Triumph and Disaster: Treat the Two Impostors just the same
Vanam Jwala Narasimha Rao
The Hans India (10-12-2023)
(The recently concluded Telangana State
Assembly Elections and the results favoring the Congress Party led by Anumula
Revanth Reddy and defeat to Bharat Rashtra Samithi led by Kalvakuntla
Chandrashekhar Rao, aptly fit in to these adages of ‘Nothing Succeeds Like
Success’ and ‘Failures are the Pillars of Success.’ Revanth Reddy fought
incessantly and never gave up in pursuit of victory, and achieved it. On the
other hand, KCR’s failure is only a ‘Suspended Success’ and he may have to wait
for the right moment to stage a comeback with an appropriate strategy. Perhaps he
gave people ‘More than what they Needed’ without a scientific ‘Need Analysis.’-Observation
by Editor, Hans India)
Alexandre Dumas, author of ‘The Count
of Monte Cristo’ and ‘The Three Musketeers,’ coined the proverb ‘Nothing Succeeds Like Success,’ which
implicitly means that, ‘Success Breeds
Further Success.’ If someone is successful once, chances of their success
in the future are better. Further, if a person was successful in one thing,
then that person is more likely to be successful in many things.
Notwithstanding anything aforementioned, concerted effort is essential.
Similarly, another proverb, ‘Failures are the Pillars of Success,’
hints at, ‘Failure is Life's Greatest
Teacher,’ and an opportunity to build an unsuccessful person’s strength.
Failure in fact is only a ‘Suspended
Success’ for any person, until the right moment comes, if in the meantime,
they work hard with consistent and appropriate strategy. While failure shows
what one should not do, success tells what one needs to do. If decisions that
caused failure are critically analyzed with an unbiased mind, possibilities of
success are higher.
Albert Einstein, an influential
scientist, observed that, ‘Failure is
success in progress,’ provided, one does not give up and keeps fighting
incessantly. Only when a person pursues victory determinedly, he stands to win
at some point. Dale Carnegie, Teacher in self-improvement, and interpersonal
skills, professed that, ‘Develop success
from failures. Discouragement and failure are two stepping stones to success.’
The recently concluded Telangana State
Assembly Elections and the results favoring the Congress Party led by Anumula
Revanth Reddy and defeat to Bharat Rashtra Samithi led by Kalvakuntla
Chandrashekhar Rao, aptly fit in to these adages of ‘Nothing Succeeds Like Success’ and ‘Failures are the Pillars of Success.’ Revanth Reddy fought
incessantly and never gave up in pursuit of victory, and achieved it. On the
other hand, KCR’s failure is only a ‘Suspended
Success’ and he may have to wait for the right moment to stage a comeback
with an appropriate strategy. The two imposters, ‘Triumph and Disaster’ are a good experience to them
respectively.
The new Chief Minister of Telangana,
Revanth Reddy started his successful political career as ZPTC Member and soon
got elected as MLC as an independent. Like ‘Nothing
succeeds like success’ he was elected as MLA from Kodangal constituency in
2009 and in 2014. Having tasted his first defeat in the 2018 Telangana Assembly
Elections from Kodangal, and in accordance with the adage, ‘Failures are the Pillars of Success,’ he
made a marvelous and great comeback, by winning Lok Sabha Seat from Malkajgiri
Constituency.
Revanth Reddy slowly proved that ‘Success Breeds Further Success.’
Consequent to his appointment as President of Telangana Pradesh Congress
Committee, two and half years ago, Revanth Reddy with a consistent and
appropriate strategy, led, with determination, the Congress' successful
campaign in the 2023 Telangana Legislative Assembly elections. He won Kodangal seat,
which he lost in 2018. He however lost from Kamareddy. Thus, moving from
Success to Failure to Grand Success. Revanth Reddy repeated the achievements of
Dr M Chenna Reddy who defeated NTR TDP in 1989, and Dr YS Rajshekhar Reddy who
defeated Chandrababu Naidu TDP in 2004, to bring back the Congress party to
power.
Kalvakuntla Chandrashekhar Rao, perhaps,
the ‘Most Successful Chief Minister of Telangana’ for two terms, made his
unsuccessful debut into electoral politics in 1983 from Siddipet Assembly
Constituency. But he continued his spree of success after success and never
looked back till the other day. Treating that first failure as a sheer ‘Suspended Success’ KCR waited for the
right opportunity, which came in just a year, when he successfully contested
from the same Siddipet in 1985 and became a first time MLA. And from then
onwards, for him, it was ‘Nothing
Succeeds Like Success.’
KCR won four times consecutively from
Siddipet, from 1985 to 1999 and served in NTR and Chandrababu Naidu Cabinets
and also was Deputy Speaker. After formation of Telangana Rashtra Samithi (TRS)
in 2001, KCR’s Success story sustained. He won in 2004 Elections, from Siddipet
Assembly Constituency for the fifth time and also from Karimnagar Lok Sabha
Constituency. He retained the MP seat and become a Union Cabinet Minister in
the UPA Government at the Centre. KCR resigned as MP in 2006 as a challenge to
the Congress and won and then repeated the feat. In 2009, KCR won from
Mahbubnagar Lok Sabha Constituency.
In 2014 elections, KCR was elected as
MLA from Gajwel Assembly Constituency and as an MP from Medak. TRS, led by KCR
emerged victorious by winning 11 of the 17 Lok Sabha seats and 63 of the 119
Assembly seats. He was sworn in as the first Chief Minister of Telangana State
on 2 June 2014. In September 2018, CM KCR dissolved the Telangana Legislative
Assembly, and then, after winning 88 seats in the Elections held in November
2018, KCR was re-elected as Chief Minister for a second term in December
2018.
In spite of incredible and
unprecedented wealth and prosperity creation for all sections of people and
‘Enabling Governance’ during the past nine-and-a-half years, registering an exceptional
growth, voters preferred Congress Party. He also tasted his second electoral
defeat after 40 years, by losing one (Kamareddy) of the two seats he contested
but winning the other (Gajwel). Perhaps KCR gave people ‘More than what they Needed’
without a scientific ‘Need Analysis.’ In a similar manner, and probably
unmindful of pros and cons, the Congress Party and CM Revanth Reddy, soon after
the swearing-in, signed on the concerned file related to the ‘Six Guarantees.’
Later, the Cabinet gave its approval and decided to implement two of them from
December 9.
‘Winners focus on winning and Losers
focus on winners.’ Why do leaders
sometimes win (Success) and sometimes lose (Failure)? ‘Win or Lose,’ the best
quality of a leader shall be to set a good example to their team. It is better
if losers reconcile to, ‘Yesterday is not ours to recover, but tomorrow is
certainly ours to win.’ Losing elections, sometimes even badly, and later
resurrecting, is a common feature in an evolving democracy like India, where it
has come to stay despite some hiccups. In any democracy the absolutely
permanent entity is ‘Changing’ and
even ‘Ever Changing.’ No leader or
party is permanent in power.
‘Crownless Queen,’ Indira Gandhi,
despite her populist slogans like Garibi Hatao and Bank Nationalization, tasted
miserable defeat in the 1977 Elections, following the Emergency Excesses. For
the first time, the Congress Party lost power at center, and Indira lost her MP
seat. However, she returned to power triumphantly, thanks to Internal feud
between Janata Party Leaders and political instability, that worked in favor of
Indira Gandhi and her Congress Party. Voters preferred a stable Government. NT
Rama Rao’s TDP that came to power with a big bang in 1983, was defeated in 1989
by Congress Party led by Dr Chenna Reddy in united AP. NTR was defeated in
Kalvakurthy. Apart from these two examples, losing badly in elections and
returning to power triumphantly with passage of time is a general feature.
Rudyard Kipling, a British Indian author,
in his Poem 'IF', writes that, 'If you can keep your head when all about
you are losing theirs and blaming it on you; If you can trust yourself when all
men doubt you, but make allowance for their doubting too: If you can meet with
Triumph and Disaster, and treat those two impostors just the same; If you can
fill the unforgiving minute with sixty seconds' worth of distance run, yours is
the Earth and everything that is in it, And, which is
more, you will be a Man, my son!
Therefore, the two Impostors, ‘Triumph
and Disaster’ shall be treated just the same. If one is carried away with
Triumph, it may lead to downfall (Disaster). Working hard after disaster
would lead to success (Triumph). Wish both the leaders Success always.
(Writer is formerly Chief Public
Relations Officer to the former Chief Minister, Telangana)
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