IDLENESS

An Evil Breeding Evils

THE second Caliph, Umar ibn Khattab, often used to express his sense of disillusionment about people he had come to like, when, on further acquaintance with them he discovered them to be idle. “On learning that he does not work, he appears to me of no value (he has debased himself in my eyes).”

Whichever way you look at idleness, there is no gainsaying the fact that it is a great evil, causing one to fritter away one’s best talents and leaving one unqualified to face life. A student who is too lazy to study cannot ever hope to acquire knowledge, or have his critical faculties sharpened in any way, and his failure in examinations will leave him without the ‘paper’ qualifications which is the ‘open sesame’ to good jobs. Without the necessary ground work, he will find himself leading a vacant existence simply drifting from pillar to post. Even people who have managed to qualify themselves suitably cannot afford to rest on their laurels. When the period of education is over, it is equally necessary to be consistently hard-working. Many make the excuse between the receipt of a degree and entry into a profession that they are waiting for the right job to come along. But one cannot go on waiting forever, simply idling away one’s time. 


A person with no sense of commitment is only living on the
fringes of existence. He is out of touch with reality and will soon lapse into utter degeneracy.


Sometimes one inadvertently slips into idle ways because there are no economic pressures in one’s life. Those who inherit legacies, or have property or investments which bring them some return are an easy prey to idleness. But this is no existence for a human being. Anyone who allows the poison of idleness to creep into his system might as well be dead.

One must opt for a regular job, which brings one a suitable income and keeps one mentally healthy. This ensures that one never becomes a financial or emotional burden on anyone else. If one is financially independent, one should turn one’s attention to higher things, pursue noble ends, serve worthy causes and keep oneself fruitfully occupied day in and day out. A person with no sense of commitment is only living on the fringes of existence. He is out of touch with reality and will soon lapse into utter degeneracy. No really superior being has ever been found among the ranks of the idle.

As the old saying goes, the Devil finds work for idle hands. o

Benefit of Patience

The benefit of patience and tolerance is that even after suffering losses,
the bereft one does not lose his balance. In spite of
temporary defeat, he never loses the ability to think
cool-mindedly and by making a realistic assessment of his situation,
plans his life anew. By forgetting what is lost, he reorganizes his work.

Accepting Defeat

The great secret of life is realism, and there is no form of realism greater
than accepting defeat. To do so is to acknowledge the fact that,
far from being ahead of others, one is behind
them. In other words, it is to know where one stands in life.