No, I am not going through a bad marriage.
I love my wife, like her company, but one of the reasons we still have the
spark in our marriage after fifteen years, is infidelity.
It is an open secret that I love so many
people over and above my wife. The list of people I have loved begin with Kapil
Dev, John McEnroe, Sachin Tendulkar, Rahul Dravid, Virendra Sehwag, Sanjay
Manjrekar. Currently my favourites are Jeev Milkha Singh, Anirban Lahiri, Virat
Kohli and Ajinkya Rahane. In case you are worried about my sexual preferences,
let me add Chris Evert, Steffi Graf, Gabriela Sabatini, Jhulan Goswami to the list, with my current heart throbs
being Saina Nehwal, Ritu Rani, Rani
Rampal, P.V.Sindhu and Heena Sidhu. No Heena Sidhu is not Navjot Singh Sidhu’s
wife, she is an international shooter in her own right and is a medal hope at
the forthcoming Rio Olympics
Last month my parents completed 45 years of
marriage. That is more than a lifetime of staying together. Notice I used the
word ‘staying together’ and not happy married life. By the way ‘Happily
Married’ is an oxymoron. Last twenty years, I have seen them greet each other
early morning ‘politely’ with an argument.
Then the acidic politeness continues throughout the day. It’s a wonder
they are not killing each other.
Then I reflect on my own marriage which has
completed nearly fifteen years. I slowly
realise both of us are going our parents way. And then I look around, I find
that a lot of people are all in the same situation. The only good thing that me
and my wife do, is we clearly ensure our paths don’t cross during the day. I
work for 12 hours, sleep for 6 and travel for 3. In spite of just having three
hours, we manage to find time for arguments. There is a Hindi movie song, which
goes as follows, “Where is the time to hate, when there is so little time to love?”
Today the situation, is “Where is the time to love, when there is so little
time to argue?” I am sure thirty years later we will be as severe as my
parents.
There was one more interesting thing about
my parents’ generation. Along with having one spouse, quite a few of them were
also married to their jobs. It was not uncommon for them to work with one
company throughout their entire careers.
A marriage is similar to a job. The first
two years, are the honeymoon period. Then differences start developing and
slowly reach a point where we can’t stand each other
When I look back at my career, managers
seem to be great at the beginning of relationships. Slowly they start
developing faults. I then start having
differences in the actions of my managers and my organisation. The increment is
not good, the rating could have been better, we could have handled this issue
differently, my manager does not stand up for me; everything is bad. My
constructive criticism is viewed as cynicism. I then get into a negative
spiral, where I try and see negative even in any positive action of my manager
or organisation.
I am sure, even my manager experiences
similar feelings about me. I am sure he /she thinks my enthusiasm has waned, am
no longer as committed, have become lazy. He / She thinks that I am resting on
my laurels and am no longer self-motivated. He / She finally concludes that I
am well past my expiry date.
What do we do? The organisation tries to
give me a bad rating, or a low increment, hoping that it will help me pull up
my socks.
My reaction? I think the organisation and
manager is against me. The manager thinks that an experienced person like me
needs no motivation. I think the organisation will not improve, sulk and stay
in a corner, become more and more silent at meetings. I am accused of not
contributing; I think, what difference will my views make, manager is not going
to listen to me. I become more cynical, my performance dives further.
There is no such thing as ‘Negative Motivation.’
Be it a marriage or a job, the courtship
and honeymoon period is the most productive. Both parties put their best foot
forward. Somewhere along the way, we start taking each other for granted.
I think that is the reason, I keep on changing jobs every few years.
I have taken a few risks, some of which have paid off and some haven’t. But end
of the day I am happy. Am I satisfied where I have reached in my career? I believe
I have underachieved, and could have done more. Is it a result,
of changing jobs frequently and not building a career? Don’t know.
The solution is Positive Encouragement. Be
it me and my manager or me and my wife, we need to get into a heart to heart
conversation, sort out the issues. We need to keep reminding ourselves of the
reasons for which we entered into the union. The spark, the fire needs to be
rekindled every now and then for a fruitful long term relationship. Remember,
people leave managers not organisations. My advice, is if the current manager
is not able to excite you, look at another manager who will. Change managers
and roles frequently but think twice before changing the organisation. After
all relationships are like wine, they take time to mature.
Thankfully society does not allow me to change
spouses so frequently. Else I would be bankrupt paying alimony. Be it a
marriage or a job, boredom is a classic recipe for disaster. Familiarity breeds
contempt, which can be a breeding ground for infidelity.
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