Through this
book, Robert Kiyosaki has explained the different actions and thought patterns that
separate the poor and the middle class from the rich.
Tuesday, 21 June 2016
Sunday, 27 March 2016
Lessons from The Seven Habits of Highly Effective People
- · In order to change, you have to address your character and not your behaviour. Our behaviour is formed by our personal fundamental principles. We see the world, not as it is, but as we are──or, as we are conditioned to see it. Our perception is not an objective reality, but rather a subjective interpretation tinted by the paradigm-glass we wear. To overcome an ingrained habit, we have to first identify the fundamental principle which forms the habit.
·
Thursday, 24 March 2016
Review of Think and Grow Rich
Written during the Great Depression, Think and Grow Rich
is probably the most famous self-help book. It is available in more than 120
editions and has been purchased over 30 million times. I had heard a great deal
about this book, and moreover, its title is also catchy, so I decided to give it
a shot.
Thursday, 10 March 2016
Summary of Who Will Cry When You Die
I am here giving the crux of Who Will Cry When You Die. The number written before each point represents the chapter number. For the full list of chapter headings, click here.
Review of Robin Sharma's Who Will Cry When You Die
Before reading this book I had no idea about its genre. I
didn’t even bother to check its reviews nor had I read any book of Robin Sharma
before this book. I was browsing through Amazon to buy some other books and
bought it just because it was one of their top 25 books. After reading it, I
can surely say that it was a good decision.
This book is a collection of life lessons. The author has
profusely used quotes and life-principles of other self-help writers and
philosophers. Some principles have directly been copied from other books. I
read Think and Grow Rich and The Power of Your Subconscious Mind just
after this book. Some content of his book matches with these books. So
basically, the author has only collected teachings of some wise men in one book.
But that does not decrease the value of life lessons this
book contains. Most of the self-help books are written on motivation where the
writer tells you about the power of your mind and urges you to be overly optimistic
and fear nothing. This simple message is repeated all over the book in
different words. This book is not entirely about motivation. It contains a
total of 101 lessons. Each lesson is concise and different from the others. If
properly followed, this book can make your life less
complicated, increase your
productivity, and bring joy to your daily routine.
Reading this book will make you happier and might change
your perspective towards life. It emphasises on finding joy in simple stuff. I
recommend you to read the full book as it will barely take three to four hours.
However, if you don’t have even that much of time, here is the crux of this
book. Summary of Who Will Cry When You Die
I am also giving the headings of all the lessons, most of the headings are self-explanatory.
- Discover your calling
- Every day, be kind to a stranger
- Maintain your perspective
- Practice tough love.
- Keep a journal
- Develop an honesty philosophy
- Honour your past.
- Start your day well
- Learn to say NO gracefully
- Take a weekly sabbatical
- Talk to yourself
- Schedule worry breaks
- Model a child
- Remember, genius is 99 percent inspiration
- Care for the temple
- Learn to be silent.
- Think about your ideal neighbourhood.
- Get up early
- See your troubles as blessings.
- Laugh More
- Spend a day without your watch
- Take more risks
- Live a life
- Learn to live
- Bless your money
- Focus on the worthy
- Write thank-you notes.
- Always carry a book with you.
- Create a love account
- Get behind people’s eyeballs.
- List your problems
- Practice the action habit
- See your children as gifts.
- Enjoy the path, not just the rewards
- Remember that awareness precedes change.
- Read Tuesdays With Morrie.
- Master your time.
- Keep you cool.
- Recruit a board of directors.
- Cure your monkey mind.
- Get good at asking
- Look for the higher meaning of your work
- Build a library of heroic books.
- Develop your talents.
- Connect with nature
- Use your commute time
- Go on a news fast
- Get serious about setting goals.
- Remember the rule of 21.
- Practice forgiveness.
- Drink fresh fruit juice.
- Create a pure environment
- Walk in the woods.
- Get a coach.
- Take a mini-vacation.
- Become a volunteer.
- Find your six degrees of separation.
- Listen to music daily.
- Write a legacy statement.
- Find three great friends.
- Read The Artist’s Way.
- Learn to meditate.
- Have a living funeral
- Stop complaining and start living.
- Increase your value
- Be a better parent
- Be unorthodox.
- Carry a goal card
- Be more than your moods.
- Savour the simple stuff
- Stop condemning
- See your day as your life
- Create a mastermind alliance
- Create a daily code of conduct
- Imagine a richer reality
- Become the CEO of your life.
- Be humble
- Don’t finish every book you start.
- Don’t be so hard on yourself
- Make a vow of silence
- Don’t pick up the phone every time it rings.
- Remember that recreation must involve re-creation.
- Choose worthy opponents.
- Sleep less
- Have a family mealtime
- Become an impostor
- Take a public speaking course
- Stop thinking tiny thoughts
- Don’t worry about things you can’t change
- Learn how to walk
- Rewrite your life story
- Plant a tree
- Find your place of peace
- Take more pictures
- Be an adventurer
- Decompress before you go home
- Respect your instincts
- Collect quotes that inspire you
- Love you work
- Selflessly work
- Live fully so that you can die happy.
Tuesday, 12 January 2016
The Intellectuals
In recent times, the dictionary definition of the word
‘intellectual’ has proved to be completely wrong. Literally, this word means a
person who uses his mind to think rationally. But the society’s definition is
the exact opposite of the literal meaning. In India, persons who use the most
illogical arguments, endorse anything but the rational, propagate absurd
theories, write ludicrous articles and senseless books are labelled as
intellectuals.
The society’s intellectuals hardly have any idea of the
ground realities, rarely provide solutions to problems and never speak the
truth. Spreading lies, distorting facts are the key traits of Indian
intellectuals. They live in a self-induced ambience where they believe that
anyone or anything rational is their enemy. They scare the public by talking
about the dangers of imaginary threats but ignore the real ones.
Think about the last time you saw the word intellectual
written with a person’s name (it might be a newspaper article or a debate on
TV). Now google that person’s profile. In all likelihood, you will find that
they support Naxals, oppose any kind of development, sign mercy petitions for
terrorists, hate a particular religion, and believe in
hate-anything-that-is-Indian. But above all, you will find that they are shameless
hypocrites who don’t have any morals and have lost all self-respect. If you
don’t remember any such name, google search for “Indian intellectuals”. ‘Anti-India’,
‘hate’, ‘fear’, and ‘intolerance’ are some of the key words on the first page.
This behaviour of the so-called intellectuals is not limited
to India. This breed of humans is found everywhere. The below paragraph is
quoted from Atlas Shrugged. Here, some fraudsters who have expropriated
governmental powers via trickery are contemplating the implementation of a
national emergency to escalate their loot. One of them wonders whether the
intellectuals would pose any problems. Someone answers:
"They won't, your kind of intellectuals are the first
to scream when it's safe—and the first to shut their traps at the first sign of
danger. They spend years spitting at the man who feeds them—and they lick the
hand of the man who slaps their drooling faces. Didn't they deliver every
country of Europe, one after another, to committees of goons, just like this
one here? Didn't they scream their heads off to shut out every burglar alarm
and to break every padlock open for the goons? Have you heard a peep out of them
since? Didn't they scream that they were the friends of labor? Do you hear them
raising their voices about the chain gangs, the slave camps, the fourteen-hour
workday and the mortality from scurvy in the People's States of Europe? No, but
you do hear them telling the whip-beaten wretches that starvation is
prosperity, that slavery is freedom, that torture chambers are brother-love and
that if the wretches don't understand it, then it's their own fault that they
suffer, and it's the mangled corpses in the jail cellars who're to blame for
all their troubles, not the benevolent leaders! Intellectuals? You might have
to worry about any other breed of men, but not about the modern intellectuals:
they'll swallow anything. I don't feel so safe about the lousiest wharf rat in
the longshoremen's union: he's liable to remember suddenly that he is a man—and
then I won't be able to keep him in line. But the intellectuals? That's the one
thing they've forgotten long ago. I guess it's the one thing that all their education
was aimed to make them forget. Do anything you please to the intellectuals.
They'll take it.”
Two entirely different cultures of different time periods
have the same description of intellectuals: hypocrites who hate anything that
is rational. The original meaning has been distorted to such an extent that it
would be better to change its dictionary definition so as to eliminate any
confusion regarding the type of person intellectuals are.