Monday 11 March 2019

How Common is Common Sense~reading this surely makes you “Uncommon”:

We all know very well that “Common Sense” is an instinctive, appropriate response to everyday events that helps make life simpler and smoother. Not only that, it is something all of us are endowed with. Common sense is a basic ability to perceive, understand, and judge things, which is shared by ("common to") nearly all people, and can be reasonably expected of nearly all people without any need for debate.

However it remains a fact all over the globe that “Common Sense” often seems to be in short supply. As the pace of the world increases, it seems that common sense is becoming ever increasingly uncommon, and many of us are guilty of not applying it at times when it is most needed.

I must make you all assured that in order to have common sense one does not need to have specialized knowledge or be super intelligent! It’s simply an innate understanding of how to behave, what to do, when and how to do it, and doing it in the right place and time. It’s a natural and automatic response to a situation, not something that needs to deliberated over!

Take things on personal level:
How many times do you find yourself not applying common sense and doing clumsy things like picking up a hot pan without using oven mitts, or speeding when road signs state, for a very good reason, that you should be driving at 30 or 40. Or, lighting a cigarette, which you have just taken from a packet that tells you clearly that it is killing you! Dropping a banana skin on the pavement is not good common sense: picking it up before someone slips on it, is!

Where is our awareness when we make these common-but-sensless choices?:
We condemn the hot pan on the stove, or the child on the street at the time of speeding, but seldom take responsibility for our own actions. It’s not so much a sign of losing our mind, but very clearly, it is misusing our mind, and not being in control of our thoughts. The reasons may be carelessness, laziness, lack of attention, to name just a few, but the mist required thing is- we need to work mindfully and not mindlessly.

The world seems to be losing collective common sense:
For example, as people were recently meeting in the world climate change conference COP19 in Warsaw, scientists in New Zealand were discovering proof that the weakening of the earth’s crust following a massive earthquake, was due to climate change. Researchers also claim that Typhoon Haiyan which destroyed the Island of Tacloban in the Philippines recently, also happened for the same reasons.

Have we become so selfish and blind to the outcome of our actions,
that we are unable to see the cause and effect taking place right in front of our very eyes? How much proof do we need to realize that damaging Mother Earth to this extent is like committing our own suicide. Do we realize that our future depends on the choices we make at every moment?

The real root cause is a lack of awareness:
The reason that we don’t have access to our own common sense is because we are so preoccupied with people and events – who said what to whom, what happened and why, thoughts of doubt and confusion, regrets of the past and worries about the future – that we forget to live in the present moment. We are always somewhere else with our mind.

What is needed here is spiritual intelligence:
In order to tap into my own inner wisdom am I aware? Am I living in the present moment and ready to respond to the next moment with calmness and composure, or is my mind in a thousand different places? If I become internally quiet then I can access my inner wisdom. Common sense is common because we all have it; we just need to reconnect with it.

Time is now ripped of…
to be aware of the moment and to apply common sense to our daily lives. As the turmoil in the world increases, let us be mindful and not mindless and emerge our innate spiritual wisdom. Live in the moment and you will know exactly what to do when.

How do you get common sense?
~ Put new common sense thinking habits into place.
~ Practice mental flexibility.
~ Develop an ability to stay open-minded and to listen to other people's notions and ideas, even if they scare you or derail your own thinking.
~ Use affirmative thinking.
~ Rely on semantic sanity.
~ Value ideas.

Mahesh Bhatt

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