Friday, 13 September 2019

He gave his First Class for Economy Class.....


This happened to my boyfriend and me in 2000 when we were traveling from the US to Ecuador for a vacation with a group of friends.

The airline had overbooked economy class but had quite a few first class seats available, so the airline crew started walking through the cabin and (maybe it was just coincidence) selecting the most light-skinned, Anglo-Saxon-looking passengers, including my boyfriend, to be upgraded to first class. My boyfriend looked on with despair while being shunted away and it was clear that I had not made the cut. He told me to go up in front in his stead, but I declined.

After the initial wave of upgraded passengers left economy class, a very tanned, weathered-looking man whose appearance looked like he’d been labouring hard all day seated himself beside me where my boyfriend had previously sat. I was glad that my boyfriend got an upgrade (his legs could use the space) but couldn’t help feeling a little smarted. Instead of cozying up with my boyfriend for a romantic plane ride en route to a dream trip to the Galapagos, my boyfriend was hanging out in first class with our (also upgraded, also Anglo-Saxon-looking) friends and I was in steerage seated next to a stranger. Oh well…

Not even a few seconds had passed when I realised that the man next to me was standing up again. To my surprise, my boyfriend was asking him (in Spanish) if he would be willing to switch seats with him. My boyfriend explained that his seat was in first class. The man couldn’t believe his luck!
“Why didn’t you stay there?” I protested. “I’m fine here.”

My boyfriend said, “Why would I want to be in first class if I could be here with you?” I married him later that year and we celebrated 17 years of marriage yesterday.

Funny how, with a simple gesture like that, my boyfriend made three of us think we’d won the lottery.

-Natalie Tarnopolsky

Thursday, 12 September 2019

Everyone Likes Me.........


If I behave like a people pleaser, I am constantly trying to make others happy.

Do not be lured by how benevolent and considerate that sounds. It’s a trap and often we set it for ourselves.

The fact is people pleasing is not altruistic.

A people pleaser aims to make others happy in exchange for being liked, approved of, or popular.
I tell myself and others I am interested in one thing (I’m so “nice”! so generous!) while trying to obtain another(please, please like me.)

People pleasing does not come from a place of magnanimity and selflessness. It comes from a place of manipulation.

When I am acting like a people pleaser what I am doing is attempting to control the emotions of others.

Making everyone happy is a futile undertaking. It cannot be done. Different people want different things, and even the same people want different things.

It’s so difficult and absorbing and time consuming to chase how to make others happy that it erases me.

I lose my own personality, preferences and identity in the barren pursuit of getting approval from erratic people I cannot control or predict and who are paying attention to themselves and not to me.
Then I wonder why I feel so lost, why I don’t know what I want and why nobody likes me.
I would much rather not meet your expectations of me.

-Dushka Zapata

Wednesday, 11 September 2019



My monthly take home is 151k after tax deductions.

I am 26, and an engineer turned MBA.

I work as a Manager in one of the fast growing startups. I have company shares worth rupees 7–8 lacs, and a yearly bonus of 3.5 lacs. CTC is 30l+ if you include everything.

I recently got married to my best friend, and she works for a Consulting company, with a ~150k monthly take home as well.

We plan to buy a house soon, and align our investments together.

Both our parents stay with us, and it’s a blessing to have them around us all the time. All of them are medically insured by our companies.

As far as our happiness is considered, we are quite happy, not just because of the money we make, but majorly because of the family we have.

We come from very middle class families where every penny is valued, and education is a must, if you have to rise from the trap of poverty.

So, we sometimes consider us very fortunate to have made it to this life, where we don’t have to think twice before spending our money on anything.

I wish to give back to my place/city very soon, which made me whoever I am, today!

Monday, 9 September 2019

Why is it important to ignore a narcissist?


Why is it important to ignore a narcissist?

Let us look at it this way.

You have an old beater of a car. The car still looks good but mechanically it continues to let you down. It is undependable, it is frustrating and it negatively affects your life because you are putting everything into this car just to keep it running so you can get on with your life. It becomes so discouraging that this object that you have loved and cared for is not giving you anything back.
One day you go out to your precious car and the POS will not start…again! You have had enough. You have dumped too much time and too much money into it. You call a tow truck and have it junked, you are done. You feel bad, you miss that old car. You loved it, took care of it and when you first obtained it, it was good to you and for you. Man, you miss that car.

BUT - do you miss it enough to go to the junk yard and have it towed back to your local mechanic so you can dump more love, money and time into it? No, you remember all of the heartache it gave you. You leave it where it is and you move on. You eventually get over that old car. You might think about the good times you had with and in that car, but you still leave it alone.

This is what you must do with a narcissist. You MUST junk it. It is not a person with any humanity. It is broken and no mechanic has the skills to fix the narc, ESPECIALLY YOU! You cannot allow the narc back into your life. Their life is the junk yard and they were (and are) trying to suck you into the yard with them.

In time you got a new(er) car. One that is dependable and trustworthy. One that you took care of and it takes care of you. It gets you where you need to be in your life. It takes you to work and back home. It takes you to the hospital when your father is ill. You drive it through the mountains to clear your head. Although just an object, you can depend on it.

If you ignore the narcissist, in time you will find someone who loves you as much as you love them. You will take care of each other, respect each other and support each other. This person will not want you in the junk yard, they will want you right next to them no matter where you end up.
If you fail to ignore the narc, you will never get out of the junk yard. You will die broken and abandoned next to many other victims the narc abused. Your life will be crushed, but unfortunately not recycled. That is why you must ignore the narcissist.
 -Martin Mann

Sunday, 8 September 2019


I am presently 29,Male working as an Auditor in Ministry of Defence currently working in Tier 2 city of Uttar pradesh. My salary is 36873 Rs in Hand.

The details of expense is as follows:
 
Room rent: 4000 (Electricity included)

Food: 4000 (Including Swiggy and Zomato)

Credit card bill: 2000 approx which includes DTH recharge for home, shopping, clothes, etc
Fruits:500

Travelling to Office:500

Other expenses:1000

I usually saves 20 to 22 Thousand Rs per month. I also have a SIP of 3000 Rs.

Government of India and I contribute to my pension scheme every month so I do not save for my retirement though I am thinking of opening some sort of policy for this too.

I have struggled a lot before joining the services. I have toiled very hard in my previous jobs with no holidays, continuous drilling of superior for sales, long working hours, pressure of performing every day. In this job I personally feel very satisfied as I have time to enjoy my life. Saturday and Sunday are weekly off so sometimes it becomes difficult to pass the time. I am not studying further as I am not into studies that much as I have used to be when I got this job.
Sometimes when I look back even I get surprised by the fact the just 4 years back I was almost crying working in my previous company. It is amazing that time changes.

To all those who are having a tough time in their present employment I want to say that “Be Strong, Everything has a solution”.

Thanks
Dastaan
India enjoys the demographic advantage of having the youngest workforce with an average age of 29 years in comparison with the advanced economies, as opposed to the developed countries, where the percentage of skilled workforce is between 60% and 90% of the total workforce, India records a low 5% of workforce (20-24 years) with formal employability skills.

With the present education and skill levels of those already in the labour force being very low, it would be a major challenge for India to reap its demographic advantage.

This challenge becomes enormous as the recent studies indicate that employers found just about 25% of Indian graduates are ‘employable’ in the organized sector. The informal sector which comprises 93% of the workforce has no skilling mechanism, as the skill development takes place on the job.
So, there is a need for quick reorganization of the skill development ecosystem and the promotion of which is necessary to suit to the needs of the industry to ensure enhancement of life of the population. India would surely rise to be the Human Resource Capital of the world by appropriately skilling its youth bulge and convert its advantage into a dividend.

India will rise when youth  develop  their own skill and raise their purchasing power. Do it for your family,for your parents. If not them,then do it for yourself. Do yourself a favor,leave entertainment and instant pleasures like gaming and do something for your life for your  future.

Friday, 6 September 2019

Failures,Miseries and Log kya kahenge......

Why are we so afraid of failures and miseries?


Human body has the abilities to bear different temperatures, conditions, emotional turbulences and circumstances.

It's not that tough dealing with miseries, then why so afraid?


The answer is “people”.


Society, neighbours, colleagues, friends, enemies, family, cousins, aunts, uncles, ex/current, spouse, children, parents and.every stranger who doesn't matter.


‘We don't have a life, in the eyes of our own life.’



Our life is a moon which rotates around the expectations of other people.


All we keep thinking in loop is-


What will they think?


How will they react?


What will they talk behind my back?


Will they make fun of me?


I will fall below them, they will supercede me.



This attitude succesfuly multiplies an otherwise manageable misery.


For example you lost your job or failed in a crucial entrance.


You still have a life, you still have a family, you can still cope by making efforts, you can still rise, maybe not too high, no one can guess, but surely you can make a come back in life.

But this unneeded thought about people shatters you to the core and you can't see beyond your miseries.



What is the result?



You fall down, but instead of standing up again, you keep lying down, and turn your face towards the ground and rub it with mud so that nobody can notice that it's you, or you can't notice their reaction.

While standing up was not that difficult.


Who are you living your life for?


Society?


One day you will die and society will move on as fast as you can't imagine in your dreams.


Answering this question.


People need to immediately-


    Calm down.

    Stop overthinking.

    Smile at their your life and existing achievements.

    Stop worrying for something which is destined to happen.

    Leave alone people and stay in solitude if necessary.

    Accept failures, and destined miseries with open hands.

    You created an ego, can't you create an indifferent and strong identity?

    Let go what has to go with peace and a right intent, cry when alone, remember in memories.

    Learn to live in miseries gifted to you by fate, it's a part of your story, stop bothering about the entire world.
  
 Try with dedication and passion and not compulsion.

    Focus on the real self and not the fake identity you created to deal with people.

    When life is a war, be a warrior. Give a strong fight and fight till your last breathe.


And most importantly, learn to find happiness in your present circumstances, however tough they are. This is the only way to succeed in life.

-Anubhav Jain

Thursday, 5 September 2019

Death of a Close Person.....







This one. This picture, taken approximately two weeks after we buried my 16-year-old son, Jesse Daniel, and his headstone was finally finished.

Jesse died of an accidental Fentanyl/Xanax overdose. I so did not see that coming-not in a million years. He was my first-born son.

The dirt is still freshly churned, with bits of grass popping through. At this point, I am still dreaming that my son is not dead, and I am nowhere near being in my right mind.

I was not permitted to go to the morgue to see Jesse after he was found dead on the sidewalk, behind the library, 10 minutes from our house on Monday, February 8, 2016.

I called the Medical Examiner’s office, pleading, begging, but to no avail. In my mind, I would not, could not, honestly believe, in the depths of my soul, that it was Jesse laying in that morgue, until I could see him with my own eyes.

I began dreaming of his name on a toe tag. I would wake up unable to breathe, and begin sobbing.
The funeral was set for Friday morning. I had to wait until Friday morning to see him, and inside, I was dying a death by degrees with each passing day. This was sheer agony.

Throughout the week, people came and went. They brought food, supplies, gifts for my other children, warm hugs, shoulders, and ears. I barely remember any of it. I do not remember half the people who came to my home. I was no longer here on planet Earth.

I remember getting ready for the funeral on Friday morning, and how surreal things were. My BFF was helping my other son and daughter with clothes and shoes.

I remember gazing at myself in the bathroom mirror, all dressed in black, my hair nice and neat, make-up in place, trying to hide the puffiness and dark circles under my eyes, and thinking, “Who is that woman? I do not know her.” I looked like a caricature in my eyes. I honestly did not feel real. This was all a very bad nightmare, and I would soon wake up.

We arrived at the funeral home at 9:30 AM. I had been told that I could spend an hour alone with Jesse, before the service began at 10:45 AM.

I remember the very kind funeral director trying to speak to me, as I made a bee-line for the room that held my precious son’s body.

I glanced through the little glass window on the top of the door, as his voice faded off into the distance, and I whispered, “Oh my God. It’s really him.”

That was it. I was off like a shot, moving rapidly towards the casket at the end of the room, glancing at the large picture of Jesse standing next to the casket, and a row of lovely plants and flowers sent by well wishers. This was not real, and yet, it was.

There he was, like an angel, appearing so serene, so peaceful. I was thinking about what a wonderful job they did with him, but I could still see bruising across the top of his forehead through the make-up, and this bothered me, so much. Had he fallen on his face, and bruised his head after taking those drugs?

I gazed down upon my baby, with heavy tears rolling down my cheeks, splashing down onto his forehead, over and over again. I caressed his hair, his face, and I cried, like I’ve never before cried in my life.

Jesse was Autistic (Asperger’s). He spent his life in sensory overload. He did not like unfamiliar crowds, like at the mall, or Walmart. This made shopping for him challenging, so, I allowed him to order many of his items on line.


Two weeks before he died, we had ordered several T-shirts for him, with all of his favorite bands.
The day he died, his very favorite T-shirt arrived in the mail, bearing a picture of Jim Morrison and The Doors. He loved The Doors, so very much. That was that.


Jesse laid in that beautiful casket, arrayed in his brand new Doors T-Shirt, that he never got to wear in life. He wore a brand new pair of jeans we had purchased around the same time, his favorite belt (he ALWAYS wore a belt :), and his favorite old Converse sneakers, with no socks. Jesse hated socks.
This was Jesse, this was my baby. He abhorred tight clothing, and a tie would never be found in his wardrobe. I wanted to honor him, as he was in life. He would want this. I had no doubt, and still don’t.

I spent the next hour, talking with him, stroking his hair, holding his hands, and somewhere, deep down inside, I kept expecting his eyes to open, and for him to open his mouth and say, “I love you, Mom.”


When the time came to receive guests and begin the service, I placed a single yellow rose in his hands, placed a gentle kiss on his forehead, leaving more tears in his hair.
After the service, we silently followed the hearse to Jesse’s final resting place. As I watched the pall bearers carrying the casket to the grave site, the tears began cascading all over again. This could not be happening, and yet, it was.



I watched in silence, hands and lips trembling, as Jesse’s friends, one by one, got up to speak about him, and honor his life. In hindsight, it was beautiful to behold.
The eulogies were now over, and the attendees were getting into their cars, to head to the memorial luncheon in Jesse’s honor.

Two men were standing by, ready and waiting to lower Jesse into the ground. I was frozen there. I could not leave. I know they did not want me there, to witness this, but I had to see it.
As they lowered the casket, I tossed another yellow rose unto the top of the casket. I blew him a final kiss, as I said, “I love you, Jesse,” and I turned to walk away, listening to the sound of the winch being lowered.


My memory is still spotty. There is much amnesia left from that moment in time. It was too painful for my mind to retain. I had what felt like many out of body experiences, because I think that I would not have survived, if I had absorbed and retained the full force of the shock and trauma surrounding my son’s death.


I spent most of the next two years absolutely lost. I faked life very well, out of necessity. My other kids need me, and I love them with my life. With or without Jesse, life has to go on. This was so excruciatingly painful to come to terms with.



Jesse’s life was an ongoing battle of two steps forward, to ten steps back. It was a dizzying, exhausting dance. In the weeks before he died, he was in more of a forward motion than he had ever been in before. He was inspired, and happy, truly happy, and he was experiencing his first true love. These thoughts do bring me some peace.



I’ve taken many other pictures of Jesse’s grave over the last three years. I take fresh flowers to his grave every two weeks on Sunday morning, but the picture I present as the centerpiece of this post, the first one I took, while that grave was still fresh? That picture marks the absolute lowest point in my life.



I’ve come a long way since Jesse died. We all have. The overwhelming pain and darkness in my heart and soul during that time nearly swallowed me whole, but God had other plans.
I will never be the same person. That won’t happen, but, in the course of my healing and overcoming, I have not lost hope, nor faith, and I know I will see Jesse again.



I have come to a place where I am once again able to be a healing, nurturing source for myself, and for others. I hope to comfort and encourage other people going through the dark night of the soul that follows the death of a child. I feel you. I get it.



I have been through much heartache, pain, and trauma in my life, as we all have, but nothing compares to the loss of my child. A huge piece of me is missing, and I feel it every day, every bit as much as if I’ve lost a limb, only you feel it on the inside, deep down in your heart and your soul.
We are never alone, and I am up to the task of offering the tenderness, kindness, compassion, and love that my fellow humans need when trying to navigate through a turbulent sea of never-ending grief and sorrow.

My sweet baby, in life. ♥




RIP Jesse Daniel, until we meet again. 7/15/1999–2/8/2016. I love you. ♥





-Sharon Gearen

Wednesday, 4 September 2019


Do you know what’s a small thing that’s really a big thing?

Energy.

Pay special attention to how you feel in someone’s company.

Awake, happy, inspired, thoughtful?

Exhausted, drained, perplexed, maybe even like you can’t trust yourself?

Hang out with people who make you feel like yah!

And, doesn’t it make sense to distance yourself from who depletes you?
-Dushka Zapata

If you Dont have Enough then you must Invest Here..........

Do you know Warren Buffett’s number one rule on investing?



"Rule No. 1: Never lose money.

Rule No. 2: Never forget rule No. 1."
I’ll never forget my father’s lesson, “Son, no matter how many material things you accumulate, you can lose them all.”

“What do you mean dad?”

“Your great grandfather owned a beautiful farm, it meant everything for him. One day, some crazy corrupt government officials came and took it from him. He lost it.

“He couldn’t get it back?” I asked.

“No, in fact, let me tell you another story, your grandfather, lost one of his businesses due to some powerful union leaders that came one day with three busses, and took all his workers.”

“How? Where did they took them?” I asked intrigued.

“By the time they retuned, they were forced to follow the unreasonable demands of the union leaders. Your grandpa’s business was never the same again. He had to eventually close that booming business. He lost it.

I couldn’t believe the stories, “Has this ever happened to you?” I asked.

“Yes. You were still a young boy. We owned a lot, one day some people decided to build a street in our property so they could get to their property — isn’t that crazy?”

“With no permits?”

“Yes, no permits! We lost that land plus a huge headache of legal fees. The lesson here son is that material possessions can be lost. But remember this; NOBODY can EVER take knowledge away from you. Investing in your knowledge is the safest investment you can ever make.”



So, to answer your question, what is the best way to invest money when you don’t have a lot?
An investment in knowledge pays the best interest,” — Benjamin Franklin
          -Hector Quintanilla

Monday, 2 September 2019

My Life Story: 5000 rupees to 500 crores (Last Part)

Read the first part here before proceeding below :  First Part A fter running the coaching center in Guntur for one year, I had to shut it d...