Your Daily Self-Assessment for Peace
To
live a peaceful life on earth, then self-assessment should be part of daily
activities. If we are able to do any one of these in the peace calendar below
daily, they we are contributing to peace.
How to Self-Assess Sabotage: The
Silent Killer
The
oxford dictionaries define sabotage as: “Deliberately destroy, damage, or
obstruct (something), especially for political or military advantage”.
Everyone
can sabotage you in life to make life very bitter for him/her! It not
surprising to find coworkers, friends, and, shamefully, family members trying
to pull us down (Adam, 2013). Saboteurs are dangerous because they don’t open
up that they are sabotaging their victim(s) and it is because of the legal
implications associated with sabotage. This makes it very difficult to identify
them. Meanwhile, Novi Survey Report on 12th September, 2018 revealed
that: “An enemy that is visible is far easier to fight than one that hides
well”. We can be sabotaged by others in various divers’ ways in multifarious
facets of our lives such as in our relationships, works/businesses, politics, religion,
and so on (Adam, 2013).
He
added that “When we understand what’s going on around us, it makes it easier to
call it what it is and move on” with our lives. So, it is better to self-assess
your family, work, political party, country, religion, race/tribe, profession
and so on for any possible form of sabotage/apartheid. This will help you to
also self-assess how to deal with it or accept it as it is and move on with
your life. It can be undoubtedly painful to realized that the one that you love
most, like; your friend(s)/co-worker(s), wife/girlfriend, husband/boyfriend,
parent/sibling(s), your church member(s) (either internal/external), party
member(s) (either internal/external), school mate(s), race/tribe mate(s) is/are
the one(s) sabotaging you (Adm, 2013). The best way to understand/self-assess
apartheid/discrimination and sabotage is to understand how human beings behave
and accept it as it is instead of fighting it; this will help us to understand
why people behave the way they behave (Adm, 2013). To Be Continued.
Thanks
for Reading. Good Night!