Showing posts with label honesty. Show all posts
Showing posts with label honesty. Show all posts

Tuesday 3 November 2015

Parenting is an art- Indian Parenting- Part II

Making the child own his/her actions
It is important to realise that roots of Indian culture still vibrates in its families and social-cultural values. Children must remain in emotional touch of grand parents and other members of the family. Good and positive emotional health brings complete growth of the child. It adds to immunity, resilience and adaptability. Parents who are vigilant, observant and careful are the source of emotional upbringing for the child. Emotional upbringing necessarily means to cultivate values like modesty, concern, trustworthiness, empathy, honesty, commitment, accountability, etc. These become the core values for him/her to lead his/her happy and healthy life. Lack of values becomes source of negative traits. The child who disowns his/her actions continuously in the childhood, is less likely to develop the values of accountability, commitment, honesty or trust in his later life and those become cause of concern for him/her. 
A new study published in Developmental Psychology examined lying in two and three-year-old children and some of the cognitive skills involved with deception.   Conducted by Angela Evans of Brock University and Kang Lee of the University of Toronto, the study used a series of executive functioning and verbal tasks as well as two deception tasks to measure lying behaviour.  
Based on their results, the authors suggested that children as young as two years old were capable of spontaneous lying and that lying behaviour rose dramatically by the time they were three years old.   The authors also suggested that this was not because younger children were more honest but that they were less able to carry out the complex cognitive tasks that went into telling lies.   In other words, children with better cognitive ability are capable of telling better lies.    All of which implies that lying is as much a developmental milestone as any other cognitive task (if not the sort that parents are likely to brag about). But developing a skill of lying by any means can not be justified in the name of the milestone. Let the child own his/her action and learn in the process, other varied characteristic features. 
But is lying always negative?   It's tempting to argue that lying is also linked to creativity since the ability to create fiction often relies on the same cognitive skills that go into telling a successful lie.   As children develop in their cognitive capacity, the ability to balance more than one reality in their head (which is what liars do when they create a fictional version of events to match with the truth) becomes easier.   It also means being able to recognize the difference between fiction and reality, much like what they watch on television as well as being able to create new stories. So parent's need to be cautious about all these studies because you as a parent is "NOT" preparing your child for a fiction.
However, it is important to understand that lying can not be judged in isolation. Child develops core values in tandem. These are interconnected, overlapping and need to be developed through proper parenting. 
How do I know that my child does not own his/her action?
  • The child hides the facts whenever he/she has not completed the task. S/he may cook stories well built to hide that fact. In such cases you need to be vigilant and keep on asking very politely. One should never resort to punishment to infuse correction. Punishment encourages the child to lie.
  • The child will avoid face-to-face contact, realising that he/she has to own an action which he/she did not.
  • The child will immediately shift the ownership of task to someone else, not present in the scene.

You need to be vigilant, observant and at the same time modest, polite, loving, caring but strict to take guard of actions of your child.

Tuesday 30 June 2015

Lord Hanuman- the deity of power and resilience



Hanuman, the mighty ape avatar that aided Lord Rama in his expedition against evil forces. He is one of the most popular idols in the Hindu pantheon. It is believed to be an avatar of Lord Shiva, Hanuman is worshiped as a symbol of physical strength, trust, honesty, resilience, perseverance and devotion. Hanuman's tale in the epic Ramayana - where he is



Salasar Balaji is a religious place for the devotees of Lord Hanuman. It is situated in Churu district of Rajasthan. Salasar Dham attracts innumerable Indian worshipers throughout the year. 
 assigned the responsibility to locate Rama's wife Sita abducted by Ravana, the demon king of Lanka — is known for its vital power and astounding ability to inspire and equip a reader with all the ingredients needed to face ordeals and conquer obstructions in the way of the world.

The Birth of Hanuman

The story of the birth of Hanuman goes thus: Vrihaspati had an attendant called Punjikasthala, who was cursed to assume the form of a female monkey — a curse that could only be nullified if she would give birth to an incarnation of Lord Shiva. Reborn as Anjana, she performed intense austerities to please Shiva, who finally granted her the boon that would cure her of the curse.

When Agni, the God of fire, gave Dasharath, the king of Ayodhya, a bowl of sacred dessert to share among his wives so they may have divine children, an eagle snatched a part of the pudding and dropped it where Anjana was meditating, and Pavana, the god of wind delivered the drop to her outstretched hands. We worship Lord Hanuman on Tuesdays and in some cases, Saturdays, many people keep fast in honour of Hanuman and give special offerings to him. In times of trouble, it is a common faith among Hindus to chant the name of Hanuman or sing his hymn ("Hanuman Chalisa") and proclaim "Bajrangbali Ki Jai" — "victory to thy thunderbolt strength". Once every year — on the full-moon day of the Hindu month of Chaitra (April) at sunrise — Hanuman Jayanti is celebrated to commemorate the birth of Hanuman. Hanuman temples are among the most common public shrines found in India.

The Power of Devotion

The character of Hanuman teaches us of the unlimited power that lies unused within each one of us. Hanuman directed all his energies towards the worship of Lord Rama, and his undying devotion made him such that he became so powerful, having ample devotional strength and great foresightedness. Hanuman's only desire to serve Lord Rama. Hanuman perfectly exemplifies 'Dasyabhava' devotion — one of the nine types of devotions — that bonds the master and the devotee. His greatness lies in his emotional attachment with his Lord, which also formed the base of his genial qualities.
Hanumat Kavach (shield) is one of the strongest recitation to envelop strengths of Lord Hanuman.
Indian philosophy of life style management is guided by legends and heros of history. That is how sanskaras (value system) are created in life.

एक यादगार अनुभव- Graceful aging

Lanscape अभी अभी मैं उत्तराखण्ड के पहाड़ों से लौटा हूँ, बेटे अभिनव के अनुरोध पर काफी दिनों से कार्यक्रम बनता रहा पर आना अभी हो सका। वो ज्योली...