The purpose of
life is happiness.
If we are not happy, we cannot think of making others happy.
A win-win situation is when we are happy and others are happy. If we are
unhappy while making other happy, it is a lose-win situation. Being unhappy and
making others unhappy is totally a lose-lose scenario.
Happiness is a result of satisfying our needs.
Selfish Needs
We begin our quest for happiness by satisfying self-centric
needs. We focus on our personal needs – food, clothing, shelter, security.
These needs do not need interaction with other human beings.
The next level of self-centric needs requires interacting
with a select group of people. These are the need for love, affection and
membership of a group. The need to belong to a group also helps satisfy
security needs. When these needs are satisfied, we feel happy.
All the above are self-oriented, and we keep moving from one
to the other, since these keep changing.
This is also a win-lose relationship, as our need fulfilment
MAY be contingent on others’ unhappiness.
Symbiotic Needs
We realise that to satisfy some needs, we also have to give
something in return.The relationship moves from ‘taking’ to ‘give-and-take’,
and a negotiation happens whether both parties in a relationship are giving
equally. This is a matter of perception, and if one party feels he is not
getting enough, then there are issues. We are buying the satisfaction of our
needs by giving something of worth to the other person. This may seem like a
barter, as there is no common currency and the valuation of the relationship is
subjective.
By the way, ‘relationships’ do not just mean emotional
couples, but include other one-to-one (boss – subordinate) and one-to-many
relationships (member’s relationship with the group). If the relationship is
based on symbiotic needs, then the perception of what one gets from this
relationship determines the quality of the relationship.
This agreement is still selfish, and such a relationship and
resulting happiness is short-lived, if one person feels he is being
short-changed or his needs will be better satisfied elsewhere. We start looking
for happiness with another person, another boss, another job and another group.
The need of one person in the relationship can become so
selfish, that he/she holds on to the relationship with both hands, suffocating
the relationship and the other person. This creates unhappiness and results in
alienation. Again, this can happen in couples, in jobs and in families. There
is no free will and can become exploitative, if one person depends on the other.
Unselfish Needs
If I loved a bird, my first instinct is to keep it in a cage.
I am happy, the bird may not be. We may rationalise this situation by saying
that the bird’s needs for food and shelter are being satisfied. We assume that
these are the only needs.
If I release the bird, two things can happen.
1. The bird flies away, never to return or
2. the bird returns and stays with me out of free will.
Either way, the bird is happy.
To really give someone happiness and therefore achieve true
happiness, we need to free the bird.
Fear of Exploitation
While discussing this philosophy with friends, one friend
said,
“I am sure even Mother Teresa would have felt bad when she
would have seen someone buying liquor with the money given to him for food!!”
Yes, it is true that we feel disappointed when people exploit
us. I have a few thoughts on that.
1. A drunkard is a victim, not a villain. He did not
willingly become a drunkard, in order to face social stigma. He now has needs,
psychological and physiological, and he believes these can be satisfied by
liquor. We are judging from our frame of reference, which says that food is
more important, and our money should be used as WE deem fit.
This is conditional giving, not free giving. Once we give the
alcoholic the money, we have relinquished our hold on the act of giving. If we
were so convinced that food was more relevant, we could have offered food
instead of money.
Such people are entitled to compassion, not judgement
2. How many friends do we have, and how many have exploited
us? If the number is low, should we change our attitude and become cynical, to
the detriment of our positivity and therefore impacting our other relationships?
3. Does this cynicism mean that we are still in symbiotic
need fulfilment stage? Does it mean that we are disappointed that we are not
getting enough in return – our need to feel wanted, of gratitude, or expiation
of some guilt?
I know that is is difficult in this materialistic world to be
truly altruistic, and we will succumb to selfish and symbiotic need fulfilment.
I just wish that we do this knowingly, with the understanding that this
happiness is short-lived.
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