A day back, I found myself in one such situation. It was some change in my colleague’s behavior that blew the fuse of my mind. I tried talking to a good friend, who himself was experiencing a bad day having forgotten his bank password. He tried his level best to make me understand, but it was not like what I was looking for. He tried justifying to me that I had pre-set upon myself a negative set of thoughts and that I should not be feeling bad about my colleague’s behavior. I could not take his opinion at least at that time. May be for a moment, I wanted him to understand me and explain to me the current situation in which I may be right in feeling bad and left-out. May be I wanted his consolation that yes, that girl was doing something incorrect as a result of which I was feeling bad. And yes, she did do something which made me feel that way. I could not talk to him any longer on the call when he tried to tell me that my thought process was wrong. So I decided to resolve it on my own with his inputs.
To start with I reloaded the moral of an article I had recently read: “Understand if the problem that you think exists does really exist before you start working on its resolution”. So I summarized my problem. I noted down each and every pin short circuiting my heart and each and every action of my colleague that had lead to overheating of my mind. Then I tried assessing whether the problem I had stated was really existing. So I asked myself the question(as told to me by my friend): “Is it a right thing that she did?” The answer was ‘Yes’. Then I asked myself, “If she is right in doing what she did, then why am I having a problem with it?” I answered with all the possible reasons justifying each of them. So I tried validating each of the reasons. For eg. I told myself, “Is it wrong to point and show certain places of improvement in the code?” I could not say it was wrong because we all need to work as a team and improve the quality of the deliverable. And just because I felt bad at her pin-pointing attitude, I should not nullify the right thing she was doing. May be her intentions were right but her way of displaying was utterly wrong.
And that’s when I remembered our GEC professor of “Software Engineering” explain to us the concept of “5 Whys” of problem analysis. He had stated that no matter what the problem, it is possible to determine the root cause of a defect or problem. And yes, it had worked for me. I had realized that my nature of disliking sudden changes affected me and made me think totally negatively, which was incorrect and needed improvement. It is okay to dislike changes but it is always appropriate to adjust accordingly within certain time. I was not able to accept her right actions; so I decided to accept them. For each unjustified action, I thought of a proper justified re-action and a display of the same in a controlled manner.
So to summarize, for each and every problem, we need to find a justification and an answer. We need to classify it as a right and a wrong action from a broader perspective, keeping our individual benefits and concerns aside. If it is right, we have to accept it. If it is wrong, we need to properly handle it while remembering not to act according to the flow of emotions. And as we all are human to err, let us try our best to have a second thought before we react sharply to anything that affects us.


