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Showing posts from January, 2026

Oh My God...From Moksha to Marketing

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  Oh My God From Moksha to Marketing: How Beliefs Got a Logo Called God In ancient times, humans had one major concern:  “How do I escape suffering and attain moksha?” They invented beliefs, simple ideas like self-control, discipline, and inner awareness. These beliefs were invisible, abstract, and extremely difficult to practice. So naturally, humans did what they always do when something is hard: they made a picture of it. ·        Anger became a demon. 😈 ·        Compassion became a goddess. 💞 ·        Time became a god.🔭 ·        Destruction got special effects. ⚔ ·        Wisdom received multiple arms for multitasking.🙏 Beliefs were given faces, faces were given names, and names were given stories. Congratulations…God was officially launched with a logo and mythology package. Originally, the picture was...

Argue with flies long enough, and You’ll forget what honey even tastes like

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  Argue with flies long enough, and You’ll forget what honey even tastes like There is an old saying: “Never argue with fools. They will drag you down to their level and beat you with experience.” A sharper version of that wisdom goes like this: “Argue with flies long enough, and you’ll forget what honey even tastes like.” In education, this is not a metaphor. It is a daily reality. When educators start fighting flies Education was meant to be about ideas, curiosity, growth, and transformation . Yet, many institutions today are trapped in endless battles with: People who resist learning but demand degrees Individuals constrained by a limited mindset and myopic perspective Faculty who fear growth but defend comfort Administrators who prioritize compliance over competence Systems that reward attendance over achievement Over time, sincere educators begin to argue, justify, explain, and defend themselves against mediocrity. That is when the danger begins. T...

Cheating Cheats the Cheater: A Long-Term Reality Check

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  Cheating Cheats the Cheater: A Long-Term Reality Check In today’s fast-paced world, shortcuts are often glorified. People admire quick success, instant results, and clever manipulation. Cheating whether in academics, business, relationships, or life sometimes appears to offer an easy way forward. But there is a truth that time repeatedly proves: Cheating may benefit you in the moment, but in the long run, it cheats you more than anyone else. The Illusion of Immediate Gain Cheating creates an illusion of success. A student copies in an exam and passes. A professional manipulates data and gets promoted. A business cuts ethical corners and increases profits. For a while, it feels like intelligence and smartness. The reward arrives quickly, and consequences seem distant or nonexistent. This short-term gain strengthens the belief: “It works.” But what we fail to notice is that cheating does not build capability, it only hides incapability. The Hidden Cost: Skill Erosi...