Tag: selfworth

  • The present moment

    The present moment

    There is one thing more desolate than hopelessness. It’s the absence of expectations.

    Hope only hurts when we still expect things to turn out differently, or still want it to be more.

    When we give up hope, and we surrender our expectations, we’re left with nothing but the present moment.

    The past fades as a hallucination often does.

    The future ceases to exist.

    And all we have is a choice to do something with the moment we’re in.

    But what is there to do with it if hope and expectations have both left?

    With no bitterness to create anger, and no love to create hope, what value does the present moment hold?

    I believe that it is in such moments that we face the brutality or the beauty of our true nature.

    Photo credit : Adobe Stock

  • It starts and ends with gratitude

    It starts and ends with gratitude

    Many struggle with achieving a sense of fulfilment in their lives because they have yet to appreciate, with sincerity, the value that they hold within themselves.

    We only make ourselves truly available in a relationship, romantic or otherwise, if we believe that who we are will be valued by others.

    The irony is that gratitude for who we are is needed before we see fit to share anything of ourselves with others, while sharing the same is the first step towards experiencing the gratitude of fulfilment.

    Such conundrums are common in our efforts to live a life of purpose.

    Purpose is not found in the acquisition of valuables for ourselves, but rather in the creation of value for others.

    I think in there lies the secret to experiencing any sense of peace in this lifetime.

    When we protect ourselves from the possibility of rejection, we deny ourselves the very fulfilment we need to feel complete, and therefore create opportunities for bitterness or regret to take hold in our lives.

    It all starts with gratitude, and fulfilment is sealed with gratitude.

    Be grateful for how your journey shaped you into who you are, so that you stop holding others accountable for your happiness.

    [This was a difficult thought process to articulate. Hope it makes sense.]

  • This is going to hurt

    This is going to hurt

    Another excerpt from a manuscript slowly taking shape in my head. From the sequel to my novel, this is Taqdeer: A dance with destiny.

    In this scene, the main character, Zayd, once more finds himself faced with the betrayal of one close to him, but it’s not enough to deter him from remaining defiant against the odds.

    “Eventually, I get tired of dodging the bullet and instead I stand, square-shouldered, facing the onslaught with eyes wide open, my heart gently ticking away in my chest, waiting for what I always knew was inevitable. Knowing that it will hit me hard, but defiantly standing there waiting to see exactly how hard it’s going to hit.”

    Will his love story ever be completed? Or is life only ever meant to be an exercise in fulfilling duty towards those who have rights over him?

    Photo credit : Adobe Stock

  • Know your place

    Know your place

    What if it wasn’t about the struggles, but about what we lost sight of that created those struggles?

    What if 2020 was needed to tamper our arrogance, or to test our gratitude?

    To remind us of the mortality of our dreams, and the reality of our shortcomings?

    To give us reason to pause and observe, rather than race on with assumptions?

    To remind us of our place in this world, as we persisted in acquiring that which we did not earn?

    2020 was a year of brutal truths and harsh realities.

    Of love and loss, and joy and grief. Like every other year of our lives.

    Only, in 2020, we were significantly constrained in our ability to distract ourselves from these grounding realities.

    2021 will be no different because the change in year doesn’t change our reality.

    Our reality only changes when we change our perspectives.

    If nothing else, let the gift of 2020 be a healthier perspective about life, and about your self.

    Oh, and remember to breathe…

    Photo credit : Adobe Stock

  • Farewell, it wasn’t fun

    Farewell, it wasn’t fun

    Goodbye to a year that has defined new depths of beauty and pain, and left its mark somewhere adrift between the two, leaving an ambivalence of hope and hopelessness, where once there was certainty.

    Nothing changes after midnight tonight. But the token of 2021 may give some hope, while the rest brace themselves for a continuation of the struggles of a year that most would want to forget, but everyone will always remember.

    Including the heartless who believe that being right about the pandemic is more important than being compassionate about the suffering that it continues to cause.

    We have a long way to climb to get ourselves out of this cess pool of humanity that we find ourselves in.

  • 2020: It doesn’t matter

    2020: It doesn’t matter

    Depleted. That is my word for 2020.

    After an eventful year, the net effect of this year has depleted my resources physically, and especially emotionally. Even a colourful life such as the one I’ve managed to create for myself could not have prepared me for the year that has passed.

    I discovered new levels of intensity of the best of what this world offered, and the worst. It was as if the higher the peak of the summit, the better the view of what was unreachable. This, if nothing else, was the beautifully wrapped gift of this year that I’d sooner forget than cherish.

    But a selective memory is one thing that I’ve been denied. The trials of life have always been experienced in full colour, with gentle hues serving as nothing more than the frayed edges of the darker shades of destruction that preceded it. Each time, leaving me more depleted than before.

    That brings me to my favourite phrase for 2020. It doesn’t matter. Despite the best efforts that I brought to bear on achieving some of the most important milestones of my life, I was reminded each time that it doesn’t matter. The only thing that mattered was what I was able to contribute towards the uplifting and healing of others. I guess that’s the burden of having a resilient spirit. Many find in that reason to take without any concern about depleting your resources. Especially your emotional resources.

    Perhaps that source of emotional resilience is the true alchemy of our souls. The ability to create beauty and tenacity through sheer will, despite having no reason, nor love, with which to create it. We create our own.

    This realisation has perhaps caused me to stumble upon yet another obvious truth that escapes too many. It is our creation of something from nothing, like the ability to love after having been through horror, or finding inner peace in the midst of turmoil, combined with the same from another, that offers us the semblance of companionship and the love connection of soul mates, when that effort is met in equal parts and with similar conviction. It is not the result of such a meeting, but in fact the meeting of two such results that creates a beautiful completeness about life. When one withdraws, the meeting is tarnished, and the promise of home once more denied.

    The reasons for withdrawing are many, most of which are fickle exaggerations of the assumptions of a tired soul. But the resulting abandonment faced by the other holds within it just one true value. That is, the reminder that despite the best intentions or efforts, true love can be fleeting if misplaced ideals are honoured while reality is discarded.

    There are some who appear in tune with the flow of joy in life, and then there are those like me, still struggling to find that flow at all. But not finding it doesn’t prevent us from stirring up the alchemy of the soul. That endless source of wonderment and inspiration, to see what is possible, despite repeated blows to the heart by what turned out to be impossible.

    This year has reminded me of one singular profound truth about who I am. I have never been the sum of a carefully nurtured gift. Yet, I have prevailed. I have never been the product of a caring society, yet I contribute. Most of all, I have never been the recipient of an unconditional love, yet I love deeply. The alchemist within me is still breathing, sometimes laboured, but still breathing. And this has been the source of the greatest wonderment and the deepest cuts that I’ve encountered in my troubled existence on this earth.

    But it’s a troubling existence that has left others more uneasy than it has ever left me questioning the purpose of life. It is my stubborn subscription to the value of not being defined by the actions of others towards me that has allowed me to maintain a semblance of sanity in my life. But sanity is subjective. And, I guess, so is purpose. My need to be of positive consequence in every setting that I encounter has been hardwired into my soul long before my first conscious thought was spawned. It is this need that drives my subscription to what I believe to be the purpose of life.

    ‘It doesn’t matter’ therefore doesn’t apply to my efforts towards others. But, instead, it confirms that no matter the responses I get, both good and bad, it doesn’t matter if it doesn’t feed this yearning to be true to myself before I am true to anyone else.

    Hence, I find myself contemplating my circumstances at the end of yet another trip around the sun. After having experienced the most beautiful moments and the darkest of horrors this year, sometimes at the same hands, I find myself still firmly attached to that rope that has kept me resilient and purposeful all my life. That is, a rope that tethers me to the divine, while the darkness of the troubled souls of this world continue to nip at my heels hoping to trip me up in their efforts for me to join their ranks of bitterness.

    It doesn’t matter. It never has. The only thing that ever mattered was me being able to live with the decisions that I’ve made towards others, even when their decisions towards me dishonoured the memory and commitment that they once shared. Despite this path being lonely, there is no companionship to be found in denying myself to appease the insecurity of another. Perhaps it is this conviction that feeds my resilience, or perhaps it is my inborn resilience that makes such convictions possible. Whatever came first doesn’t matter, as long as what goes last remains true to the convictions that I claim to uphold.

    Anything less will be hypocritical. And that is a despicably slippery slope indeed.

  • Time rewrites every line

    Time rewrites every line

    From my blog post titled Legacy of Beauty, this excerpt resonated strongly this evening.

    “As time morphs the pain into beauty it also morphs the beasts into angels.

    Those that manipulate the vulnerable suddenly appear as the downtrodden when their loss of control is lamented as a betrayal of love or affection.

    I sit with morbid amazement as I watch kids who are barely teens reminiscing about childhood and the wonderment that went with it as if it’s a long lost part of their lives, and I feel sad.

    The sadness deepens when I witness how their recollections embellish events to make it more wholesome or inclusive than it really was.

    The disease of the adults appear to have transcended a generation that used to be symbols of hope.

    Those symbols of hope are quickly becoming reminders of despair instead.”

    Read the full post on my blog at https://zaidismail.com/2016/04/29/a-legacy-of-beauty/

    Photo credit : Adobe Stock

  • The twins of love and pain

    The twins of love and pain

    We see in the world around us that which occupies the most space in our hearts.

    When our hearts are filled with love and affection, we find no place for hate or bitterness.

    When we hold space in our life for justice for past oppression, we prevent that space from being filled with the love that we may receive in the present moment.

    The need for justice often overwhelms any prospect of happiness because we feel denied as long as those who caused us pain live without consequence.

    When we’re filled with the rage of revenge, or the need for justice, any approaching love or affection appears as a threat for further pain because the possibility of betrayal is still clearly etched in the pain from the past that has yet to be reconciled.

    Healing then becomes dependent on justice, and life is put on hold. That holding pattern serves as a constant reminder of the injustice that we suffered, or the betrayal that cut so deeply.

    Thus, the oppression of the past contaminates the present, and denies us a future of the very happiness we hope to experience.

    But, when our rage convinces us that love and pain are twins, the promise of peace becomes a threat, and the holding pattern of pain becomes a comfort. Thus, we become unavailable to those who love us, and remain committed to seeking vengeance against those who thrive on our misery.