It is one
thing to pat oneself on the back and proclaim that one is a pontiff of sorts;
one is on a greater moral and ethical plateau than the ordinary denizens and
even one’s spouse, children and friends. But it is a different matter to be
humble to not proclaim oneself as the infallible, moralist hero. The pleasure one
may sense by this sententious being and when patting on the back is narcosis and
the state, narcissism-more so when an image of the wronged is created. This is
not a liability found in the elite of the society or the celebrities who are
caught with their trousers down, with foot in their mouth; it is also seen much
amongst us ordinary souls.
Cheating on
oneself is more dissolute than cheating on your spouse or the world itself. I
do not know what would be for instance in the mind of Louis Armstrong now. Reading
his autobiography, “It is not about Cycling”, I was impressed by the raw
courage and perseverance he displayed from a terminally sick stage and come
back into the world to inspire awe by winning the most grueling physically
exerting sport, the “Tour de France”. I’m sure he would have felt empty within
even when he proclaimed that he was wronged and unfairly handled or even when
he wore the Yellow jersey of the winner of the tour seven times.
But Armstrong
just happens to be another human being who perhaps led himself to be deluded. This
deluding happens every day amongst many.
But I think
not about deception perse as seen in the case of, say a Tiger Woods or an
Armstrong. It is about the character we generally display to the world, the
image that we create for public consumption and with some, for comfort of hallucination.
What I’m, is best told by my spouse and my children. Mothers may be prejudiced
in favour of their child. But I guess the wife/husband or the children may be
forthcoming and candid. So what we are is best known from our spouse and kids.
This is especially true in case of folks who claim a higher ground for themselves
in character, outlook even in mundane or seemingly trivial matters. A person
who champions in public the cause of women’s emancipation and equal treatment
may be the most cantankerous and quibbling man at home. A man or woman who
exhibits the air of a perfect partner may be the artist of malarkey and ruse
back home. These fantastic revelations are closed circuited inside the walls of
the house and privy to the spouse and the kids only. Some of them can be even misogynist.
I have known
a close relative whose promiscuity was deftly covered up by his spouse all the
while when she was alive. But it was shockingly made aware to me after her
death, his profane indulgence with women and his disregard for his conduct
being known to his teen aged daughters. When she was alive he used to assault
his wife provoked by his temper and the matter seldom seeped through the walls
of the house. He retired from a powerful position with a multi- national company.
He was seen and known as a disciplinarian, a gentleman, an unfortunate bereaved,
loving husband and affectionate father!
There are
some who thrive by blaming the spouse, usually the wife. The image they create
to the outer world is that of the gentleman, the tolerant and loving husband, a
person who has much forbearance and patience with his spouse. It is a revelation
that is opposite that we get to see if the wife chose to talk. Such people are
always enjoying the image of the wronged.
It is true
that we can find specimen in all matters in the society we live. This person a
woman was a termagant - cantankerous and emotionally debilitating in attitude
and conduct towards her husband that he was driven into alcoholism. His was not
a case of silly excuses and self-justification to hit the bottle. He chose to drown
himself in the trickery that inebriation and over dose of alcohol provides. Well
his wife was in fact an image of friendliness and the wronged.
Why do I say
so much? Because it is mentally comforting to have the image of what you are, of what your spouse or children would define you as.When you know you are a semi-outlaw and a fallible,
an ordinary mortal who will stumble,who is not above infractions but moves on, rather than a contrived wax image of moralist and the
wronged.