Saturday, 29 February 2020

“I want to be a Government”



I want to be a Government” He replied,
The entire classroom of standard 2nd started laughing over his answer when teacher asked him “what you want to be in your life?
The 6 year old boy got really angry with the laughing kids. This is real incident of 2nd standard class of a municipality school located at very small village place called 'Nitane', which had a population of 1500 that time in the Nashik district of Maharashtra, It was the only school in the village, with only 4 class rooms in total , where villagers used to keep cattle post school hours .
No doubt his answer was quite funny but there was a reason behind this answer. This kid was born in a poor farmer's family. One day while looking at ST bus , He asked his mother “Who is the owner of such large bus..? Mother replied - "Government".

After few days, Pointing a finger at a Plane in the sky, He asked ,Who owns that plane? The innocent illiterate mother again replied - "The Government" and this left huge impact on his little brain. He was determined to become the government. This motivated him to study with true determination and work hard towards it, against all odds.

In fact after few years ,due to a drought in his village when he was in standard 7th , he had to work as a labourer for the wages of Rs 15 for per week. He set goal for himself that he will become part of government any how.
In SSC days despite very adverse condition he secured “2nd position” in the center.
Then with lots of hopes He opted for science stream for XI but the situation got worse as there was no college nearby. He got admitted to the boarding at Satane, which was located 23 kms away from his house. In highly complicated situation he paid fees in the form of 3.5 sacks of wheat.
In 12th, He studied extremely hard and succeed to score 85% but even then it seemed that God wanted to test him even further . The only available medical college for 8 district that time was BJ medical college of Pune and he lost admission to that college just by 1 Percent.
In such adverse circumstances, his father finally got frustrated and with heavy heart he said, 'farming' is the only option left and told him to give up his education. With a heavy heart he accepted this “U” turn of life as challenge and became Full-time farmer.

 Every single drop of his sweat on the field constantly reminded him about his main goal in life and it did not let him sleep at night . Some times he used to hear the sound of that 2nd standard classroom laughing at him.

One day he had some dispute with father while he was working in the field and once again his anger turned into determination , he left the farm at that moment saying that he will not take any kind of help from his father further.
He saw advertisement of Osmania Open University in news paper and decided to complete his graduation from there with distance learning program for B.A. He borrowed Rs 350 from his mother and without wasting time he obtained a admission for B.A. The stubborn boy passed all 21 written exams and graduated in one year.
He started taking efforts towards his goal. He further gathered every details of various competition examinations. He spent days and nights and studied really hard and passed the first MPSC exam for The post of PSI by securing rank 13 in Maharashtra. In addition, He also appeared for the "Combined Defense Services Exam" (CDS) and He secured “The second highest number in India" but the this fellow did not stop and started preparing for examination for the post of Deputy superintendent of police without breaking the bar.
As part of preparation He visited Ex- teachers, friends, some acquaintances, some libraries just to collect /borrow required old/used books and other necessary study material for this exam, He merely spent Rs 70 on book purchase for this exam.



With No special training , No coaching classes, No guidance, No help, No Mentor support this boy continued to study without giving up in such a dire situation and secured “2nd position“ amongst thousands of examinee from Maharashtra.
Try Try but Don’t Cry “ At the age of 22, this young man became the “Deputy Superintendent of Police.
He put his heart and soul for his duty but it did not refrain him from studying . Further he also completed his another course in Psychology. As a matter of fact he worked even 18 hours a day ,everyday for one of the extremely sensitive case of 1993 bombings.
While interrogating a terrorist called Faki Ali ; Entire department tried everything to break him, but he refused to open his mouth. Then this man just calmly went to him and said if he didn’t start talking, they will be going to bring his entire family to the station to watch him suffer & with this brilliant move , His behaviour shifted and within 10 minutes he had given the location of 30,000 rounds of AK56 bullets, hand grenades and guns. ( This is how his studies in Psychology helped him.)
It was biggest achievement against terrorism and It was one of the largest recovery in India .
Later on he dealt with many of the major crimes and cases intelligently and bravely. His speciality was ,he always focused on reducing crime rate with his brilliant plan of action and in fact he was extremely successful to reduce the crime rate significantly in each of his posting ; He ensured that every staff under him must understand value of team work and to be responsible and disciplined .The government honored him with various accolades for this but he always gave his credit to the junior staff. He always believed in giving credit to Team members and taking ownership of Blames.
In addition to cultivating a persistent learning attitude, he became an "IPS".

Not only that this extraordinary man also got selected for special commando training at United States of America ,in fact he won Gold medal in "Statergic Planning" topic. He was honored by the “Federal Law Entrance of United States” which was another proud moment for Indians.
The best part was; He went to US with his mother and she was very worried with the thought that “How her son will manage in US ?” as he never dealt with English language and further her son was invited to speak at "United Nations" and after 90 min speech of this small town man from Maharashtra , he got back to back round of applause in the hall of United Nations general assembly.


This is a story of his journey from Farmer to IPS.

This is Story of his real life battle.
This is story of IPS & IGP Pratap Dighavkar.
He literally Slapped to all of them with his inspiring struggle and success.
This slap was for all the students who laughed over him in that classroom of standard 2nd.
This slap was for all the people who made fun of his dreams when he was farmer.
This slap is for those who gives up in tough situations.
"Success is the Best Revenge" isn’t it ?
Further , He helped to the same old school of his village where he studied. He collected 25 Lacs for them and for needy student who want to appear for MPSC/UPSC .He started special coaching centre in the same school for MPSC/UPSC students .( Currently more than 300 students taking benefit of this facility)
He took initiative for scheme of 10000 flats only for police constables and for their widows at Panvel, Maharashtra. He approached Government of India , followed the process , kept constant track, Acquired land of 120 Acres, took all the necessary efforts so that they can get their own dream house at a subsidised rate.
He did not forget that he was farmer. He has planted and maintained over 2 lacs trees. Ministry of Forest took a note of this spectacular work and Honoured him with highest grade award of this segment.
His message for us is "Dream big , Be Confident and Don't Stop."
His struggle will inspire us forever .
क्यू मरते है सनम के लिये
मरना है तो मरो वतन के लिये
जिंदगी मे करो कुछ ऐसा काम
तिरंगा नीचे आये तुम्हारे कफन के लिये..”


-Meera Pathare


{Bloggers Note: Here SSC means 10th Standard  }

Sunday, 23 February 2020

The Kind of Things you study in Psychology



1.My Mom was suffering a bad headache that day, and asked my Dad to get her some pain killers.

My Dad got her two pills and a glass of water, and she took them immediately.

About half an hour later, my Mom was refreshed and back to alive. She felt great and full of energy again.

Actually, my Dad just gave her two pills of Vitamin C.


2.One night, my Mom couldn't fall asleep anyhow, restless in bed. She asked my Dad to get her some sleeping pills.

My Dad got her two pills and a glass of water, and she took them immediately.
 Later, she had a sound sleep like a baby.

Actually, my Dad just gave her two pills of Vitamin C.

These two stories happened truly in my family.

My Dad is a doctor.

This is called the Placebo Effect.



-     Shimmy He   Shimmy He

Saturday, 22 February 2020

Mastering DS & Algo for Amazon,Flipkart



I was working with TCS for 2.5 years. So if you are a fresher you might be able to crack it in lesser time.
Here is my Experience,

I started my preparation on Jan 10′th of 2018. I did not do much coding in college as i was from a circuit branch. I picked Python in the beginning, as it gave me the felxibility to just think about the logic and not that much about the syntax.

It took a months time to get myself comfortable with loops, variables, scope, storage classes, primitive data types, condition based branching and some basic problems about array’s and strings .
Then i took time to get myself used to Data structures like Linked list, hash map, Binary Tree’s, BST, DP, Backtracking, Greedy Algorithms, Heaps .

All these topics are complex and a lot of times you would feel dumb and useless when you see a new question. It took 6 months for me to not feel scared when i see a new question and see the patterns for these questions. So It was August.

Then i started leetcode grinding, solved problems, everyday. Daily one problem in the morning before i went to work , another problem after i come home. I could see myself getting better at these problems, and i gained confidence every day. I also got myself used to some basic CS fundamentals like Computer Networks, OS and DBMS and this took up two more months . So it came up to November.

And I vividly remember DEC 4 there was a Amazon SDE off campus drive which happened and i had 6 rounds ( 1 online test , followed by 4 rounds, 1 bar raiser round). I remember Acing every question and i was finally told that i am hired after the bar raiser round. I was in tears of joy, because it took a year’s effort for me. Again I was working and i learn things slowly. You might be able to complete it earlier.

There are some paid resources that would help you fast track the learning. But if you learn it the hard way, then you won’t forget it and that will be shown in the interview .

Try practicing problems in white board as you go along.

Note down why your approach did not work and note down why the right approach is working.
Revise everyday . You will be bogged down with information everyday so it is always good to make notes.


Thanks.



-Vidhya Sagar,Electroncis & Communication Engineer,PSG College of Technology

Friday, 21 February 2020

4 years of struggle





My Salary is 44000 after deducting HRA and taxes as I have got Govt. accommodation . And am I happy with this? Answer is big Yessss. So here comes my journey.

After graduating from Tier III engineering college in mechanical engineering I had not any chance for a good placement, hence I decided to prepare for GATE and join any Psu. I came Delhi in August 2014 and joined Made Easy. But Made Easy classes were very crowded and schedule is very hectic, one who has ever joined Made Easy may understand. Classes started and my problems too. In starting things where going in easy mode but as some days passed, due to hectic schedule of classes I was not able to be in line with the classes.

 In between November to December my classes were of 10–12 hours per day, I was struggling with subjects due to lack of revision. On 10′th of January 2015 core subjects were completed by Made Easy but mine preparation wasn't due to lack of revision and practice. Then came GATE 2015 and I scored very low. I was nowhere in the race of getting any Psu or any other job. In August of 2015 I was diagnosed with dengue and I have to go to Patna (My home town) for treatment. After 20 days of treatment I returned to Delhi. In September I had to appear for NPC ( National Productivity Council) exam and I cleared Prelims of that exam but sucked in mains which was the selection stage due to illness. 

I again appeared for GATE in 2016 but again failed to grab any job. Now I was devastated and was feeling very low. Till that date my preparation was financed by one of my elder cousin brother, as my own family's financial condition was not able to support me and after my two failed attempts he was not in mood to support me further. But then one of my elder cousin sister who was married and was working in SBI started supporting me financially and mentally. 

I again started my preparation and cleared prelims of 2 Psu's and got interview call in 2017 but was selected for none of them. 

That was the lowest point of my life, I started feeling depressed. But soon I understand that I have to overcome this and started practicing yoga and meditation which helped me both physically and mentally. By then everyone was suggesting me to prepare for banking jobs or any other non-tech jobs saying that engineering job is not your cup of tea but I didn't listened them. My Father used to tell me that you come here (Bihar) and do B.Ed atleast you will be able to apply for teaching jobs, but my mother and my cousin sister who was supporting me told me to do whatever you want to do. In April 2018 I apeared for Junior Engineer exam in Delhi Development Authority and got selected. 

After so many lows in those 4 years I learnt to be happy with whatever I have. I am happy because now I have not to think that how I will fullfill my basic needs, how will I help my father financially, how my siblings study will be financed. I am happy because now I have not to face those days where I had to skip evening snacks so that I can have dinner from that money. I am happy because my father always tell me that I have increased his prestige in society. 

I am happy because my mother is happy now (She used to get sad ☹️ after seeing my struggle during preparation days) . I am happy because I have kept the faith of my sister who had faith in me and financed my study all because of that 44000. This 44000 is not just 44k but key of my happiness. 

I have brought my siblings and cousins to Delhi for there further studies. My younger sister plays cricket, and she got selected in Under 19 cricket in 2018 but due to Bihar cricket internal politics her future was not safe there so I have brought her Delhi and got her admitted in a good Cricket academy. I have learnt to be happy with what God has provided us.

-Prashant Ranjan

Thursday, 20 February 2020

This is the difference between those that will reach success and those that won’t.







You are on your way to the airport.   
   
It’s the first time this year that you are going on an actual holiday.
   
You booked the ticket months in advance, and have been preparing for this trip for weeks.
   
Today is finally the day on which you leave.
  
You arrive at the airport earlier than you need to, get your luggage checked in and are in front of the gate, ready to go, 2 hours in advance, when you hear this over the announcement:
  
“Flight 206 to Honolulu has been cancelled. We apologize for the inconvenience. Have a nice day.”
  
Your heart sinks into your chest. 
 
That was your flight.
  
You lean back in the chair you were sitting in, stare up at the ceiling and take a deep breath. 
 
Then you pull out your cell phone, grab your carry-on and start walking.
  
On your way to the information desk you check various’ other flights, check hotels in the area, and when you get to the information desk you ask about alternative, last-minute routes.
Within 20 minutes you have an alternative booked, have gotten your ticket refunded, and are ready to go.
  
This is the difference between those that will reach success and those that won’t.
   

  

The key indicator of those that will be successful later is that they do not let their situation stop them.
  
They find a way, are solution oriented, and will act a hundred times more often than they will complain.
  
Stop complaining about your situation and stop focusing on the problem. And look at what you can do now instead.
   
-Lukas Schwekendiek

Wednesday, 19 February 2020

I understand the material/lecture but I cant solve questions...


Ah, you’ve fallen for the understanding trap.

You attend all the lectures. You probably leave each lecture thinking “Yeah, good, I understood that.” That feeling is a seductive lie.

You study all the material. For most people, that means you reread the material to make sure you understand it. You probably walk out of your study sessions thinking “Yeah, good, I understood that.” That feeling is a seductive lie.


Applying knowledge is a skill, like basketball or carpentry or card magic. The only way to get better at a skill is by practicing that skill. You can watch Gordon Ramsay all day long, but you won’t learn how to cook unless you actually go into the kitchen, break a few pots, serve mediocre food to people, hear and learn from their criticism, go back in the kitchen, break fewer pots, make better food, and so on. The only way to learn to do the thing is by doing the thing.


So if you want to be better at applying your STEM knowledge, you have to apply your STEM knowledge. To get better at solving problems, you have to solve problems. To get better at taking exams, you have to practice the skills that the tests ask you to demonstrate. That’s hard work, not just because the subject itself is hard, but because you have to battle your own self-image. (That frustrated feeling that you’ll never be able to do this is also a seductive lie!)

So. Find a bunch of problems to solve. (You can often find them in your textbook, or in your instructor’s homework assignments.) Close the book, turn off the internet, find some blank paper, write one problem statement at the top of each page, and then start solving. When you get stuck—and you will get stuck— ask your teacher or fellow students or the internet or your textbook for help, but not help solving that specific problem. Rather, ask for help solving that kind of problem. Try to figure out why you’re getting stuck, and work on that cause. Repeat ad nauseam.

-Jeff Erickson, Professor @ University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

Tuesday, 18 February 2020

I have lost everything....


1.      Surrender to the Storms of Life and Remember the Words of the Great Epictetus

We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence, therefore, is a habit, not an act. ~Epictetus

In October of 2018, I ended a four-year relationship with a woman I loved dearly.

Five months after the dissolution of our partnership, right when I was beginning to feel normal again, I received an unexpected call in the middle of the night informing me that one of my friends had died unexpectedly in a freak helicopter accident.

I was in shock. We’d gone out to dinner the week prior and just like that, …he was gone from the face of the earth.
As I began the grieving process and learned to come to terms with the unexpected loss of a dear friend I received another call; this time from the police telling me that my father had passed away unexpectedly.
“What the fuck is going on?” I thought to myself. Was life trying to break me?
To make matters worse, shortly after these events transpired, I began suffering from inexplicable fatigue, severe brain fog, confusion and mood swings. Multiple emergency room visits, thousands of dollars and more than 20 doctor’s visits later, I discovered that the source of my problems was a rare form of mold poisoning, an ongoing challenge that will take me at least a year to fully recover from, if not longer.
I don’t share this with you to garner your sympathy or pity. Rather to illustrate something we all know but seldom admit.

Life, even if it is happening for us, is unexpected and often brutal. It doesn’t care about your goals or ambitions. It has designs of its own and will put you on journeys whether you consciously select them or not.

We do not have the luxury of picking every aspect of our journey’s in life. No matter how hard we try to wrestle fate into submission and carve our own destinies, life has a funny way of laying waste to our best-laid plans.
It will strike us down when we least expect it and then spit in our faces just for good measure. Failure to accept this notion only prolongs suffering.
But the inconvenient truth is that…

It doesn’t fucking matter.

We all deal with pain. We all face adversity. We all have to contend with unexpected trials and setbacks.
Sometimes, no matter how grounded we are, life sucks. It’s painful, overwhelming, and confusing.

And there’s nothing any of us can do to stop it.
The only thing we can do is to submit to the shit storms of life. For every storm has an eventual ending.
To embrace the journey on which life places us and commit to achieving excellence even when we don’t want to, or can barely get out of bed.
This year has been my personal trip to hell. It’s felt like life is actively messing with me. Trying to see how much I can take. Like someone, somewhere, gets a perverse pleasure from my suffering.
But through it all, I’ve chosen to endure.

To take the chaos life has thrown at me and swim through a river of fire to find my freedom.

I still miss my friend and my father. It still hurts every time I think about them. I still can’t focus for more than an hour with my toxic mold illness. It often feels like I’m in the body of an 80 year old man.
But I’ve decided to make the most of what’s in front of me.
To search for the lessons and find a way to use my pain for good.
And, to stay grounded, you must do the same.

Sometimes, life will kick you in the balls until you can’t take it anymore. And when this happens–and trust me, it will happen–the only choice you have is this:

“Will I give my all and make the most of this situation…will I commit to excellence and giving 100% to this journey, no matter how challenging it may be?”
Or, “Will I let this break me?”

It is my greatest hope that you will commit to excellence. To persevering in the face of pain. To staying strong and giving your best no matter how hard it is.
Because that is the way of the of the Grounded Man.



2.      The “Billion Dollar Mindset” that Will Immunize You Against Failure

Failure is inevitable.

No matter how hard you work, how smart you might be, or how tough you think you are, you are going to fail many times in your life…and you’re going to fail hard. It’s an inextricable part of the human experience.

Whether your business venture burns to the ground, your boss fires you, your lover leaves you, or your body becomes plagued by chronic disease and pain, failure is coming. And it often comes when you least expect it.


However, there is a single belief, a paradigm shared by the most successful people in history, that will immunize you against failure and allow you to stay grounded in the face of overwhelming odds.

Enter the “The Growth Mindset.”

First coined by Dr. Carol Dweck, (the best-selling author of Mindset), the term ‘growth mindset’ simply means you believe any skill, talent, or ability can be acquired through hard work and dedication.

Or, as it pertains to this conversation, it is the belief that:

“The future can be better and I have the power to make it so.”

When faced with adversity or failure, our fight or flight response kicks in and our gut reaction is to anticipate the worst. To assume that this single failure marks the end of our lives as we know it and the beginning of the end.

Considered from the standpoint of evolutionary psychology, this reaction makes sense.

For our ancestors, small mistakes often led to ostracization from the tribe or even, death. And our 200,000-year-old brains are still trapped in this paradigm and have yet to catch up with the remarkable complexity and relative security of modern society.
However, this propensity to predict (and dwell) on the worst possible outcome does not serve us in the 21st century.
Times have changed. Life on earth is safer, easier, and more flexible than it’s ever been.

You’re likely not living in actual fear for your life. You’re not worried about starving to death or not having clean drinking water. If you lost everything tomorrow, you’d still be okay. Think about that for a moment…
The simple truth is that failure is rarely fatal like it was for our ancestors.

No matter how deep of a hole you find yourself, you can find a way to climb out inch by inch, recover slowly and rebuild a brighter future.

And it is this belief that lays the foundation for developing a grounded mindset.

To stay grounded you must believe that whatever you are facing is temporary. And that it can be overcome. This too shall pass. You must believe that you can endure the challenge and learn the skills necessary to overcome your adversity you are faced.

It doesn’t matter where you are right now. It doesn’t matter how much debt you have, what addictions you have, how overweight you are, how many failed relationships hang in your rearview mirror, or how many times you’ve broken integrity with yourself. You can learn to think, act, and live in a completely new way.

No matter how horrible your situation is right now, other people have suffered setbacks far more devastating than whatever is facing you…and they found a way to overcome it and triumph in the face of overwhelming odds.

Nelson Mandela was unjustly imprisoned for 19 years, tortured, and humiliated. Yet he emerged from his captivity as a leader and changed the course of an entire nation.
Bill Gates first company Traf-O-Data went bankrupt and failed spectacularly before he went on to achieve unprecedented success with Microsoft.
Stephen King received so many rejection letters (more than 30) for his first book Carrie that, when he pinned them up in his office, the weight of the papers tore the nail from the wall.
When you look at the lives of the world’s most successful people you will find that every great success was preceded by a string of failures. Failures they notably chose to overcome and grow from.
So no matter what happens in your life…how hard times become…how spectacularly you fall flat on your face…realize that you can always choose growth.

3.      Travel “Through Time” to Keep Perspective and Control the Chaos of Your Life

When surrounded by chaos in our day-to-day lives, it’s easy to slip into panic and “turn molehills into mountains.” To view relatively small obstacles as insurmountable challenges that are a threat to your very way of life.

The problem is that human beings tend to dwell in only one of two times: The past and the immediate future.
We are either replaying the mistakes of yesterday. Engaged in perverse self-flagellation and wishing we could “rewind the clock” and try again.

Or we are projecting our purported failures into the immediate future. Mentally rehearsing a worst-case scenario and imagining a devastating turn of events (that is never as likely as we believe).

The problem with both of these habits is that they ignore the immutable truth of human existence.

Life is not a game played in days or months…but decades.

Barring a fatal accident or disease (both of which are statistical anomalies), you will likely live well into your 80’s, if not longer given medical advancements.

The setbacks and frustrations you are experiencing today will be a mere speckle on your life’s timeline.

Over the course of the decades, you will face and overcome more adversity than you can possibly imagine and whatever you are facing today is nowhere near as fatal as your monkey mind would have you believe.
To stay grounded, you must embrace this truth and learn to accept the long game of life.
The chaos that is happening right now, as painful as it might be, is temporary. In the grand scheme of things, it’s a small redirection on your path to bigger and better things.
Even if you lose someone close to you, the pain will eventually subside. You will never forget their memory and you may never truly heal from the loss, but it will get better and you can find happiness again.

When you are thinking and strategizing decades ahead in time, you will learn to see your present problems for what they are. Lessons in life that you made you a stronger and more capable human.

Although this practice in and of itself doesn’t solve the situation–you still need to find a job, get over a breakup, or heal an injury now–it gives you perspective on what is happening and helps you maintain hope when it’s needed most.

Your frustration, fear, anger, and hurt will lessen. You will realize that as challenging as your situation might be, you will eventually overcome (and likely forget) it, in time.
So the next time you are faced with a challenging situation, ask yourself, “What will this mean 10-30 years from now? Will I still remember this setback in a decade?”

Consider that over a decade ago you had many challenges in life, health, financially, relationships that you can’t even remember today.

Although it can be challenging to “play the story forward” when in the midst of a crisis, never lose sight of the future.

4.      Learn How to Eat an Elephant

“How do you eat an elephant? One bite at a time” ~Navy SEAL saying.

Although embracing a long term view of your life can help allay your existential anxiety and give you hope in the face of adversity, this strategy is only effective when coupled with an extreme bias toward massive action.

If your wife leaves you, your boss fires you, your business goes under, or you are stricken with a violent illness, trusting that things can and will get better does little to solve the immediate problems you’re facing.

Even if you trust that things will improve, you have little to no knowledge of how they will improve.

And in this situation, you must adopt the Navy SEAL mentality and accept that the only way to “eat an elephant” is one bite at a time.

Simply put, you cannot control the future. You can’t control all of the outcomes or force the story to play out the way you want.

But you can control what you are doing in this moment, right now, so focus on what you can control, one day at a time.

Trust that things can get better and spring into action immediately to make them so.

Focus on the ONE step you need to take right now and take it. Then take the next step and the next.

Instead of allowing yourself to be overcome by depression and overwhelm, become myopically focused on the task that is right in front of you.

If you lose your job today, get up tomorrow and immediately search for a new one or invest all of your spare time and energy into creating the business you’d always wanted.

If your partner leaves you, spend a few days alone journaling, meditating, and figuring out exactly what it is that went wrong and figure out how you will improve for the next relationship.

If you are diagnosed with a serious illness or injury, figure out the one thing you can do to begin your road to recovery and implement it immediately.

To be grounded is not only to accept what you can’t control but to take action on what you can, even if it’s a small action.

In every situation, you must ask yourself, “What does this really mean” (the long game), and “What am I going to do about it?” (today’s action).

5.      The Eight Magic Words that Will Eliminate Suffering, Foster Growth, and Push You Through Adversity

There are eight words that, when internalized and believed, have the power to transform your life for the better…

“Life is happening for me, not to me”

In every painful situation, through every failure, and throughout all the chaos of human life, you have a choice.

A choice to believe that the universe is conspiring against you, that life is happening to you. Or a choice to believe that everything is happening exactly as it should and life is happening for you.
How would you act if the latter were true?
If the “bad” thing that was happening to you right now was the exact thing that needed to happen to redirect the course of your life and for you to live the life you wanted, how would you respond differently?
If losing your job opened up the opportunity for you to pursue the career you really wanted, how would you feel now?

If the devastating breakup was the catalyst for unprecedented growth and starting a new relationship more spectacular than anything you’ve ever experienced, how would you respond now?
If everything that happened to you was actually happening for you, how would you live your life differently today?

Again, to be grounded is to accept what you cannot control and change what you can.

You can’t control the economy, the health of your loved ones, the emotions of your partner, or the disposition of your employer.
But you can control the story you choose to tell yourself about what is happening in the present.
Your best options is to choose a more empowering story that will fuel a greater life.
Choose to believe that life is happening for you. That adversity is simply success with a time limit in disguise. That all of the pain, heartbreak, and frustration you are experiencing is simply preparing you and strengthening you for a life more magnificent than you could possibly imagine.
When nothing seems to be going your way…

When obstacles arise at every turn…

When your life seems screwed up beyond all recognition…

When you are feeling the depths of hell closing in, pause, stay grounded and ask yourself, “Is this my downfall, or the makings of a brighter future?”

6.      Act Like a Modern Samurai Warrior and Keep the Blade Sharp

To stay grounded, stand strong in the face of adversity, and maintain a stoic and optimistic composure, you must take care of yourself.

In the same way that ancient Samurai warriors would spend hours, sometimes days sharpening their swords before a battle, you must treat yourself like a weapon and ensure that you engage in the right habits to maintain your “edge.”

Even the most grounded man when sleep-deprived, hungry, and emotionally exhausted, will slip into ungrounded behaviors and toxic thinking.
It’s simple biology.
We often practice self care when times are good, and in challenging times, we simply don’t have the time anymore. But why?

When shit hits the fan, our natural instinct is to abandon our self-care rituals and practices. To forgo our training, sedate our pain with unhealthy foods, alcohol, and drugs, and opt for distraction–in the form of video games, TV marathons, or porn–instead of growth.

But it is times like these when you must double down on self-care.

Personally, this has been one of the most challenging years of my life.

And I’ve lost count of how many times I’ve been tempted to give into my old vices and temptations. To pursue the path of alcoholism, drug abuse, and rampant sedation in an attempt to forget all of the pain and suffering with which I’ve been faced.

But I haven’t.

Instead, I’ve chosen to sharpen the sword.


I’ve been sober for months. My diet is cleaner than it’s ever been before. My days begin with yoga and mindfulness and include some form of physical activity. Instead of isolating myself and hiding from the world, I’ve sought help and support from those I trust and invested more time and energy into relationships.
As a result, I’ve been able to deal with my challenges instead of hiding from them.

I’m stronger, happier, and more grounded because I chose to face the pain by keeping the sword sharp.

And to stay grounded when faced with adversity in your life, you must do the same.

Take care of your mind and body. Exercise, eat clean, get plenty of sleep, minimize or eliminate drugs and alcohol. The stronger and more grounded you are physically, the stronger and more grounded you will become mentally and emotionally

Sharpen the sword. Take care of your body and soul, and it will take care of you.

7.      Minimize the Significance of Your Pain by Sharing the Truth

The final and possibly most powerful way to stay grounded through the chaos of life is to transmute your pain into power by asking a simple question…


“How can the pain I am experiencing right now serve other people and do good in the world?”


As I’ve wrestled with the challenges this year has presented, the main thing that has kept me going…the only thing that prevented me from turning to the bottle, snorting myself into oblivion, and abandoning my attempts at growth and development is… you.


Men like you who read this content, who engage with this mission, and who listen to my rants and improve your life because of them.

Through every challenge and tribulation, I know that my pain could be used to serve others undergoing the same.

The pain I’ve experienced after losing two of the people who were close to me has equipped me an intimate understanding of the process of grief. And now I can help other men suffering from similar challenges cope with their loss in a healthy way and avoid the path of self-destruction.
My battle with mold poisoning has taught me the value of health and sent me down a mad scientist rabbit hole that has given me a greater understanding of the human body and how men can optimize their health to get more out of themselves and put an end to unnecessary suffering.

In an ideal world, I could have uncovered these lessons without the pain and heartbreak that accompanied them.

But we don’t live in an ideal world, do we?

We live here, on earth. On a majestic but undeniably fucked up rock that is equal parts beauty and tragedy. And it is our duty to take our experiences, both bad and good, and share them with others.

To pay it forward and transmute our suffering into the life lessons of tomorrow.

Not to lessen it, but to give it meaning. To find purpose in the pain and leverage it to make the world a better place.

Life can be a cold heartless bitch, I know. There’s no getting around it. And no amount of positive thinking, law of attraction or visualization will change that.

Sometimes, the only thing we can do is to take the focus off ourselves and remember that everything we are experiencing can be used for good…if only we are willing to first see the good in the chaos.

-Andrew Ferebee

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