In
every life, some rain must fall. Madhumita Gupta has some tips on bringing back
the sunshine.

There comes a time in everyone’s life when things vie with
each other to prove Murphy’s Law true — everything that can go wrong
does and the end of the dark tunnel seems nowhere in sight. It can range from
failing in an interview, to getting ditched by your best friend, to being bested
in love, to something as irreversible as losing one of your loved ones.
Life seems the pits and you feel as if you don’t have it in you to
get out of it all. But you reckon without your built-in resilience — your
innate ability to bounce back. However well hidden, your hidden shock absorber
is within you — just give it time to get working.
Life hurts, but
the balms are yours for the finding.
THE FIVE
FUNDAMENTALS
* SHARE:
Troubles are halved when shared. Be it with your friend, mother, hubby, someone
you are really close to, tell it all without feeling that you may be making a
fool of yourself. And then listen to what they say. It will help you to be
objective and considerably lessen the crippling subjectivity.
* WORK:
You may feel you simply
can’t face another file, ledger, class — whatever it is you deal
with. Admittedly, it needs a superhuman effort to perform the most mundane task
— but the sheer feel of ‘routine’ will give you the stability
you need when your world seems to be falling apart. There is no better anodyne
than work.
“The wounded deer,” wrote poet Emily
Dickinson, “leaps highest.” Grief will sometimes bring to the fore
strengths which you never imagined you had.
* TIME:
The greatest healer of
all. Let it take its course and go with its flow. What seems unbearable today
will pass sooner or later into the past. Forever. Just don’t go digging it
up and opening old wounds. Nothing was ever achieved by wallowing in self pity.
* TAKE CHARGE:
It may seem a
steeply uphill task to take control when you’ve been through an emotional
wringer, and you will be sorely tempted to just let things be. But, don’t
forget, that situation won’t change until you do something about it. It is
tough, very tough, but don’t underestimate your resilience.
*
HAVE FAITH IN ‘HIM’:
Remember Granny saying: “He sends
these things to try us”? You might have thought it trite then; you may not
believe it today, but give the idea a try anyhow — for your granny’s
sake and yours. Try standing up to His trials. Granny too, must have gone
through a lot in her time; how did she manage to stay so serene and calm?
Perhaps her unshakeable faith in God was the key. If you can make yourself
follow these suggestions, half the battle will be
won.
THE
DON’TS
But guard against these pitfalls:
*
Don’t battle with grief:
Trying to put up a brave front is being
like a pressure cooker with a bad safety valve — it can burst any time. A
good cry may be just what the doctor ordered. You are a human being —
conditioned to ‘feel’ things and emote accordingly; why try to be
otherwise?
* Don’t brood:
Dwelling on the past is absolutely no good. It’s over and done
with, so there’s no use moaning, ‘If only!’. Concentrating on
the present and future is a more profitable alternative.
* Don’t rationalise:
Again
something which takes up an enormous amount of time and thought and achieves
zilch. What good is saying, ‘Maybe he did it because...’? A better
option is to learn from your experience and empower yourself with that
knowledge.
GET ON WITH
IT!
And now, some things which will definitely help lift your spirits:
* Think happy:
Keep the joyful
memories instead of the painful ones. It’s difficult, but doable.
* Pray:
We’re not
necessarily talking an elaborate
puja
;
just send up a small heartfelt prayer. You may actually feel divine benevolence
touch you like a downy feather.
* Do
something you really enjoy:
But do it without feeling guilty. Rediscover
all those things which gave you pleasure — now is the time you need them
most.
* Get a change of scene:
If
your current surroundings depress you by bringing back memories, get away.
Pronto! Even a day out will do something for those sagging spirits!
* Count the small blessings:
Even
if it looks like it at the moment, life isn’t just one damn thing after
another! There are a million things that you can still be thankful for.
* Listen to someone else’s
problem:
One of the most poignant stories has this moral: ‘I
thought I was unlucky that I didn’t have a shoe, till I met the man who
didn’t have any legs’. You may think yourself to be the most
unfortunate person on earth. But look around you — misery abounds. Join an
NGO, do something for someone; your own troubles will seem more insignificant.
Take heart from these oft-quoted lines, which hide a wealth of
wisdom, compassion and solace in them — “The darkest hour comes just
before dawn”; “When winter is here, can spring be far
behind?”
GOT COMMENTS OR QUESTIONS?
E-MAIL US AT femina@timesgroup.com WITH ‘TOOLS — HEARTBREAK? SHOVE
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