men prefer networking to isolation?
Hey, listen!
- The world is big enough to accommodate everybody,
and you are too small to accommodate the world alone.
- Nobody is your problem, you are your own
problem. Witchcraft exists because people would rather blame others than
themselves.
- Helping people won’t reduce you, it will strengthen
and make you wiser.
- You don’t have to suppress others to
achieve success, you just have to be good enough.
- Networking will do more for you than
isolation.
- You will die and leave all your wealth and
accomplishments for others, so the strife isn't worth it.
- The energy you waste plotting someone’s
downfall can be converted to yield maximum utility to society.
Face it, whether you like it or not, the young shall grow, the poor
will get rich, the young will get old, the fashionable will soon become
outdated and YOU WILL NOT REMAIN THE BEST FOREVER. The true measure of
greatness is not in your self-aggrandising accomplishments, but in your ability
to accommodate and help others.
You don’t need anybody eliminated for you to succeed. We can all become
the best of ourselves, we can all be happy and we can all co-exist. Most competitions
are unnecessary. THE WORLD IS TOO BIG TO BE FOUGHT FOR. If we all have this
understanding, envy and strife will be no more.
Ezeme Kingsley C.
kingynelsy@gmai.com
Comments
These words will ever remain Indelible to my memories sir.. Thank you for Adding a value to our lives daily.
From Joseph Ifeanyichukwu
The world is really big enough to accommodate our different ideas
And not to seek the downfall of others...
More grace sir
Zikrullah A. Yusuf