Don’t
do everything just for money, rewards, recognition, name and fame. As we feel,
most of our doings are just blind pursuits for something more important expected
at the end of the doing. Doing thus
becomes secondary, the outcome. The reward takes the centre stage, and
everything before that turns a stale, perspiring, frustrating struggle. The
process of doing becomes traumatic. By subjugating the process of doing to the unknown outcome in the
future, we pawn the happiness and intrinsic satisfaction, which simply doing
could have been, against the shifting, blinding mirage on the hot sands in
future. Try to make doing primary. It’s like casting the chains away and lightens
your burden. Not only it will light up your soul, the outcomes, whether you
care about them or not, will just follow with a bang. If you do something just
for some specific outcomes, it’s not doing, rather it’s some barter against the
drops of your sweat. It’s labour, a menial work, mere slogging. You are not the
master. Just try to do a few things without caring for the material and social
rewards. You will know that you own the act of doing. It becomes pure
and unadulterated. You own it and you are the master of it. Once you master something,
given the potential human soul has, the byproducts will drop like sweat autumn
windfalls, ripe, without any effort. That is the cascading effect pure doing
does. There are hundreds of posts on this blog. I write not for viewership
stats or adsense money. My reward is the numerous trophies I gather while
simply writing. I write because I love doing it. There is no
bigger reward than being able to do something you really love and
like doing.
A very small publisher trusts me and publishes my books. He likes my writing
and invests some money to publish my books. I help him to the little extent
that I don’t take any royalties. My books sell in just hundreds of copies,
rarely touching the four figure mark. And even for that I don’t expect any
royalty. Still I write for months to complete a book. Simple thing is I just
love doing
it. As I work on my books, without any restraints on publisher- and commerce-ordained
limitations, I feel like flying in an open sky. It’s like being a painter
having a completely empty canvas and possessing all the options to experiment
with colours and shapes. This is what you get, the rewards, your breath of
freedom, your space and your happiness. Every moment is like holding a big
trophy. And believe me, if you immerse in doing something just for the sake of doing
it to the core, you warp space-time continuum to the tune and frequency of your
doing,
and rewards follow, whether you accept these or not is another matter. Most
importantly, the doings that bring instant soul-sweetening sense rarely give
you money and material rewards. Helping a stranger, who has lost her wallet on
a crowded platform, with a hundred rupee bill that can help her save hell lot
of trouble; stopping to take an old hand and help him to cross the road; taking
a stranded stray puppy out of the drain; a smile from an unknown face just because
you did only this much to keep the elevator door open, helping her to catch
onto the precious moment, etc., etc. The feeling you get instantly is
sufficient to overpower any vanity of earning millions and getting gold medals.
Most importantly, such small, small doings help you hone the humanity in you.
Just like you pump iron in gym to harden your muscles, such little, little acts
of just doing without expecting any rewards will hone the muscles of
your conscience. Goodness can be practiced. It can be made a habit. Begin with
such small things where your egoistic, self-driven work flow won’t revolt to
begin with. Very soon you will turn out to be the best of a human being. And
who is a good human being? Well, basically she is happy.
The posts on this blog deal with common people who try to stand proud in front of their own conscience. The rest of the life's tale naturally follows from this point. It's intended to be a joy-maker, helping the reader to see the beauty underlying everyone and everything. Copyright © Sandeep Dahiya. All Rights Reserved for all posts on this blog. No part of this blog may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means without permission in writing from the author of this blog.
About Me
- Sufi
- Hi, this is somebody who has taken the quieter by-lane to be happy. The hustle and bustle of the big, booming main street was too intimidating. Passing through the quieter by-lane I intend to reach a solitary path, laid out just for me, to reach my destiny, to be happy primarily, and enjoy the fruits of being happy. (www.sandeepdahiya.com)
Wednesday, May 17, 2017
Tuesday, May 16, 2017
Cancer and Tumors in Earth
You run after a
thing, struggle and toil for it to the chronic pain of your bones, and much
deservedly you land up at the destination. You have achieved your thing. It’s
the time to cherish its worth, its value for you. It’s time to celebrate and
pause and allow the feeling to sink in. What value the victory carries if you cannot
even spare the time and pause to allow the feeling seep into the perspiring
pores of your skin, taking cool calmness reach to the limits of your soul. But it
almost never happens. The pause, the rest is ever elusive. You achieve your
target and the thing turns out to be valueless. The things, goals and
destinations that you get and achieve and reach become almost valueless the moment
you nail it. It’s always a struggle for the future. And it’s never living in
the present. The dream value, which was earlier carried by the things and
destinations where you stand now, shifts again to some another milestone in future.
So again we drop our present and run after the future. The futile chase: the
mirage keeps on shifting on the hot sands of our bloodied battle. And we run,
madly, trampling the things and the moments which are the only possessions we
have in reality and could have enjoyed, and rush for future, for things in
mind, in the form of ever-escaping criteria of values, goals and destinations.
No wonder, we never live our present by enjoying the victories and rewards our
sweat has fetched us. We abandon the real rewards. We trample the true trophies
of the present. You get the thing and it loses its value. No surprise that we
feel so deprived, poor, cheated, underachieved and unhappy at the end of the
journey when we fall. We hate any talk of pause in life. Little do we realize a
restless run results in a fatigued, huffing fall at a time when legs cannot
carry anymore and eyes fail and heart gives in. A run or a walk is well managed
with intervals of pause and rest at the milestones we cross. It reinvigorates
you for the next leg of the journey. Pause is blissful. It gives you the
beautiful gift of accepting your present. A man, an animal, a vehicle, a
civilization all need pause at intervals to maintain the journey, to save a fatigue
and burnout. Unfortunately that is what we are not doing. Individually and
collectively, we are headed down the precipice. The mad onslaught of modern
civilization, with its plunder of natural resources and unchecked technological
growth, needs a pause, for survival, for continuation of the journey. We are
far advanced down the technological lane. Let’s pause now. First allow the
horizontal spread of the utilities and benefits to the poorest of the poor. Let’s
put a pause on population growth rates, exploitation of natural resources, scientific
spurts and industrial productions. The modern civilization has gone too far
with its unchecked growth. Unchecked growth is self-destructive. It’s nothing
but cancer. The planet is carrying a cancer now. It needs to be checked. Let
there be a pause, please.
Friday, May 12, 2017
Roaming the planet to look for something which is safe in your pocket
Hi, this is
somebody who has taken the quieter by-lane to be happy. The hustle and bustle
of the big, booming main street is intimidating with the added risk that I may
well forget myself after being lost in the crowd. As you walk in the crowd, the
monotony and anonymity takes over. You lose the charm of life in doing the same
things others are doing. You don’t feel the kick in solving the same problems
using the same old, oft-repeated methods. The solutions also are boringly the
same, the results also the same. And happiness ever looks at the farthest end
of the planet or even beyond. The long and winding chains of the preconditions to
be met, before you trudge nearer to the ever-elusive happiness, are spooling on
and on: the dangerous mathematics of infinitely long factors and functions of
happiness. I will be happy if I top, then you top, ok let me grab the best job,
you get it, ok let me be the best CEO, you become one, then more. Then your
children have to be the same or even more to take you to the still elusive
dream of happiness. More money, more power, more prestige. Then there are
others in the fray who can turn you unhappy even after you have overturned the records
set out for yourself. There is no stopping. And hence no happiness. The problem
is if your happiness is not within you from the beginning and
lies at some goal-post in future at a distance, there are millions, trillions,
zillions and even more open-ended factors that affect, mathematically scuttle
your chances of a win. Forget it. It’s futile chase. The more we run after
conditional happiness, the more we push it away from ourselves. The fundamental
mistake is that we expect happiness to be the fruit on the tree of our efforts,
i.e., the result, the fructification. No, it simply isn’t. It is the root of
the tree of our endeavors, where we begin from, which lasts from the beginning
to the end. If it’s not in the beginning, forget it, it won’t appear later. It
has to be there before you begin. And the state of being happy can be habituated.
Practice it as a daily routine, like you pump iron to tone your six and eight
packs. Nurture the habit of just feeling happy, causeless and reasonless. Just
smile when you are alone. Please try it and you will know what I mean. It lets
loose a cascading effect driven by the hormones triggered by the movement of
the muscles around the corner of your lips. Try it. Close your eyes and just
smile. Unconditionally. You will feel how comforting it can be just to be
happy. The fruits will follow later as you slog it out in the battlefield. It’s
a simple verb, being so, a simple act, a solacing function. We but treat it as
an intimidating noun in the future, interpolate it as success and achievements,
the fruits at the end of the tunnel, the light at the end of the tunnel. It but
is the lamp which is within you when you are in the dark.
The path to happiness can never pass through the stages of unhappiness and
struggle. It’s the present in continuation. Remove all future components from
the equation of your happiness. So passing through the quieter by-lane, not stomped
and nudged by the teeming crowds, I intend to reach a solitary path, laid out
just for me, to reach my destiny, to be happy primarily, and enjoy the fruits
of being
happy. All in all, I just practice the
art of being happy unconditionally.
Thursday, May 11, 2017
Cancered farmer and beggared peacock
There
is an addition to the diminishing bird life in my village. As tractors take
angry mechanized burps, cattle bellow, buffaloes bray, still-remaining house
sparrows tweet, rest of the pigeons coo, irritated crows croak and pigs snort,
the peacocks add their voice to the rustic humdrum. The peacocks scream, is it
a mating call, or distressed plight, I’m not sure. I don’t think our national
bird, occupying a lofty position in the rule book, likes humans as such. It’s a
punishable offence to kill a peacock. But the killing should be direct,
specific, with the proofs of blood and slaying visible at the spot. However,
indirect killing, the slow killing over a period of time, in the form of loss
of habitat and introduction of poisonous inputs in the farms, goes unpunished--as
usually with slow crimes which unfold over a period of time, losing the track
of crime and the perpetrators spreading over a whole group of society and
institutions.
So
they risk their lives to enter the human habitation. It’s a forced migration. A
feathered riot of colours, they are the latest beggars from the species who can
no longer sustain for themselves and look to the man for survival. Irony here,
it is the same man who has grabbed their share from the nature. But then the
robber can very well impersonate as the philanthropist. It massages the
conscience for a mushy-mushy feeling. So the peacocks look forward to get
survival crumbs here. The nature is dying, so how will its offshoot, this
feathered riot of colours survive under the onslaught. They prefer to run on
their paws in a forest. But that is perilous in a village street. Dogs chase
them, cats lay around predatorily and urchins throw stones. So the peacocks
with multi-hued splendour of their trains have to heave their huge
feathering from roof-top to roof-top, looking out for grains and chapatti
thrown by their enemy to salvage some punya
from the basket of sins.
Their trumpeting
peehoo goes vain like rest of the
species’ role in making nature what it was and brought mankind to this level.
The peacock even holds the copyright to the best of colours that we humans
boast about in our designs and aesthetic portraits. But the poor thing doesn’t
have the in it to encash the royalty born of this copyright. Its metallic blue,
bluish-green, iridescent greenish blue, bronze-green, black and copper
markings and glossy green shading is no longer a wonder for the
modern man. It does not create awe anymore. The long train made up of elongated
upper-tail bearing
colourful eyespots is just a pattern on a bird.
Whenever
there is a chance for courtship, the train is raised into a fan and shaken to
impress the females. Love in times of war. There are risks of being caught and
preyed upon. At least the male attracts some iota of appreciation due to its
colours. Poor peahens, on the other hand, with their greenish lower neck and
duller brown plumage hardy get noticed. If there is a crumb to be thrown,
people prefer the peacock and shoo away the unattractive female.
The land under
cultivation, where they forage for grains, snakes, lizards and small rodents,
is under poisonous assault. That land is no longer for them. In fact it is not
even for the farmers—in the medium term. With population blast, decreasing
land-holdings, increasing costs and decreasing returns, the farmers delve
deeper into their pockets to buy more killer pesticides and poisons. They just
cannot afford to lose a crop. A season’s loss and their fate go down the drain.
So the survival comes at huge costs of injecting insecticides, pesticides and
weedicides. The poison not only kills the small world that sustains birds like
peacocks, it enters the ground water and goes into the food chain as well. The
cases of cancer in the village are on the rise. The numbers are far more than the
cities ill-reputed for life-style diseases born of pollution and lack of physical
activity. The farmers die of slow poison, three or four every year due to
cancer. The peacocks roam around the village with their screams. It’s an
ominous shriek. The world is but too busy to survive in the short term, even if
it comes at the cost of slow-death some years down the line.
Wednesday, May 10, 2017
Need headache free dose of jounalism--Try WION
What
do we expect at the end of the day? Of course some rest and repose. And some
dose of news and views before hitting the bed. But then pick up the remote,
flip to the news channels. Lo! You get attacked. It’s a Web-war. Web-Heroes are
slaying Web-Villains. Just stay on a channel and the last traces of your sanity
are gone. Anchors shout, panelists fret, fume and pour venom. God, it gives
terrible headache. At the end of it you wonder what did you gain, apart from
the headache, in terms of information that may help you in forming a healthy
opinion. You feel cheated as you come out bruised and the head aching from the
cyber war. For peace-loving souls like me there is an option. In a quiet corner,
there is a channel, away from populist rhetoric and hegemonic posturing, doing
its service of healthy journalism. It’s WION man! The succor of chicken-hearted
souls like me, who cannot afford to witness the Web-War from the reputed
fire-mongering anchors, who are fresh with even freshest channels. The Republic
of my sanity is bombarded. I prefer WION. Sitting with my glass of bed-time
milk, I look for the information that will turn me healthier in my opinions of
the world around. The unhurried trill of its world-class lady anchors providing
nonbelligerent dose of information. It feels like having Chavanpraash with
milk. Very healthy journalism I tell you. Try it.
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