My Mother Sent Me to Audition for Fauji; But Didn't Live to See My Work: SRK's Heart Warming Speech
Shah Rukh Khan has climbed back to the numero uno spot on the 2015 Forbes India Celebrity 100 list. Having slipped to number three last year, he has wrested back the top position from "Bajrangi Bhaijaan" star Salman Khan.
SRK featured on the cover of the magazine and attended the unveiling of the cover at IIM Bangalore today. At the event, he spoke to the gathered IIMB students about his life, leadership, creativity and many more topics.
SRK mentioned that he became a star by accident and also narrated a beautiful story.
Here is an excerpt of his heart warming speech:
On How He Became An Actor
"Accidents happen (I am a living proof of an accidental movie star/entrepreneur/speaker at an IIM gathering. I wanted to be a sportsman. Represent India hopefully as a hockey or a cricket player. Suddenly I hurt my back. Didn't have the resources to get the best treatment. Joined a theater group to fill in time and overcome my sadness of not being able to play at a professional level. Father died and we were evicted from our rented house. Mother went looking for a smaller place and the dealer's father in law was making a series, called Fauji. My mother sent me to him and he cast me as Abhimanyu Rai in the serial. Things went ballistic from there. I got film offers and one thing led to another, and I became a movie star. By the way we never took the house from the dealer, Mr. Dhawan who actually got me on the road to stardom. And my mother didn't live long enough to see my work either). I realize now that hurting my back wasn't an accident, being here speaking to you all is the larger happier accident. So Destiny plays a part for sure and no one can teach us either how to find it or how to chase it. Just like disaster, it will come your way but if you don't have the courage to ride its wave when it does, it'll toss you right back on the beach and all you'll get to see is the sunset of a tired and weary life (plus your backside will be sore!). So I would advise keeping your eyes open for life's magic and not turning away from it citing practicality and good reason."
On Creativity
"See I am fifty. An age where you most likely are making retirement plans not romantic plans. But here I am still coochie cooing girls my children's age. And no they don't look up to me, actually they can't because they are all taller than me, they treat me as their age/equal having been put in the position of someone who is a romantic hero, I have cultivated a belief that I can love them back as beautifully as any man can age notwithstanding. With respect dignity and put in my own experiences of life, which younger heroes wont have. Though I must admit girls having a bit of a father fixation, comes in handy with my endeavours."
On Being a Dilwala
"To conclude, I'd like to borrow from my latest endeavour of creativity- Dilwale and say that unless you live by the heart, unless you are Dilwale, none of this will truly translate into the splendour that life is capable of unfolding before you. The mind is the seed of creativity but the heart is the soil. That seed cannot grow without an open heart. To be able to love, to give, to share, to nurture, to take others along on your journey with as much goodwill for them as you have for yourself is the basis of all creative endeavour, of all real success, of all happiness and of true leadership. If you close up your heart to the world, if you choose to live your life on parameters that let you forget how to love, you will dishonor life and disallow it from honouring you. There is no greater creativity in life or leadership than the ability to touch each moment that you are living with the beauty of living it by your heart, to give back to life the fullness that it has had the generosity to give to you."
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