Wednesday, December 10, 2014

TOMORROW IS ANOTHER DAY

A very powerful and speculative ending from ‘Gone With The Wind’ by Margaret Mitchell. To me it meant another chance, to learn, to grow, to make mistakes, to learn from them and to grow some more. One place where we do this on a regular basis is a forum called Toastmasters.

Have you ever seen a toddler learn how to walk? Spreading both the arms across, with one wobbly step after another, a child falls down, gets up wobbles a little more, falls again, gets up… and the process is repeated till the toddler is finally walking and eventually running.

Resonance 2014 was one such experience. To the trained eye, we probably made a lot of mistakes, but it made me very proud of those people who took on responsibilities for the first time and performed so well. In the true toddler style, the minute I stepped up on stage, I tripped and fell and got up again. All good things begin with a mistake.

My mind reeled back to August 2014 International Convention at Kuala Lampur, when I heard Chris Woo. This man, sweet, unassuming was a finalist at the World Champion of Public Speaking. He came to the stage and started speaking on how he didn’t have a speech, but he was there because he wanted to live up to the expectations of people who wanted him to be there. Chris inspired me, not because he had an exceptional speech, but because he taught me a very important lesson… that it’s okay to fail. It’s okay to be imperfect, it’s okay even if you don’t do well today, because tomorrow…

You don’t have to be a superhero, throughout our lives we keep hoping for superheroes to come and save us, or help us out of our jeopardizing situations. I personally grew up on stories where the girl falls, and a handsome hunk is there to catch her before she touches the ground. Most of our movies and TV soaps are based on the same theme. In real life, nobody turns up. When you fall, you have to get back up, dust yourself and start walking again. Falling down and making mistakes are a part of life, are a part of walking, are a part of growing up. Hrithik Roshan didn’t turn up to catch me, and don’t even get me started on Abhishek Bachchan. Not even a side-hero!


Like they say in Kannada, “Every dosa has holes, it’s how well you cover them up that matters.” So make mistakes today, learn from them, and start afresh tomorrow, because tomorrow is another day!