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Opinion

Be unitive, not divisive

HINTS AND TRACES - Fr. Roy Cimagala - The Freeman

I didn’t realize that a joke video I shared some time ago on social media would resonate with so many people. It was about a fellow who wondered why a wife rushed to cremate her husband when he only started to have a fever.

Some people told me that with couples under lockdown, some tension and conflict become unavoidable. “They know that their commitment to each other,” someone told me in jest, “should be ‘till death do us part.’ But it should not be 24/7 that they be together.”

It’s undeniable that seeing each other the whole day, let alone, for an indefinite number of days, can create friction. We are all notorious for that. We seem helpless before that tendency. But it’s a challenge we have to face and learn to handle. And the current quarantine dispensation is a good occasion to do that. We actually have a golden opportunity to learn something precious.

I was just both amused and disturbed that in social media these days, some funny conflicts and useless squabbling over unimportant matters are playing out. A doctor, for example, bashes a public official over a matter of prudence about what proper steps and measures are supposed to be taken regarding protection from COVID-19, triggering a chain of similar reactions. And things like this seem to be sprouting all over.

It cannot be denied that all this can be an effect of the unfamiliar and uncomfortable situation brought about by this quarantine. People become irritable. Egos get easily rubbed, especially if there’s some public image to protect and project. Patience gets overstretched and becomes a costly commodity.

To a third party detached from the issues involved, it’s clear everyone has a point, except that the tone and manner of presenting and reacting to things get exaggerated. One overreacts to a view expressed by another person, and the person also overreacts in response. It’s like the Law of Talion being played out, and before you know it you have an explosive situation over something that’s really nothing.

We have to learn to calm down, respecting each other’s opinions. We cannot avoid differences. That’s part of being human. But let’s not forget that at the end of the day we’re all in the same boat. We have to care for one another. We float or sink depending on how we behave toward each other.

When we’re sober, keeping our emotions under control, we can actually sort out our differences quite well. And even in those instances when our differences cannot be reconciled, we can always manage to disagree in an agreeable manner.

Let’s make use of this quarantine to learn to be more patient, understanding, and caring towards others. Yes, let’s learn to be more humble, because all this useless quarrels are at bottom a matter of pride and vanity.

Let’s learn how not to get tired seeing the same faces the whole day. In fact, let’s be accepting of everybody, regardless of how one is, warts and all. Never allow critical thoughts and grudges to stay long in us. On the contrary, let’s be ever creative and   in showing our love, concern, affection for everybody, being quick to understand and to forgive.

When we notice that we want to distance ourselves from someone, then it’s a clear sign that we have a problem, and that problem has to be solved with God’s grace and our effort.

The same attitude should be kept when we’re in some public discussion or engagement. We have to be careful with our emotions, and let’s see to it that our humility is kept strong and vibrant especially when we are misunderstood or mistreated.

Our foremost concern is that we foster unity always, never allowing any signs of divisiveness to creep in, as much as possible!

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