Thought For the Day… ” Ethics and Morality ” …

The Doubts We Have About Ethics And Morality- clarifications by Pujya Gurudev Chinmayanandaji.
 The Doubts We Have About Ethics And Morality  Anjili: How would you interpret the words ethics and morality?

Swami Chinmayananda: The right and healthy values of life that you preserve in yourself comprise ethics, while morality manifests in your behaviour vis-à-vis the outer world. Immoral thoughts are not possible. There are either unethical thoughts, or ethical thoughts. There is no ethical action, but moral and immoral activity. The two words are used in this sense that one is for the discipline of one’s behaviour in the outer world and in one’s relationship: the other is subjective – ethical values and moral behaviour… So unless you have got healthy ethical values you cannot live a healthy moral life.

 

Anjili:Would you say that ethics is the theoretical aspect?

A: No, the subjective. Ethics is more subjective, something you have to cultivate in yourself. Then its expression in the world outside becomes morality. A man ethically cannot be morally good. A moral man springs from the ethical values he preserves in himself.

 

Meera: Are we naturally moral beings or is morality something that emerged because of the needs of the social situation?

A: It all depends on your definition of man. The human being or ‘man’ (the general term that refers to human beings) is really an animal, a two-legged animal. A newborn baby has no sense of morality. Then we slowly train him, which in society we call giving him culture, education, and so on. It is then that morality comes. Suppose you are living on a solitary island, morality would have no meaning. Morality and Self-discipline are necessary when you live in society.

 

Meera: Since man has always been a social animal, does it follow that morality has always existed?

A: Yes, but morality will depend upon the social complexion of the society. There was no income tax in the cave man’s life. But there was sharing with the other man what he had, helping him in need lest he may also need him. It’s mutual. I think morality slowly built up that way.

 

Meera: Do  you mean to say it’s only because, let’s say, you may fall sick and need help from another later so you do it for him when he needs it, a kind of social contract?

A: Naturally. But that is the lowest level of human evolution. From the highest standpoint all individuals are nothing but the Supreme Reality, Brahmn. So, you are only Me in that form. Me, meaning the Self, in that form. So, between you and Me, the relationship is like that between my hand and my leg.

 

MeeraThen at a higher standpoint morality comes naturally?

A: Yes, it comes naturally! It is not more morality thrust upon from outside. In the beginning it is a discipline thrust upon from outside, later on it becomes natural for you to live those higher values.

 

Meera: Does the place of morality in the general scheme of things come after birth?

A: Yes, it comes much afterwards, because in the early childhood period there is no morality. The child wants the other boy’s toys without sharing his own. Then the mother and others will tell him, “No, no baby, you give it to that boy also. Play together.” Very slowly, we try to make him understand.

Don’t Blame People For Disappointing You

Blame Yourself For Expecting Too Much From Them..!!
 
Condemn none: If you can stretch out a helping hand, do so. If you cannot, fold your hands, bless your brothers and let them go their own way. 
SOURCE::::: input from a friend of mine
Natarajan

உங்க நட்சத்திரத்துக்கு சொல்ல வேண்டிய காயத்ரி மந்திரம்….

27 நட்சத்திரங்களில் பிறந்தோருக்கும் துன்பங்கள் தீர்க்கும் காயத்ரி மந்திரங்கள்
உங்கள் நட்சத்திர காயத்ரி மந்திரத்தை மனப்பாடம் செய்து தினமும் குறைந்தது முறையாவது சொல்லுங்கள். வாழ்க்கையில் மிகச்சிறந்த முன்னேற்றம் காணலாம்.
 
அஸ்வினி
ஓம் ஸ்வேத வர்ண்யை வித்மஹே சுதாகராயை தீமஹி தன்னோ அச்வநௌ ப்ரசோதயாத்

பரணி
ஓம் க்ருஷ்ணவர்னாயை வித்மஹே தண்டதராயை தீமஹி தன்னோ பரணி ப்ரசோதயாத்

கிருத்திகை
ஓம் வன்னிதேஹாயை வித்மஹே மஹாதபாயை தீமஹி தன்னோ க்ருத்திகா ப்ரசோதயாத்

ரோஹிணி
ஓம் ப்ராஜாவிருத்யைச வித்மஹே விச்வரூபாயை தீமஹி தன்னோ ரோஹினி ப்ரசோதயாத்

மிருகசீரிடம்
ஓம் சசிசேகராய வித்மஹே மஹாராஜாய தீமஹி தன்னோ ம்ருகசீர்ஷா ப்ரசோதயாத்

திருவாதிரை
ஓம் மஹா ச்ரேஷ்டாய வித்மஹே பசும்தநாய தீமஹி தன்னோ ஆர்த்ரா ப்ரசோதயாத்

புனர்பூசம்
ஓம் ப்ரஜாவ்ருத்யைச வித்மஹே அதிதிபுத்ராய த தீமஹி தன்னோ புனர்வஸு ப்ரசோதயாத்

பூசம்
ஓம் ப்ரம்ம்வர்ச்சஸாய வித்மஹே மஹா திஷ்யாய தீமஹி தன்னோ புஷ்ய ப்ரசோதயாத்

ஆயில்யம்
ஓம் ஸர்பராஜாய வித்மஹே மஹா ரோசனாய தீமஹி தன்னோ ஆச்லேஷ ப்ரசோதயாத்

மகம்
ஓம் மஹா அனகாய வித்மஹே பித்ரியா தேவாய தீமஹி தன்னோ மகஃப்ரசோதயாத்

பூரம்
ஓம் அரியம்நாய வித்மஹே பசுதேஹாய தீமஹி தன்னோ பூர்வபால்குநீ ப்ரசோதயாத்

உத்திரம்
ஓம் மஹாபகாயை வித்மஹே மஹாச்ரேஷ்டாயை தீமஹி தன்னோ உத்ரபால்குநீ ப்ரசோதயாத்

அஸ்தம்
ஓம் ப்ரயச்சதாயை வித்மஹே ப்ரக்ருப்ணீதாயை தீமஹி தன்னோ ஹஸ்தா ப்ரசோதயாத்

சித்திரை
ஓம் மஹா த்வஷ்டாயை வித்மஹே ப்ரஜாரூபாயை தீமஹி தன்னோ சைத்ரா ப்ரசோதயாத்

சுவாதி
ஓம் காமசாராயை வித்மஹே மகாநிஷ்டாயை தீமஹி தன்னோ சுவாதி ப்ரசோதயாத்

விசாகம்
ஓம் இந்த்ராக்நௌச வித்மஹே மஹாச்ரேஷ்ட்யைச தீமஹி தன்னோ விசாகா ப்ரசோதயாத்

அனுஷம்
ஓம் மித்ரதேயாயை வித்மஹே மஹா மித்ராய தீமஹி தன்னோ அனுராதா ப்ரசோதயாத்

கேட்டை
ஓம் ஜயேஷ்டாயை வித்மஹே மகா ஜய்ஷ்ட்யாயை தீமஹி தன்னோ ஜ்யேஷ்டா ப்ரசோதயாத்

மூலம்
ஓம் ப்ராஜாதிபாயை வித்மஹே மஹப்ராஜையை தீமஹி தன்னோ மூலாப் ப்ரசோதயாத்

பூராடம்
ஓம் சமுத்ரகாமாயை வித்மஹே மஹாபிஜிதாயை தீமஹி தன்னோ பூர்வாஷாடா ப்ரசோதயாத்

உத்திராடம்
ஓம் விஸ்வேதேவாய வித்மஹே மஹா ஷாடாய தீமஹி தன்னோ உத்ராஷாடா ப்ரசோதயாத்

திருவோணம்
ஓம் மஹா ச்ரோணாய வித்மஹே புண்யஸ்லோகாய தீமஹி தன்னோ ச்ரோணா ப்ரசோதயாத்

அவிட்டம்
ஓம் அக்ர நாதாய வித்மஹே வசூபரீதாய தீமஹி தன்னோ சரவிஹ்டா ப்ரசோதயாத்

சதயம்
ஓம் பேஷஜயா வித்மஹே வருண தேஹா தீமஹி தன்னோ சதபிஷக் ப்ரசோதயாத்

பூரட்டாதி
ஓம் தேஜஸ்கராய வித்மஹே அஜஏகபாதாய தீமஹி தன்னோ பூர்வப்ரோஷ்டபத ப்ரசோதயாத்

உத்திரட்டாதி
ஓம் அஹிர் புத்ந்யாய வித்மஹே ப்ரதிஷ்டாபநாய தீமஹி தன்னோ உத்ரப்ப்ரோஷ்டபத ப்ரசோதயாத்

ரேவதி
ஓம் விச்வரூபாய வித்மஹே பூஷ்ண தேஹாய தீமஹி தன்னோ ரைய்வதி ப்ரசோதயாத்

 
SOURCE:::: input from a friend of mine
Natarajan
 
 
 

How a Team of 70 is Helping People to Find Jobs …An Inspiring Story of “Mera Job “

Pallav Sinha and Girish Phansalkar of MeraJob

A team of 70 based out of Delhi is helping nearly 4 lakh job seekers find their careers across sectors. This is their story. 

Every year, thousands of people move from India’s villages and towns to its cities looking for employment opportunities.

They pack their bags and bid their families goodbye with no idea how their life will shape up in a city which is already crowded with people competing for every job opportunity.

On the other hand, there are companies that fall short of manpower because they struggle to find the right match.

When the supply is huge, why do companies still struggle to fill lower end white collar and skilled blue collar vacancies?

This is exactly the question Pallav Sinha, Founder and CEO of Mera Job, asked himself.

“I moved to India in 2008 and soon realised the challenge of hiring good resources. I knew from my past experience in building teams that there was plenty of talent available in the country but it missed the employer’s attention due to lack of right exposure,” shares Sinha.

He saw that no one was focusing on the mass recruitment segment and decided to tap this enormous potential and Mera Job was founded in 2012.

Mera Job is a hybrid talent acquisition startup that strikes a balance between offline and online hiring.

It offers a marketplace for lower end white collar jobs like telemarketing and sales executives, receptionist etc. and even skilled blue collar workers like drivers and delivery boys.

How is it different from similar players in the market?

Mera Job has a unique pre-screening process for jobseekers where they verify and match the skill set of the candidate with the employer’s requirement.

Jobseekers have an option to either get pre-screened online or call the tele-recruitment centre to go through the quick test.

The company plans to rely on its technology platform to gather unique data about registered candidates to analyse future behaviour.

“Once we know (through our data analysis) that a candidate is not looking for say a banking job and would prefer a company located in Ghaziabad we make a note of these preferences.

We don’t send a job recommendation to the candidate that doesn’t match his liking. This not only saves the jobseeker’s time but also helps employers screen candidate without arranging a telephonic or personal interview,” explains Girish.

Pallav, 51, co-founded Fullerton securities (now Dunia Finance) before Mera Job.

He met his co-founders Girish Phansalkar and Raman Thiagarajan at McKinsey, where the two were consulting Pallav on a project at Fullerton.

“I never thought that I would become an entrepreneur. I still feel that I might be the oldest in the startup lot in the country,” giggles Sinha with the enthusiasm of a 23 year old. Girish, in his self-assured and pragmatic style, shares the story of the bonding the founding team shares.

“Pallav, is the ‘ideas man’ in the team. He has vast understanding of consumer markets and Raman brings in high problem solving ability with global experience. I am a techie with years of technology and operational experience,” says Phansalkar, the IIM-A and IIT-B alumnus.

The MeraJob team

The initial idea of Mera Job was to make a repository of around two million profiles which can be accessed by employers through a subscription. But the team soon realised that with this model they would only burn resources in achieving scale without connecting with the employers.

They quickly pivoted and designed a systematic pre-screening process. They will soon be launching their mobile app.

During the discussion Pallav shared a very interesting trivia which changed my assumption about this market.

As many as 80 per cent of job seekers in the mass market own a smart phone.

When they come to the city they do not have a social circle hence they buy a smart phone which is their only source of entertainment.

With a team of 70 people, 400,000 job seekers, and operations in 12 cities, Mera Job raised its initial investment of $ 3 million from private investors and is looking for a series A funding by end of this year.

Their current revenues come from B2B transactions and all services for job seekers are free.

“We feel that skill development of the job seekers will become our focus in the coming months. We have sealed a partnership with NSDC and plan to add counselling and language training to our services portfolio,” adds Pallav. However, sourcing right candidates at the right time stays their biggest challenge.

Like any other businesses, managing efficiency throughout the value chain is critical to their operation.

Pallav feels that the work pressure you feel as an entrepreneur is a positive one as it helps you and your company evolve.

Girish however fears failure for a reason.

“I had an unsuccessful business before Mera Job. At that time failure did not matter much because I was bootstrapping. It was my own money at stake. Now I dread failure because my investors’ money and employees’ careers are at stake.”

The recruitment market in India is worth about $800 million and is growing at 20 per cent annually, according to data by Matrix partners.

We are seeing a second wave of online hiring firms post the Naukri, Monster era.

The new entrants in the market are targeting specific problems that exist in acquiring talent at different levels.

The Indian start-up ecosystem itself is predicted to create 300,000 new jobs in the next few years.

The recruiters however still struggle with piles of unsuitable resumes, long recruitment cycles and fleeting employee loyalties.

Ensuring retention of selected candidates in the lower end job segment is even more challenging as a hike of even a few thousand rupees leads to attrition.

Companies like Mera Job have to fight against the legends of the online hiring industry and find inventive ways of partnering with offline consultants who serve as industry insiders. But with clear focus and 40 years of collective core team experience, Mera Job has already bagged clients like HDFC Bank, Yatra, Britannia and JLL.

source::::: Reema Sathe  in http://www.rediff.com

Natarajan

Solar-Powered Plane on Its First ” Round-The-World ” Flight !!!!

Solar-powered plane begins first round-the-world flight

Swiss plane Solar Impulse 2 landed Monday in Muscat, Oman, the first stopover in the attempt to fly around the world powered by the sun alone. Follow the flight.

Image credit: solarimpulse.com

Image credit: solarimpulse.com

A Swiss plane called Solar Impulse 2 took off from Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates Monday morning (March 9, 2015) and later landed at its first stopover in Muscat, Oman. Solar Impulse 2 is the first plane to attempt to fly around the world without a drop of fuel, powered by the sun alone.

Solar Impulse founder Andre Borschberg was the pilot Monday morning at take-off. Borschberg will trade piloting with Solar Impulse co-founder Bertrand Piccard during stop-overs on the months-long journey, expected to end in late July or early August.

You can track the plane’s progress on the Solar Impulse website.

You can also follow Solar Impulse on Twitter or FlightRadar 24.

 

The solar-powered plane Solar Impluse 2 lands at the Al-Bateen airport in Emirati capital Abu Dhabi on March 2, 2015.

The solar-powered plane Solar Impluse 2 lands at the Al-Bateen airport in Emirati capital Abu Dhabi on March 2, 2015.

The Solar Impulse 2 is made of carbon fiber and has 17,248 solar cells built into the plane’s 236-foot (72-meter) wingspan. The solar cells recharge four lithium polymer batteries. Solar Impulse’s wingspan is larger than that of the Boeing 747, but the plane weighs only around 5,070 pounds (2300 kg) – about as much as a minivan.

On Tuesday, the plane will head for Ahmedabad, India, and after India, to China and Myanmar. The next leg is across the Pacific to land in Hawaii. Then it will head to Phoenix, Arizona, and New York City. The path across the Atlantic will depend on the weather and could include a stop in southern Europe or Morocco before ending in Abu Dhabi.

SOURCE::::: http://www.earthskynews.org

Natarajan

Message For the Day… ” He Who Realises Divine Verily Becomes Divine …”

The Divine is the base, and also the superstructure. The beads are many, but the interconnecting, integrating string of the rosary is one. So also for the entire world of living beings; God, the permanent, omnipresent Parabrahman, is the base. The scriptures proclaim, “He who realises Divine verily becomes Divine (Brahmavid Brahmaiva Bhavathi)”. The bubble born of water floats in it and bursts to become one with it. All the visible objective worlds are like bubbles emanating from the vast ocean of Divinity, Brahman. They are on the water and are sustained by water. How else can they arise and exist? Finally, they merge and disappear in water itself. For their origination, subsistence, and mergence, they depend only on water. Water is the basis; bubbles are delusive forms of the same imposed on it.

Sathya Sai Baba

Meet the Cute Little Sleeping Beauties … !!!

s there anything cuter than a sleeping newborn baby? Yes. Ten of them!

Baby photographer Sandi Ford has shared some images from her recent photo shoots to celebrate the arrival of spring and Mother’s Day.

In the heart-warming collection of pictures the babies are captured snoozing peacefully on super soft rugs and blankets.

Sandi runs her company Bumps, Babes and Beyond Photography from a studio in Ealing, West London, where she adds dainty accessories to the dozing newborns she shoots, some of whom are just a few days old.

Baby photographer Sandi Ford has shared some images from her recent photo shoots to celebrate the arrival of spring and Mother's Day

In the heart-warming collection of pictures the babies are captured snoozing peacefully on super soft rugs and blankets

In the heart-warming collection of pictures the babies are captured snoozing peacefully on super soft rugs and blankets

The photographer is a fan of natural light and says she likes to focus on the little details, fragility and tenderness of a newborn baby and encourage parents to use props and personal or sentimental items to provide a unique and personal touch to the pictures.

Sandi has three young children herself which she says helps her know how to get giggles from older children and how to soothe and relax a new arrival.

As well as newborns Sandi, whose work has appeared in Vogue and on Netmums.com, loves maternity shoots saying: ‘Pregnancy is such an amazing time in a woman’s life and we love to celebrate your beautiful body!’

See more of her work at www.bumpsbabesandbeyond.com

Sandi runs her company Bumps, Babes and Beyond Photography from a studio in Ealing, West London

The photographer adds dainty accessories like this floral headband to the dozing newborns she shoots

Many of her subjects are just a few days old and so spend a lot of their time sleeping

Sandi uses both natural and studio light and says she likes to focus on the little details, fragility and tenderness of a newborn baby

She says having three young children herself helps her know how to get giggles from older children and how to soothe and relax a new arrival

She encourages parents to use props and personal or sentimental items to provide a unique and personal touch to the pictures

Sandi's work has appeared in Vogue and on Netmums.com

SOURCE::::: TONI JONES FOR MAILONLINE  in http://www.dailymail.uk.com

Natarajan

 

 

 

 

 

Pamban Bridge… A Fascinating One !!!

 

Pamban Bridge (named after the place at one end) lies between Indian main land
and Rameswaram island. It was the longest sea bridge for almost a century in India
(built in 1914) until Worli – Bandra sea bridge was built in Mumbai a few years ago.
Now it is the second.

Besides this, it is also a cantilever bridge that opens up in the middle to allow
ships to pass by like the Tower Bridge in London.

It was damaged in a cyclone in 1964 and was restored in just 46 days by E Sreedharan
the father of Delhi Metro.That cyclone had however damaged the link from Pamban to
Dhanuskodi town that vanished in the cyclone, thereby cutting the rail link between India
and Sri Lanka. Along with it went away the name Boat Mail for Madras – Dhanuskodi train.
Boat mail ? yes, because from Dhanuskodi, the passengers used to take a ferry to
Thalaimannar in Sri Lanka and continued their onward train journey all the way to Colombo.
Since the Madras train connected to a boat at the end of the journey, it was called
Boat Mail. This train was also known as Indo Ceylon Express in very early days.
https://i0.wp.com/static.panoramio.com/photos/large/41963310.jpg
https://i0.wp.com/i1.trekearth.com/photos/18313/img_2671.jpg
https://i0.wp.com/www.ramnad.tn.nic.in/images/Final_Scissors%20Bridge%20001.jpg
SOURCE:::: iNPUT FROM A FRIEND OF MINE
Natarajan

8 ways to Make Your Most of the Day…

Multi-tasking can sometimes lead to poor results due to lack of focus

Plan how you’re going to spend the day and stick to it.

Avoid checking e-mails first.

Use the first one hour of your day to review your pending tasks and finish them….

Productive time management is the new age tool for planning your success ahead of time.

Here are some tricks to help you increase your productivity

Tune off Whatsapp for the first half

Is your phone humming for attention?

Avoid using WhatsApp to delegate work if you are stuck in a traffic jam.

Use it to share information, read a light note and share updates.

You may use your commute time to connect with your family and friends.

While you’re at work, prioritise and tune away from groups and chats.

Avoid checking e-mails first thing

Plan how you’re going to spend the day and stick to it. Avoid checking e-mails first.

Use the first one hour of your day to review your pending tasks and finish them.

“Mornings are fresh and I usually come to work with a positive attitude and spend the first two hours speaking and connecting to the customers,” shares Pooja Arora, HR at Bisleri India, Mumbai.

Tony Robins, American life coach and author of Unlimited Power, Unleash the Power Within and Awaken the Giant Within, suggest setting up an “hour of power”, “30 minutes to thrive” or “15 minutes to fulfilment”.

Review your calendar, call list and respond to customer feedback.

If something else needs your urgent attention, you will receive a call anyway.

You are not a juggler

Most organisations assume multitasking as a skill required.

In the long run it will lead to little or lack of focus on one task.

Multitasking is like regulating attention, it is addictive and feels like a superhuman that is incredibly efficient but eventually leads to a burnout.

Break the habit and your brain will thank you.

I am a compulsive multi-tasker yet there are activities I do not prefer to multi task like reading, studying and contemplating, says Rajesh Kamath, partner MTHR Global, an HR consulting firm in Pune.

Too much multitasking can add to your anxiousness and hypertension to meet the finish line, the idea is not get trapped into it.

Select the tasks that are in line like a chef who multi tasks to cook well.

Get the monkey off your back.

“I know — I have to finish this; it’s important. But where do I begin?” says, Delhi-based creative writer Rashmi.

“I often find myself struggling with multiple tasks that should have been finished yesterday. I just keep procrastinating because it’s tough.”

Keep your tough tasks on a high priority and complete them the first thing.

Mornings are a great time for creativity; use it to leapfrog to the rest of your day.

Procrastinating what you least enjoy will only keep you trapped.

Accomplishing the hard tasks will not only give you time to enjoy other task but will also keep you motivated.

As the popular writer, Stephen Covey says “Eat the ugliest frog first”.

Finish the two-minute tasks

How often do you say “Hey just give me two minutes to finish this”.

To raise your productivity ensure that you immediately finish the two-minute tasks, like responding to an e-mail, making a phone call, setting reminders etc.

If not addressed, these tasks get piled on to become stress later.

Most of these tasks require urgent attention which is why they pop up the last minute.

Meet over coffee 

Share the morning coffee to discuss ideas, plans and your schedule.

Keep away from unwanted discussions around politics, cricket and office gossip.

Reserve these discussions for lunch.

One of the biggest issues in Indian workplaces is unscheduled, unplanned meetings and discussions.

Respect other people’s time says Sushma Sonty, a Mumbai-based freelance HR professional.

Spend some time interacting directly with your colleagues and peers for healthy relationships.

Use technology for good

Are you a super social buddy who likes to show off a bit, great?

Keep a few tools handy to stay on top of all that you flaunt.

It’s great to be a buddy, but it can get tricky for you may get addicted to it.

Consider HootSuite, which offers central dashboard for managing all your social media accounts.

Save your good reads, articles and interesting features with Pocket, Feedly and Evernote.

Cloud On allows you to use Microsoft word, Excel and PowerPoint to create documents on the go using a hand-held device.

Take a break

Short breaks when timed well in between bursts of high intensity work rejuvenates you like nothing else. The thumb rule is 75:10.

Take a 10-minute breather for every 75 minutes worth of high pressure work.

A quick walk down the stairs, soaking in the sun, getting some fresh air are all great ingredients that act as a catalyst to the short break.

The bottom line is, when breaks are timed well, there can be nothing as effective as them.

Now, go and take a well deserved break!!

The author of this piece works with a leading travel and leisure company and can be reached at deeksha.nagi@gmail.com.

Photograph: Ryan Ritchie/Creative Commons.

SOURCE:::: http://www.rediff.com

Natarajan

Message For the Day….” Significance of Mantra ‘ Om Tat Sat ‘…”

When you perform an activity (kriya) as an offering to the Lord, your own good, what is good for others, and the highest good(swartha, parartha, and paramaartha) all merge! First, you and I become we. Next we and He becomes One. The individual soul, the ‘I’ (jiva) should accomplish identity first with the creation (prakriti) and then with the Supreme Divine (Paramatma). This indeed is the significance of the mantra Om Tat Sat (which connects the identity of the individual with the UniversalBrahman). ‘He’ and ‘I’ are always there; the spiritual practice(sadhana) is always there too. Just as the sun is inseparable and is never apart from its rays, under no circumstances should any aspirant part with one’s sadhana. It is only then they can be said to be one with Om.

Sathya Sai Baba

Message For the Day…” The Sense of ‘Mine’ is the bond of Deluding Attachment…’

A bird in flight in the sky needs two wings; a person walking needs two legs; an aspirant eager to attain liberation needs two qualities: renunciation and wisdom — renunciation of worldly desires and wisdom to become aware of the Atma. When a bird has only one wing, it can’t rise up into the sky, can it? In the same manner, if one has only renunciation or only wisdom, one cannot attain the Divine. The sense of ‘mine’ is the bond of deluding attachment. How long can one cling to what one fondles as mine? Someday you must give up everything and leave, alone and empty handed. This is the inescapable destiny. Hence give up as quickly as possible assumed relationships and artificial attachments through rigorous analysis of their nature. Attachment breeds fear and egotism. The wise will never bow to the fancies of objective desire. Constantly stick to the everlasting truth and adhere to the immortal virtues that the Atma represents.

Sathya Sai Baba