Sunday, 26 February 2017

EDUCATING GIRL CHILD


  • There goes a saying 'Educate a man, you educate only that man, but if you educate a woman, you educate the entire family'. It couldn't be truer in a country like ours which is struggling its way out of the grips of social evils like dowry, female foeticide, child marriage & honour killings.

  • Benefits of educating girl children are:-
  1. The educated women can help in eradicating social evils like dowry, female foeticide, discrimination regarding education of girls, illiteracy and so on.
  2. A girl who has had more than six years of education is better equipped to seek and use medical advice, to immunize her children, and to be aware of the importance of sanitary practices.
  3. An educated woman can play a more dynamic role in addressing the economic challenges faced by the country.


  • Steps taken for girl’s education
  1. Awakening programs have been launched by the government for encouraging the girls education.
  2. The introduction of TVs in rural areas and the 50% reservation given to females in Panchayats have played a positive role in motivating the society to educate the girls.
  3. Several other policies like enhanced subsidy to girl entrepreneurs,various self employment schemes and Self Help Groups of women have resulted in mobilizing and directing the parents to get their daughters educated.

  • Thus, for every educated woman, who is able to contribute to the family income, our country takes one more step towards progress. For every educated mother, who teaches her son to respect women, who stands up for her girl child and does not curse her existence, she helps us all take a step closer to living in camaraderie rather than conflict. For every educated young lady, who decides to wait till she's ready to marry and refuses to pay dowry, we lay the bricks for social reform and new thinking. But all these are possible only when a young girl is sent to school to study.


Saturday, 11 February 2017

FATHER-SON RELATIONSHIP


Hello readers 😊! Today is a very special day for me. It’s my father’s birthday. I don’t remember I ever did anything special for him, so here I take my chance. ‘BABA’ this is for you…

The connection a man has with his father shapes his life. That is why every adult son must choose how the relationship will or won’t define him.

As I was growing up I didn’t exactly see eye to eye with my father. As every now and then I thought our conversation would end up in an argument. Today, I am 20 years old and I have an open friendship with my father. But for the most of the life, we two were at odds.

When I was a child I had a trouble in learning the ABC’s. It was already bad and one day when my father started to tech me, I was not able to answer his questions it got worse. He slapped me. It seemed like he didn’t care who I was inside. I was too young to think about this situation practically at that time. I simply thought my dad is cruel.  

My situation may not be an extreme case, but its general contours are typical in sometimes rocky path travelled by men and their fathers. Psychologists who specialize in the area agree that the father-son relationship is one of the most complex in a man’s life and that it’s a relationship that can affect all others.
Unmet expectations on both sides can leave fathers withdrawn and sons exasperated. But even when there’s no open warfare, many men long for a deeper friendship with the men who raised them. Building that kind of rapport can be hard work, but the rewards are commensurate with the effort. This rocky path can be cleared out at the early stages of life.

What happens is beginning in their early teens, boys begin to differentiate themselves from their fathers, often by openly rebelling against the home rules. As painful as it is for both of them, their adolescent mutiny is an important part of boy’s development. The son is building his own identity he need to find his own way in the world.

In many families, however, this natural stage turns into a lifelong disconnect. Some father can’t handle the transformation of their son from a darling child to a snarling teen. That’s why they try to fight back. Either by restricting the son’s activities or by insulting him on his strange behaviour. (normal for rest of the world but strange for the father). And when a time comes when they realize that their efforts are futile they simply retreat from the relationship.

And the reason for all this mishap is that, whether by nature or nurture fathers are less open than mother about their feelings and emotions. Basically, men are not overflowing with all kinds of words and emotions unlike women. This reticence can deepen the divide between the fathers and sons.  

Becoming a parent is bound to change a man’s view of his own parents, says Chethik. “When we become father, we realize that our fathers may have messed up, but we are messing up too,” he says, “so we begin to think of them as a human.” Even if you don’t have a child of your own we need to understand that our father is a man not God and this can be a critical first step in building the relationship. We always think of our father being perfect in whatever he does. Trust me he never will be perfect. No one can actually.

The powerful tool for improving the father-son relationship is forgiveness. There are times when you are annoyed with your father’s bitterness. Don’t grieve about it. Instead go and apologize for your mistakes to him. Surely you would be relived off the burden and your relation will start blooming like blossoms in spring. Forgiveness changes us physically and emotionally. It floods our body with fresh energy and positive thoughts.

I face many situations in my life where I don’t like the rules enforced by my father. The most unnecessary rule which I consider is the returning home around 7. I use to think my father don’t trust me. I was annoyed of following this rule because I wasn’t able to give time to my friends. But then one day when I thought this through I realized, in spite of being my father and even being the rock of our house, he worries a lot from his heart. He actually cares but he won’t show it. Here were I think fathers go wrong. They should express whatever they feel and put forward their thoughts and also explain their theory behind all those rules they try to enforce on their children. This will surely make a difference.

For most men, earning their father’s acceptance and respect as a profound effect on their image. It feels really good to hear “I am proud of you” coming out from a father and these words cannot be duplicated and clears away any wreckage in the relationship.

Every boy, in his journey to become a man, takes an arrow in the centre of his heart, in the place of his strength. Because the wound is rarely discussed and even more rarely healed, every man carries a wound. And the wound is nearly always given by his father. – John Eldredge, Wild at Heart. The wound described by John Eldredge is handed down generation after generation. Most of the times if a son shares a troubled relationship with his father, this would affect his relationship with his son too. And the pain and suffering which has occurred will be carried forward generation after generation.

Men learn they are men by having their father around. They try to ack like their father because they consider him like a role model. All the competency, bravery, strength, intelligence he observes and acquires from his father. Under the best of circumstances, this happens through male bonding and adventure, through affectionate and approving gestures, and through a variety of attendant verbal and nonverbal "you've got what it takes," "nice shot!" and "atta boy!" messages. In this way, fathers bestow a growing sense of adult masculine identity onto their sons. But when this doesn't happen, or when a father instead reflects a surfeit of criticism, disdain, disappointment or ambivalence for his son, the son never fully matures. Instead, he lives with a private fear that he is not really an acceptable or worthy man.

Most of all don’t forget the efforts he puts every day to provide you a better living. He has always provided you with more than you have ever expected. Always respect your father and if you are not that attached to him, after reading this article please try to talk to him and share your experience with me.

And if you find this article and my blog appealing, the credit goes to my father. Thank you for supporting me father, and on your special day I wish you a happy and a long life.😊   


Also like my facebook page A Convivial Mind @https://www.facebook.com/aconvivialmind/


 for more interesting articles. :-)

Sunday, 5 February 2017

AM I PRIVILEGED? (Part 1)

I stay up just late enough until I am exhausted, that I can fall into my bed and sink into immediate slumber. Because I can’t stand lying in a bed in a dark room alone with just my thoughts for so many hours and hours. These thoughts make me feel alive. I doubt many things. I literally talk to myself. Oh! Yes, I do. Because sometimes I think I am the only who is willing to listen. Just as Stephen Covey says “Most people do not listen with the intent to understand; they listen with the intent to reply.” That’s why I prefer talking to myself. Trust me! the conversations which you’ll have with yourself would be the most fascinating conversations ever. But there’s a catch. If you are spotted while having such loud conversations, you may definitely end up in an Ambulance headed towards a mental asylum.

So now you may ask, what do I really talk to myself? What are the topics? Well, you know the human mind is a very complex thing. Many questions pop up into my head. But I’ll tell you only about the things which make sense. Now, I may sound stupid but these are the thoughts which often come to my mind. 



               

The first question:
Who am I?

Now, this question makes me doubt about many things around me. I feel scared. The fact that one day our life is going to end, and we practically don’t have any solid idea about WHEN, WHERE or HOW? This makes me feel terrible. I doubt my existence. Am I here to complete my education, earn for a living, make a family and then die? Is that it? Is this really the purpose of one’s life? I thought over it, and finally came up with my idea about the existence. What I think is, this world is a big program of God almighty. He chose me and gave me a chance to be a part of his big game. And I don’t know why I shouldn’t be happy about it? God offered this chance to nearly billion sperms which could be at my place right now. But no! He chose me and I am here. I am his pawn and I act on the laws, which he put to govern this whole world. So, my job is to live my life on his rules and respect his decision of making me a part of his Big game. And by respecting his decision I mean, one shouldn’t end one’s life and plan an escape from this world regardless of God’s decision. I think that’s the reason why suicide is considered as the most dreadful crime. That’s why I think I AM PRIVILEGED to be a part of this big game of God almighty.






The second question:
What is my job here on Earth?

I know many educated personals have given their statements on this question. And the fact which amazes me all the time is, even though we know that we are going to die one day, we are still fighting for what we want. And by fighting I don’t mean working hard. Working hard is acceptable but getting things by destroying other people’s lives is a terrible thing to do. Why do we hurt people when we don’t even know we would live to see the things which we snatched from them. God created us in many different forms and gave us all a different life. But the work assigned to all of us is same. We are here to survive. As simple as that. But we humans, who are considered the most intelligent beings on earth started turning up against God’s will. We became greedy. Just like how Adam the first man ate the apple and got banished by God, the curse is carried forward to us. In the quest of earning more I think we somewhere lost our humanity. Everybody wants to rule the world. But despite of all these things going on in the world I think I AM PRIVILEGED to have sufficient resources in my life. Credit goes to my parents, friends, teachers and all the loved ones who make me feel contented and more Human. 




    

 The third question:
Am I good enough?

This one question makes me feel insecure all the time. Trust me! the feeling of insecurity is the worst feeling ever. Insecurity is worse than death, do you know why? Because death will kill you once but insecurity will kill you every day over and over again.  Insecurity at some point is good, because it makes you work harder and be successful and get over your anxiety. But being insecure every day might lead to some serious problems. Then I thought about getting away from my insecurity issues. I talked to myself and found some fascinating answers. Basically, insecurity is hypothetical, it does not have any existence. It’s all part of our imagination. We feel insecure when we start to forget who we really are. We forget about our strengths and start focusing on our weaknesses. The only thing which can make us feel less insecure is to believe in what you are capable of doing. God made us all even. Nobody is tricked by him. He blessed all of us with a special talent. But the fact is we don’t care about what we have, we are busy in snatching what others have. That’s human mentality. So, the best way to get rid of the insecurity is to invest more time in yourself and taking time to improve what we have. And here at this point of my life I think I AM PRIVILEGED to have a special and unique identity gifted by God and I try every day to improve it by all means. 

To be continued in Am I privileged? (Part 2)..

Also like my facebook page A Convivial Mind @https://www.facebook.com/aconvivialmind/

 for more interesting articles. :-)