Category: Life

  • Toxic blah blah

    Toxic blah blah

    The belief that people are toxic is self-serving.

    The belief that parents are toxic is a sign of ingratitude.

    The belief that others are not allowed to change how they behave towards you when you don’t honour what is important to them is entitlement.

    The belief that what is important to us is more important than those who raised us is probably the closest thing to a toxic trait that we’ll find.

    Societies that have withstood the test of time are the ones who honoured their elders and embraced the wisdom that was passed down to them.

    Adapting that wisdom to solve contemporary problems is the failing of the current generation of parents and children.

    People, not just parents, withdraw from relationships when they feel rejected, betrayed, dishonoured, disrespected, taken for granted, and more.

    If you hold your parents to that standard of supposed toxicity, be sure to apply the same definitions to your own behaviour.

    If you truly understood the effort, self-sacrifice, compromise of dreams and aspirations, and duress that a present parent must overcome to show up as a parent, you might understand why betrayal of trust, disrespect, or rejection hurts them enough to want to withdraw from the life of the child that they spent their life serving up to that point.

    It’s fashionable these days to judge parents harshly while believing that the new generation has a better understanding of what’s needed to make life work.

    Sadly, the current state of society proves otherwise.

    How does your judgement of the people who raised you stand up to the scrutiny of the ‘toxic’ label that you’re so willingly throwing around these days?

    You will be tested by that which you judge others about. Be careful.

    Arrogance is a slippery slope.

  • Deluded confidence

    Deluded confidence

    We treat others the way that we treat ourselves.

    If you struggle to understand what drives the emotional currents that you experience within yourself, look at the feedback that you’re receiving from those who stand to gain nothing from your downfall.

    Remember: The most important feedback is non-verbal.

    When we hold ourselves accountable for what we do or don’t do, we will hold other’s accountable for the commitments or claims that they make.

    When we give ourselves an easy pass, we’ll allow others to be flaky about their commitments towards us.

    We give what we have and we accept what we want must be tolerated about us.

    So when we are filled with self-loathing while pretending to be at peace with and claim to be grateful for who we are, we will be harsh or unforgiving towards those who question our behaviour while being exceedingly gentle and generous with those who affirm our delusions.

    This is not about who is right or wrong, good or bad, noble or despicable.

    This is simply the way life works.

    You cannot give what you don’t have.

    Expecting it to be different will result in contention and stress within yourself as you struggle to find answers to what should not be problems, and it will strain relationships that matter because you will be that much more difficult to be understood.

    That lack of understanding from others, when observed through your delusions about who you are, will seem like rejection or confrontation because when we are unwilling to hold ourselves accountable for the state in which we find ourselves, we will feel attacked by anyone else holding us accountable for our contribution towards any problems in our relationship with them.

    The reasons for holding onto delusions, especially while knowing that those delusions conflict with reality, is a topic for another day.

    But first, we must be willing to test our assumptions about life and about others to ensure that we’re not deluded to begin with.

    It always starts with you.

  • While you were raging

    A poem about rage, by Zaid Ismail

    While you were raging
    The world moved on
    The ones who struggle
    Are the ones who scorn
    Who find comfort in your pity
    To honour their own
    Who pacify your regrets
    To deflect from their own

    While you were raging
    Your world moved on
    As you trusted the pitiful
    You discarded your home
    Inevitable was the outcome
    Of being alone
    What you sought to avoid
    Became your new home

    While you were raging
    You destroyed your home
    You traded your peace
    For an unfortunate loan
    A debt you’re claiming
    From one who is gone
    Imposed on the living
    Your rage found a home

    While you were raging
    You discarded your home
    Neglected the living
    While honouring those gone
    The living receded
    The dead grew real
    As you scorned at what is
    But yearned for what’s lost

    While you were raging
    You lost your soul
    You traded your beauty
    For a whimsical song
    You traded your blessings
    You traded your peace
    And exchanged your sincerity
    To be a devilish pawn

    While you rage
    The world moves on
    The world doesn’t care
    About your scorn
    The world has enough
    Enough of its own
    Adding to its rage
    Only destroys your home

    Stop raging
    It wastes you away
    It doesn’t convey
    What you wish to relay
    It only repulses
    Whom you wish would listen
    If only you knew
    What you possess within

    There’d be no need to rage
    No need to damage
    No need to destroy
    No need to ravage
    You’ll discover understanding
    Empathy, and grace
    Compassion will return
    And gentleness too
    And best of all
    You’ll spare some for you.

    If you choose to rage
    The world will simply move on…
    Without you.

    Zaid Ismail

  • The victim-hood of self-loathing

    The victim-hood of self-loathing

    No good deed goes unpunished. I was reminded of this in recent days when the bitterness of a self-loathing human distracted me from what is important about life. It’s not the bitterness that was jarring. It’s the intensity, and the immensity of the self-loathing that has become the battle cry of too many that jarred me most.

    The delusion that doing good attracts goodness adds to the mind-numbing effort of being human. We don’t attract what we do or what we give, we attract those who are most in need of what we’re offering.

    That’s why the vapid seek the wholesome.

    The weak seek the strong.

    The self-loathing seek the grateful.

    And the cursed seek the blessed.

    But the twist is a terrible one. Just because you’re self-loathing doesn’t mean that you’re not blessed. It just means that you will not see in yourself what others see in you.

    It’s easy to lose yourself to the bitterness of a world full of ingrates disguised as humans parading as the wounded selfless ones. But in that lies the clue to recognise the twist of that dagger of self-loathing before it is inserted into your tender flesh.

    The selfless, the truly selfless, never parade.

    The ones who wear their heart on their sleeves, their struggle on banners of goodness and humility, and their inaction as a claim to exhaustion from their reality are the ones who are ungrateful for who they are and what they have. That’s why they look for validation for what they parade in sometimes subtle tones, but most often in blatant distortions of their reality.

    Naivety is the knife that you drive into your own gut when you trust blindly, serve loyally without question or wisdom, and when you surrender who you are for who you believe you must be.

    Joy is ephemeral when not shared. It becomes a fleeting moment celebrated privately when what we honour comes to pass, but is just as quickly set aside because it doesn’t really matter if we don’t matter. It is this core of being human that turns our humanness into a frailty that is exploited by the self-loathing.

    Self-loathing is born from our assumption that we are incapable of what is needed to earn affection or inclusion. Such an assumption demands that we must present our best case to defend our pitiful state before others see us as pitiful or lacking. That’s when our struggle grows to define us. That’s when we need everyone to revere our struggle and not dare to advise us to rise above it because rising above it becomes a threat to our sense of self.

    If we don’t recognise the self-loathing in others, we’ll exhaust ourselves to the point of depletion in our efforts to be enough for them, or to inspire them to be better, or to believe in them until they begin to believe in themselves, while never holding them accountable for their ingratitude for everything that the have, and all that they are.

    If we don’t recognise the self-loathing in others, we’ll assume that they’re victims of life, while losing sight of the victims of their carnage as they go through life taking from everyone but always having reason not to reciprocate in equal measure. That’s how a healthy self-esteem in one who is sincere in uplifting another can easily be exchanged for crippling self-doubt after struggling to understand why we may never be enough for one who seems so full of potential if only…If only they see themselves the way that we see them.

    Self-loathing doesn’t create space for such realisation because self-loathing is the abdication of accountability for who we choose to be. Without accountability, there can be no healthy self-esteem because we need accountability to take a stand for what we stand for before we will ever experience the self-respect that results from standing for something that we believe to be important, rather than chasing things that make us important to others.

    Self-loathing is the ultimate barometer of gratitude, or more accurately, ingratitude. If we can’t be grateful for who we are, how can we possibly be grateful towards others for what they do? We cannot give what we don’t have. Which means that we can only give what we have. That is how our behaviour, when understood clearly, reflects the light or the darkness that we court within.

  • You’re human. Be human.

    You’re human. Be human.

    We need to be careful with subscribing to a victim mindset.

    Any form of abuse leaves emotional scars.

    But that doesn’t mean it breaks us.

    Nor does it mean that it’s impossible to heal from it.

    Don’t believe everything you read.

    No human is broken.

    And every mind can be healed.

    When we convince ourselves that we’re broken or that we can’t be healed, we create a self fulfilling prophecy, because what you set out to achieve is what you will achieve.

    Besides, it’s not the physical pain of physical abuse that sticks with us, it’s the mental and emotional anguish that it leaves that haunts us.

    Memes like the one above are well meaning, but they cause more harm to our mental health than they offer benefit or relief.

    Be careful what you take from the Internet.

    Good intentions have destroyed many lives.

    No matter how elaborate and sincere your effort at solving a problem may be, if you don’t understand the problem well enough, you will go about solving the wrong problem until you eventually convince yourself that the real problem cannot be solved.

    There is a solution for every problem except death. So if you’re not figuring it out, it means that you need more information and a fresh perspective of what you’re dealing with.

    Remember: No one is broken. No one is damaged. No one is beyond help. It takes a single moment of realisation to turn your entire world around.

  • Do you see you?

    Do you see you?

    Life conditions us to look at what we’re getting, rather than what is given.

    That means that we focus on what we’re giving, and not what others are receiving from us.

    That’s how we end up misinterpreting the signals that we get from them, while they also misinterpret the signals that they get from us.

    The result: A lot of avoidable misunderstandings that break down good relationships.

    The reason why everything is tainted or beautified by your self-worth is because that is the lens or the filter through which you view life.

    When we have an unhealthy self-worth, life seems dreary and morbid without any hope that what’s important to us will be important to anyone else.

    When our self-worth is healthy, we see opportunity to create value, and find reason to uplift others rather than wait to be uplifted.

    Self-worth is often over complicated.

    Simply put, it’s our belief in our ability to add value to the world and to the lives around us.

    When we doubt this, or become distracted when our efforts to add value were rejected by someone significant, we question our value first, before we consider that they may have been going through their own difficulty that caused them not to see or believe in what we were offering.

    That distraction is what leads to self-loathing.

    Self-loathing therefore sets in when we stop seeing ourselves for who we are, and start seeing ourselves the way we think others see us.

    Perhaps this is just another reason why the eyes are the windows to the soul.

    When last did you see you and not what you think society thinks of you?

  • Look back with understanding

    Look back with understanding

    When you don’t have a gentle hand to guide you, or an understanding structure to support you, life will be shaped through trial and error.

    In the same way that we can’t give what we don’t have, nor can others offer us what they don’t have – no matter how much we need it from them, or may have rights to get it from them.

    Realising this has been the saving grace of my sanity through a colourful life.

    So many of us set out in life knowing who we don’t want to be based on our experiences with those around us – especially our parents.

    But we fail to realise that it doesn’t prepare us, or give us anything to work with, in determining how to be who we want to be.

    It may sound cryptic, but it’s not.

    It’s easy to identify what we want to achieve in life, but if we don’t know how life works, we will keep tripping up on the subtleties that cause havoc in ways that we never anticipated.

    No one sets out to destroy their own life, even if they persist in blatantly destructive behaviour.

    They do so because they exhausted themselves living life wishfully instead of purposefully.

    Such a mindset results from anger about what you don’t have, leading to acting with haste or impatience in striving for what you want.

    The only antidote that I’ve discovered for this is to observe, with the intention of understanding, those who let you down or didn’t show up the way you needed them to.

    Our trial and error, like theirs, denies others the wisdom and support that they need to learn how life works.

    Self-pity or entitlement, and especially anger, will never change that reality, it will only repeat the cycles that may have caused us hardship.

    It always starts with you.

  • 10 Rules for life

    10 Rules for life

    If you don’t hold yourself accountable before you hold others accountable, you’re insincere about what you claim to uphold.

    If you focus on everyone else’s shortcomings that you think may justify your behaviour, you will be defined by everyone else’s shortcomings.

    Is that really the standard by which you want to live?

    It always starts with you.

    Here are the 10 Rules:


    1. If you want to be trusted, conduct yourself with integrity and consistency at all times, not only when things are easy.

    2. If you want to be respected, learn to respect others, not only when there’s something in it for you.

    3. If you want to be appreciated, show appreciation for what you have and what you receive instead of behaving as if you’re entitled to everything that you need or want.

    4. If you want to be treated like an adult, communicate like an adult instead of throwing tantrums or assuming that you’re right so there’s no need for you to convince anyone else about what you believe to be true.

    5. If you want to feel cared for, show due care and consideration for others, and not only for people from whom you need things or from those who stroke your ego.

    6. If you want the benefit of the doubt, work on your credibility instead of demanding to be treated as if you have credibility, especially if you did something that raised doubts about your credibility.

    7. If you want to be heard, listen with the intention of understanding, and not with the intention of responding to prove that you’re right while ignoring the facts presented to you.

    8. If you can’t handle the answer to a question, don’t ask the question because you’re looking to hear what you want to hear, rather than being interested in what others have to say.

    9. If you don’t want others to assume the worst of you, stop assuming the worst of others.

    10. If you want your rights to be respected, fulfil your responsibilities. All of it. Not only the ones that you think you need to or feel like fulfilling.