This weekend I watched Steven Spielberg's “Bridge of
Spies”. During the Cold War, an American lawyer is recruited to defend an
arrested Soviet spy.
Tom Hanks played the main character, James Donovan, who
was tasked with the unenviable job of defending a Russian spy by the name of
Rudolf Abel, played by the relatively unknown actor Mark Rylance.
Throughout the movie, Abel faced an uphill battle because
he was hated by both American and Russians alike as a spy who got caught on U.S.
soil. Throughout his time spent in prison, during his trial and in the hostage
negotiations Abel remained stoic and showed little emotion.
Each time it looked like Abel was out of options during
one of these ordeals Donovan would ask, “Aren’t you worried?”
And every single time Abel would offer the deadpan
response, “Would it help?”
That sentence, the way it was spoken and its deeper
meaning went straight to the depth of my heart. An array of day to day
situations played through my mind’s screen. In any situation where we have to
take a decision, it can come from two sources.
One is your own decision, which will be based on your
intelligence and previous experience. When the emotions are running high, it
becomes difficult to think straight and take the proper decision.
Secondly, we should realise that before a problem comes
into existence, its solution is already in the etheric atmosphere. So the
correct decision is already there, to be downloaded into your mind. But a
highly strung mind is so clouded that it is impossible for it to happen.
I got an experiential knowledge that emotional upheavals are
definitely a disadvantage. We gain absolutely nothing by getting upset or worked
up, but there are a lot to lose!
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