Last week I was on vacation with a very dear friend and her teenage daughter. I introduced them to a ‘Confessions Game’- a deck of cards on money, relationships, family and career. The person rolling the dice, answers a question on the card that she picks. The questions were bold and made you reflect deeply on aspects of your life that you may not have revealed to yourself, let alone the world. 'How would you say your parents have damaged you?',
So what about this simple game
fascinated us?
Our minds are flooded with a
multitude of thoughts and feelings- some pleasant and some frightening. The
turmoil in our external world has only compounded the state of our inner world.
The fear of impending death, loss of a job, the loneliness- the chaotic clutter
has its pulls and pressures. In placing them out there, we are lessening the
burden of holding it in our minds. A spring cleaning of thoughts and emotions
that have been buried in the recesses of our mind, hanging heavy. Vulnerable
sharing of our past, particularly our childhood has a certain liberating
quality to it. Critiquing our parents’ style of parenting, is not something
that’s common or encouraged. Yet in this reflective objective evaluation, we
redeem a part of ourselves. The smoothing of the frayed edges is soothing.
“Everyone communicates, few connect.”
this statement by John
Maxwell, stands out as a stark reminder of our lives in the recent past. An
inability to comprehend the embroils of our mind, the hesitation in voicing our
discomfiting feelings; has led to stress and anxiety. A growing sense of
isolation and solitude is an obvious by product of pent up emotions. Such an
irony in times where our lives are getting invaded by new communication
technology and social media platforms!
When we share uninhibitedly , carefully
examining what makes us who we are, we feel healed and collected. The hurt caused by betrayal, the guilt of a
broken relationship, the crashing of dreams and desires– is yearning for release.
With all that’s getting accumulated within, the need to have adequate support
groups where there is safety in letting our guard down; is becoming a pressing
need. I see many around me getting
crushed under its colossal weight of unresolved thoughts and feelings, leading
to ill health both physical and psychological. They try desperately to put up a façade of
normalcy, denying the whirlwind of unsettling emotions that rages within.
As a conversation starter, this game
was the perfect medium to dive deep within. My friend and I had a candid
threadbare discussion on an argument we had a day earlier. We got to the source
of what triggered us and what we need to be mindful of in future. Mother and
daughter surprised each other with their perspectives, taking their
relationship a notch deeper. My reservations about my friends’ likes, an
assumption that this game would be dismissed as ‘too serious or heavy’ was
busted all too quickly.
Many of us spend time on social media
speaking about what’s going right in our lives. And that’s just a miniscule
part of who we are. In our effort to
uphold a social image of having everything under control, we quell our weak and
tender side. We need to consciously keep identifying people within our network
who we can turn to, to rediscover, redeem and re align ourselves. Coaches, friends,
family need to be sought out as our support circle.
When we choose this for ourselves, we
are wise not weak.
1 comment:
Wonderful article. And since I was the guinea pig on this one, I can vouch completely for the magic of deep conversations
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