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Fruits of Labour (A Motivational Story!)


There once lived a rich businessman who had a lazy and fun loving son. The businessman wanted his son to be hard-working and responsible. He wanted him to realize the value of labour. One day he summoned his son and said: "Today, I want you to go out and earn something, failing which you won't have your meals tonight."

The boy was callous and not used to any kind of work. This demand by his father scared him and he went crying straight to his mother. Her heart melted at the sight of tears in her son's eyes. She grew restless. In a bid to help him she gave him a gold coin. In the evening when the father asked his son what he had earned, the son promptly presented him the gold coin. The father then asked him to throw it into a well. The son did as he was told.

The father was a man of wisdom and experience and guessed that the source of the gold coin was the boy's mother. The next day he sent his wife to her parent's town and asked his son to go and earn something with the threat of being denied the night meals if he failed.

This time since there was no one to help him out; the son was forced to go to the market in search of work. One of the shopkeepers there told him that he would pay him two rupees if he carried his trunk to his house. The rich man's son could not refuse and was drenched in sweat by the time he finished the job. His feet were trembling and his neck and back were aching. There were rashes on his back. As he returned home and produced the two rupee note before his father and was asked to throw it into the well, the horrified son almost cried out. He could not imagine throwing his hard-earned money like this. He said amid sobbing: "Father! My entire body is aching. My back has rashes and you are asking me to throw my hard-earned money into the well."

At this the businessman smiled. He told him that one feels the pain only when the fruits of hard labour are wasted. On earlier occasion he was helped by his mother and therefore had no pain in throwing the coin into the well. The son had now realized the value of hard work. He vowed never to be lazy and safe keep the father's wealth. The father handed over the keys of his shop to the son and promised to guide him through the rest of the life.

Moral of the Story: Some of the life's best lessons come from the hardest situations.


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HAPPY INDEPENDENCE DAY






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Funny Photographs_ 1




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I Support Anna Hazare and YOU ....???





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Current Political Situation











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Cute dolls girls

Ira Brown is only 2 years old, but she is already a well-known model in the USA. Her parents have signed contracts with a couple of famous brands in children's clothing.

The girl is a real cutie doll. According to her parents, she loves to pose for the camera and enjoys castings and children's fashion shows.













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INDIA: Stats, Facts and Trivia




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Happy Independence Day :)

Here's the national anthem of India sang by Lata Mangeshkar, Pandit Bhimsen Joshi, Kavita krishnamurthy, Hariharan, S.P. balasubrahmanyam, Asha Bhonsle, Saddiq Khan Langa, Jagjit Singh, Dr. Balamuralikrishna, D.K.Pattamal, Hariprasad Chaurasia, Jasraaj and Bhupen Hazarika.

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Become Someone else







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Vande Mataram











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To Succeed, You Need Concentration Swami Kriyananda

    On every level of mental activity, concentration is the key to success. The student is taking an exam but is distracted by a popular song running through his head. The businessman trying to write an important contract is worried over an argument he’d had with his wife. The judge is distracted by a teenager appearing before him as he resembles his own son. Lack of concentration means inefficiency. But what is not generally known is that a concentrated mind succeeds not only because it can solve problems with greater dispatch, but also because problems have a way of somehow vanishing before its focussed energies, without even requiring to be solved.
    A concentrated mind often attracts opportunities for success that, to less focussed (and therefore less successful) individuals, appear to come by sheer luck. The one who concentrates receives inspiration and this may often be thought of as a divine favour by others. But such seeming “favours” are due simply to the power of concentration.
    Concentration awakens our powers and channels them, dissolving obstacles in our path, attracting opportunities, insights, and inspirations. In many ways, concentration is the single most important key to success. This is particularly true in yoga practice. The mind, in meditation, must be so perfectly still that not a ripple of thought enters it. God, the Subtlest Reality, cannot be perceived except in utter silence. Much of the teaching of yoga, therefore, centres on techniques designed especially for developing concentration.
    Ask, what is concentration? Concentration implies, first, an ability to release one’s mental and emotional energies from all other interests and involvements and, second, an ability to focus them on a single object or state of awareness.
    Concentration may assume various manifestations, from a dynamic outpouring of energy, to perfectly quiescent perceptions. In its higher stages, concentration becomes so deep that there is no longer any question of its remaining merely a practice: The yogi becomes so completely identified with the object of his concentration that he and it, as well as the act of concentration itself, become one. In this way, he can gain a far deeper understanding of it than would be possible by aloof scientific objectivity alone.
    In concentration on our own higher realities, identification with them becomes lasting. For in this case there is no other, more personal, reality to come back to. We are those realities. We are the infinite light, and love, and joy, and wisdom of God.
The most effective technique of concentration will therefore be one which both interiorises the mind and permits a gradual transition from technical practice to utter stillness. In that state, the senses become automatically stilled, permitting an undisturbed continuation of the concentrated state. Once the mind is so perfectly focussed, its concentrated power may be applied to any object one wishes.
    The techniques of concentration are like finger exercises on the piano, which enable one to play fluently but are no substitute for actual playing. Once your mind has become focussed and quiet, it is time to forego the practice of techniques, and offer your entire awareness calmly up to God. Concentration leads naturally to that state in which the will, no longer busily engaged in outward planning, can be uplifted in a pure act of becoming. Concentration, directed in this way, becomes ecstasy.


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