Wednesday, November 24, 2010

Choice

The reason for writing this blog is because I wanted to understand the choice that we make everyday. I wondered what drives us to make such decisions or rather choose from a given list of options, what’s the driving factor behind all this? After researching and reading articles I came across various theories that explain the human behaviour and how we make choices. Hope it makes sense to whosoever is reading this blog. 

Choice theory explains us that outside events never "makes" us to do anything. What drives our behavior is internally developed notions of what is most important and satisfying to us. These internal notions are related to the basic needs which are built in every structure of every human being.

The basic needs which provide the foundation for all motivation are 
  • To be loving and connected to others.
  • To achieve a sense of competence and personal power.
  • To act with a degree of freedom and autonomy.
  • To experience joy and fun and
  • To survive. 

To explain that behaviour is not externally triggered, consider this example. "We answer the telephone because it rings and stop the car because the traffic light goes red". People or events outside us never stimulates us to do anything. Rather, our behaviour always represents the choice to do what we believe most satisfies our need at the time. We answer the phone because we choose to do so in order to communicate, not because we react to the ring. We stop at a red light because we choose to avoid risking a traffic ticket or an accident, not because the light turned red. Even a quick action is chosen and not automatic.

All individuals live their lives which are driven by genetically transmitted needs. All needs are equally important and all must be reasonably satisfied if we are to fulfil our biological destiny. We are in pain when a need is not satisfied and in pleasure when its satisfied. When any need goes unsatisfied, there is a continual urge to behave. This urge is as much a part of the human genetic instructions as in eye colour. Instructions related to survival, such as hunger, thirst are relatively distinct. The non-survival, or psychological needs are challenging because often they are less clear. Psychological needs, like biological needs have their source in the genes, even though they are much less tangible and the behaviour that fulfil them are more complex than the physical behaviours used to fulfil the survival needs.


Even though human needs are essentially the same for everyone, the behaviours through which individuals choose to satisfy it might be quite different. Beginning from birth, we have unique experiences that are either pleasurable or painful. Through these experiences individual learn how to satisfy their needs. Because individual have different experiences, the things that they learn to satisfy their needs will be different as well. Each individual have memories of need fulfilling behaviours specific to his or her unique life experiences. These pleasurable memories constitute the individual's quality world and become the most important part of the person's life. For most this is composed of pictures representing what they have most enjoyed in life. These perceptions have become the standard for behavioural choices. Unlike the basic survival needs, which are the same for everyone, the perceptions in each person’s quality world are very specific and completely individual.

To satisfy the basic needs, a person must behave. This means acting, thinking, feeling and involving the body of all which are the components of the TOTAL behaviour. Whenever there is a discrepancy between what one wants and what one has, the internal behavioural system is activated. The motivation is always to behave not only to fulfil the present need but consider the future need as well. People innately reject being controlled by others because they are capable of fulfilling only their own needs. Loss of control to another is dysfunctional and runs counter to the fulfilment of needs.

To satisfy needs, people must be able to sense what is going on both externally and internally and then act accordingly based on the information. If we examine the total behaviour, it can be composed of four components, which occur synchronously 
  • Doing (eg. walking, talking)
  • Thinking (eg. reasoning, fantasizing)
  • Feeling (eg. anger, depression)
  • Physiology (eg. sweating, headache) 
Consider you failed in an examination, which you thought would pass. How would you behave? Let’s take a subject "Mr. X" who failed the examination.

All of Mr. X senses are busy informing him of the bad news that he flunked. In this case, what makes immediate sense is to go home, sit in the chair, drink a few beers and avoid the classmates. Probably he will be depressed, irritated, somewhat resentful, anxious, tensed and fearful a whole series of emotions will be running. He may be suffering from headache which adds to the misery.

In most situations people are more tuned in to their feelings than their actions, thoughts or physiology. It is unlikely that an individual would mention all the components described in this passage if asked how he or she was doing after failing an examination; most likely the person  would talk about the feeling component – being upset or depressed about the situation. By recognizing that the feeling component is just one of four that make up total behaviour, people can be in more control of their lives. When people begin to think in terms of total behaviour, they can see that they choose these behaviours and have the option to change them. The most direct way to change a total behaviour is to change the behaviour’s doing and thinking component.

We have almost total control of the doing component of behaviour and some control over the thinking component; we have less control over the feeling component and very little control over physiological phenomenon. When we change what we are doing, we will notice that our thoughts, feelings and physiological responses change as well.

So how do we deal with the problem of Mr. X who has failed the examination. Instead of sitting at home and being miserable, he can call up his friend an arrange a game of any sport. He may not play the best of the games at that moment, but still he plays.  Once he starts to play he will start feeling different thoughts, feel different feelings and experience a different physiology. The stress starts to go away.

If what we do gives us greater control, it will be accompanied by better feelings, more pleasurable thoughts and greater physical comfort. To get out needs met effectively, we need to realise what we always have a control over the doing component and can choose to do something more effectively than being miserable.

Well to summarise, If we have better control on ourselves and the TOTAL behaviour we can choose what is best for us and fulfil the basic needs.




Tuesday, January 26, 2010

Our Thoughts

We often think Life is an enigma, a deep mystery, a incomprehensible problem, but it is very simple if one holds the key. Mystery is just another name for ignorance, the more ignorant we are the more mystical life is. Just as a magician who has different tricks under his belt, and how we "wow" his performance, but once we understand and know the trick its no more a mystery. Similarly once we start understanding the mysteries of life and how we can unfold them as and when we want, we start understanding Life and it no longer appears mysterious.

There are three motives for which we live; we live for the body, mind and the soul. None of these three can live fully if either of the other is cut short of full life expressions. It is not right to live only for the soul and deny mind and body; and it is also wrong to live for the intellect and deny body or soul. We cannot live fully without good food, comfortable clothing, warm shelter, freedom and good work. Rest and recreation are also necessary to this life. We cannot live fully in mind without intellecutal companionship, which could be reading books, travelling places or travelling and observations. To live fully in soul, we must have love. Highest happiness is found in the things we love.

Let me elaborate more on the mind and the thoughts that are generated by this creative mind, as Buddha said once "All what we are is the result of what we have thought".

We are constant thinkers, we can change our thoughts but we cannot stop thinking. It is the power to think that determines our state of living. The kind of thoughts that we register in our memories or habitually think attracts the same kinds of conditions. If we take the thought of success and keep it in mind, the thought elements of success will be attracted to us. We will be more focused on achieving success for "like attracts like."

Most of us think we must deal with the two forces that is good thoughts and other one being bad thoughts. But this is not correct and not true. For example, if we are feeling cold, we build a fire or find a warm place and enjoy the warmth of the fire or the warm place. As the warmth is build the cold dissapears, because cold is nothing but the absence of heat. So, this states that we actually don't have to deal with the negative thoughts, negative thoughts are nothing but the absense of positive thoughts. To be warm we direct our attention to create the warmth, we ignore the cold in thinking of heat. Similarly we can ignore negative thoughts by harvesting positive thoughts and just thinking positive "Be an optimist".

When our thoughts are aimless and imperfect, we create for ourselves confusion and agony. Aimless thoughts are like uncontrolled electric energy. An uncontrolled energy develops lightning which is destructive. Yet the same electric energy when channelled properly in a controlled environment harness wonders. The first question in our self development is "Are we controlling our thoughts or are the thoughts controlling us?" To gain all good things, we must first gain a disciplined, orderly and constructive state of mind. We will delay the good from coming to us if vent our feelings through impatience, temper, malice, hate, pride, envy, lies, dishonesty or any negativity that we keep within us. How often have you seen a person who cribs and in the same time he is successful?

Does it conclude that our problems are mental? Let us see. If we desire to gain wealth, we find that it is not a place or an environment. If it was so that all the people in one place or rather city would be rich and the people of another place or city would be poor. We find a mix of both in any place or city. Wealth is not the result of saving or being thrifty. Many penurious people are poor and many free spenders are rich. Wealth is not due to any certain business or job profile.
Mother nature teaches us to be organised and follow our instinct. For example a cat patienly waits for a mouse for hours, a hungry lion does not roar and lash in an effort to find his prey, instead he is quite and steals carefully upon his prey. This is the organisized method, the constructive method. We must stalk success or any worthwhile enterprise similar to the lion who stalks his meal. Man must work himself up to gain sucess, he will not just fall into it. When our ideas our organized, they are under our control. Our thoughts will be so arranged that they will work together as a single unit.

Do all that you can do in a perfect manner everyday, but do it without haste, worry or fear. Go as fast as you can, but never hurry.  The attitude of mind necessarily depends upon what we think. Therefore, the secret of all power, all achievement and all possible depends upon our method of thinking.

This is true because we must "be" before we can "do," and we can "do" only to the extent which we "are", and what we "are" depends upon what we "think."

The Law of Attraction, Plain and Simple

Sunday, December 27, 2009

Life as a Pencil

I am reading a book called "Like the flowing river" by Paulo Coelho these days... its a book where you have lots of short stories... There is one particular story which I really liked... its called "The Story of the Pencil".. I thought will share it with you....




A boy was watching his grandmother write a letter. At one point, he asked:
"Are you writing a story about what we've done? Is it a story about me?"
His grandmother stopped writing her letter and said to the grandson:

"I am writing about you, actually, but more important than the words is the pencil "I'm using. I hope you will be like this pencil when you grow up.''

Intrigued, the boy looked at the pencil. It didn't seem very special.
'But it's just like any other pencil I've ever seen!''. "That depends on how you look a things. It has five qualities which, if you manage to hang on to them, will make you a person who is always at peace with the world."

"First quality : You are capable of great things, but you must never forget that there is a hand guiding your steps. We call that hand God, and he always guides us according to his will."

"Second quality: now and then, I have to stop writing and use a sharpener. That makes the pencil suffer a little, but afterwards, he's much sharper. So you, too must learn to bear certain pains and sorrows, because they will make you a better person."

"Third quality: the pencil always allows us to use an eraser to rub out any mistakes. This means that correcting something we did is not necessarily a bad thing; it helps to keep us on the road to justice."

"Fourth quality: what really matters in a pencil is not its wooden exterior, but the graphite inside. So always pay attention to what is happening inside you."

"Finally, the pencil fifth quality: it always leaves a mark. In just the same way, you should know that everything you do in life will leave a mark, so try to be conscious of that in your every action."







Saturday, December 19, 2009

My Hometown Darjeeling/Kurseong

This is the place where I belong...Kurseong (The land of white orchid)...

Kurseong is a hill station (and sub-divisional town) situated in Darjeeling district of West Bengal, India. Located at an altitude of 1458 metres (4864 ft), Kurseong is just 30 km from Darjeeling. It has a pleasant climate throughout the year and the winters are not as severe as Darjeeling.
The local name of Kurseong is called "Kharsang" which in the Lepcha language means "Land of the White Orchids". Kurseong is 47 km from Siliguri and is connected to the city by road and the Darjeeling Himalayan Railway. The nearest airport is at Bagdogra.The nearest major railway station is New Jalpaiguri [NJP], which is about 53 kilometers from Kurseong. The town is based mainly on schools and tourism. The best times to visit Kurseong are between March end and May and between the end of August and October.


Kurseong was ceded to the British Empire by the chogyal (monarch) of Sikkim in 1835. Later in 1880, the small hamlet became a tourist destination for the colonial authorities and was a preferred place for sanatoriums where the sick would recuperate.



Kurseong is developing as a quiet hill station. The gardens include Castleton, Makaibarie, Ambotia and Goomtee. The Cochrane is amongst the best places to stay for a hill station.
Other main attractions you can visit in Kurseong are:

Religious Attractions:


  • The Ambhotia Shiva Temple. (The way towards Ambhotia Tea Estate and the temple in itself is a lifetime experience of scenic beauty.)
  • Giddapahar Durga Mata Mandir.
  • Jagdish Mandir on Bank Road (on way to the Eagle's Craige). This is a very old temple (almost 300 years old) of Lord Jagannath.
  • St. Pauls Church on Hill Cart Road, Near St. Joshephs School.
  • Buddhist Gompa in Montieviot.
  • Buddhist Gompa in Dowhill Road.


Natural attractions:
  • Eagle's Craig.
  • Deer Park - Now known as DowHill Park, on the DowHill Road.
  • The Kholas (Water Falls - Springs) like Whistle Khola [ named by the Britishers, as there is a bend and the toy train whistles when passing through it, locals call it Hussel Khola.