To be "In" Socially as a Cover Up for Insecurities and Inadequacies
Posted on Sunday, 17 April 2016
To
be “In” Socially As Cover Up for
Insecurities
and Inadequacies
By Apolinario Villalobos
The objective of some people in joining a
social group is usually tinged with an effort to cover up their insecurities
and inadequacies, as well as, the desire to flaunt unexpected success in life. Their
effort to join an organization to boost their once timid personality is
commendable but they should not use their identity with an organization to an
overwhelming degree of arrogance which makes them social climbers.
Those who thirst for recognition may not
even need to join any organization to earn it. They missed the fact that by
being alone, only they will enjoy the recognition at the proper time and opportunity.
On the other hand, if they are identified with an organization that might later
prove to be questionable, they will eventually get a share of the stain, too.
I have met and talked to some people who
joined the “Foundations” and “associations” sponsored by a politician because
they were hoping that he could help them with their personal problems later on.
They joined the “Foundations” and “associations” without knowing their
objectives until they found out, albeit very late, that they were being used as
conduits for ill-gotten funds from dubious transactions. At the end, their
membership made them parties of the politician’s illegal acts. Until now, they
are still being investigated.
And, here’s a story about a friend who
tremendously improved his financial status because of hard-earned wage as a
seafaring engineer. In due time, he was able to purchase a house in an
exclusive subdivision in Tagaytay, aside from a Porsche sports car and a Benz
van. In both, he has permanently stashed expensive golf sets which surprised me
because he does not play golf. He also stuck stickers of La Salle, UP, Jaycees,
and Rotary at the back windshield of the van, although, he has got nothing to
do with them. He graduated from Cebu and not a member of any of the two
organizations. I just smiled and pitied him, for he told me himself, how he
struggled hard as an impoverished clerk/messenger while exerting much effort to
finish his marine engineering course and capped it by passing the board. His
multi-million home in Tagaytay is a mish-mash of furnishing, resulting to an
overdone eclectic interior that grossly defies harmony. Such effort betrayed
his inadequate social background.
Being a very good friend, I took the risk
of pinching his ego by advising him to remove the stickers and golf sets from
his van and just be his real self, adding that he should have more time with
his family than with his seafaring buddies who enjoy rounds of beer on weekends.
And, as I felt, too, that he wanted to be socially “in”, I advised him to join
a religious group that is always involved in community outreach programs. He
joined two groups but failed to find satisfaction so he left them. At the end,
I just gave him the opportunity of joining me every time he is free during my
rounds of RAS (random acts of sharing), that he found more fulfilling, as like
me, he also identified himself with those whom we share simple blessings.
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