Tuesday, October 28, 2025

Troubling trouble?

It is quite possible that someone achieves success without having to struggle in the process to achieving it. Possible, yes, but probable? (Oh, yes, I have had people misquote Holmes, saying "When you have eliminated the improbable, what remains, however impossible, is true." Really? 'Impossible' means probability of occurrence is ZERO; 'improbable' means probability of occurrence is LOW. What's impossible, therefore, can never be true.) So, yes, 'possible' means that it can happen but because it is not probable, the possibility of occurrence is LOW. If you intend to succeed, then, you need to be prepared for struggle.

Tiru has this to say...

Idumbaikku idumbai paduppar idumbaikku idumbai padaa-a dhavar - Tirukkural

They cause trouble to trouble who are not troubled by trouble - Loose Translation

Essentially, Tiru says that to overcome obstacles and succeed you need to have the strength of mind to not be overwhelmed by trouble. Like all good advice, it is pure commonsense. If you are going to roll over and die at the first sight of trouble, how on earth can you overcome it and progress? The point, though, is that, like all commonsense, it is something that you know and parrot but very seldom apply.

ANY endeavour is going to come  with its set of obstacles. It is the attitude with which you encounter those obstacles which decides your success. Are you going to react with 'Why do these things happen to me?' or 'I don't think I can work against this sort of resistance' OR are you going to face it with a 'Let's find a solution to this issue'? In other words, are you going to find a way to trouble trouble OR are you going to let trouble trouble you?

Once you have figured out that last sentence, you'll know which way leads to success!

Monday, October 13, 2025

Laudable ability?

As I have had reason to say, various human abilities are given pole position in different contexts by philosophers, especially if they are also poets. And, so, here we are with the most laudable ability of them all in today's post. Whether or not you agree is left to you.

Ah, no, no, no, I am NOT the poet-philosopher that I am referring to. Tiru is.

Enaiththitpam eidhiyak kannum vinaiththitpam vendaarai vendaadhu ulagu - Tirukkural

No matter what abilities you possess, the world shall not praise you if you do not seek determination in action - Loose Translation

I think I may have mentioned this before. That I read somewhere that 'Vision without execution is mere hallucination'. Yay! Tiru implied it way before. What is the point of having abilities if you will not apply them? And applying them would mean something only when you'll do the job to completion. You are the greatest engineer in the world, the greatest doctor or whatever not because you have the most degrees but because you put your knowledge to use AND you successfully complete the jobs you take up. THAT's when the world lauds you.

AND, again as I have had reason to say before, any job will come with its set of obstacles. You need to have the determination to forge ahead with your execution and complete the job satisfactorily. It is not just your intellectual capabilities that will take you to success. It is also your character. AND for THAT, you need to place that determination at par, if not above, the other abilities. Without that, you could always make the best plans on paper but the world will not appreciate you. A man with lesser intellectual abilities but with that determination to see through the execution will always earn more fame than the genius who will not leave his drawing board.

THAT is the difference between 'Mungerilal ke haseen sapne' and success. Determination in Execution.

Monday, October 6, 2025

Get good consultants?

There is no dearth of advisers in the world. Get onto social media and ask ANY question and you will find scores of people ready with advice. People never let pesky little things like lack of knowledge get in the way of giving advice to other people. There is, therefore, this difficulty in knowing whose advice to take.

Tiru has this to say...

Utra noi neekki uraa-amai murkaakkum petriyaar penikkolal - Tirukkural

Cherish the closeness of those who cure the present ill and ensure that you are defended from future ills - Loose Translation

You know, though, how it goes in organisations. You can only become a hero by putting out raging fires; whoever made a hero out of the guy whot put in place fire protection systems? In other words, you need to SAVE people from current danger. It's not much use, personally to you, to safeguard people from future danger. What sort of people, then, do you, as the leader, keep around yourself - the ones who wait for a fire to start before acting or the ones who anticipate fires and put in place safeguards to avoid them?

Tiru, of course, gives credit to he who solves current problems. But he also says that the same chappie, if he is also capable of anticipating and safeguarding against future problems, is worth keeping close to you and be respected for his advice.

Now THAT is a tough ask for most 'leaders'. I mean, if someone puts in place measures today and some six months down the line a problem is avoided, only HE will be saying that it was because of his precautions. Everyone else would have conveniently forgotten all about his efforts or will take the view that the problem would not have occured even without his efforts. You need to SEE the fire AND the chappie heroically putting it out in order to understand the value of his efforts. I mean, come on, if there is NO fire because of fire-retardant systems, how do you even know that there could have been one?

And THAT is why good leaders are very rare. For they have to have that ability.

Monday, September 29, 2025

HR cannot be always right?

Assembly lines may come and mess up the tenets of production; Computers may come and kill the need for arithmetic abilities; AI may come and muck up things for all and sundry; but, for as long as man management exists, the basic principles of man management may probably not change. (What if ALL you employ is AI? Well, then, would the need for man management still exist?)

And so it proves with Tiru saying something like this which will echo with the HR guys of today...

Enaivagaiyaan thaeriyak kannum vinaivagaiyaan veraagum maandhar palar - Tirukkural

No matter how detailed your assessment before you select a person, there will always be those who change once they are on the job - Loose Translation

I'm sure that Tiru does not mean technical capabilities here. Like, it is not likely that the chap who was an expert at coding is suddenly going to turn around and ask you, "What is Java?" THAT is not the sort of thing that Tiru expects to happen. It could well happen that the chap who talks well of coding is, in actual fact, incapable to writing a single line of code...but THAT would mean that you had only interviewed him and not tested his coding skills otherwise. (NOT detailed assessment, no?)

But, yeah, you could find that he is pathetic at working with people in a team. Now THAT is the sort of thing that shows up over a period of time; it is not like he is going to break his laptop over the head of the team lead in the first meeting. But THAT still does not count as 'changing'; it's merely a character trait that manifests only when on the job and not under test conditions when people are trying to put their best foot forward.

Some changes do happen. Like, when someone is hungry for a job, all the conditions of the employer seem fine. ONCE on the job, comparisons creep in - about how peers in the company are treated; how peers in the industry are treated, yada yada. The person may well be perfectly honest when he agrees to take up the job; and equally as honest when he goes up in arms against the compay later.

People will change on the job. Their sense of their own value, their sense of the fairness of their own treatment, their sense of the burdens of the job and the sacrifices demanded - all of that will change once they are on the job.

Which is why managing people is way different from managing machines. THAT, after all, is one of the primary attractions of AI!