The following is an
excerpt from the book How Big is Your God?
by Paul Coutinho, SJ
Published by Loyola Press; October 2007;$18.95US; 978-0-8294-2481-2
Copyright © 2007 Paul Coutinho, SJ
Do You React or Respond
to Life?
Stephen Covey, in The Seven Habits of Highly
Effective People, shares an experience that he once had while
traveling on the New York subway. Imagine you are riding the subway early one
morning, and everybody appears to be comfortable -- people are drinking their
coffee, reading their newspapers and magazines, working on their laptops,
talking on their cell phones. Everything is normal and peaceful. At each
station, a few people get off, a few people get on, everything is calm and
sedate, until the train stops at a particular station and a man walks onto your
train car with his little children. He finds seats for them and then sits down
in a reflective mood. While he is in deep meditation, the children begin to run
up and down the aisle, screaming and shouting, running all over the train car.
How do you feel? Are you mad at the man? Why are you mad? You are perhaps
thinking, This man should take care of his
children in public. If he does not know how to take care of children, why did he
have them in the first place! Are you mad at the children for making
so much noise? Spoiled kids! you
might think. You notice there is no mother. Now you might be thinking,
I bet the mother left this man with these
undisciplined children. See yourself going up to this irresponsible
father and confronting him, saying, "Excuse me, sir, would you mind tending to
your children? They're being so disruptive, and I think everybody is getting a
little upset." The man looks up at you and says, "Two hours ago these children
lost their mother in the hospital. She just died, and ever since then I have
been trying to explain to them the death of their mother, and their only
reaction is this."
Now how do you feel? The children are still jumping up and down, screaming and
shouting. But now you feel terrible. You feel guilty. You feel sorry for the
man, you feel sorry for the children, and you feel bad about their mother. You
might even feel upset with yourself for feeling negatively about the father and
his children.
I give you this example to demonstrate the power of our beliefs. Emotions are
not caused by situations. Emotions are caused by our
beliefs about situations, beliefs
that color our perception and our understanding of events. In this example, the
children are still jumping up and down and shouting, but some of us have moved
from being upset to feeling sad, compassionate, and concerned. Others may still
feel angry, because they believe that children should always behave in public.
Beliefs cause emotions that trigger behavior. If we feel angry about a situation
and react in anger, it is because we have angry beliefs about it. If we feel
compassionate, it is because we have compassionate beliefs.
Situations in themselves do not produce feelings. It is our perception of the
situation that makes us feel good or bad. Just as situations cannot make us
happy or sad, another person cannot make us feel happy or sad. We choose to be
happy or sad. If we seek greater freedom in our lives, we need to be objective
and rational about the power of our beliefs versus the power of situations. We
control our emotions. When we live in freedom, we choose the way we respond
rather than let our automatic destructive reactions get the better of us.
Now you might ask, "Okay, but how
do I do this? How do I choose to respond when I am under pressure, when I have
been taught to fear or fight, when the situation seems 'bad' to me?" The "PQR
formula" can help us live freely in stressful, anxious, or depressing
situations. We pause to
question how we would like to
respond rather than react and live
to regret our negative reaction. Let me try to explain what I mean by react: You
push; I shove. Without thinking, I shove. This is my reaction. It is immediate
and disconnected from my higher Self, the constant "I," and the meaning of my
life. My reaction is an imprisoned effect. This is not freedom. By applying the
PQR formula, however, I can respond.
I pause (find myself in the situation), question (How does this situation relate
to the meaning of my life? How do I wish to respond given a world of infinite
possibilities?), and then respond (a freely chosen action -- not a reaction).
Responding rather than reacting helps us live freely and in greater harmony with
our true identity in every situation. It helps us grab hold of the freedom we
seek in order to enter into the river of divine life.
Copyright © 2007 Paul Coutinho, SJ
Author
Fr. Paul Coutinho, SJ is an
internationally recognized Ignatian scholar and speaker who brings an Eastern
influence to Western spirituality. A Jesuit from the Bombay province of India,
he frequently leads retreats, gives spiritual direction, and trains people to
lead the Spiritual Exercises. Fr. Coutinho holds masters degrees in both
clinical psychology and religious studies, and he has a doctorate in historical
theology from Saint Louis University. He currently divides his time between
India and the United States.