We battle with others, thru words, looks and silences.. We battle with ourselves constantly.. The more I thought about why we battle with others and ourselves, only one reason kept occurring to me – our expectations.
As I wrote out these two words ‘Our expectations’, it seems simple enough but it also seemed overwhelming. Simple enough to ask, ” Two words can be the reason for many a battle?”; and complex enough to ask, “Why are these expectations such a heavy baggage to carry? Why should they be carried at all?”.
There are so many roles that we don, with each role requiring a different hat (in different shapes and sizes) and each role interacts with different people. If this does not seem complicated enough, to add a few more variables – the people we interact with are playing their own roles and are wearing their own different hats. Different roles, different hats and different people.. Well!! the many permutations and combinations can be imagined!!
We have no choice in the roles that we need to play. ‘The hat’ is the way we are and the way we act in a particular role. We expect that the person with whom we are interacting with dons a hat that is similar to ours; which means they are and should act in a way that we expect them to. The hat that we pick up to fit the role, is where the challenge originates? Perhaps…
We have picked up a hat that is comfortable for us and which we we think is fit for the situation. The person who we are interacting with could be playing a different role and hence will wear a hat that is comfortable for them; and which they think fits the situation. Valid, inst it?
For example, if we are playing the role of a parent, we have our own expectations from our child(ren) in every interaction. Our daughter(s) or son(s) in their role as children, have their own expectations in every one of their interactions with us, their parents. As much as our expectations are valid, so are theirs and vice versa.
Taking another example, when we are playing the role of a doctor, we have our own expectations of how a patient should be with us; similarly a patient consulting a doctor comes with their own expectations of how a doctor should be with them. As much as the doctors’ expectations are valid, so are those of the patients’ and vice versa.
We could extend this to any two roles that interact with one another..
These situations can be further compounded by hearing from people who are playing similar roles, on their experiences in similar situations.. If their experiences resonate with us, we expect similar experiences too and we are already imaging that to happen.. The expectations therefore are doubled now.
Compounding this even further, when we play or have played the role of the person we are interacting with, we would have played it differently. If so, we then expect the person who is now interacting with us from that role to behave in the same way we did.. The expectations now is tripled.
We now have our own sand castle of expectations that we have watered, beautified and built with. Any turbulence to this sand castle of expectations will only shake our very foundation. What took time and effort to build is being shaken and that creates fear, insecurity and helplessness. These three feelings gather momentum and result in anger against the person who according to us, was the cause for the turbulence..
Each one of us handle this anger created by fear, insecurity and helplessness, in our own ways. Some of us vent our anger immediately thru words and looks; this creates a rift in the relationship which may or may not be repairable. There are times when we regret the venting out and wish we had refrained. This certainly leads to a conflict within ourselves. We keep going back to this time and again and wish we could change the past.
Some of us stay in stony silences not wanting to vent out, which could lead to tanking of the feeling of anger, which builds up over time and leaves its own mark We have our moments when we wish we did not stay quiet and had the courage to vent our feelings.
Be it vented anger causing a rift in a relationship or a stony silence causing dissonance and disharmony in oneself, the repercussion caused by unmet expectationsgives rise to some questions within us:
– Is it wrong to have expectations?
– Why should I not have expectations?
– Is it possible for others to be the way I want them to be?
– Is it possible for me to be the way others want me to be?
– How do I handle this?
Being born as humans, it is but natural to have expectations.. However, expecting those expectations to be fulfilled and in the way we expect them to be, is where we perhaps need to ponder upon..Herein lies our intelligent thinking and appropriate action, which would contribute to our happiness and growth.. Needless to say that our happiness and growth can create a ripple effect in the lives of others as well..
July 6, 2025 at 9:41 am
Excellent to ponder.. my two cents..
a. The expectations do not stop with others only. Even about self that creates the dissonance until we leave that out and empty our hands / expectations
b. The same person for a similar situation might behave differently at two different times. We experience it and many times wonder until we realise that it is the same with the self as well.
July 9, 2025 at 7:46 am
Agree on this that we carry expectations from ourselves and the load is pretty heavy 🙂
June 1, 2017 at 7:02 am
I agree, being humans, it is but natural to have expectations.
Here, I have to make a little deviation to move to Ethology. I was under the impression that other creatures had expectations limited only to go after their food and biological urges that lead to reproduction, until my daughter brought an Alsatian pup (German Shepherd) from my friend in Ooty. When she came to our house I was prompted to get introduced to a subject called Ethology hitherto unheard of by me, amazed to note her simple expectations from us- play with her, allow her to scratch her back against us. Not leave her alone, when any of us leave for a while take leave of her, when we return speak to her a little etc. Can you believe that for fifteen years we (wife, daughter and me) never went to any place together? That pet behaved as if it is one of us! When she left us after her normal life of 15 years she had made an indelible touch of hers (of superior quality) causing unbearable agony to all of us.
So then, I want to say with some authority and conviction that it is not humans alone, but other creatures too have expectations, but so simple and even bordering on divine perhaps! The devil in me had even prompted to wonder whether the expectations of creatures are simple perhaps because they are so helpless to go beyond that, then I cursed myself for being so harsh in my thinking even after moving with my pet so long and being aware of her behavior!
Now I come back to the topic. We humans have our expectations from others that surely dwell on our happiness and satisfaction without concern for the others happiness from us. Why is it so? Simple! We think we are superior and sky is the limit for us to reach. A simple reality to dawn me that it is foolish needed so many years and a chance arrival of a pet through my daughter!
I doubt very much whether intelligent thinking and appropriate action, which would contribute to our happiness and growth, will arrive unless as accidentally as it happened to me!
Now let me try to respond to the questions:
Question:Is it wrong to have expectations?
Answer: It is impossible as humans not to have expectations
Q: Why should I not have expectations?
A: Most certainly, because of the answer to to the previous question!
Q: Is it possible for others to be the way I want them to be?
A: The ‘not possible’ answer will dawn on us only on accidental experiences that open our eyes!
Q:Is it possible for me to be the way others want me to be?
A: Same answer as the previous one!
Q: How to handle this?
A: One has to have the fortune of good karma backed DaivasampaT
Many thanks for an opportunity to be vocal on my simple lovely pet
Now back to the beginning!