Look the
other way,
is an idiom unlike any other. It does not catch much attention but easily hurts.
Looking the other way allows immoral or illegal acts but its benign
version, which could mean many more things like, avoid, ignore, desert,
abandon, let down etc, could be immensely painful to those looked away from.
The literal meaning of looking the other way is straightforward as the
words suggest; looking in the opposite direction. Our roads play host to both literal
and literary versions of it.
Pedestrians
across the world have the right of way. In many countries, pedestrians can
cross the road, only at the zebra lines. If the light is not in their favour
they wait or push the pedestrian button to allow them to cross. If pedestrians push
the pedestrian button, they get the green to cross and the light goes red for
motorists. People crossing like that wave at the motorists signalling
gratitude.
Pedestrians
at home are more empowered. They cross roads and motorways at will. They do not
have to signal gratitude because they can remotely apply the brakes in our cars
with their palms. Some jump over the railing erected to prevent random
crossings. The more steel-willed and philanthropic ones go a few steps beyond.
They alter or manipulate the railings or barriers to allow unhindered rights
for everyone to cross. If you notice pedestrians crossing the roads here, you
will find many crossing the road looking the other way. Having
outsourced their safety to the goodness of the unknown motorists, they
deliberately do not make eye contact. They just look the other way. Risks of tail
bang notwithstanding, a few drivers screech to stop while most continue
because they are skilled enough to evade the moving two-legged obstacle or too
lazy to apply the brakes. The unmindful hero gets to live another day to look
the other way because the drivers chose not to look the other way.
Looking the
other way is
rarely that detached and removed. There is a painful side to it, especially if
it happens in relationships. All of us would have experienced it sometime in
life. Irrespective of the pain inflicted, the incident often leaves us baffled
with the question, “How could he?” or “How could she?” One only needs to recall
the incident to realise how it felt then. At times even time cannot lessen the
trauma and its aftermath. There would be nobody in this world who would not
have experienced this feeling.
There is a
flip side too. If you feel, you have been at the receiving end of this
traumatic experience from someone else, there would be people around you who
would have received similar treatment from you. It is so common and sometimes
so subtle we may not even realise we have inflicted injuries worse than the
worst we suffered.
There is
good news. The damage in such cases is self-inflicted and therefore treatable. Cannot
believe it? That is because you are not looking at the other side of their
looking the other way. Such experiences arise when people do not
react or perform the way we expect them to. The more one expects, the higher
the chance of shortfall and the more bitter our experience. This discussion of
expectation and response is not related to setting work-related targets and
their delivery but to human behaviour in social and interpersonal transactions.
It may do us
good if we truthfully ponder over the latest heartbreak we experienced.
In most cases, we likely assumed that the person would deliver what we expected,
without telling the person what we expected. What about those instances when we
tell people what we expect from them? We often expect without consideration of
their competencies, compulsions, or circumstances. The converse is also equally
true.
We may be at
a loss to explain why someone suddenly felt offended by us. Check! We
would not have known what they expected from us and in the absence of such
knowledge, we might not have lived up to their expectations. In most cases,
they would not have even demanded something from us but merely expected us to
respond as they desired. The intensity of the let-down is immense when the
relationship is intimate because we take it for granted the other person knows
us well enough to rise and respond.
Now that we
know, there is another side to someone looking the other way, it
could open new avenues to renewing our relationships.
Let me add a
caveat. Tread with caution!