THE POWER POINT
"With great power comes great responsibility." Or is it the other way round?
Let us take a look at a very interesting spectrum of power dynamics. A man with new found youth, bubbles with energy that he derives from the upbringing that sensitised him with his niche. He knows his niche. He knows his power. A farmer's son, he is fully aware of his role in his field. A young man aspiring to serve his nation by becoming a soldier. A krantikari ready for his calling. "You are your nation" he remembers being told as a child. "Your nation is you".
Let us also look at another young man facing a sea of possibilities. Unaware of his calling, he is nevertheless, fully aware of the shells he could pick: "A government job provides me security", he thinks. "This one is a great opportunity for that, that and that" he wonders.
What is the point of this, you may think. The point is: power.
When you chase that what you love, you know what you are doing and why. Sad our demanding times have successfully reduced passions to mere jobs. The development of a nation may be measured by the possibility of carving out a profession from a passion. On the contrary, a society that reduces passions to job is an unfortunate society.
When, on the other hand, we chase that what is the demand of the trying times as opposed to what we appreciate, we may or may not really understand the beauty of our job. Of subtle beauties of a job, the more visible and definitely the one that makes a first and lasting impression upon it is the 'power' associated with it.
This concoction of undesired job plus awareness of the power of the position is the cradle of a satanic downward spiral- the cradle of 'anti-development'.
Power blindens its bearer.
If someone appreciates the power he acquired via his job more than his job per se, it is more likely that he uses this power than using his position for more good.
Power blindens.
For instance, if I am a politician's son I may not like politics. Neither may I be a leader. However, I do know the power that is vested in a paradoxically simply dressed politician. I am, thus, more likely to use this power should I spontaneously "inherit" my father's profession.
This type of power is not only a menace when top officials go blind, it also affects us in simpler and tinier steps when humble and significant professions like those of teachers, doctors, police etc are so infested.
This power play is the tuberculosis affecting the very spine of development.
Who is responsible?
The responsibility, at the first look, is dual. On one hand our faltered perspective must be brought in alignment. They say chi (the natural energy) flows well in a home when all furniture is well aligned with the natural flow of chi. This is a claim with a much broader application. If my natural energy is not in sync with my profession, both my health and my job suffer to produce a frustrated employee and an ill finished job. Thus, our perspective when it concerns selecting a job must be aligned with our hearts more than our heads.
On the other hand, youth can chase their dreams only when it is allowed to. We need opportunity to do that what we wish. In paucity of scope, in trying to secure a future, the youth of today is like the myriad blocks of the age old video game: varied blocks simply falling and aligning into the space available.
However, when we look again we realise that the problem is only one: our own perspective.
In our society jobs are looked as 'above and below'. All jobs have been ranked. All parents want their child to secure the highest possible ranking job. This and only this is the root problem. What should be the ideology is that all jobs are the same and that it is how great the person doing that job rises his profession that ranks him.
Ranking a lion, a lamb and a pigeon for their ability to roar is not only silly, it is also detrimental because when forced, the lamb will still not know the rules of a hunt but what he will know is the impact of being the king of the jungle.
-Kriti Gangwar