There are, however, also differences as are bound to be in two people’s respective experience even as they chart a separate course in life. I certainly have had to struggle harder than him in climbing such a ladder to higher achievement, while he was born literally with a silver spoon in comparison. With a family to boot, initial barriers were overcome simply by the strength of his genealogy, as he found glory. I, a son to a typical farming family of Punjab, had to begin my struggle early, very early, and chart my own course ahead.
Our respective fields of profession meant a measure of ‘application’ adding value to what was naturally endowed; his cricket, mine flying — only a minuscule make it successfully in combat flying. He became a champion cricketer before the eyes of the world; I, accomplished enough in the art and science of flying, known within my narrow spread of profession. There is, however, a crucial common between us that paved the way for our respective success: passion, that he calls ‘junoon’; and application, that composes hard work, perseverance and resilience. It is ‘application’, and the knowledge of what it takes to succeed that keeps one grounded. Passion alone can be a misleading teacher. Varying amounts of application in one’s experience could engender a different value of grounding.
There is another teacher in life that is a bigger and a better teacher than success — adversity. Beyond the common losses that each of us share in the cycle of life, there are some that are personal; especially, if it also involves one’s ‘junoon’; like experiencing an early end to one’s career built around passion. He did not have to experience such setbacks. He rose to become the skipper of the national team, and won his country the world cup. That is akin to a soldier rising to be the chief of his service, and then winning his nation a war. He did both; I remained shy of both despite similar levels of passion.
In learning ‘why’, there lies the key to understanding Imran’s current dilemma; one moment a heady mix of a likely victory celebrated through visible devotion of his fans, and at another a constant chatter that tells him he has the system and himself locked into a grid with no way out; the cost too horrendous to imagine — to himself and to the political system of which he now is the shareholder. We are into what one might call ‘a political paralysis’ — a government unable to function. To most in the country, Imran’s passion has brought us into this blind alley. ‘Events’ now dictate how Pakistan will react, rather the other way round. This is called ceding control to extrinsic processes, such as street power. This is a failing of the government.
An initial attempt at dialogue between the two was soon taken over by primordial recourse to battle positions when the Parliament provided the government a ‘thumping’ support. Political sanity is in serious short supply in a nation that thrives on passion to the point of frenzy. We fail to realise that those who touched greatness did with heaps of ‘application’ added to such passion. Knowing it had little to fear after support from all state institutions the government simply forgot about remedying the shortcomings that had first been the reason the PTI and the PAT moved against it.
This is what ‘adversity’ might have taught Imran: as you near the peak, there are many who are ready to throw you off. You might think of them as lesser people, unsuitable to the lofty heights that they occupy instead, but them all — the environment, the elements — can combine to thwart your moment of ascent to the peak. They bring you down in the name of a system, with which they have common stakes and shared interests. They will do so without concern for how far you may have travelled and how arduous and how steep had been your ascent. Systems win; individuals lose. Systems can be overturned by revolutions alone, but revolutions are destructive; not every structure can take a revolution.
When the US political system shuts down because of a gridlock — at times for months — it still has the resilience to resume and recover when it restarts. For Pakistan where daily borrowing is to the tune of rupees five billion just to make the system run, no authority in control means that both the state and the nation will crumble. It is to keep the basic unit functioning that we step back, that we withdraw, that we forsake our ambitions. This, too, is the ultimate sacrifice especially when passion drives your ambition.
And this is what ‘application’ would teach you under the circumstances: the need to persevere ‘within’ a system; to work the possible avenues and incrementally evolve the system closer to the dream that one carries. The system like a mountain is else too heavy to move despite the passion. Knocking against it is decimating your own existence.
Another lesson of politics resides in its definition: the art of the possible. A pursuit of the impossible in contrast is irrational. Irrationality and audacity are mutually replaceable commodities; if you win, you will be called audacious; when you lose, you will be termed irrational. The line is thin and the cost is huge. The cases that Imran or Tahirul Qadri make are genuine, but against a system that decides to stand against them en bloc, they may not make much difference beyond D-Chowk. Under such circumstances you play for a draw, which is as fair a result if not as exciting. When maximal is costly, optimal can be the best take-away. Take it.
Published in The Express Tribune, August 23rd, 2014.
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COMMENTS (25)
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First time I feel this is good article, GP65 obviously will chant always differently and consistently only one mantra....
We had high hopes with the present govt but unfortunately they failed to deliver & solve people's problems, due to nepotism & mainly corruption. I had a plot in a society in Islamabad near new airport. The route to this society was open during Gen Musharaf ( dictatorship ) era. Now access route to this society has been blocked in democratic times. I have heard that people at the helm of affairs are asking money to open this route. The courts which are giving decisions in days in political cases are silent in our case since December last year. Where one should go & to whom one should contact. There are 8000 allottees in this society. Since CDA has failed to develop new sectors, the private societies have chipped in but unfortunately instead of encouraging the private sector, hinderance is created at all levels to extort money. People simply can't afford to buy property in Islamabad due to exhorbant prices. They have to move out to these societies but then face beaurocratic problems. Under the circumstance, why shouldn't we back Imran khan, Tahir ul qadri or dictatorship. What type of democracy is this, where people are murdered & the routes to their plots & houses are blocked. At least I am not in favour of such democracy & governments. I would favour any body, who brings change in this system.
Never give up,is a virtue of great revolutionaries and leaders.IK and TUQ are leaders with grit.They know very well that success particularly a CHANGE in SYSTEM do not come easily and is not bounded by time.Why should both play for a draw and let down their people ?.Those who play for a draw to implement a great idea are weak people and not leaders.Great leaders are not necessarily achievers and vice versa.
In a democracy, where is the need for street action to bring down an elected government.
Let the persons who are in the opposition today, win the next election.
IK should remember that politics is the art of possible. In case a new election takes place and he is unable to get a simple majority how will he form a govt if he has not a single political party that is willing to back him given his belligerent attitude to them. Then there will be a new crisis.
@manoj
Gp65 is seriously biased against this writer for obvious reasons; don't expect her to be neutral in her observations.
He is immature alright ( let's say) but he is honest, has guts to put all his hard earned recognition at stake only to ensure genuine elections. Is this asking too much? No other single politician has ever sacrificed or compromised his or her position like this ever. This is beginning of the end.
Chaudhry sahab, from a son of a Punjabi farmer, one expected a humble and pragmatic approach. But what we have is muddled thinking, from you and, your fellow "top achiever".
Shahzad, as usual, a good analysis. But can anybody among the PM's close advisors really understand what are trying to tell. I doubt.
By referring to Hosni Mubarak repeatedly in the last few days, Imran gives us a peak into what he's thinking. He is here to overthrow the Mubarak of Pakistan. But at the end of the day, the Egyptian army rules the country today, not politicans. So if Pakistan were to go the way of Egypt, Imran would be nowhere. It would be El Raheel Sisi Shareef sitting on top of us. So I am still puzzled about what Imran really wants.
@riz: and gp65 - narcissm and self praise? When did opening up one's failures began to get counted in praise. It is courageous to bring home to others lessons for success borne from personal failures of another. You only see what your brain tells you to see. Your brain only tells you based on what it is composed of.
It is an excellent analysis of the current situation prevailing Pakistan. We all feel that we are constantly victim of the most corrupt political system that does not bring any good news for the masses and Imran Khan plus Tahir ul Qadri speak the language of our anguish. The beneficiaries of this system stand hand in hand to save it for themselves. We shaould stand by their side at this defining moment to bring a just change otherwise we are deemed to fall in the ditch of disgrace.
Interesting, not the whole article, but just the last para advising Imran to cool it. I wish the writer had given more reasons than just "passion" for what Imran is up to. Did Imran miscalculate, is he over ambitious (then it should be made of sterner stuff, the last outburst of his was counter-productive), or is he being driven by forces larger than himself? At the end of the day, for politicians (and in fact, for just about everybody else), it is unwise to paint yourself into a corner. As the AVM tells it, don't make the ultimate the enemy of the possible.
@Rangoonwala: very right Pakistan is Modi's mercy now ! Just as your economy is at IMF's mercy.
@riz: You said it. Just what i thought.
What if army support fails to materialize?
Narcissism & self praise, running supreme these days among politicians and even writers :D
Very interesting and thought provoking. Is it possible that the world cup victory may be seen as a victory for the team and Imran Khan may be now looking for an individual victory? If so, then let's see how the events unfold.
Creation of Pakistan was no trivial task, may be seen as unnecessary (and foolish) at that time by some but today do we side with the view that the effort was unnecessary? The one person who championed that effort (went against an established system) may have felt that it was a do or die opportunity...now it may be Imran Khan who may see himself in that same position.
The question is what stops us from taking a chance? or should we ever stop taking a chance irrespective of the number of victories or defeats we face?
Why should we settle for less when there is nothing but our own self to stop from trying even harder? Call it what you may...adversity...application...junoon...foolhardiness...etc.
Stop not till the goal is reached...right?
A very good suggestion for IK (TUQ is completely irrelevant to Pakistan) at end paragraph. But will he take it? He is again betting on a large turnout over the weekend. When you claim to bring one million people to march, and not even 5% of this number materialises, you should quit. But like all politicians, shame has not touched the has-been cricketer. Unlike other politicians, however, he cannot see a blind alley when he is heading into it.
But the main consideration is what IK's powerful Pindi-based backers are planning for Pakistan? This time, it seems, they are bent upon sinking the boat if they can't steer it.
Truly awful piece.
You are right, the system is too powerful to be fought just with passion and emotions. Imran's basic demands may be genuine but his stubbornness is proving to be suicidal. Imran has another problem which is his ego and a narcissistic personality which makes things worse. In politics as in life, it is much wiser to look for an optimal take-away because a maximal one is almost always too costly. Hopefully, Imran has already realised this.
While Imran operates like a wild horse when left on the streets he can be a top national asset if he is made to devote his energy inside the parliament. It is the government's biggest failing that it did not seriously consider redressing his grievance s. The next few days will show whether this govt is capable of harnessing this stallion in a positive direction for the larger benefit of Pakistan. There is still time to do it before this horse jumps off the fence.
This is all Modi's fault. He and Amit Shah and Suhag Man did it.
Army rule is better than Shareef khandan rule.