Maulana Wahiduddin Khan | The Times of India | May 01, 2015
Television actor Ram Kapoor, in an interview to The Delhi Times says, “After 20 years of smoking I quit smoking overnight. From 40 cigarettes to zero, only because my daughter said to me, `Dada, you want to die. You want to leave me.' It has been one year, three months since I stopped smoking.“
Ram Kapoor was addicted to smoking and under normal circumstances it was not possible for him to overcome his addiction. But one sentence from his beloved daughter had shaken him and a strong will power emerged in him. And when there is strong will power, nothing can stand before it, neither habit nor addiction or anything else.
Often people say that they cannot give up a habit. For example, they say ,i cannot stop being angry or i cannot prevent myself from becoming tense or i cannot stop hating others or i cannot agree to humble myself before another.
All this is not because it is impossible for the person in question to do these things. The real reason is that he is not serious about developing strong will power. If he developed strong will power, he would be able to give up any habit in the same that way Ram Kapoor overcame his desire to smoke.
There are two kinds of strong will power: emotionbased and reason-based.There are many people who are motivated by an emotional moment and so abandon their habit. But it is better to abandon something on the basis of reason: a person should think and apply reason to his behaviour, then give up his habit as the result of a wellconsidered decision.
For example, people often develop complaints about others and go on living in the complaint culture. The habit of complaining is an issue of reason and not of emotion. That is, if a person just thinks about it, he will realise that to go on complaining means being a bad member of society . A good member is one who wishes others well. This kind of thinking is possible through rational analysis. If a person thinks in this manner, he will surely develop strong will power and instantly abandon the complaint culture.
I once met a person who told me that he used to constantly feel angry with others.One day he thought that although he was the one who was angry with others, it was actually he who paid the price for this because he constantly lived in a state of tension and stress. When he realised this, he instantly took the decision to change his attitude and stop being angry.
It is commonly seen that people easily develop strong will power for their own personal interests, but where it concerns another's interests, they do not do so. Such a person lives by double standards. If he uses his reason and recognises this as a weakness, then surely he will develop strong will power and will abandon his wrong habit.
Often rifts develop between husband and wife and then their married life is filled with bitterness. If both were to reflect that if, after marriage, they could not live in the same happy way as before marriage, it was because they had been living with their own family members with whom they had a blood relationship now there was no such relation.Once they acknowledge this they would be able to summon the will power to correct their behaviour and so manage to lead a happy married life.
Develop strong will power and you will certainly be able to move mountains.