π
πππ π
ππ πππππππ
People called him mad-man
but I was surprised when he moved close to me,
He said, βcan I ask you a very important question?β
I nodded, in acceptance,
and then,
he asked, βam I a mad man?β
The obvious answer, from a sane person, will be, "no",
and that was what I said.
βThank you!β, he replied;
then he said,
βjust because I donβt see things the way other people do, does that make me a mad man?β
"No", I answered again.
He bent down, wrote βWβ,
and asked me what he wrote.
At this point, I was already feeling ashamed,
getting involved in a lengthy conversation with him.
In a hurry to leave, I said βwβ,
but I was amazed when he replied to my answer,
βYou only see 'W',
because of the angle at which you are looking at it.
If you turn upside down, you'll see βMβ;
If u look from the right side, it is β3β,
and looking at it from the left side, it is βEβ.
The fact that I donβt see things at the perspective that everyone is seeing it doesnβt make me a mad man, he said. Then he left.
I pondered for so long about this and its application to life.
Because We act, and relate to people, based on the perspective at which we are looking at their situation.
Have you taken your time to look at other possible perspectives?
I then decided that,
before I get angry with, or act against, or judge anyone that has done something unfavourable to me,
I will view it in at least three possible perspectives;
1.my own perspective,
2.his own perspective and
3.others perspective'.
So, before you judge people, before you rage your anger on them, take a little time to view their angle or perspective, and, if you still cannot see a reasonable reason, then you may act REASONABLY .
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Richard Nse
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