Who Would Like to Be Insane?

In the past six years, I have had the privilege of meeting various people to counsel them.  Some are individuals facing challenges at work, others in school, while some are couples or spouses.  I also get to meet families where the parents are having trouble with their children, either in their behaviour, studies or both.  This reminds me of my earlier mentor-counseling days back in mid-late 90s from my final year in university to my work life before I left for monkhood and began training in Fa Yun Monastery in New Mexico, US.  The key difference was that back then, I was there as a befriender and the teens were referred to me through the school and counseling centre.  Now, they come with their parents.

While they all have different background and face different difficulties, they have a similar disdain for one thing that practically all teens simply cannot stand:  Nagging parents.

It is amazing how parents I have met, can bring themselves to repeat themselves again and again and again.  One mother shared that she would repeat herself at least 10 times before something happens, and by something, she meant either she lose her marbles and goes bat-shit crazy or she get her husband to come and get the child to do as told.

Maybe 10 times is an exaggeration.  But wait, she says that sometimes she goes beyond that.  One thing is for sure, over the lifetime of a child, I’m pretty sure that one’s mother or father may have repeated themselves over and over and over again.  Why do they do that?  They hope that the child would change.  Great idea!  But to the child, it becomes nagging, it just becomes background noise.

Giving a reminder is one thing, giving 10 reminders or more is another.  We think that children are the ones who need nagging, oops, I mean reminders.  The thing is, if there are no consequences to ignoring reminders, people in general will just ignore them.  The parking “aunty” may annoy some people and do not strike most people as a profession of high standing, this person is part of a critical part of the civil servants in Singapore who enforces the law or
regulations.  Without the parking aunty, there would be no consequences for illegal parking.  Without consequences for illegal parking, then the very law on land use is moot.  As much as lawyers and judges run the show in courtrooms, the ground law enforcement officers represents the law and delivers it in your face.

So what does that got to do with nagging and parenting?  You see, if we just start nagging and deliver no consequences to a no-show, then the nagging is the warning and consequence.  If the punishment for parking illegally is to get a parking ticket that simply ‘fines’ you with more parking tickets, who would care?  Just more scrap paper maybe?

The flow-chart above is an example of the “communication” (or nagging) process.  In some cases, parents get tired of doing it, and they simply do it for them.  They become the ‘maids’ while the kids become the boss.  They do so until they get sick of it and they start nagging their kids again.  Rinse-and-repeat.  Sometimes, they would discipline their child, other times they would just do it for them.  You will notice in the image, a big cross over the “do it for them” bubble.  While it does ‘solve’ the dishes, dirty clothes, dirty room etc problem, the child gets a free room service.  Do it a few more times and we accidentally teach the child that ignoring the naggings may well get the job done or disciplining.  Hey, might as well take my chances!

When getting children to do their chores, it is useful to stop their activity and have their full attention first.  But have a bit of reasonable buffer and not expect your child to give soldier drill precision results at your beck and call.  Remember that you are trying to nurture your child, not train a soldier as well.

Some time back, I heard of a line “Insanity is doing the same thing over and over again but expecting different results.”  Today, after a google search, I found that this quote is from the author Rita Mae Brown in her book Sudden Death on Pg. 68 from 1983 [1]

Sounds familar?  When parents nag and nag and nag, hoping to get different results, they are really exhibiting some level of insanity.  Is that what is meant by parents being driven nuts by their kids?

Our parents, with their incessant nagging, do seem like lunatics sometimes.  I mean, what makes them think that we are going to budge* and suddenly change with the next gentle reminder?

No one in this world, in their sane mind would do that, surely.  No one.  No one but our dear parents.  For us, they are willing to be insane.  For us, they are driven to their wits end.  For us, they are willing to nag again and again and again.  They just hope that we will change the next hundredth time they nag.  They just hope like crazies.  For even if there is one strand of hope, they will be willing to be crazy, to act like lunatics, to nag at us just one more time.

There is no special celebration today for mothers, fathers or parents in general.  But to all parents, care givers, mentors, and teachers!  Thank you for being crazy for us!

PS: In a somewhat poignant way, today I kinda understand how it must have felt for my mom when a long time ago, I forced an apology out of her.  While I think I was right back then, I now understand how she felt when she said “I’m your mom, do you really need me to apologise to you?”.

Sorry mom! *weep*

 

Reference

Terror Strikes Mahabodhi Temple Despite Intelligence Warnings

A sad moment.  Hope the Dharma brothers and sisters who are hurt is recovering well.
Please stop this violence here and now.

This only goes to show what can happen when we are driven by hatred.
No matter what religion you have, let us all develop love and compassion for fellow human beings.

14.47 pm: Security alert sounded at Indo-Nepal border
An alert has been sounded on the Indo-Nepal border after nine serial explosions rocked the internationally renowned temple town of Bodh Gaya in Bihar.

District Magistrate K V Pandiyan said police and Sashastra Seema Bal (SSB) have been alerted after the terror attack and they have been asked to maintain a vigil on the border.

http://indiatoday.intoday.in/story/serial-blasts-bodhgaya-in-bihar-mahabodhi-temple/1/287300.html

和平的代价

前些日子,我和一位好友永喜一起吃午餐。他问我: “是否只要目的正当,我们就可以不择手段?” 我想了一会儿,再回答: “那么如果现在我们最终的目标是世界和平,但是得杀死每一个人…(因为没有了人,也就不会有争执,最终达到和平)这样还对吗?

我们在日常生活中所做的决定往往并非生死大事,但常常处在灰色地带,难以分辨对错。我个人觉得做事方法既然是为了达到目标所采取的行动,那么我们不应该把目标和方法分开来看,而应该一体对待。

另外,我们有些时候会发现,当我们想做某件事或采取某些行动之前,会不断地三思,甚至觉得难以决定。在这种状况下,很明显的-做事方法与结果的对错可能已经失去平衡。

汉译:燏

原稿:http://buddhavacana.net/2006/07/20/what-price-peace/

 

Inventor of ADHD’s Deathbed Confession

INVENTOR OF ADHD’S DEATHBED CONFESSION: “ADHD IS A FICTITIOUS DISEASE”

The German weekly Der Spiegel quoted in its cover story on 2 February 2012 the US American psychiatrist Leon Eisenberg, born in 1922 as the son of Russian Jewish immigrants, who was the “scientific father of ADHD” and who said at the age of 87, seven months before his death
in his last interview: “ADHD is a prime example of a fictitious disease

Parents, teachers and child educators, you may wish to take a second look at the child under your care.  Are we not giving our children a chance to grow up naturally?  In our attempt to have our child grow up fast enough, study and be more competitive, we are led to believe that our children have a disease when what they really need is some time to grow up.

The consumption of pharmacological agents altered the child’s behavior without any contribution on his or her part.

That amounted to interference in the child’s freedom and personal rights, because pharmacological agents induced behavioral changes but failed to educate the child on how to achieve these behavioral changes independently. The child was thus deprived of an essential learning experience to act autonomously and emphatically which “considerably curtails children’s freedom and impairs their personality development”, the NEK criticized.

Follow the link to read the full article.  http://www.worldpublicunion.org/2013-03-27-NEWS-inventor-of-adhd-says-adhd-is-a-fictitious-disease.html

Learning to Listen (Bonus Video Inside)

Sometimes what people need from us is a listening ear.

I know how that feels like, to really just need to share something with someone.  Ok, I felt that way like maybe twice in my whole life, but I digress.

A long long time ago, I read this interesting book “Men Are from Mars, Women Are from Venus” and chuckled over the insightful note that men tend to be fixers while women tend to be listeners.  Almost any time women share with men the challenges or difficulties they are facing, men will put on their “Mr-Fix-It” hat and start offering solutions.  Meanwhile women feel a disconnect, that they are not being heard.  After awhile, the man tend to stop offering solutions, or in some cases just zone out.  Then women would feel even more strongly that the man in their life is not listening to them!

It does not really matter whether the solution is valid or not, ‘cos sometimes people, not just women, just want someone to talk to or be heard, to feel like they are not alone facing their problem.  Sometimes all we really need is that emotional or morale support really.

Those of us with a “Mr-Fix-It” hat glued to our hat, can learn to go easy with our hammer as well. Not all conversations are about a nail that needs hammering or a hole to be plugged.  If we really want to help with solutions, it is vital to first listen as well, otherwise we might be bringing a plumber’s wrench to fix an electrical wiring fault, or as some would say, to bring a sword to a gun-fight.

I share this not because I’m faultless, but because occasionally, I would do that as well.  Recently, a friend shared with me her experiences in active listening training on how various factors like postures, body language, eye-contact, affirmation can promote listening.

A key point was on listening without thinking.  Most people are lost in their thoughts without listening completely to what the other person has to say.  We are busy formulating our reply or answers and are just waiting for a chance to have our say.

Her sharing struck a few cords in me.  Besides the book “Men Are from Mars, Women Are from Venus” I mentioned above, it also reminded me of the counselling training I had back during university days by Shan You Counselling Centre, the training in consulting earlier on, and how that’s exactly what I saw in people whom I was having counselling or discussions with.

Many people were indeed drifting away mid-sentence, either thinking about other matters or waiting for a chance to reply … or give advices!

So I was somewhat surprised when my friend told me that me jotting notes while counselling meant that I was not 100% listening.  It got me thinking whether I am a good listener.  Perhaps I’ve gotten jaded over the years and assumed that I know all the intricacies of people’s mind and the problems they face and so I stopped listening so much.  Or maybe I’ve become complacent and thought that I can listen and write without colouring my hearing?  While I like to think that I do listen, as with most things, it is probably a shade of gray and I’m probably somewhere in between.

It is a good reminder to listen, to listen attentively with our heart.

Perhaps the next time you drop by and talk to me, you will see my pen resting idly on the writing pad or book, while I listen to what you have to say.  And if you ask me any questions or need me to suggest a solution, then will I start writing, drawing, sketching and illustrating my point.

Be like Guan Shi Yin Pu Sa 觀世音菩薩, listening attentively to the cries of sentient beings in the world, ready to care, comfort and love all.

Happy Vesak Day!

Bonus Item

A very revealing video on how active listening is most important! :p

It’s Not About the Nail from Jason Headley on Vimeo.

七个包子的故事

从前有两个志同道合的朋友,麦佳柔泥和佳碧。 有一天,他们俩约好一起吃午餐。由于佳碧知道麦佳柔泥从小就喜欢吃包子,所以两人不约而同地决定午餐就吃包子!佳碧给自己点了一个大包,也为好朋友点了一样的大包。

那一天,麦佳柔泥非常饿,很快地就把大包给吃完了。但是他还是觉得有点饿,便请佳碧为他点多一个大包。吃完了第二个大包之后,麦佳柔泥还是觉得有点饿,又再一次请佳碧为他点多一个大包。。。就这样,麦佳柔泥吃了第三个大包,第四个大包,第五个大包,第六个大包,一直到第七个大包。

这时候,佳碧不禁松了一口气,心想:我的好兄弟终于吃饱了,没想到他的胃口竟然那么大。。。但是麦佳柔泥似乎有些心思。

“好朋友,你在想什么?是不是要我再点多一个大包啊?”

“我在想。。。我是吃了第七个包子才觉得饱。早知如此,我就不该吃了前六个大包,只吃第七个包子就好了呀!”

“别傻了!你是因为吃了前六个大包,再吃第七个大包才觉得饱!”

“真的吗?但是我吃了第一个包子后还是觉得饿, 吃了第二个还是觉得饿,第三个, 第四个, 第五个和第六个也不例外。直到吃了第七个大包后,才觉得饱的呀!”

朋友们,想一想你拥有的技能或能力。不论它是多么的微小或独特,它必须是你所拥有的。这个技能或能力并非是我们一出世就拥有的,所以回想一下你是如何地培训这个技能或能力。是谁在你的身边帮助了你?你在培训当中需要些什么资源吗?又是谁帮助了你获得这些资源呢?是你自己争取到的,还是他人给你的,或者是他人把它卖给你的?

这个技能或能力,你是从某个人,某本书或网页学习到的呢?若你能够明白使用的语文,还能依然地学习吗?就如阅读这篇文章,你若没有学习华语,便无法阅读甚至明白这篇文章。因此,学习华语是阅读与及明白这篇文章的一个先决条件。

对于大多数人来说,你会发现,几乎所有我们今天所拥有的能力不仅仅是我们自己努力的结果,而是经过我们自己的努力与及很多很多个人,组织,资源的功劳。但是往往,我们不认识这些人,甚至对他们浑然不觉。

当我们反思我们今天的成就,我们可能会感激我们生活中的少数的几个人。但是,当我们更深一层地反思,我们便会意识到我们就像故事里的麦佳柔泥,把成功全归结到最后一个人或团体。事实上,错综复杂的相互关联的依赖关系只能进行建模或抽象的居多,而即使是这样,我们简单的生活其实涉及到很多个别的因素而成就的。

今天,我们庆祝教师节。但是我们要明白,我们生活中的老师不仅仅是课室里的老师而已。就如七个包子的故事,我们生活中的每一个人都教过了我们某些东西,多亏他们的功劳,我们才会拥有今天的成就。我们应该向佳碧学习,感恩我们生活中的每一个教师。解决饥饿不单单是第七个包子的功劳。

在中阿含《连车经》,舍利弗尊者(Ven. Sariputra)及菩那尊者(Ven. Punna)一樣的思择七种清净法,各为彼缘后而究竟解脱涅槃。经中,菩那尊者用了七连车為比喻,述说了波斯匿憍萨罗王(King Pasenadi Kosala)以七连车从舍卫城(Savatthi)到沙只城(Saketa)去。国王并非以任何一辆车抵达目的地,而是以七连车通行。这部经也就以此喻而得名。

所以,我的朋友啊,仔细看看你的生活。联想一下七个包子的故事,要感恩帮助你成长和成熟的老师们。我们要感激许多人,朋友和陌生人,大,中,小,看到的和看不见的,近及远。

让我们用爱和同情,发出内心的感激和喜悦,祝每个老师教师节快乐!

汉译:燏

英文原稿 The Story of Seven Buns

参照