Guest guest Posted September 27, 2003 Report Share Posted September 27, 2003 SHOULD WE TALK ILL OF OTHERS? Backbiting is no different from other contagious diseases and none is immune from it – be it men, women or children. Quite a number of men and women get the real kick out. Taking time off from the mid-day chores, housewives often join together to exchange remarks on somebody who is not there. On being questioned why they resort to talking ill of others, a majority would confess that it releases a bit of their pent-up selves. A few, however feel that this argument is flimsy, it is just a smoke screen to cover up a wrong. That is why no words ought to be minced to condemn backbiting Let us take a hard look at the problem. Why do we criticize others generally without much ground and always in their absence? By doing so don’t we prove ourselves to be cowards? It benefits more but hurts quite a few. Once someone talked ill of a person in his absence to the late Shri Madam Mohan Malviyaji. Malviyaji grinned and said, "Listen man, what do you gain by casting aspirations on a person who is not here? I can assure, you won’t be able to win the ‘last laugh’ in this ugly game." Backbiting has many other causes also, seeing you excel a person in examination or securing a higher status could also be grounds, for backbiting whenever it is felt that Mr. A’s selfish motives are at stake, easy resort is made to backbiting and spreading wild stories before others. Then there is a chain reaction that leaves many a family ruined, domestic and social tranquility is jeopardized. Domestic servant and small children fall easy prey to the games who get to know the truth despite your best efforts to conceal. Backbiting gives to pride. It happens only when we blind ourselves to our own blunders, and are eager to criticise others on mere pretexts and quite often on pretensions. It would be of great social advantage if we looked at ourselves and if possible always at ourselves. Nobody realizes how much do we harm others. If we must talk about others let us praise them. Acharya Vinoba Bhave has rightly counselled to redirect all complaints of backbiting to the deal letter office. After all, backbiting means biting from behind any way should a self-respecting fellow take recourse to this none-to-chivalrous act! Mahatama Gandhi’s theory to ‘hate the sin and not the sinner’ is a relevant quotable in this regard. Let us, therefore, pledge ourselves in doing our best to make life richer with the co-operation and goodwill of all. (Courtesy: R.L. Pathak in Modern Practical Psychology, April 2003 issue) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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