Incredible things are done in the world simply out of
commitment. A great example is that of Mahatma Gandhi. If we look at
this man, he was not talented or anything special, please see. As a
child he did not show great potential. He was not extraordinarily
intelligent. He was not an artist, scientist, or even a very good
lawyer. He could not successfully practice as a barrister in India,
which is why he went to South Africa for a better opportunity. Even
there, he was not very successful. But suddenly, the man made a
commitment towards something. He got so committed that he became a
giant.
Only with just one incident in his life,
suddenly all his identities broke.
He had gone to South Africa to make a
living and he was doing okay as a lawyer. One day he bought a first
class ticket in a train, got in, and traveled some distance. At the next
station, a white South African got in. This man did not like a
brown-skinned person sitting in first class, so he called the ticket
collector.
The ticket collector said, “Get Out!”
Mahatma Gandhi said, “I
have a first class ticket.”
“It doesn’t matter, just get out.”
“No, I have a first class ticket. Why should I get out?”
They threw Gandhi out of the train along
with his luggage and he fell on to the platform. He just sat there for
hours. “Why did this happen to me? I bought a first class ticket. Why
was I thrown out of the train?” he thought. It was then that he
identified himself with the larger predicament of the people. Till then
his survival, law, and making money were important to him. But now, he
identified with a much larger problem that existed. He just broke that
little identification and moved into a much larger identity.
A
man once visited a temple under construction where he saw a sculptor
making an idol of God. Suddenly he noticed a similar idol lying nearby.
Surprised, he asked the sculptor, "Do you need two statues of the same
idol?"
"No," said the sculptor without looking up, "We need only one, but the first one got damaged at the last stage."
The gentleman examined the idol and found no apparent damage. "Where is the damage?" he asked.
"There is a scratch on the nose of the idol." said the sculptor, still busy with his work.
"Where are you going to install the idol?" The sculptor replied that it would be installed on a pillar twenty feet high.
"If the idol is that far, who is going to know that there is a scratch on the nose?" the gentleman asked.
The sculptor stopped his work, looked up at the gentleman, smiled and said, "I will know it."
The desire to excel is exclusive of the
fact whether someone else appreciates it or not. "Excellence" is a drive
from inside, not outside.
Many humans who are historically known as
great beings; this is all that happened to them. They were living with a
limited identification. All of a sudden, an event occurred that broke
their identities and they were able to relate to a larger process
happening around them. They did things that they themselves could not
imagine possible.
Gandhi moved millions of people just like
that. Not only in India, anywhere in the world just take the name of the
Mahatma and there is a sense of respect. All this happened at a time
when there were so many leaders who were true giants in India. They were
more talented, better orators and better educated. Yet, this man stood
above them all, simply because of his commitment.
"Whatever happens, life or death,
commitment must not change." That is the mantra of Mahatma Gandhi ji. Truly committed, you express yourself
totally, in every possible way. When commitment is lacking, somewhere
you lose your purpose. When the purpose is lost,
there is no question of fulfilling our goals. The goals remain totally unfulfilled.
So being committed is just something we
have to decide within ourselves. If we are truly committed to whatever
we have taken up in our life, then the results are plenty. If
results don’t come for a committed person there is no such thing as
failure. If I fall down 100 times a day, what to do? Stand up and walk
again, that’s all.
Commitment does not mean aggressiveness;
this must be understood. This is where Mahatma Gandhi’s example is so suitable in the circumstances. He was committed to India’s freedom struggle, but at the same time
he was not against the British people, only because of his humanity. That was the best part, wasn’t
it? This shows the maturity of that man.