Have you ever juggled? Let’s just imagine for one moment that you are juggling balls of different materials. One is marble, another is wood, then rubber and finally a glass ball.
The glass ball is your family — spouse, parents, kids and close friends. The rubber ball is the time you spend on social media. The marble ball is your work. The wooden ball is your ‘me’ time, say playing golf with your buddies. The point of this mental exercise is to get you to pick the ball that you decide to protect the most. Just think long and hard who, when you are on your deathbed, will be standing next to you and holding your hand? Will it be your boss, your laptop, your colleagues, your golf buddies or your Facebook friends? None of the above. It will be your family and closest friends. The company where you work can replace you in a matter of days. However, a child can never replace his father or mother.
Most people leave for work early in the morning and come home late in the evening, exhausted and irritated. True success is in figuring out a routine where you are more efficient at work, you don’t bring work home and you get home before the family is asleep. When you are home, don’t turn into a couch potato or be grumpy. Your wife/husband and kids have probably been waiting all day to spend a few hours with you. You don’t have the right to carry your work into your family time.
We are obsessed with how we can increase our incomes. A child doesn’t need a bank account to feel secure and confident. A child just needs a hug and encouraging words from his/her parents to develop into a functional and successful adult. Children need to feel like they matter and that their parents give them time and attention. Even our parents, as they get older, need more of our time and attention.
I also want to point out that social media has taken over our lives. For many people, their phones, laptops and tablets are substitutes for human connection. We are willing to Facetime with our friend sitting in America or Canada but we ignore the person sitting right next to us. We immediately ‘like’ someone’s comment or tweet about the Ebola virus but no comment is made about how good your spouse is looking.
Even in work equations, when we have the opportunity to involve a friend or family member, we will do anything in our power to make ourselves look good in front of the boss. So we will underpay or get a freebie from them instead of doing what is right, which is to ensure that they get paid well. I have personally experienced this many times. Friends and family will ask me to host shows for free as a favour. I wouldn’t mind if it was for charity or if they actually had no money but nine out of 10 times I’ve turned up to these events to discover that they are fully-sponsored and everyone is getting paid but me.
As the well-known saying goes, charity begins at home. Then should we not start with the people whose bread and butter are connected to us? These days it is okay to spend hours giving outsiders emotional nourishment but even five minutes are unavailable for your spouse, parents and children. The people who love us the most are the ones who we take the most for granted. Food for thought I hope.
Published in The Express Tribune, December 8th, 2014.
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Miss Juggun Kazim has come of age at a very young age!! There is nothing more valuable for any one in the world than ones own family.They understand or at least try to and inspire the individual when one needs it most and encourage when one comes across discouragement and share with one in most cases adversity and rarely the success and grandeour. We have a saying that while the parents can love and care for seven children in return rarely get the support of half of them. Listen therefore to the wise words of the author for they are explicitly mentioned in the scriptures too.
Rex Minor
The topics that Juggun picks are good but seems the text usually lacks the depth; at times its quite amazing that an article does gets published with text having no appeal to the audience-is this because of the showbiz charisma - should not the newspaper have some pre defined selection criteria that it exercises for the rest of writer! food for thought....
it is true people spend a lot of time om facebook and most of the friends are far away, but the reason little conversation takes place within the house, is mutual unerstandimg. Many families i know, men and wives have hardly anythinmg in common and other than sitting on the table and argueing, they are happy to live their own lives. i was once on facbook, but what I saw was so shocklng, I decided to quit. it starts with my pics, my children photoes and parties we are having. And if that ends, we have advice quotes, like. Do not leave for tomorrow what you an do day. And then of couse, the talk of good quotes from holy book or Ali, Umer and some otherrs. And then every senterncve ends with pray for my health, for Muslims wordwide and suffering Kashmiris or Palestinians. Once I had the audacity of writing that if millions of prayinmg was succressful, there would be no misery in the Muslim world. What is importent is that childrten are talked to more often and not 'father' telling them how to behave etc, but just as friends. I know some who just turn TV on so that kids do not get on adults nerves. I admit I am cinic. .