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Life style - Action Plan

The universe runs itself. Don’t worry about controlling it. Instead, understand your own system: body and Manas. The body moves through four instincts: food (aahaara), fear (bhaya), sleep (nidra), and reproduction (maithuna). The mind responds through six impulses: lust (kama), anger (krodha), greed (lobha), attachment (moha), arrogance (mada), and jealousy (matsarya). Together, these ten forces operate every action — good or bad. Without understanding them, external joy remains elusive. Indian lifestyle offers a clear plan: operate instincts, organize impulses. Here’s the action map: Food → Be frugal Fear → Know death is imminent Sleep → Put limits Reproduction → Practice monogamy Lust → Resist Anger → Be silent Greed → Donate Attachment → Mindfulness Arrogance → Humility Jealousy → Love Master this plan, and joy flows naturally. *********************************** “Clarity shared is clarity multiplied.” If these lines cleared your mind, pass them on to your circle. 🌸💫🌼 ***********...

Understanding Begets Bliss

Confusion breeds suffering. Experiences clash with perceptions, rules shift in a changing world, and certainty dissolves. No fixed law can measure the value of every action. So the path is simple: act by your own rule — but first, understand yourself. Who are you? The immediate answer: this body. Yet the body is a system of organs, and their functions create Manas — the mind. Beyond body and mind, everything else is world. So your actions must serve body and mind. What disturbs them? Only activities that disrupt smooth functioning. The body moves through four instincts: food, fear, sleep, and reproduction. The mind responds through six impulses: lust, anger, greed, attachment, pride, and jealousy. Ten forces in total. Control them wisely, align them with harmony, and they give happiness instead of chaos. Understand this principle, live by it, and bliss flows through all worldly activity. ************************** Raw words from a pure experience. If these lines tou...

By Surrender You Conquer

Effort is direct. Result is indirect. You can act, but you cannot manufacture the outcome. The result is always a consequence, never a creation. That’s why no one can decide in advance whether they win or lose. Even the strongest team can fall in the final minute. Effort belongs to you; result belongs to the world. People suffer when good effort doesn’t bring good results. They blame time, fate, or manipulation. But truth is simple: results aren’t manufactured, they emerge within the world’s parameters. So what’s the way to peace? Surrender. W ork sincerely, then release the outcome. Victory or defeat, don’t cling. Surrender with humility, clarity, and no prejudice. Only then do emotions stay balanced.  Only then does inner calm remain intact. ********************************************************** Every post is a seed. If it sprouted calm or clarity in you, let it travel — share it with your tribe of seekers. **********************************************************

“Do” for Peace and Calm

Humans can’t sit idle. Even silence is activity, even thought is motion. Every moment, something pushes us to act — survival, pleasure, recognition, or just impulse. But not all actions are the same. They usually fall into three streams: Disciplined acts Learned from parents, culture, and society. Structured, safe, and accepted. Bold acts Risk‑taking, high‑aiming, often clashing with discipline. Celebrated only when they succeed. Instinctive acts Spontaneous, without logic or reason. Sometimes creative, often chaotic. Most people chase worldly success through one stream alone — usually bold or instinctive. But fulfillment doesn’t come from extremes. It comes from blending. When discipline steadies you, boldness lifts you, and instinct adds spark — action aligns with peace. Without this balance, success feels hollow, and suffering creeps in. Living Inside Out – Menu of Wisdom “Wisdom is meant to flow, not to be stored.” If this piece brought you peace, pass it on — let the circle gr...

Awaken Your Body

We live inside a body — but most of us never wake it up. Every object in the universe is known by its form, yet the human body is different. It’s not just flesh and bone; it’s a temple. And a temple isn’t about walls or rituals — it’s about dormant energy waiting to be stirred alive. The purpose of life is not to decorate the body or indulge it, but to awaken the energy within. Yet today, the body is treated like a playground for pleasure, a canvas for muscles, food trends, and health fads. Without awakened energy, people collapse under suffering, because they lack the inner strength to withstand the world. True beauty isn’t in appearance. It shines only when energy flows through you. The body is more than physicality — it’s a vessel. To transcend the surface and feel the energy inside is to finally understand what life means. ✨ Living Inside Out – Menu of Wisdo m ✨         Raw words from a pure experience.  If these lines touch the chord of calm and ease even a...

World Validates None

The world doesn’t exist to validate anyone. It’s not your backyard, not your playground. It runs on its own mechanics, its own agenda, its own limits. Success, failure, recognition, fame — they all unfold inside those boundaries. You can’t simply declare, “I will achieve this, I can do that.” Because the truth is, the world moves according to its own rhythm, not your personal will. Hard work? Effort? Yes, they matter. But the world is not obliged to hand you fruits just because you labored. Before stepping out, you must understand how the system works — its rules, its capacity, its flow. Here’s the subtle truth: the principle that drives the world and the principle that drives the individual are not the same. Your task is to tune your actions to the mechanics of the world. Only then do results align. Name and fame? You don’t earn them. The world grants them. That’s the paradox. Recognition is not claimed; it’s reflected back when your actions resonate with the larger rhythm. So learn t...

Beware, the World Consumes

We chase “life” only when we’re plugged into the world. At home, silence feels like boredom. But pause—what’s magnetic out there that keeps everyone running? Strip it down, and the world offers just three subjects: Individuals — endless conversations, DMs, calls. We can’t go an hour without talking to someone. Items — clothes, games, resorts, reels. Stuff that entertains but rarely fulfills. Issues — politics, gossip, society’s drama. Noise that fills our heads until sleep. These three keep us busy, but they also hijack our mind. They generate thoughts and opinions, which slowly stack into our ego. And ego? It’s the biggest wall between us and real life. We mistake this cycle—individuals, items, issues—for “living.” But it’s just distraction. The more we feed it, the more we drift from the raw experience of existence. To live is not to scroll, shop, or argue. To live is to step beyond ego. Unless we loosen our grip on the world’s bait, we’ll never taste life itself.