Life is often compared to various things. One such analogue would be the entangled poonal. If you are one of those who happen to sash the sacred thread on your shoulder, you’ll know this.
My case was a peculiar. What happened was:
1. The Poonal was in a complete disheveled state.
2. It was in an imbroglio with the earphone cable
3. The snarled thread was still on my shoulder
So what did I do:
1. Get Frustrated
2. Looked at it as an opportunity to provide a solution
3. Developed some perspective and decided to throw some philosophy on life
Comparing, the three stages -
1. Life’s sometime screws up
Being an aspirant Statistical Thermodynamicist, I’d like to sprinkle some scientific perspective on this. Nature always has a way of maximizing entropy. With respect to any string/chain/polymer, there are more configurations that it can assume in the coiled state rather than in the outstretched, or near outstretched state. The point: chaos is inevitable. What we need to do, is see order in chaos, and tackle chaos without causing further chaos.
2. Our life entangles in other’s issues – We are not alone
Living independent is again an impossible thing to do. The conglomeration of people is like a gossamer. Oftentimes, in sophisticated societies, there is an extent to which independence is existent, but this is at the price of isolation where plebian support is also negligible. The point – We need to leverage other people being around and work together towards detangling. The people, society and others must never be a liability to our progress.
3. Our ego still sticks on to our problems
When I was young and when my poonal used to entangle, Amma used to help detangle it. She always had a systematic approach to problem. And during the annual “avani avittam”, Appa used to detangle it. But in life, you can’t always expect others to look into and solve your problems. You need to work your way through.
We need to dissociate ourselves from our problem and approach it rationally and logically.
The modus operandi:
1. Dissociate yourself with your life, but don’t run away – unsash the poonal, don’t get rid of it.
2. Take a first glance at the problems, the poonal is intertwined like a labyrinth
3. Locate the problems, they are all over the place like the knots in the poonal
What we often do is getting too caught in our own problems that we continue to live in the rut. Else, there’s always somebody calling. Like Steve and Shrevats wanting me to play “Halo”
So what comes next?
The brahmamudichu:
1. The brahmamudichu or the brahmagranthi is the master knot that holds the three strings of the poonal together. The three strings are said to represent unity of thought, word and deed. In life, the brahmamudichu is our spirit or the eternal life force, which holds us together.
2. We must use this ‘master knot’ as a pivot and approach the problems carefully, using it as reference ensuring that the master knot itself doesn’t get caught in the imbroglio.
3. Now the rest of the tangled parts of the poonal have different points where the “confusion” is.
The final solution
1. Once the brahmamudichu is pivoted, we must ensure that we locate our other problems carefully and disassociate one from another. This way we’ll have a better idea of how our problems look like and how big they are.
2. Work on the problems, one by one. Ensure that you do not get boggled by the big problems. Once the small ones are on the way, the big one seems easier.
3. Work on the big problem
The big problem:
Often the last step is the toughest. It’s tantalizing, playing a game with you. It forces you to give up at the same time, you know you don’t have much left before you get to the cheese. The most important thing is to NOT GIVE UP NOW.
Once you show enough commitment, dedication and focus, life will pave a way itself. And in the end, the last of knots will be detangled by a simple “legerdemain” of the wrist.
You get the cheese. Your life’s in your hands. Crystal clear. Now don it. And live life. King size.
Yagnopaveetham paramam pavithram
Prajapatheryasahajam purasthad
Aayushyamagryam prathimuncha shubram
Yagnopaveetham balamasthu thejah!!
13 comments:
That made a very good read! Hilarious and very informative for a layman... :) Keep writing!!
awesoem stuff dude ....excatly wat hppnd to me tday...I shall learn from u ...
gethu da... engeyo poita un thinking la! also, GRE king :D
only you can do it :) (Pun intended)
on similar lines - i once had to change my poonal on a non-aavani aavittam day, and while I was working on to untie the new poonal (poonals usually come in a nice simple knotted fashion) - for some blunder I made, the poonal got entangled. Try as I may, the entanglement got more complicated, or got simplified but stopped at one level and wouldn't go beyond that - as a result - I was working to make the poonal proper for a good amount of time - the points you wrote in your article - "dissociate the problems from one another" - I did that, but when I dissociated some areas, other parts of hte poonal got associated into another complex twist - okay, I tried to "locate the smallest problem" - but there were atleast half a dozen small entanglements and I couldn't discern if they were small or if they were big - because all they were were just entanglements all over, okay - coming to the Brahma's Knot - I located that, toyed around that portion, kept the Three Faced Knot in view and used it as a lever, as a pivot, as a initial point, as a initial guess, as an chaos generator - but, the entanglements always harmoniously oscillated between getting more complicated or going to a stagnant level of simplified state, try as I may - looked at it from a bigger picture - all I saw was a mass of white which had lots of fibrous strands protruding everywhere, so - after few hours of struggle, the conclusion - certain entanglements are not worth working on for long times, working on a problem thinking you can solve it no matter what - is sheer lack of rational thinking, some problems are worth solving, some are worth dwelling on, some are worth attempting even though it cannot be solved, some - are just to be discarded never to be looked at again - because, it is very easy to start from the very beginning with a new sample and do the entire thing again, so - I took a new poonal and un-knotted it without any hassle and without committing the error I did earlier - the idea is - to identify the cause of the problem, see if you can repeat the entire process without making the same mistake that caused the problem, if that is possible - then it is easier to discard the problem and start over, if you are so deep into something that it is impossible to start all over - then, you need to sit and solve it - because that is your duty, you have to wear it, you have to understand it, you have to know how to work it.
Your thoughts are as entangled as your poonal and I can see you are really trying to find order in that chaotic brain of yours. At the end of this read,it is So??????
Keep writing...
Nice one da... a new perspective. really well brought out...
@Ajith, Satish, Sreenath and Venk: Thankees
@Mahesh: Super perspective da. Fresh new (pun intended) way to look at it. Really happy to know that you have put good thought into a random problem everyone encounters. At the end of the day, handling problems is a pedestrian thing and we all somehow have a way around it. As you clearly said, I'd have clearly gone in for a new poonal if at all I had one. The primary reason of my obsession to detangle it was because it was the only one with me! And in the process of doing the detangling only did it ever occur to me that it would be a blogpost worthwhile writing. Thanks a lot!
@Malini: True. Thoughts are chaotic. Getting them straight laid out is one thing I'm working on!
Great read.
Aravindh: Simplifying life's concepts, One Poonal at a time.
I know what poonal can do to u sometimes, it has left me with more frustrating situations. But giving it such an elaborate theory might sound crazy to many, but i consider it practical.
I would suggest you to sprinkle some more "James Gleik" theory in it..might also end up making it even more chaotic...! ;)
good one kai ! :-)
ha ha the poonal became a pain-nal.. Awesome .. I really liked this post. I'm glad u've started blogging seriously...
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