Showing posts with label meaningful. Show all posts
Showing posts with label meaningful. Show all posts

Sunday, January 28, 2018

Compassion for Cruel People

“Then said Jesus, Father, forgive them; for they know not what they do. And they parted his raiment, and cast lots.” ~Luke 23:34 KJV.
The world is a cruel place. If you have any doubt about that, turn on the news. Watching any news channel for no more than five minutes makes it abundantly clear that there is no shortage of cruelty in all levels of society – from that of the lowliest janitor or laborer to that of the wealthiest financier or ruler – and in all cultural milieus – from the most technologically challenged tribal villages to the most technologically advanced urban centers.

Cruelty is commonplace. There is nothing special or remarkable about sadism. It is widespread and universal. It infects the human condition from childhood through advanced age. We are hard pressed to escape it.

Essentially, as I have discovered, after some reflection, cruelty is a way for weak people to feel empowered. What is truly remarkable is compassion and empathy – that takes inner strength and courage, especially in the face of cruelty.

Cruelty is easy.

Compassion is hard.

And compassion for cruel people is hardest of all.

When one confronts cruelty or a cruel person, the experience is invariably painful in some way – physically or psychologically. The most natural response to cruelty, therefore, is to respond in kind – with more cruelty – to seek to hurt or inflict pain on the people who inflict pain on oneself. The experience of pain makes one feel powerless, and one seeks to respond by inflicting pain on others in order to feel empowered.

One might seek to inflict pain on those whom one deems to be responsible for one’s own pain, thereby gaining a sense of retribution – or on some random, hapless bystander or scapegoat, thereby gaining the satisfaction of feeling oneself to be higher up in the food chain and not quite so helpless as the experience of pain and cruelty invariably make one feel. The sad reality to this situation is that if one responds to cruelty with more cruelty, then one is, essentially, succumbing to the influence of cruelty – becoming infected by the contagion of cruelty – allowing the inhumanity of others and of the circumstances one experiences to rob one of one’s own humanity.

It is a case of “an eye for an eye mak[ing] the whole world blind,” to quote Gandhi.

The most difficult thing in the world is to respond to cruelty with compassion, with kindness, with understanding. What that requires is tremendous inner strength – the strength to absorb pain and not allow a painful experience to render one heartless, unsympathetic and vindictive. It then requires one to try to appreciate the fact that those who are cruel towards you are, invariably, themselves in pain – that they are reacting out of their own personal sources of pain. That they seek to inflict pain on others in an attempt to alleviate the pain that they themselves feel, for some reason. It then requires one to seek to understand their source of pain in order to feel compassion for them.

If one is able to accomplish this truly heroic feat – a feat more admirable than winning any Olympic gold medal, in my humble opinion – one is able to respond to cruelty with compassion, with kindness, with empathy, and, thereby, one is able to overcome it, and not be overcome by it. One is then truly able to “love your enemy” and “turn the other cheek” and, in doing so, help to make the world a slightly better place.

Wednesday, July 30, 2008

Horizon Cybermedia makes no Apologies!

Here at Horizon Cybermedia, Inc., we make no attempt to pander to the masses with the substandard garbage that prevails in the mainstream media, and we make no apologies for not doing so! Our mission statement, from the very outset, is to try to raise the bar―to strive for a higher standard―a new vision―something fresh, exciting and different!


But if you don't get what we are after, we won't hold that against you!


Horizon Cybermedia has, in part, grown out of a sense of profound distaste at the depths to which the mainstream media has sunk―the shameless populism, the hopeless lack of taste and the shoddy mediocrity displayed all too often by television and cinema content! In fact, I am shocked that even some of my favorite television shows (naming no names) have descended to the level of pandering to the basest of popular tastes in search of a cheap boost in ratings. At Horizon Cybermedia, we want to make it clear from the very outset that that is the very thing we want to avoid at all costs, even if it costs us your viewership!


No―we are not about snob appeal or “elitism.” We are about quality, plain and simple. We are about aspiring to higher standards and producing media content that is meaningful, beautiful and powerful. We won't turn anyone away, but neither do we have any desire to pander to you for pure ratings!


Horizon Cybermedia is about staying true to our vision, first and foremost. Yes, we want you, the viewer, to enjoy and appreciate our content, but what we are really after is the people who get us―what we would like to think of as the happy few who take pleasure in the finer things of life. We are not necessarily interested in the sort of mass viewership that gigantic media conglomerates tend to enjoy. So, in that sense, this is not mass media―this is about excellence in media.


We, at Horizon Cybermedia, entertain no illusions―we may never enjoy the sort of mass appeal that blockbuster Hollywood movies may enjoy, to be sure. But neither are we too concerned by that possibility. What we are primarily interested in is in keeping our vision alive and thriving. So we emphatically refuse to sink to the crass, substandard level of populist media!


We make no apologies!


But, all the same, we sincerely hope you enjoy our content and the body of work we are trying to develop―enough to support us with your viewership and by recommending us to your friends and family!


In the end, Horizon Cybermedia is about making a difference and opening some eyes―at least, those whose eyes are not totally glazed over by the harsh glare of mainstream populist trash!


Wishing you the very best,

Uday Gunjikar,
Founder and CEO,
Horizon Cybermedia, Inc.