Posts

The Space Where Accountability Lives

 

 

یہ مضمون اردو میں پڑھیں

I sat across from him and finally said what had been on my mind for days: “I don’t understand why I’m held responsible for anything. Isn’t everything determined? My upbringing, my temperament, my reactions—they all come from conditioning. So what part is really my choice?”

He looked at me calmly, as if he had heard this struggle many times before. “You really feel that nothing you do is a choice?” he asked.

“Well,” I said, “I was born into a certain environment, shaped by certain experiences, programmed with certain triggers. So, if I act a certain way, especially in emotionally charged moments, why blame me? Isn’t it all predetermined?”

He let a thoughtful silence settle between us. Then he asked, “If that is completely true, then why praise someone for being kind, or discourage someone from being cruel? Why reward good behavior or punish harmful behavior? If people are only acting out their conditioning, then moral language becomes pointless.”

I felt a slight discomfort. “When you put it that way… it does sound extreme.”

“That’s because it is extreme,” he replied. “Many things about you were indeed predetermined. You didn’t choose your parents, your childhood, your genetics, the emotional vocabulary you were given, or your natural tendencies. But there is one thing that was not predetermined.”

I leaned forward. “What’s that?”

He said, “How you respond in any given situation. That part is not written. That part is yours.”

I frowned. “I don’t know. Some reactions feel uncontrollable.”

“Like what?” he asked.

“For example,” I said, “when someone insults me. I just can’t control my anger. It explodes. In that moment, I honestly feel like I have no choice.”

He tilted his head. “No choice at all? None?”

“Yes,” I insisted. “Whatever I do in that anger feels automatic—beyond my control.”

He smiled—not dismissively, but knowingly. “All right. Let me ask you something. What if the perceived insult came from your teacher?”

I blinked.

“What if it came from your boss?” he continued.

I felt myself getting quieter.

“And what if,” he asked finally, “it came from a parent?”

I looked down, because the truth was now painfully apparent. My “uncontrollable anger” seemed very controllable in certain situations.

He didn’t rush me. He let me arrive at the realization on my own.

After a moment, I whispered, “That… would be different.”

“Why different?” he asked gently. “The insult is the same. The words are the same. The hurt is the same. So why does your reaction change?”

I sighed. “Because the consequences matter more. I’d stop myself.”

He nodded. “Exactly. So, the reaction is controllable. You simply choose not to control it in some situations. When the stakes are high, you regulate yourself. That regulation is willpower. Your understanding of what is appropriate—that comes from conscience. Both operate inside you. You are just not using them consistently.”

His words settled into me more deeply than I expected. “So, I do have a choice… even when it doesn’t feel like it.”

He said, “You always have a choice. Sometimes the space is small—a single breath—but it exists. Between the stimulus and the reaction lies a gap. In that gap is your willpower. In that gap whispers your conscience. That is the part of you that makes you human.”

I watched him for a moment as he continued. “Let me tell you something. A few days ago, someone cut me off in traffic. My irritation rose instantly—my conditioning ready to react. But then I remembered how I want my child to handle such moments. A small space opened. I used it. I didn’t honk. I didn’t glare. I let it pass. A small choice on the outside, but a meaningful one on the inside.”

I nodded slowly. “So, accountability is not about my past, but about that small moment of choosing.”

He said, “Exactly. You are not answerable for your genetics, your upbringing, or your emotional wiring. You are answerable for your response—the place where willpower and conscience meet. That is the part no one else can control. That is the part that defines you.”

I exhaled, feeling a strange mixture of relief and responsibility. “Believing everything was determined made me feel safe at first… but also powerless.”

He smiled gently. “That’s because it takes away the only part of you that truly matters. Determinism explains your starting point. Responsibility determines your destination. You cannot control the storms of life, but you can choose how you steer your boat. That small choice—that steering—is your humanity.”

I looked at him with a new clarity forming. “So, everything may be written… except my response?”

He nodded. “Yes. And that small unwritten part—your response—is why you are accountable… and why you matter.”

When "No Choice" Feels True

 

 

یہ مضمون اردو میں پڑھیں

There are moments in life when the phrase “I had no choice” is not spoken casually but with a weight that silences a room. It arises from situations so extreme—harassment, coercion, violence, threats—that judging them from the outside feels almost indecent. In such moments, every visible option seems wrong, dangerous, humiliating, or fatal. Choice itself seems to evaporate.

I broke the quiet and said, “Imagine being trapped in a situation where escape feels impossible and resistance feels suicidal, where every path carries an unbearable cost. That is when people say, ‘There was no choice.’”

He leaned back, rubbing his forehead. “And honestly… in those moments, it doesn’t just sound true. It feels true.”

“I agree,” I said. “It feels true. But before we accept it as the final word, we have to distinguish two realities—what is happening to a person and how the person responds to it. These two are often collapsed into one.”

He looked at me, waiting.

“What happens to us,” I said, “can be completely outside our control. Abuse. Violence. Threats. Coercion. But the moment we respond—internally or externally—we enter the realm of choice. That realm may be horrifyingly narrow… but it still exists.”

He hesitated. “That sounds like a philosophical luxury. In real life, people freeze. They collapse. They comply without thinking.”

“Of course they do,” I replied. “Fear disorganizes the mind. Trauma floods the nervous system. Yet even then, something inside still tilts in one direction or another—toward compliance, resistance, silence, or sacrifice. That tilt is not random. It is a decision, even when made in terror.”

He was quiet for a moment. Then he said, “What about situations where a person gives in to save their family? Would you really call that a choice?”

I nodded. “Yes, a tragic one. But still a choice.”

He looked unsettled.

“Imagine this,” I continued. “A man is threatened: surrender or your family will be killed. If he gives in, the cost may be his honor, his freedom, his inner peace. If he refuses, the cost may be the lives of those he loves. Both costs are unbearable. Yet precisely because both carry a cost, a choice exists.”

He whispered, “That sounds cruel.”

“It is,” I said softly. “But denying the existence of choice does something even crueler—it turns the human being into a helpless object of fate. That may protect us from guilt, but it also robs us of dignity.”

I told him about a woman I once knew—never by name. She had endured years of emotional abuse. Everyone around her kept saying, ‘You have no choice. You have to stay.’ One day she said quietly, “No… I am choosing to stay. For now. For my children.” That single sentence changed everything. She was no longer a trapped victim in her own eyes. She was a chooser paying a price she understood. Years later, she chose differently. But the shift began the day she reclaimed ownership of her choice.

He listened closely.

“Every decision,” I said, “has an opportunity cost. What you choose to save determines what you are willing to give up. The tragedy of extreme situations is not that choice disappears—it is that the price of every option becomes unbearably high.”

He took a slow breath. “But doesn’t faith complicate this even more? Doesn’t religion often push people into unbearable guilt over whatever they choose?”

“It can,” I said, “when faith is misunderstood. But when it is understood properly, it does something very different. It introduces mercy without erasing agency.”

He looked up.

“There is a verse in the Qur’an,” I continued, “that speaks directly about coercion—about someone who is forced under threat to say what they do not truly believe, while their heart remains firm in faith. In that situation, God gives permission. An allowance. A relief.”

His face softened slightly.

“But here is the crucial qualification,” I added. “That permission is not an order. It is not a command to submit. It simply means that if a victim benefits from this divine allowance, no one has the right to condemn them. Their dignity remains intact, and their faith remains intact.”

He nodded slowly.

“And yet,” I said, “if another person, under the same terror, refuses to benefit from that allowance—if they choose to lay down their life, their family’s safety, or their honor because they cannot live with surrender—they too are not to be condemned.”

He exhaled deeply. “So, both paths are morally honored.”

“Yes,” I replied. “Because both are decisions. One chooses survival through divine concession. The other chooses sacrifice through moral conviction. Neither can be judged lightly from the safety of the outside world.”

I remembered a story a teacher once told: two prisoners under torture. One uttered the forbidden words to survive. The other remained silent and was killed. The teacher had said, “Both stood before God, not as cowards and heroes—but as human beings whose inner intentions were known only to Him.” That lesson has stayed with me for years.

“This,” I said, “is why even Divine law does not reduce everything to rigid rules at the breaking point. It keeps the moment alive as a moment of choice—not as a mechanical formula.”

He was quiet for a long time.

“So,” he said finally, “when people say, ‘I had no choice,’ what they really mean is… ‘Every choice was too painful to accept.’”

“Exactly,” I said. “That statement deserves compassion, but it should not be confused with philosophical truth. Because the moment we say, ‘I had no choice,’ in an absolute sense, we adopt a deeply disempowered view of ourselves. Life becomes the sole actor. We become only its victims.”

“And that affects everything that comes after,” he said.

“Yes,” I replied. “If I believe I had no choice, I cannot reflect, learn, or grow. I can only remain wounded and resentful. But if I say, ‘I chose under unbearable pressure,’ then—even in pain—I remain a moral agent.”

He looked at the floor.

“To make moral decisions,” I added, “a person first has to step out of this disempowering paradigm. One must dare to say: I am choosing—even now. Only then does responsibility become possible. Only then does healing begin.”

He slowly nodded.

“Extreme situations do not erase human choice,” I said quietly. “They only strip away the illusion of easy choices. They reveal what we are truly willing to pay for what we hold sacred—life, family, faith, dignity, or survival.”

The room was silent again. But this time, the silence felt reflective, not heavy.

The Freedom No One Can Take Away

 

 

یہ مضمون اردو میں پڑھیں

Viktor Frankl, the Austrian neurologist and psychiatrist who survived the horrors of Nazi concentration camps, once expressed a timeless truth: everything can be taken away from a person—health, wealth, relationships, possessions—but one freedom always remains: the freedom to choose one’s response.

This insight was not a philosophical idea formed in a comfortable armchair; it was uncovered through the toughest human experiences. Frankl spent three years in concentration camps, dealing with starvation, humiliation, forced labor, and the constant threat of death. Every morning, he woke up uncertain if he would make it through the day, and each night, he went to sleep not knowing if he would see the sunrise. Still, amidst this daily fight with mortality, he learned that even when everything was taken away, there was one thing his captors could not take—his inner freedom.

Freedom in the Midst of Suffering

Frankl noted that prisoners reacted differently to the same brutality. Some gave in to despair, others became bitter, while a few kept their dignity and compassion. The difference wasn’t in the circumstances — which were equally harsh for everyone — but in how they responded.

This is where Frankl’s discovery shines:

  • You may not control what happens to you.
  • You may not control how others treat you.
  • You may not control illness, loss, or tragedy.

But you can always control how you choose to respond.

Think about two people who unexpectedly lose their jobs.

  • The first person falls into despair, blames others, and sinks into hopelessness.
  • The second experiences the same pain but chooses to view it as a chance to re-evaluate life, improve skills, or even follow a long-neglected passion.

The event remains the same—losing a job. But the result varies greatly depending on how you respond.

Small Daily Illustrations

This principle is not limited to extreme cases like concentration camps or devastating losses. It applies to our everyday lives.

  • When someone cuts us off in traffic, do we get angry or take a deep breath and keep going?
  • When a family member speaks harshly, should we retaliate right away or pause and respond calmly?
  • When plans fall apart, do we drown in self-pity or see the setback as a lesson?

In each situation, our well-being is influenced more by how we respond than by what actually happens.

An Anecdote of Perspective

A teacher once poured a glass of water halfway and asked the class, “What do you see?” Some said, “Half empty.” Others said, “Half full.” He smiled and said, “Both are correct. But remember, the choice of which one you see determines not just your mood today but also your future tomorrow.”

Frankl’s lesson is the same: we cannot alter the facts, but we can always change how we see and respond to them.

Remember

  1. Response is Power – It is the one area of freedom no one can breach.
  2. Response is Responsibility – With this freedom comes accountability; we can’t always blame circumstances or others.
  3. Response Shapes Character – Each time we select our response, we are shaping who we become.

A Takeaway for Life

The world may take away many things from us. We might face illness, rejection, failure, or even severe injustice. But as long as we are alive, we hold within us the sacred space of choice. That space—our ability to respond—is the source of dignity, resilience, and purpose.

As Frankl understood in the bleakest moments: “They can take everything from me, but they cannot take my response. That remains mine, and mine alone.”

For Reflection:

Recall a recent situation where you reacted impulsively. If you had taken a moment to pause, what different response could you have chosen? How might it have affected the outcome for you and others?