“In Another’s Shoes: Borrowing a Conscience for a Day”

If I were granted the whimsical liberty to be someone else for a day, I would choose neither a monarch enthroned in splendour nor a tycoon surrounded by glass towers. I would choose a frail man wrapped in simplicity yet armed with moral thunder — Mahatma Gandhi.
Why Gandhi? Because power may command obedience, but character commands history. In a world that often confuses noise with influence, I would wish to inhabit a mind that mastered silence as strategy and humility as strength.
The Weight of Simplicity
To be Gandhi for a day would mean walking barefoot upon the sands of Dandi during the epoch-making Salt March, challenging the might of the British Empire with nothing but moral resolve. It was not merely salt he lifted from the shore; it was the dignity of a nation.
Imagine confronting injustice without bitterness, resisting oppression without violence. That paradox fascinates me.
As a former Principal who spent decades shaping young minds, I learned that authority does not lie in raising one’s voice but in raising one’s example.
Gandhi’s life was precisely that — a living curriculum of courage.
The Experiment with Truth
Gandhi titled his autobiography The Story of My Experiments with Truth. The phrase itself is profound. Life is not a finished monument; it is an ongoing experiment.
If I could inhabit his consciousness for a day, I would wish to feel that inner laboratory — the discipline behind fasting, the turmoil behind political negotiations, the solitary nights of introspection. Leadership is often a mountain peak: one stands tall, yet frequently alone.
At sixty-five, with abiding energy yet reflective pauses growing longer, I too conduct my modest experiments with truth — as an educator, as a consultant, as a father, and now as a grandfather. Have I always chosen conviction over convenience? Have I spoken truth with grace rather than harshness? Gandhi’s example nudges me gently but firmly.
Courage Beyond Anger
Non-violence, or Ahimsa, was not passive submission; it was disciplined strength. Even leaders like Martin Luther King Jr. drew inspiration from him, proving that moral courage travels farther than armies.
To be Gandhi for a day would mean feeling the tremor of history beneath each word uttered. It would mean forgiving when retaliation appears tempting. It would mean standing firm while storms of criticism rage.
Yet I would not romanticise him blindly. To be Gandhi would also mean enduring misunderstanding, criticism, and the burden of imperfection. Greatness does not imply flawlessness; it signifies transparency and accountability.
Returning to Myself
And then, as twilight descends upon that imagined day, I would gladly return to being myself — Prashant: husband to Agnes, father to Akash, and grandfather to Vaidehi and Agastya. Their laughter is my ashram; their innocence, my prayer meeting.
For ultimately, we need not become Gandhi to practise truth. We need only begin where we stand — in our homes, in our conversations, in our daily dealings.
If I borrowed his conscience for a day, it would not be to escape my own identity, but to refine it.
Because the final lesson is simple:
To walk in another’s shoes is education;
To walk wisely in one’s own is wisdom.
Let me not crave another’s fame,
Nor covet crowns that glitter bright;
Grant me instead a steady flame
To guard my conscience through the night.
If I could borrow a saintly tread,
To feel how fearless hearts endure,
I’d learn that truth is daily bread
And humble living makes it pure.
And when I’m back where I belong —
With little hands in mine at play —
May love be firm, my patience strong,
And truth my compass, come what may.
For greatness is not a borrowed role,
Nor history’s echo in a hall;
It is the quiet shaping of the soul —
And that, perhaps, is the greatest call.





