PERSONALITY
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About this ebook
I really enjoyed it. I found it was a nice and complete introduction to a world yet to be discovered, but there was something unsnobbish or caring or patient in his way of writing that made me continue to read it.
Vanita Gauba, Manager Program Management (I.T.)
I am fortunate to receive some rare-found knowledge from his latest work of art PERSONALITY A PICK-ME-UP GUIDE . It is, in true sense, an uplifting experience to read this book since he has deeply deliberated upon various personality traits in such an artistic manner that reflects his unmatched understanding of the subject along with an out-of-the-world expression of his thoughts in words and pictures without being verbose anywhere, that keeps the reader glued to it till the end. After reading this book twice, I feel every sentence of this book is filled with very deep meaning that is spiritual yet practical and every chapter of this book can be blown into a complete book, if not many.
Air Vice Marshal (Rtd.)
(Decorated in war, decorated in peace), renowned Author.
If you wish to understand the meaning of life, its purpose and aim then you need to understand the meanings of knowledge, anubhava (experience), mind, resolve, ego, nothingness, karma. Love etc. as expounded in the book.
This book opens the doors of these words to enable you to walk on the road of spirituality which may lead you towards reality , the fundamental basis of existence.Readers who are fond of thinking would benefit more from this book as the author forces the reader to think.
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PERSONALITY - Balkrishna Panday
LOVE
Chapter 1
KNOWLEDGE
Go placidly amid the noise and the haste, and remember what peace there may be in silence
, is a quote from the famous document Desiderata by American mystic poet Max Ehrmann.
Knowledge as this one is the pith of wisdom of the wise, which cannot but be of the wise. Let us give credit and be obliged to the source of origin. All knowledgeable persons are not wise of their knowledge although they may speak the oft-repeated words of wisdom. There is a stream of thought process that helps the wise ones to arrive at nutshells of wisdom.
Talking of streams, writer Janine Gomes writes that sometimes we find, the streams of our lives can run into frozen winters. In an actual instance beneath the surface, in a little stream (the stream was only about four yards wide) the water in the waters ran deep. She mentions that Klemens Tilmann found a profound symbolism, the upper stream was in constant movement. Parts of the stream were frozen over and large areas of ice that had survived colder weather and had become covered by the energetic flow of the water above. But, the water flowing beneath the flat surfaces of ice was full of bubbles, dancing and vibrating.
The water of the stream sometimes encountered obstacles, and at other times flowed freely. Sometimes it ran in the opposite direction to the current only to later join the mainstream. All these different processes were observed by Tilmann. He was impressed by the water ’s obedience to its own essential being. Tilmann saw in this little stream a symbol of what all human life on this earth was meant to be. Human life to be attune with the phenomenon of nature. Lovely thought that indeed. Just suppose you were an adventure tourist with your group of friends negotiating the rapids of this stream on a raft guided by paddles. You would be experiencing a chilling thrill in the company of your social circle. Your overwhelming sentiment would be of conquering the obstacles of nature and their vehemence. This would be experience not knowledge.
The integral knowledge from the stream for the individual’s self would be along the lines of earlier paragraph.
By contrast to the adventure, if one were sitting along the bank of the stream, enjoying the scene calmly and the similarity of nature and the way to live human life, meaning of the words, Go placid,
would dawn upon oneself as if a solution to a mathematical paradox, clarifying the concept of happiness, (call it ‘Ananda’). This solution may be ingrained deep. ‘Shruti’ or scriptures of the philosophy of Hindu religion have tried to bring forth that experience which is based on immediate action – reaction with the world, is mentioned as ‘Maya’. This phenomenon is transitory and amenable to the consistent process of change.
That other part of this worldly experience with ‘Maya’ which is steady, consistent, unlimited and reflects one’s real nature in its rapport with one’s soul is knowledge. It is in this knowledge that one picks up a moment of happiness, ‘ananda’, and one does not want to let go this moment. It is desired for all the time.
When you want ‘ananda’ (i.e. His grace) all the time, meditation comes in handy. In the year 2003 Nilanshu Ranjan writes that an enlightened being is an individual. The spiritual, enlightened and mystics do not want their faithful, their followers to adhere to any specific beliefs. They are actually taught to have a questioning mind. They are in fact trained to have an empty mind devoid of fleeting thoughts. The learning is by virtue of spoken or unspoken communication of a rationale leading towards reality, the truth.
Preoccupation with thoughts is bound to mislead the mind and pushes it in myriads of directions. Emptying of mind is not that difficult, as it appears to be. You just let the thoughts be, let them come and go as they may. One uses the emptiness resulting from care-free attitude to develop consciousness, awareness by one’s inner self, an acuteness to understand and realize at a noble stratum, the reality, the truth. The truth would primarily relate to one’s individuality. Individuality ought not to be erroneously confused with personality, as is likely. The enlightened people also called ‘sadgurus’ i.e. holy teachers, help the learners, the pupils, to discover their individuality which lies dormant, subdued, suppressed and unblossomed.
On account of suppressed individuality a very meagre percentage of our physical and mental capacities come into actual play in the societal field.
Ranjan writes that what we claim to know about individuality is nothing but personality. Personality is not individuality. Personality is not of much importance. Psychologically it may be of utmost importance but spiritually, personality has no value. Spiritually speaking, individuality is innermost and it has to be discovered and not invented because it is very much there. Individuality means not to borrow from others, not to be conditioned. Personality is the outcome of our conditionings. Personality is that which is thrust upon us, by parents, teachers, society etc.
That which exists is existential. Existentialism is a modern system of belief propounded by Jean Sartre in 1940s, in which the world is meaningless. Each person is alone and completely responsible for one’s own action by which one makes own character.
Somewhat in this light Osho states that individuality is existential. In the ordinary course, a person with un- developed inner consciousness has no individuality, he has only a personality. Personality is the result of our conditioning by family and social environment. Only when individuality blossoms you become one with the whole (i.e. totality of universe). The experience of becoming the whole is of consciousness and the expression of it is through the body / mind. When one goes into deep meditation, one becomes absolutely silent; he is neither body nor mind. He is far above them. It is a stage of pure consciousness.
What obstructs the individuality to follow development of inner consciousness? Evil. Evil is the roadblock to ananda, pure incessant happiness. Bindu Chawla writes in 2005 "Any life of sadhna or devotion unleashes evil, so that the agenda for meditation becomes for us the war with evil before it is peace with ananda. The word evil has a simple meaning. It comes from the word German ‘ubel’, meaning ‘ill’. The word ‘diabolic’, however, has a complicated etymology. It comes from the ‘diaballein’, from ‘dia’ meaning ‘to throw’, and ‘ballein’, meaning ‘across’. Clearly, to throw away poison or negativity.
Given the nature of all illness, the wise have always recommended the killing of poison before the poison decides to kill. First, the nature of evil should be understood. Like the 10 heads of Ravana, evil, in the course of any kind of sadhana we undertake, not only rears its head mercilessly, but has unending resilience.
Second, evil is perennially connected to ‘good’. They are two sides of the coin, for where there is good there is evil, masked. So it is difficult for an ordinary person to discriminate and avoid coming under its spell. Evil is created by The Void, the spiritual gap between man and God. As opposed to love (bhakti or devotion) which alone can fill this gap, the Void, ends up being powerful.
The void where evil resides results in a state of anxiety in the individual. Mukunda Goswami writes in 2004, anxiety is a bummer. When it strikes, some resort to counseling and others to drugs, legal and illegal, Distress is what nobody wants, like garbage in your bedroom.
Wished for or not, feelings of quiet desperation, call it depression, descend on us all, When it’s a daily occurrence enduring for all one’s waking hours, something drastic needs to be done. Switching on the tube, shopping, going to the movies, and bingeing on food or alcohol just don’t get it, not long term anyway.
What we do and the people we see, most often affect us. Adages like Shaw’s ‘you are what you eat’, and ‘A man is known by the company he keeps reflect this’,
It is a tenet of contemporary psychology that an individual’s mental health is supported by having good social networks.
One successful way of curing a life of anxiety or depression is to alter its course by and by modelling oneself internally as well as externally upon the people one respects and regards high in esteem. Pick up their values and imbibe them step-by-step steadily. Notice and check-up when one fails. It is tedious, lifting oneself up from the morass but yes, it is possible. Anxiety and distress will shed piecemeal. By the time this chapter is over you shall have a very dear friend, close to your heart. Yes, your intuition, your conscience. Do rely upon your own opinion from within. Stick to it with rationale. The world around shall fall in line.
It is the void that is created between spirituality and the life when the uniformity, the oneness of the ultimate truth in all religions is lost in the maze of tenets of religion.
The follower of fundamentalism sticks to the strict observance of the tenets of religion as they happen to be understood or misunderstood. The agony of getting the tenets of own religion forced for acceptance upon the non-followers of those beliefs or mores, is transferred to the society for cracks therein and the