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The Expectations That Shape Us

 

 

یہ مضمون اردو میں پڑھیں

I thought he was merely assessing my literary exploits when, out of the blue, one day, he asked me. “Have you read Bernard Shaw’s play ‘Pygmalion’?”

I shook my head.

He smiled. “Then let me tell you what years of research discovered after that play.” He explained that researchers became curious about a simple but unsettling question: What actually makes people rise—or sink—over time? Not intelligence alone. Not talent alone. Something far quieter was at work: Expectations.

They found that children who were, by all objective measures, average began to perform above average—not because their intelligence suddenly changed, but because the environment around them treated them as if they were capable of more. Teachers spoke to them differently. Parents responded to them differently. The tone shifted. The belief shifted. And slowly, the children shifted too. At this point, he paused and gave the idea a name. “This phenomenon,” he said, “is known as the Pygmalion Effect.”

He explained that the term derives from a play by George Bernard Shaw, in which a simple change in how a person is treated—spoken to, respected, expected of—gradually transforms who that person becomes. The idea is straightforward but profound: people tend to become what significant others expect of them. “It’s not magic,” he said. “It’s psychology—and moral influence.”

“What’s fascinating,” he continued, “is that nothing magical was added. No special training. No extraordinary resources. Only expectation.” When a child senses that the people around him genuinely expect him to be thoughtful, capable, dignified, and responsible, something internal reorganizes. He begins to act in ways that justify that expectation. Not consciously at first. Almost instinctively.

I thought of moments from my own life. There were teachers whose classrooms felt different. They didn’t flatter us. They didn’t shout motivational slogans. They simply assumed we would rise to the occasion. And somehow, we did. Then there were others who treated us as if mediocrity were inevitable. In those spaces, even effort felt pointless.

He nodded when I shared this. “Exactly,” he said. “People don’t just live up to standards. They live up to the way they are seen.” He leaned forward. “Now imagine,” he said, “what happens when a child grows up hearing—explicitly or implicitly—that he is careless, unreliable, or disappointing.” Those words don’t just describe behavior. They sculpt identity. And identity, once shaped, begins to defend itself. He contrasted this with a different approach. “What if,” he asked, “instead of saying ‘Why are you like this?’ we said, ‘I expect better from you—because I know better exists in you’?” Not angrily. Not sarcastically. Calmly. Consistently.

He emphasized that expectations are effective only when they are sincere. Empty praise doesn’t shape character. But quiet confidence does. “When you treat someone as honest,” he said, “you make honesty easier. When you treat someone as dignified, you invite dignity.” He gave an example that struck me: Two children spilled a glass of water. One is told, “You’re always careless.” The other is told, “You’re usually careful—this seems like a mistake.” Same incident. Different futures. One child learns a label. The other learns responsibility.

He reminded me that the Pygmalion Effect doesn’t stop in childhood. “It works in marriages,” he said. “In workplaces. In friendships. Even in how you speak to yourself.” When I expect myself to fail, my effort weakens before I even begin. When I expect growth—even slow, imperfect growth—I stay engaged. Then he said something that unsettled me. “Be careful,” he said, “because you are constantly teaching people who they are in your presence.” My silence can teach insignificance. My impatience can teach incompetence. My trust can teach responsibility. None of this happens overnight. But over time, it becomes reality. He paused and added, “This is not manipulation. This is moral responsibility.” If expectations can quietly elevate people, then careless expectations can quietly damage them as well.

I realized something uncomfortable. Many times, I thought I was being realistic—when I was actually being limiting. I thought I was being honest—when I was unknowingly shrinking someone’s sense of possibility. He noticed the shift in my expression. “This,” he said gently, “is why this idea is such an eye-opener. Once you see it, you can’t unsee it.”

He ended with a thought that stayed with me long after the conversation ended. “You don’t raise people by correcting them constantly,” he said. “You raise them by holding a vision of who they can become—and refusing to let go of it too easily.”

Expectations are invisible. But their consequences are not. And once I understood that, I began to ask a new question—not just about others, but about myself: What expectations am I living under—and which ones am I quietly passing on?

Borrowed Identity

 

 

 

یہ مضمون اردو میں پڑھیں

I still remember the day I walked into his lecture hall. There was a strange silence in the air, the kind that signals something important is about to be said. He smiled softly, almost knowingly. “Welcome,” he said. “Sit. I want to begin with a story.”

The Story That Was More Than a Story

He leaned forward. “Once,” he began, “someone placed an eagle’s egg beneath a sitting hen. When the eggs hatched, the eagle emerged among chicks—tiny, yellow, clumsy creatures who looked nothing like him but acted like his entire world.”

I raised my eyebrow as I heard someone ask, “So he grew up thinking he was a chicken?”

He nodded. “He followed them everywhere. When the mother hen called, he rushed under her wings. He pecked grain with them, scratched the soil with them. Every warning the hen gave, he memorized: stay on the ground; danger comes from the sky; never look up too long.”

“And he believed all that?” someone asked.

“How could he not?” he asked. “Identity is inherited from the conversations we are raised in before it is chosen by us.”

The First Glimpse of the Sky

“One day,” he continued, “while grazing in the fields, the mother hen gave her warning cry. Everyone ran. He ran too. And then… his eyes fell on the sky.”

He paused for effect. “Up there,” he whispered, “was an eagle—grand, effortless, floating like it owned the wind.”

I smiled. “So the eagle chick was mesmerized?”

“More than mesmerized. Conflicted. Fascinated yet terrified.”

“Because he had been taught to fear what he actually belonged to,” someone remarked.

He nodded again, pleased.

“Every night, he dreamed of that creature. Sometimes the dream felt like a nightmare—sometimes like a longing. Confusion is often the first sign that you’re seeing a truth you’ve never met before.”

The Encounter That Changed Everything

“One day,” he said, “the eagle heard a sudden loud voice behind him, ‘Are you sick?’”

I laughed as I heard someone say, “That must have scared him to death!”

“Oh, he panicked,” he said. “A full-sized eagle was standing beside him. He ran as if his life depended on it.”

The boy sitting next to me leaned forward and asked, “And the eagle chased him?”

“Yes—but only to fly over him gently and say, ‘Why are you afraid? You are mine. You are like me.’”

I frowned. “But he wouldn’t believe it.”

“Of course not. When you’ve lived your whole life in a certain narrative, truth first appears as a threat.”

“But the big eagle kept coming back?”

“Every single day. Not to frighten him, but to talk to him—to give him a new conversation. Gradually, fear softened into curiosity. Curiosity became openness. Openness became friendship. And friendship became transformation.”

The First Flight

He leaned back. “Then came the day the great eagle said, ‘Let me show you who you are. Try extending your wings.’”

“And he tried?”

“He tried. Awkwardly first. Clumsily. But then—with a bit of practice, a bit of courage—he lifted off the ground.”

I exhaled slowly. “So the sky that was once a terror became his home.”

“Exactly,” he replied. “But not because someone dragged him up there… Rather, because someone changed his conversations.”

The Mentor’s Lesson

“So,” someone asked, “what does this story teach us?”

He raised a finger. “Everything,” he said quietly. “Everything about how human beings become what they become.” Then explained:

  • Some skills you think you cannot develop are simply things you were told you cannot do.
  • Some strengths you believe define you were once someone else’s description of you.
  • Your fears, your limits, your worldview—they all carry fingerprints of the conversations you grew up in.

I heard someone say, “So the question is not who I am—but whose voices built me?”

He smiled. “Exactly.” Then added, “Growing is not only about learning new things—it is about choosing which conversations to stay in… and which ones to walk away from.”

“Why conversations?” someone asked.

“Because conversations shape communities,” he replied. “And communities shape identity.”

“And if I change my conversations…”

“…your life will inevitably change. Because you cannot remain the same person while breathing different air.”

He looked at me kindly. “Sometimes the people around you will not change. But you must decide what your inner circle—your real community—will look like. Who gets to influence your mind? Who gets to define your sky?”

The Students’ Realization

“So you’re asking,” someone said slowly, “whether I am living like an eagle raised among chickens?”

He didn’t answer. He didn’t need to.

Because the question landed.

Am I limiting myself because of borrowed fears?
Am I shrinking because of inherited conversations?

Am I denying the sky because people around me never believed in it?

He leaned in one last time.

“Today,” he said, “your real task is not to find a new identity. Your task is to stop living a borrowed one.”

The Mentor’s Closing Words

As the session came to an end, he looked around the room with a quiet warmth in his eyes.

“At the end of every session,” he said gently, “I ask only two things from you.”

He raised his first finger.

1. Practice one small insight in real life.

“This work is not meant to stay inside your notebooks or in your thoughts. Learning becomes real only when it turns into even a tiny action. Don’t overwhelm yourself with big steps—choose one small thing you discovered today and live it out. A moment of awareness, a short pause, a new way of speaking, a slightly different choice—anything. Small practices, repeated sincerely, reshape a life far more than grand intentions that never leave the mind.”

Then he lifted his second finger.

2. Share your experience next time—without fear or shame.

“When you return, tell us what happened. Not to impress anyone, but to be honest—with yourself and with this community. Maybe your practice worked beautifully. Maybe you struggled. Maybe you forgot. All of that is part of growth. When you speak without fear, you release shame. And when you share openly, you give others the courage to try as well. Together, we turn individual efforts into collective strength.”

He smiled softly, as if blessing the moment. “We are all here because we want to grow. Growth is slow, gentle, and honest. It begins with one small step—and becomes stronger each time we speak truthfully about our journey. Do this, and you will not remain the same person you were when you walked in.”