Ambiguity
Ambiguity.
A bondhu recently said, looking at two people, "there is no
ambiguity" in the bondhutta (friendship) between the two people. Such an important
moment in a relationship when others can watch, and they observe the complete
lack of speculation. Sanguineness is a rough opposite of ambiguity. And finding
that certainty is a difficult thing in life. Afterall, life is a series of
risks with one risk-free event. Until then everything is risky. And in that
theater of risk, finding a moment of peace - knowing that "All Iz
Well" is something we all seek, but often find difficult to pin down. The
classic cliché of "does he love me? Does he love me not?” while plucking
out the petals of a flower has been memorialized by the romantics, with the
obvious predictable, although mostly false answer, depending on the number of
petals and which question one starts with conveniently ignored by the
romantics. But there are moments in life when one runs across a situation where
the ambiguity disappears, the pretenses fall off, and there is a sense of
certainty that indeed things are gloriously good, or brutally bad. The key is
recognizing those moments and being honest with oneself. When the things are
good - pursue that relentlessly, with reckless abandon. When you know things
are bad, walk away from it and save yourself the inevitable pain. Yet, ambiguity
battles hope. We lull ourselves into believing that perhaps it is not as bad or
boost ourselves with the hope that things are good. An impossible choice with
horrendous outcomes - the people of Jewish faith in the Warsaw ghetto or the
teenage girl who still thinks that the guy will come back, even after the
ghosting (if you do not know what ghosting is, then you should return to the
Twentieth Century) that she experiences from the guy who promised her the
World. But if there is hope, then you pursue it, give it your best shot and
perhaps the ambiguity will disappear, and the relationship you are hoping for
will actually happen. Our lives become this constant struggle for reducing uncertainty
until you start to realize you are running out of time. The curious
relationship between ambiguity, hope and time is something that causes anxiety.
Think about how many ways in which this manifest. With COVID-19 we lived with
it. The numerous waves, the obscurity of knowing what will happen, the longing
for a solution and the sense we are running out of time led to a global
anxiety. And we are still there, word of unknown variants percolate through
news and the anxiety returns. It happens in relationships. Restless nights. Not
knowing what she really means. The puzzles embedded in short messages and
"OK"s and the hope it means more than the two letters. Perhaps time
will tell. In the meantime, the messages fly over the Internet, constantly
seeking to find a meaning to it all. In the end, the solution is action. Statis
only increases the anxiety. More messages, more silence, more ghosting, but
eventually something will break. That is the hope. Having taught all my life,
and with my experience of moderating meetings for my research, I have learnt
one thing - we dislike silence. As a teacher the sure way to encourage students
to talk is to ask a question and then be silent. Try it. People cannot tolerate
silence, and it causes anxiety. And someone will give in and answer the
question - because the silence in the zoom room is intolerable. The weapon of
ambiguity is silence. Nothing hurts more than silence, the hope for an answer
and the final realization that an answer may never come. You have been ghosted.
It is what the members of the Allan Parson Project perhaps meant in saying, "Don't answer me/Don't break the
silence." It is the same as asking the question, "Where Art Thou?" and being met with a
deafening silence. And at that point you die. Ambiguity is over, no more risk.
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