The Herald (South Africa)

See doughnut, not the hole

- Beth Cooper Howell

SELF-PITY is, without doubt, one of the most pointless emotions. It won’t do us any good, because it can’t solve whatever caused the upset, no matter how much we feel justified and correct in being sorry for ourselves.

It also ties in neatly with repetitive, irreproach­able victimhood, and that trigger-happy tool of social media – “taking offence”.

I read such an eye-opener last week about this concept. The wisdom stuck with me, and is now stuck on my bathroom mirror. I preach it to myself each morning, as I scrabble for toothpaste and fix my hair in the wintry dark.

Writer Gil Friedman, in his book Gurdjieff – A Beginner’s Guide (Yara Press, 2011) explains the pith of it: “We have the right not to be negative.”

Based on teachings offered by Gurdjieff, a Russian philosophe­r, the concept is deceptivel­y simple – much like the negative emotion traps we set ourselves daily, and to which general society gives its blessing.

If you read it several times, you’ll understand that it doesn’t mean having no right to be negative. Of course you do – there isn’t a law on earth preventing people from reacting to challengin­g circumstan­ces. In fact, these days, misery does love company, particular­ly on Facebook and Twitter, where commiserat­ion replaces conversati­on more often than not.

What it actually means, explains Friedman, is that choosing not to be negative is our birth right. which of your other rights have been infringed. It means that you can go about righting wrongs, and making the world better, but you can do it without self-pity, or a sour mood.

I wondered why this impacted me so much, as it may appear, at face value, to belittle suffering, that common sling and arrow of outrageous fortune.

But it doesn’t. There’s nothing mean-spirited about encouragin­g humanity to exercise its mystical right to see the doughnut, rather than the hole.

It has nothing to do with ignoring negative circumstan­ces, such as war, or inequality or gender discrimina­tion.

No matter the weather, or global state, you have the right not to be negative.

And if you choose to swing the other way, that’s your own fault – and nobody else’s.

 ?? Picture: YOLANDA VAN DER STOEP ?? GUESS WHO: Former title holders gathered at the Miss South Africa 2018 pageant this past weekend with, from left, Penny Coelen-Rey (Miss World 1958), Margaret Gardiner (Miss Universe 1978), Miss Universe Demi-Leigh Nel-Peters, Rolene Strauss (Miss World 2014) and Anneline Kriel Bacon (Miss World 1974) among them
Picture: YOLANDA VAN DER STOEP GUESS WHO: Former title holders gathered at the Miss South Africa 2018 pageant this past weekend with, from left, Penny Coelen-Rey (Miss World 1958), Margaret Gardiner (Miss Universe 1978), Miss Universe Demi-Leigh Nel-Peters, Rolene Strauss (Miss World 2014) and Anneline Kriel Bacon (Miss World 1974) among them
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