Friday 25 November 2016

How should I handle the pressure of being alone when a best friend of mine has betrayed me?

If you are betrayed it means he/she was not your friend. So the best thing to do is learn from the mistake and be prudent while making friends. Don’t feel dejected and feel bad about yourself . Close the chapter and move ahead, don’t trust the guy but don’t hate him either. Hatred will ruin you from within, hence introspect from the experience learn from it and be happy.

Don’t waste time by degrading yourself by trying to return the favor. If you are a Indian you might be aware of the concept of ‘Karma’; he will get what he deserves.
While choosing friends remember the story of ‘THE BEAR AND THE TWO FRIENDS’

Google images
Once two friends were walking through the forest. They knew that anything dangerous can happen to them at any time in the forest. So they promised each other that they would remain united in any case of danger.
Suddenly, they saw a large bear approaching them. One of the friends at once climbed a nearby tree. But the other one did not know how to climb. So being led by his common sense, he lay down on the ground breathless, pretending to be a dead man.
The bear came near the man lying on the ground. It smelt in his ears, and slowly left the place. Because the bears do not touch the dead creatures.Now the friend on the tree came down and asked his friend on the ground, “Friend, what did the bear tell you into your ears?” The other friend replied, “The bear advised me not to believe a false friend.”

Do you believe that we face the toughest period of our life before the best one arrives?

It is difficult to provide a Yes/No answer to this question.
We know about Oasis, a fertile spot in a desert, where water is found. While wandering in the desert thirsty we will feel like being in heaven once you see an Oasis. On the other hand if you are in a rain forest on a pleasure trip and you come across a river you may not be as happy when compared.
It is the thirst and the rough terrain that create this feeling.
The same applies to how we perceive success in life.

Source - Google images
When we face adversity in life we somehow want to get over it. When we overcome the situation we feel it is the biggest achievement ever. It is the struggle which we went through in achieving it that gives it this aura. In contrast if we had achieved the same without any trouble we may not always feel it as the best one; we perceive it as just another achievement .
Hence ‘we face the most difficult period of our lives before the best times arrive’ may not be factually true . But the hard ship we faced gives us this perception.
(But I too believe that the best days awaits me once the bad days are over. It helps me move forward.)

What is spiritual intelligence?

Different religions have taken the term ‘Spiritual Intelligence’ and have created their own versions based on their respective faith and Philosophy. Some of the more famous ones are
  1. Spiritual intelligence; A HINDU PERSPECTIVE ON SPIRITUALITY AND MANAGEMENT (Hinduism)
  2. Spiritual Intelligence: What Is It?(Christian)
  3. Measuring Islamic Spiritual Intelligence (Islam)
  4. The Components of Spiritual Intelligence(Buddhist )
…………….
But it was originally Danah Zohar who coined the term "spiritual intelligence" and introduced the idea in 1997 in her book ReWiring the Corporate Brain. It was different from all the versions mentioned above.
Spiritual intelligence is a term used by some philosophers, psychologists, and developmental theorists to indicate spiritual parallels with IQ (Intelligence Quotient) and EQ (Emotional Quotient).

Image source -About 3Q Institute
  • Spirituality exists in the hearts and minds of men and women everywhere, within religious traditions and independently of tradition. Definitions of spiritual intelligence rely on the concept of spirituality as being distinct from religiosity.
  • Spiritual intelligence is defined as "the capacity of an individual to possess a socially relevant purpose in life by understanding 'self' and having a high degree of conscience, compassion and commitment to human values” (Definition by Vineeth V. Kumar and Manju Mehta who researched the concept, extensively. Operationalizing the construct)
Danah Zohar defined 12 principles underlying spiritual intelligence:
  • Self-awareness: Knowing what I believe in and value, and what deeply motivates me.
  • Spontaneity: Living in and being responsive to the moment.
  • Being vision- and value-led: Acting from principles and deep beliefs, and living accordingly.
  • Holism: Seeing larger patterns, relationships, and connections; having a sense of belonging.
  • Compassion: Having the quality of "feeling-with" and deep empathy.
  • Celebration of diversity: Valuing other people for their differences, not despite them.
  • Field independence: Standing against the crowd and having one's own convictions.
  • Humility: Having the sense of being a player in a larger drama, of one's true place in the world.
  • Tendency to ask fundamental "Why?" questions: Needing to understand things and get to the bottom of them.
  • Ability to reframe: Standing back from a situation or problem and seeing the bigger picture or wider context.
  • Positive use of adversity: Learning and growing from mistakes, setbacks, and suffering.
  • Sense of vocation: Feeling called upon to serve, to give something back.
Robert Emmons defines spiritual intelligence as "the adaptive use of spiritual information to facilitate everyday problem solving and goal attainment."
He originally proposed 5 components of spiritual intelligence:
  1. The capacity to transcend the physical and material.
  2. The ability to experience heightened states of consciousness.
  3. The ability to sanctify everyday experience.
  4. The ability to utilize spiritual resources to solve problems.
  5. The capacity to be virtuous.
The fifth capacity was later removed due to its focus on human behavior rather than ability, thereby not meeting previously established scientific criteria for intelligence.
Frances Vaughan offers the following description: "Spiritual intelligence is concerned with the inner life of mind and spirit and its relationship to being in the world."
Cindy Wigglesworth defines spiritual intelligence as "the ability to act with wisdom and compassion, while maintaining inner and outer peace, regardless of the circumstances."
She breaks down the competencies that comprise SQ into 21 skills, arranged into a four quadrant model similar to Daniel Goleman's widely used model of emotional intelligence or EQ. The four quadrants of spiritual intelligence are defined as:
  1. Higher Self / Ego self Awareness
  2. Universal Awareness
  3. Higher Self / Ego self Mastery
  4. Spiritual Presence / Social Mastery[11]
David B. King has undertaken research on spiritual intelligence at Trent University in Peterborough, Ontario, Canada. King defines spiritual intelligence as a set of adaptive mental capacities based on non-material and transcendent aspects of reality, specifically those that:
"...contribute to the awareness, integration, and adaptive application of the nonmaterial and transcendent aspects of one's existence, leading to such outcomes as deep existential reflection, enhancement of meaning, recognition of a transcendent self, and mastery of spiritual states."
King further proposes four core abilities or capacities of spiritual intelligence:
  1. Critical Existential Thinking: The capacity to critically contemplate the nature of existence, reality, the universe, space, time, and other existential/metaphysical issues; also the capacity to contemplate non-existential issues in relation to one's existence (i.e., from an existential perspective).
  2. Personal Meaning Production: The ability to derive personal meaning and purpose from all physical and mental experiences, including the capacity to create and master a life purpose.
  3. Transcendental Awareness: The capacity to identify transcendent dimensions/patterns of the self (i.e., a transpersonal or transcendent self), of others, and of the physical world (e.g., nonmaterialism) during normal states of consciousness, accompanied by the capacity to identify their relationship to one's self and to the physical.
  4. Conscious State Expansion: The ability to enter and exit higher states of consciousness (e.g. pure consciousness, cosmic consciousness, unity, oneness) and other states of trance at one's own discretion (as in deep contemplation, meditation, prayer, etc.).[13]
https://youtu.be/W37TyJVEUfgSpiritual intelligence - Wikipedia
http://www.davidbking.net/spiritualintelligence/sisri-24.pdf (questionnaire for Spiritual intelligence)

Is predictability necessary for trust in a person?

Yes,
“When you do anything in a consistent manner you are making yourself predictable and therefore easier to trust.” - Gordon White
  • Predictability is the degree to which a correct prediction or forecast of a system's state can be made either qualitatively or quantitatively.
  • Trust is the firm belief in the reliability, truth, or ability of someone or something.

Source - A Preliminary Investigation of the Effect of Social Media on Affectiv…
Trust means being able to predict what other people will do and what situations will occur.
When we say, we trust someone or something,we expect an outcome/result. A trustworthy person has value system and he acts within those boundaries.We believe that he will not cheat us and will act in an expected/predictable manner.
Eg: If the partner cheats you, he/she acts against our expectations(predicted pattern of behavior).
It is when a persons act according to our belief(prediction we have) that we trust them. Hence predictability is necessary for trusting a person.
What is Trust?

What's the algorithm for happiness?

This is the flow chart for being happy.

1. Calm your mind
Tan advised breathing exercises to calm the brain and "be mindful" of the breathing. “If that’s too hard, then just think about nothing for little bit,” Tan said, according to the BBC. Obviously, this is the first step in meditation which is about calming one's mind and lowering stress.
2. Log moments of joy
Basically, when you are having a great time or enjoying yourself, take the time to express your moment of joy. Modern-day people tend to hold onto the negative, so embracing a happy, positive moment is a necessity. It can also get us to believe that, when looking back, the day was a happy one.
3. Wish other people to be happy
Tan believes in altruism, including "Kindness is a sustainable source of happiness." Apparently charity work gives people almost as much joy as dancing (I think this also says something about how we need to start dancing.) It also feeds positive thoughts about others which lasts weeks. Basically giving is better than receiving.
While there's some debate about the science of Tan's formula, there's certainly nothing wrong with implementing the three keys to happiness.
Google's algorithm for happiness

According to World Happiness Report 2015,Somalia has attained 76th position while India has attained 118th position.How's this possible?

Welcome to new India: it’s shiny and unhappy.
Mahatma Gandhi once said, “Happiness is when what you think, what you say, and what you do are in harmony.” Looks like we Indians are going wrong, somewhere. India ranks 118 th in the World Happiness Index, down from 117th in 2015. India had ranked 111th in 2013.
The World Happiness Report calculated each country’s ranking on the basis of six variables:
  • The index considers six key categories to calculate this index.
    - GDP per capita
    - Healthy years of life expectancy
    - Social support (as measured by having someone to count on in times of trouble)
    - Trust (as measured by a perceived absence of corruption in government and business)
    - Perceived freedom to make life decisions
    - Generosity (as measured by recent donations)
    Differences in social support, incomes and healthy life expectancy are the three most important factors, the report states. (link to be inserted)
Comparatively speaking, India is not doing abysmally on the GDP stakes. Our life expectancy is healthy enough. We enjoy greater freedom than in countries like Iran, Pakistan and Italy (all of which are happier than India, if the data is to be believed).
The report said that India was among the group of 10 countries witnessing the biggest happiness declines, along with Venezuela, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Yemen and Botswana.
India comes below Somalia (76), China (83), Pakistan (92), Iran (105), Palestinian Territories (108) and Bangladesh (110).

Source- Google Images
Why is Somalia a happier country?
Ranked at 76 globally in the 2015 World Happiness Report, Somalia is the happiest country in Sub-Saharan Africa, followed by Kenya at 122.
  • Somalis, may be living with a daily bombardment by the Al-Shabaab, but those people have retained more happiness about their country.
  • The report does not assess Somalis’ happiness about GDP, which is fettered by war anyway.
  • And though they have little to say about their health and life expectancy, researchers found that their sense of generosity, social support and imagined happiness and residual liking makes them happier than any other country in the East African region.

Source- Google Images
Why is India unhappy?
The World Happiness index takes into account factors like GDP per capita, social support of having someone to count on in times of trouble, freedom to make life choices, healthy life expectancy, generosity and perceptions of corruption.
Leading experts across fields -- economics, psychology, survey analysis, national statistics, health, public policy and more – describe how measurements of well-being can be used effectively to assess the progress of nations.
  • A 13 year analysis of Crime Data reveals there is one rape every 30 minutes in India
  • One in five cases of honour killing internationally every year comes from India (United Nations)
  • The rate of malnutrition cases among children in India is almost five times more than in China and twice than in Sub-Saharan Africa (The World Bank Report)
  • 12 million children spend their childhood at work and not in a classroom (Census 2011)
  • 270 million persons live below the Tendulkar Poverty Line (NSSO Survey 2013)
  • People are happier living in societies where there is less inequality of happiness.
  • In addition to these startling facts, the scams and controversies which keep popping up every other day are only adding to the misery.

Source - Google images
MENTAL HEALTH
Back in 2011, a WHO-sponsored study concluded that while around 9% of people in India reported having an extended period of depression within their lifetime, nearly 36% suffered from what is called Major Depressive Episode (MDE).
In 2013, it was reported that 10% of the Indian population suffered from “minor” mental disorders such as stress, anxiety and depression. With this in mind, India's low ranking in The World Happiness Report doesn't seem odd. A heartbreaking 72% felt they needed to conceal their diagnoses because they anticipated censure or discrimination.
  • India’s mental health care is underfunded. India spends a mere 0.06 percent of its health budget on mental care, compared to developed nations such as the United States, which spends 6.2 percent of GDP on mental health, and England which spends 10.82 percent. Even Bangladesh trumps India on its mental health expenditure budget.
  • According to the India’s health ministry, 6-7 percent of India’s population suffers from psychosocial disabilities — roughly 75 million people. Yet India has a psychiatrist to patient ratio of one psychiatrist for every 343,000 patients.
  • Currently, India has just 23% of the required psychiatrists, 25% of required psychiatric nurses and only 3% of the required clinical psychologists and psychiatric social workers. This means India presently has 3,500 psychiatrists, 500 clinical psychologists, 300 psychiatric social workers and about a 1,000 psychiatric nurses.
Add to that the fact that going to see a counsellor or a psychiatrist is invariably treated like a dirty secret.

Source - Google images
Conclusion
The stereotype of India is that it is a place where loneliness vanishes. We’ve surrounded ourselves with stories and images of well-meaning, meddling family members; strangers who invade your personal space because they figure you need help; big fat Indian weddings, and jubilant festivals like Holi and Durga Puja in which crowds become comrades.
It isn’t as though none of this is true, but it’s equally evident that as a society, we’re going through some difficult times. Let’s hope we’re able to talk our way out of them.

Why does Maneka Gandhi protect man eating stray dogs of Kerala?

Sri. Maneka Gandhi is the Indian Union Cabinet Minister for Women & Child Development in the Government of PM Narendra Modi . Majority of those who were attacked are women and children and we expect her being the minister to be have concern for the citizens. But quite strange that her concern is for the stray dogs and not for the citizens of India.
We can argue she is a animal love and hence the response. But Menaka Gandhi was mute when a MLA who broke the police horse Shaktimaan’s leg and it eventually died.
[Deaths due to stray dogs is a small number and hence killing them is inhumane is the argument in favour. But we ignore the fact that of the 20, 565 deaths from rabies which happen each year, dogs are responsible for about 97%.]
Why is she protecting the man eating stray dogs?
  • To know the complete picture one has to understand the scope of Rabies vaccines market in India. Stray dogs are the backbone of this industry.

Source- Google images
Below is the timeline of major incidents of stray dog menace that hit the headlines in national and regional media.
According to a Supreme Court panel there are over one lakh dog bite incidents in Kerala. In 2015-16 alone and the state is estimated to have stray dog population of 2.5 lakhs.
  1. - October 29, 2016 A 90-year-old man who was seriously injured after being mauled by a pack of stray dogs died. He was lying in the sitout of his house at Varkala near here in the early hours, seriously injuring him.
  2. - AUG 20, 2016: A 65-year-old woman was mauled to death by a large pack on a suburban beach at nearby Kanjiramkulam in the state capital. The hapless woman, Siluvamma, a resident of the coastal belt, was attacked by a large number of stray dogs at Pulluvila beach.
  3. - JUNE 7, 2016: A 10-year-old girl was mauled to death by a pack of stray dogs in Madhya Pradesh's Khargone district
  4. - JAN 12, 2016: A 67-year-old President's award-winning teacher died after a street dog attacked him at a village in Bareilly.
  5. - JAN 8, 2016: A three-year-old boy, Angadbir Singh, was mauled to death by a pack of dogs in Hardkhurd village in Amritsar.
  6. - AUG 4, 2015: A six-year-old boy was mauled to death by four stray dogs when he tripped and fell on them in southeast Delhi’s Jamia Nagar.
  7. - APR 15, 2015: A six-year-old girl was attacked and killed by a pack of street dogs at Kakumanu village panchayat in Guntur district.
  8. - JULY 12, 2011: Stray dogs ripped apart a two-year-old baby at a brick construction site in Bagalur in Bengaluru. The child, Prashant, was found dead and mutilated --the dogs tore away portions of his arm and leg.

Source - 90-year-old Kerala man dies after stray dogs attack him at his house
Almost 70% of the dog bite victims have been joggers, minors and senior citizens. Still dogs are to be protected. In India Animal rights triumph over human rights.
INDIA
The stray dog menace is not just a problem of Kerala, it is a pan India issue. Infact the real treat from these dogs is not the attacks. It is rabies which almost exclusively transmitted through saliva from the bite of an infected animal.

Source- Google images
  • Rabies is the 10th biggest cause of death due to infectious diseases worldwide. Among this, 36% occurs in India.
  • National Multi centric Rabies Survey, conducted in 2003 by the Association for Prevention and Control of Rabies in India in collaboration with the World Health Organization reported that there were 20, 565 deaths from rabies per year in India.
As per recent National guidelines for prevention of rabies in India 2013, dogs are responsible for about 97% of human rabies, followed by cats (2%), jackals, mongoose and others (1%).Every two seconds, one person is bitten by a dog in India. The WHO estimates the stray dog population to be around 25 million in India(2.5 crore), with an estimated dog: man ratio of 1:36 in India.India accounts for more than one third of the world’s total rabies deaths.
  • More than 10, 00,000 people undergo anti-rabies vaccination every year.
RABIES VACCINES MARKET (Pharma Industry)
Stray dogs are an integral part of the pharma industry, stray dogs spread rabies and they provide the vaccine. Hence they are bound to protect stray dogs as without them the rate of rabies infection will decline.

Source - The Hindu
  • Rabies is the 10th biggest cause of death due to infectious diseases worldwide. Among this, 36% occurs in India.
[Across Asia the annual expenditure due to rabies is estimated to be reaching 563 million USD(Rs. 37,737,580,350 ). It is known that $25 million(Rs. 16,76,011,250 ie over 16 thousand crore) are spent on Post Exposure Prophylaxis in India annually. Around 40% of Post Exposure Prophylaxis is given to children below the age of 15yrs.]
  • The cost of Pneumococcal vaccination in the Indian private sector ranges between Rs.8000 and Rs.16000 for a complete course and for rotavirus, it ranges between Rs.2000 and Rs.4000. This course is given free at PMC-run hospitals and government bear the expense.
(It is the stray dogs that create the opportunity for the rabies vaccine industry to flourish. Without the stray dogs and their bites, we will miss rabies; so we need to protect the stray dogs at any cost.)
Conclusion

Source- Google images
It is pretty clear from the above data who are behind the stray dog lovers. They have brain washed the animal lovers and using them to maintain the need for rabies vaccines. Menaka Gandhi being a member of parliament is expected to be a Philanthropist, but unfortunately she is just another animal lover.
It seems she has turned blind with her love for animals. Before making such irresponsible statements she should first understand the grave threat posed to people here. The government at the center is doing wonders, but she is a misfit to the post.
Govt prioritises rotavirus and pneumococcal disease vaccination under immunisation programme
Costs Analysis of a Population Level Rabies Control Programme in Tamil Nadu, India
India’s ongoing war against rabies
Nonagenarian dies after stray dog attack in Kerala

What are the ways to be happy leaving past behind?

In life we come face difficulties and certain memories might keep pestering you. It could be the demise of a loved one, a failure which destroy your confidence etc. Knowingly or unknowingly we develop our own strategies to tackle it. Some of them motivates us while some others are for escape the situation. Hence we have to be choosy in which method we employ.
In some areas of psychology (especially in psychodynamic theory), psychologists talk about “defense mechanisms,” or manners in which we behave or think in certain ways to better protect or “defend” ourselves. Defense mechanisms are one way of looking at how people distance themselves from a full awareness of unpleasant thoughts, feelings and behaviors.
Most defense mechanisms are fairly unconscious – that means most of us don’t realize we’re using them in the moment.
The chart below gives an idea of defense mechanisms

Defense Mechanisms
15 Common Defense Mechanisms
Part 1
Mature Defense Mechanisms(These are more recommended ones)
Mature defense mechanisms are often the most constructive and helpful to most adults, but may require practice and effort to put into daily use. While primitive defense mechanisms do little to try and resolve underlying issues or problems, mature defenses are more focused on helping a person be a more constructive component of their environment. People with more mature defenses tend to be more at peace with themselves and those around them.
  1. Sublimation
Sublimation is simply the channeling of unacceptable impulses, thoughts and emotions into more acceptable ones. For instance, when a person has sexual impulses they would like not to act upon, they may instead focus on rigorous exercise. Refocusing such unacceptable or harmful impulses into productive use helps a person channel energy that otherwise would be lost or used in a manner that might cause the person more anxiety.
Sublimation can also be done with humor or fantasy. Humor, when used as a defense mechanism, is the channeling of unacceptable impulses or thoughts into a light-hearted story or joke. Humor reduces the intensity of a situation, and places a cushion of laughter between the person and the impulses. Fantasy, when used as a defense mechanism, is the channeling of unacceptable or unattainable desires into imagination. For example, imagining one’s ultimate career goals can be helpful when one experiences temporary setbacks in academic achievement. Both can help a person look at a situation in a different way, or focus on aspects of the situation not previously explored.
2. Compensation
Compensation is a process of psychologically counterbalancing perceived weaknesses by emphasizing strength in other arenas. By emphasizing and focusing on one’s strengths, a person is recognizing they cannot be strong at all things and in all areas in their lives. For instance, when a person says, “I may not know how to cook, but I can sure do the dishes!,” they’re trying to compensate for their lack of cooking skills by emphasizing their cleaning skills instead. When done appropriately and not in an attempt to over-compensate, compensation is defense mechanism that helps reinforce a person’s self-esteem and self-image.
3. Assertiveness
Assertiveness is the emphasis of a person’s needs or thoughts in a manner that is respectful, direct and firm. Communication styles exist on a continuum, ranging from passive to aggressive, with assertiveness falling neatly inbetween. People who are passive and communicate in a passive manner tend to be good listeners, but rarely speak up for themselves or their own needs in a relationship. People who are aggressive and communicate in an aggressive manner tend to be good leaders, but often at the expense of being able to listen empathetically to others and their ideas and needs. People who are assertive strike a balance where they speak up for themselves, express their opinions or needs in a respectful yet firm manner, and listen when they are being spoken to. Becoming more assertive is one of the most desired communication skills and helpful defense mechanisms most people want to learn, and would benefit in doing so.
Part 2
Less Primitive, More Mature Defense Mechanisms
Less primitive defense mechanisms are a step up from the primitive defense mechanisms in the previous section. Many people employ these defenses as adults, and while they work okay for many, they are not ideal ways of dealing with our feelings, stress and anxiety. If you recognize yourself using a few of these, don’t feel bad – everybody does.
4. Repression
Repression is the unconscious blocking of unacceptable thoughts, feelings and impulses. The key to repression is that people do it unconsciously, so they often have very little control over it. “Repressed memories” are memories that have been unconsciously blocked from access or view. But because memory is very malleable and ever-changing, it is not like playing back a DVD of your life. The DVD has been filtered and even altered by your life experiences, even by what you’ve read or viewed.
5. Displacement
Displacement is the redirecting of thoughts feelings and impulses directed at one person or object, but taken out upon another person or object. People often use displacement when they cannot express their feelings in a safe manner to the person they are directed at. The classic example is the man who gets angry at his boss, but can’t express his anger to his boss for fear of being fired. He instead comes home and kicks the dog or starts an argument with his wife. The man is redirecting his anger from his boss to his dog or wife. Naturally, this is a pretty ineffective defense mechanism, because while the anger finds a route for expression, it’s misapplication to other harmless people or objects will cause additional problems for most people.
6. Intellectualization
Intellectualization is the overemphasis on thinking when confronted with an unacceptable impulse, situation or behavior without employing any emotions whatsoever to help mediate and place the thoughts into an emotional, human context. Rather than deal with the painful associated emotions, a person might employ intellectualization to distance themselves from the impulse, event or behavior. For instance, a person who has just been given a terminal medical diagnosis, instead of expressing their sadness and grief, focuses instead on the details of all possible fruitless medical procedures.
7. Rationalization
Rationalization is putting something into a different light or offering a different explanation for one’s perceptions or behaviors in the face of a changing reality. For instance, a woman who starts dating a man she really, really likes and thinks the world of is suddenly dumped by the man for no reason. She reframes the situation in her mind with, “I suspected he was a loser all along.”
8. Undoing
Undoing is the attempt to take back an unconscious behavior or thought that is unacceptable or hurtful. For instance, after realizing you just insulted your significant other unintentionally, you might spend then next hour praising their beauty, charm and intellect. By “undoing” the previous action, the person is attempting to counteract the damage done by the original comment, hoping the two will balance one another out.
Part 3
Primitive Defense Mechanisms
9. Denial
Denial is the refusal to accept reality or fact, acting as if a painful event, thought or feeling did not exist. It is considered one of the most primitive of the defense mechanisms because it is characteristic of early childhood development. Many people use denial in their everyday lives to avoid dealing with painful feelings or areas of their life they don’t wish to admit. For instance, a person who is a functioning alcoholic will often simply deny they have a drinking problem, pointing to how well they function in their job and relationships.
10. Regression
Regression is the reversion to an earlier stage of development in the face of unacceptable thoughts or impulses. For an example an adolescent who is overwhelmed with fear, anger and growing sexual impulses might become clingy and start exhibiting earlier childhood behaviors he has long since overcome, such as bedwetting. An adult may regress when under a great deal of stress, refusing to leave their bed and engage in normal, everyday activities.
11. Acting Out
Acting Out is performing an extreme behavior in order to express thoughts or feelings the person feels incapable of otherwise expressing. Instead of saying, “I’m angry with you,” a person who acts out may instead throw a book at the person, or punch a hole through a wall. When a person acts out, it can act as a pressure release, and often helps the individual feel calmer and peaceful once again. For instance, a child’s temper tantrum is a form of acting out when he or she doesn’t get his or her way with a parent. Self-injury may also be a form of acting-out, expressing in physical pain what one cannot stand to feel emotionally.
12. Dissociation
Dissociation is when a person loses track of time and/or person, and instead finds another representation of their self in order to continue in the moment. A person who dissociates often loses track of time or themselves and their usual thought processes and memories. People who have a history of any kind of childhood abuse often suffer from some form of dissociation. In extreme cases, dissociation can lead to a person believing they have multiple selves (“multiple personality disorder”). People who use dissociation often have a disconnected view of themselves in their world. Time and their own self-image may not flow continuously, as it does for most people. In this manner, a person who dissociates can “disconnect” from the real world for a time, and live in a different world that is not cluttered with thoughts, feelings or memories that are unbearable.
13. Compartmentalization
Compartmentalization is a lesser form of dissociation, wherein parts of oneself are separated from awareness of other parts and behaving as if one had separate sets of values. An example might be an honest person who cheats on their income tax return and keeps their two value systems distinct and un-integrated while remaining unconscious of the cognitive dissonance.
14. Projection
Projection is the misattribution of a person’s undesired thoughts, feelings or impulses onto another person who does not have those thoughts, feelings or impulses. Projection is used especially when the thoughts are considered unacceptable for the person to express, or they feel completely ill at ease with having them. For example, a spouse may be angry at their significant other for not listening, when in fact it is the angry spouse who does not listen. Projection is often the result of a lack of insight and acknowledgement of one’s own motivations and feelings.
15. Reaction Formation
Reaction Formation is the converting of unwanted or dangerous thoughts, feelings or impulses into their opposites. For instance, a woman who is very angry with her boss and would like to quit her job may instead be overly kind and generous toward her boss and express a desire to keep working there forever. She is incapable of expressing the negative emotions of anger and unhappiness with her job, and instead becomes overly kind to publicly demonstrate her lack of anger and unhappiness.
15 Common Defense Mechanisms | Psych Central

What were the practices of the Indian Christians like before contact with the Western denominations? How were they different from Western Christians?

Very few regions in the world have provided Christianity as much freedom to tell its story and propagate itself as India, and in no other country has Christianity tried to spread its message so hard and for so long—for nearly 2,000 years to be specific—which is about half as long as Indian civilization itself. They are the St.Thomas Christians.

Source - Muziris - Wikipedia
Thomas Didaemus is believed to have visited India in two phases. His first mission took him to the Parthian empire in the Indo-Scythian border province of Kandahar (now in Afghanistan). Christians believed that king Gundapar who ruled in India, allowed Thomas to preach the gospel in his kingdom.
For 10 centuries, the existence of such a king was doubted. However, a large number of coins discovered in Kabul, Kandahar, and in the Punjab, bear the name of Gondophores. Research indicates that Gondophores probably ruled Peshawar between 20 and 45 A.D. However, there is no further evidence whether the first Christians were converted here or not.
  • His second visit was to Kerala.
The tradition of origin among Saint Thomas Christians relates to the arrival of Saint Thomas, one of the 12 disciples of Jesus at the ancient seaport Muziris on the Kerala coast in AD 52 which is in the present day Pattanam, Kerala. It was his second visit to India.

At Palayur, he organized the new coverts and appointed priests from among the leading families. Alongside he organised the erection of the first church in India at Palayur, now in Trichur district. He established 7 and a half churches, known as ezharapalli in Malayalam.
St. Thomas then moved on to the east coast of India making conversions and crossed over to China. Returning to India he shifted base to Madras (now Chennai). But the people here did not appreciate the new religion and he was persecuted and killed in a cave in what is now called the St Thomas’ Mount in 72 A.D.
To know more visit the site of Muziris project [Discover the history of Muziris]

SAINT THOMAS CHRISTIANS
They follow a unique Hebrew-Syriac Christian tradition which includes several Jewish elements along with some Hindu customs. Their have a Syriac-Keralite heritage, their culture South Indian, their faith, St. Thomas Christian, and their language, Malayalam.
The peculiarity of this community is that they neither let go of their Indian roots nor shunned the external Syrian influences. Over the centuries, a unique culture was formed which was strongly Indian yet strangely foreign. The names of Syrian Christians are interesting too, as most of the times they include Hindu names and are not fully westernised eg: Arun Kurian, Vivek Paul, Georgekutty Cherian, Kunjumon Thomas, etc.
Members of the Syro-Malabar Church, an eastern rite of the Catholic Church, adopted the Syriac liturgy dating from an unknown period before the fourth Century. In the fourth century, at the instance of Bishop of Edessa of the Kerala Church, removed Apostle’s relics to Edessa, later moving them to Italy.

Coonan Cross Oath
When the Portuguese arrived in India, they were surprised to find a Christian community already thriving in such a distant part of the world where other religions were more common. The colonialist were Catholics (who had full communion with the Church at Rome and accepted the Pope as their leader) and followed the Latin rite, as opposed to the Syrian rite of the Nasranis who did not accept the hegemony of Rome but instead followed the Patriarch of Antioch. The Portuguese decreed the Nasrani community to be heretics and declared their beliefs and rituals to be blasphemous and non-Christian.
After one such incident where a priest was exiled, the Nasranis decided they finally had enough of colonial bullying and vowed to stand up against the violations inflicted on their faith. This came through at the very famous Coonan Cross Oath, in which each Nasrani touched the Cross at Mattancherry and vowed to protect his/her faith against the Portuguese attempts to destroy their culture and beliefs. A rope was tied to the Cross and then passed around for the people to hold. As the force pulling the rope was too great, the cross got bent which is how it got its name (Coonan means bent in Malayalam).
Courtesy Manu-Madhavan answer to Why are there so many Christians in Kerala?
Saint Thomas Christian Churches - Wikipedia

Margam kali, a group dance of Kerala practiced by Syrian Christians
The oldest church in India is St. Thomas Syro-Malabar Catholic Church, Palayur located at Palayur (also spelt Palayoor), in Thrissur district in Kerala on the west coast of India. According to tradition, it was established in 52 AD by St Thomas, one of the twelve apostles of Jesus Christ.


Interior of ‘St. Thomas Syro-Malabar Catholic Church, Palayur’
St. Thomas Christians (52-1498)
[Before Vasco da Gama and Europeans]
Ancient Era (52-431)
  • 40 Apostle Thomas is brought before King Gondophares, in Takshasila in North India (Pakistan).[note 3]
  • 52 Arrival of St. Thomas the Apostle in Muziris (near Kodungalloor)[note 4] in the Indian state of Kerala, founding the Church in India.
  • 52-72 St. Thomas converted and baptized many caste Hindus including thirty-two Namboori (Brahmin) families and certain members of the royal family, Namely, Bana Varma Perumal and his nephew who later became Kepa, the first Archbishop of Kerala; St Thomas established 7 churches at: Kodungalloor; Palayoor; Paravur; Kokkamangalam; Chayal; Niranam; and Kollam.[note 5]
  • 72 Martyrdom of St. Thomas the Apostle, in the neighborhood of Mylapore, city of Chennai, state of Tamil Nadu.[note 6]
  • 105 Church established at Kuravilangad (St. Mary’s Forane Church).
  • 189 Arrival of Stoic Philosopher Pantaenus from Alexandria, who visited the Malankara Church[note 7] at the request of the Malankara Christians (reported by Eusebius of Caesarea and Jerome);[note 8] according to Eusebius, Pantaenus was for a time a missionary preacher, traveling as far as India, where it was reported that he found Christians who were using the Gospel of Matthew in Hebrew.
  • 196 Bardaisan writes of Christians amongst the Parthians, Bactrians (Kushans) and other peoples in the Persian Empire .
  • 230 Veera Raghava Chakravarthy, the King Emperor of Kerala, who had his capital at Kodungallor, granted to the Nazaranis a series of royal honors, by a proclamation engraved on copper plate called "cheped."
  • 290 Brief persecution of Persian Christians under Bahram II.
  • ca.300 Bp. David of Basra undertook missionary work in India, among the earliest documented Christian missionaries in India.[note 9]
  • 325 First Ecumenical Council in Nicaea; St. Jacob of Nisibis, Bp. of Nisibis in Mesopotamia and spiritual father of Ephrem the Syrian, attended the First Ecumenical Council, as did Persian Bp. John (Mar Yohannan) presiding over the churches "in Persia and India".[note 10]
  • 327 Apparition of Theotokos at Kuravilangad.
  • ca.4th-6th c. Severe persecution of Christians in Persia (Sassanid Empire).
  • 337-379 The Persian Church faced several severe persecutions, notably during the reign of Shapur II (309–79), from the Zoroastrian majority who accused it of Roman leanings.[note 11]
  • 340-360 The Nasranis were granted special rights and privileges by the edict Thazhekad Sasanam; the edict was written on stone and provides proof of the early existence of St. Thomas Christians in Kerala.
  • 345 A small group of K'nanaim merchants travelled to the Jewish trade posts at Kodungallur in Kerala and settled there; their descendants are today known in Kerala as Knanaya Nasranis (Saint Thomas Christians); they were under the leadership of Thomas of Cana (Thomas of Kynai), with Bishop Joseph of Edessa (Bp. Uraha Mar Yausef), four priests, several deacons, and 72 Syro-Aramaic Jewish families who migrated from Edessa (about 400 people).
  • 354 Theophilos the Indian was sent by Emperor Constantius II on a mission to south Asia via Arabia, where he is said to have converted the Himyarites and built three churches in southwest Arabia; he is also said to have found Christians in India, along the Malabar Coast, as recorded by the Anomoean (Arian) Church historian Philostorgius.
  • 363 St. Ephrem the Syrian at Edessa, writes about St. Thomas as the Apostle of India.
  • 379-402 Continuation of the Great Persecution of the Persian church.
  • 380 St. Gregory the Theologian writes about St. Thomas as the Apostle of India.
  • 390 St. Ambrose of Milan writes about St. Thomas as the Apostle of India.
  • 400 St. Jerome writes about St. Thomas as the Apostle of India.
  • 409 Permission was formally given by the Zoroastrian King Yezdegerd to Christians to worship openly and rebuild destroyed churches, though they were not allowed to proselytize (some historians call this decree the Edict of Milan for the Assyrian Christian church).
  • 410 The Council of Seleucia-Ctesiphon, also called the Council of Mar Isaac, met in AD 410 in Seleucia-Ctesiphon, capitol of the Sassanid Empire of Persia, extending official recognition to the Empire's Christian community, (known as the Church of the East after 431 AD), and established the Bishop of Seleucia-Ctesiphon as its Catholicos, or leader, declaring him to be supreme among the Bishops of the East; this established a hierarchical Christian Church in Iran, with a patriarchate at Ctesiphon and metropolitans in the capitals of five Persian provinces; it also declared its adherence to the decisions of the Council of Nicea and subscribed to the Nicene Creed.
  • 424 Schism begun: Formal separation of the Assyrian Church of the East ("East Syrian Church", "Persian Church", "Chaldean Syrian Church", or "Nestorian Church"), from the See of Antioch: the Synod of Dadyeshu met in Markabata of the Arabs, under the presidency of Mar Dadyeshu, proclaiming the independence of the Iranian Church from Byzantium, deciding that the Catholicos should be the sole head of the Church of the East and that no ecclesiastical authority should be acknowledged above him, referring to him for the first time as Patriarch, answerable to God alone (thus also reassuring the Sassandid monarchy that Persian Christians were not influenced by the Roman enemy).
https://youtu.be/SpjBHMQLr1c(First 10 minutes of the Video is History of St.Thomas Christians)
Saint Thomas Christians - Wikipedia
Timeline of Oriental Orthodoxy in India (St. Thomas Christianity)
How did Christianity Come to India?
St. Thomas Syro-Malabar Catholic Church, Palayoor - Wikipedia

Should dogs be killed in Kerala?

According to a Supreme Court panel there are over one lakh dog bite incidents in Kerala. In 2015-16 alone and the state is estimated to have stray dog population of 2.5 lakhs. We need a solution to the issue.
"The ends justify the means"
Stray dogs are a threat to humans and hence their number has to be reduced. As an immediate measure the more dangerous ones have to be killed, but how to identify them is a mystery.
Sterilizing them is a more human option, but since the situation is worse we need immediate measures. It is a war like situation and killing them is not inhumane as the situation demands it.

Source- Nonagenarian dies after stray dog attack in Kerala
This 90yr old man was attacked and killed by a pack of dogs. Such attacks are rare and we can pardom the stray dogs. But of the 20, 565 deaths from rabies which happen each year, dogs are responsible for about 97%.

Source- Google images
Below is the timeline of major incidents of stray dog menace that hit the headlines in national and regional media.
  1. - October 29, 2016 A 90-year-old man who was seriously injured after being mauled by a pack of stray dogs died. He was lying in the sitout of his house at Varkala near here in the early hours, seriously injuring him.
  2. - AUG 20, 2016: A 65-year-old woman was mauled to death by a large pack on a suburban beach at nearby Kanjiramkulam in the state capital. The hapless woman, Siluvamma, a resident of the coastal belt, was attacked by a large number of stray dogs at Pulluvila beach.
  3. - JUNE 7, 2016: A 10-year-old girl was mauled to death by a pack of stray dogs in Madhya Pradesh's Khargone district
  4. - JAN 12, 2016: A 67-year-old President's award-winning teacher died after a street dog attacked him at a village in Bareilly.
  5. - JAN 8, 2016: A three-year-old boy, Angadbir Singh, was mauled to death by a pack of dogs in Hardkhurd village in Amritsar.
  6. - AUG 4, 2015: A six-year-old boy was mauled to death by four stray dogs when he tripped and fell on them in southeast Delhi’s Jamia Nagar.
  7. - APR 15, 2015: A six-year-old girl was attacked and killed by a pack of street dogs at Kakumanu village panchayat in Guntur district.
  8. - JULY 12, 2011: Stray dogs ripped apart a two-year-old baby at a brick construction site in Bagalur in Bengaluru. The child, Prashant, was found dead and mutilated --the dogs tore away portions of his arm and leg.

Source - 90-year-old Kerala man dies after stray dogs attack him at his house
Almost 70% of the dog bite victims have been joggers, minors and senior citizens. Still dogs are to be protected. In India Animal rights triumph over human rights.
INDIA
The stray dog menace is not just a problem of Kerala, it is a pan India issue. Infact the real treat from these dogs is not the attacks. It is rabies which almost exclusively transmitted through saliva from the bite of an infected animal.

Source- Google images
  • Rabies is the 10th biggest cause of death due to infectious diseases worldwide. Among this, 36% occurs in India.
  • National Multi centric Rabies Survey, conducted in 2003 by the Association for Prevention and Control of Rabies in India in collaboration with the World Health Organization reported that there were 20, 565 deaths from rabies per year in India.
As per recent National guidelines for prevention of rabies in India 2013, dogs are responsible for about 97% of human rabies, followed by cats (2%), jackals, mongoose and others (1%).Every two seconds, one person is bitten by a dog in India. The WHO estimates the stray dog population to be around 25 million in India(2.5 crore), with an estimated dog: man ratio of 1:36 in India.India accounts for more than one third of the world’s total rabies deaths.
  • More than 10, 00,000 people undergo anti-rabies vaccination every year.
RABIES VACCINES MARKET (Pharma Industry)
Stray dogs are an integral part of the pharma industry, stray dogs spread rabies and they provide the vaccine. Hence they are bound to protect stray dogs as without them the rate of rabies infection will decline.

Source - The Hindu
  • Rabies is the 10th biggest cause of death due to infectious diseases worldwide. Among this, 36% occurs in India.
[Across Asia the annual expenditure due to rabies is estimated to be reaching 563 million USD(Rs. 37,737,580,350 ). It is known that $25 million(Rs. 16,76,011,250 ie over 16 thousand crore) are spent on Post Exposure Prophylaxis in India annually. Around 40% of Post Exposure Prophylaxis is given to children below the age of 15yrs.]
  • The cost of Pneumococcal vaccination in the Indian private sector ranges between Rs.8000 and Rs.16000 for a complete course and for rotavirus, it ranges between Rs.2000 and Rs.4000. This course is given free at PMC-run hospitals and government bear the expense.
(It is the stray dogs that create the opportunity for the rabies vaccine industry to flourish. Without the stray dogs and their bites, we will miss rabies; so we need to protect the stray dogs at any cost.)
Conclusion

Source- Google images
It is pretty clear from the above data who are behind the stray dog lovers. They have brain washed the animal lovers and using them to maintain the need for rabies vaccines.
Govt prioritises rotavirus and pneumococcal disease vaccination under immunisation programme
Govt prioritises rotavirus and pneumococcal disease vaccination under immunisation programme
Costs Analysis of a Population Level Rabies Control Programme in Tamil Nadu, India
India’s ongoing war against rabies
Nonagenarian dies after stray dog attack in Kerala

Did Hindus kill St. Thomas the Apostle?

Did Hindus kill St. Thomas the Apostle?
All the 12 apostles were killed (How Did the Apostles Die? - National Geography Channel)
St. Thomas was one of the direct disciples of Jesus Christ and he came to India in 52 CE . He was the first saint who brought Christianity to India. After the Death and Resurrection of Christ, Thomas became acquainted with Habban, a merchant of king Gondophare of India. It was in the company of this merchant that Thomas landed at Cranganore on the Malabar Coast of present day Kerala in 52 A.D.

After building seven churches on this coast, St Thomas crossed over to Coromandel Coast of India's eastern seaboard and enriched the southern part of India with the seeds of the Gospel in a land that had never known what this Gospel of salvation was. It was a hard fight which made him to go into hiding in the Little Mount.
When at last he reached the Parangi Malai (present St Thomas Mount), perhaps he found that this place was better suited for his life of solitude and prayer. But that very spot and that very moment of prayer were sealed and sanctified when he became a libation for the Gospel in the year 72 A.D.

The tomb of St.Thomas the Apostle in Mylapore, India
He was buried in Mylapore, on the east coast of India. Ultimately, St. Thomas’ remains were transported to Ortona, Italy, where they reside today.
His mortal remains were shifted to Santhome where the huge Basilica of St Thomas was erected later to entomb the Apostle's body. Thus the three punctuations of his itinerary in the city of Chennai – Little Mount, St Thomas Mount and Santhome – became places of spiritual energy in the years to come.
‘HINDU’
To say he was killed by Hindus is not correct as at that time the word ‘Hindu’ had a different meaning.
  • The historical meaning of the term Hindu has evolved with time. Starting with the Persian and Greek references to India in the 1st millennium BCE through the texts of the medieval era, the term Hindu implied a geographic, ethnic or cultural identifier for people living in Indian subcontinent around or beyond Sindhu (Indus) river.
  • Religion in ancient Tamil country. The Sangam period in Tamilakam (c. 200 BCE to 200 CE) was characterized by the coexistence of many religions: Hinduism, Buddhism and Jainism alongside the ethnic religions of the Tamil people.
https://youtu.be/21XLpxw7hj0video is ‘A BRIEF HISTORY OF SAINT THOMAS’
Thomas the Apostle - Wikipedia
Hindu - Wikipedia
St. Thomas Mount National Shrine
Religion in ancient Tamil country - Wikipedia

How about banning fairness products in India?

I don’t think banning it these products is the solution. It is our mental frame work that has to be changed and just by banning the products it won’t change.
The fascination for fair skin can be been in Indian History(culture).
The article on Discrimination based on skin color - Wikipedia(India) explains it in detail.
India’s rulers have often been white, from the Aryans to British colonialists. A pale skin is associated with the exercise of power. Discrimination based on skin color was most visible in British India, where skin color served as a signal of high status for the foreign British who actively promoted the idea.

Google images
  • The caste system in India too involves complications of skin color. In Indian culture, "black" is associated with the underprivileged caste. "Black" symbolizes "dark", "evil" , "dirty", etc in India. On the opposite side, "white" has been a symbol of "purity", "fairness", cleanliness", and "beauty", proving itself to be a symbol of power and privilege.
  • Aspects of Hindu mythology reinforce this idea with the goddess Kali. Kali is a dark-skinned goddess known for destruction and a symbol of ugliness. Kali's appearance and character traits visually demonstrate the negative association Indian culture gives to dark complexioned women.(from the article in Wiki)
British historians observed that since the upper castes were not involved in tedious labor and weren't as exposed to the sun as the lower castes, they used to stay indoors and thus possessed lighter brown skin.
The lower castes on the other hand had higher melanin concentration in their skin cells due to continued exposure to sun from working in agricultural fields and outdoors.
  • Indians prefer their matrimonial partners to be light-skinned.
The deep-rooted color bias has ensured that there is extensive discrimination in the labor market, as people with light skin are generally preferred.
  • For example in the state of Maharashta a group of young tribal girls trained to be flight crew through a government scholarship program that aimed to empower women. The majority of girls were denied employment due to their darker skin-tone. A few of those women landed jobs, but only as out of sight ground crew.
FAIRNESS PRODUCTS

Google images
It is true that the ads of these fairness products have set the standards for beauty. They have successfully made us beleive that I am not Okay.
Most of the ads follow the formulae of formulae of dark skin complex and we blindly believe it.
It starts with a dark-skinned girl (of course painted with black foundation or something). The girl is depressed and feels hopeless because she can’t achieve anything. Why? Because she has a dark complexion. Then, out of nowhere, this extremely beautiful fair-skinned girl shows up and offers her the magic formula that will transform her life.
She applies the magic formula and voila! She turns into a beautiful girl with snow white skin and suddenly achieves everything in life;she becomes successful gets a dream job and boys suddenly seem interested in her too!
In a nutshell, the message that you get is ‘apply this formula, change your skin colour and your dreams will come true’.
The fairness products have invested on the insecurity feeling we already have. Indians are racist; it’s a deep-rooted thing here. It is this feeling of insecurity that we need to change rather than banning.

[India is not the only country in the world where beauty is judged by the color of your skin. Around the globe this is the case.]
The dark side of fairness products
Edit
India is sovereign socialist secular democratic republic where people have the freedom to choose/select what he wants.
Banning takes away the freedom, it is imposing an idea forcefully.For government to dictate on the the beauty concept is not ideal for a democracy like India.
A check on the advertisements which propagate this idea is acceptable. But to ban the product as it will do more bad than good.
Is India losing its freedom with the government banning everything?

Are people really upset with Modi's demonetisation decision?

Initially people welcomed demonetization as it is said to curb black money, but later developments and reports have changed the initial response for a vast majority, including me.
Some still believe that, though they suffer it might eventually bring results. The idea that it is war against black money makes them feel that they are engaged in a patriotic mission. But majority including me, have come to a conclusion that it could be a futile attempt and that too executed with poor planning as the new currencies are non-compliant with the existing ATM machines.
  • The worst hit are those who are not on plastic money and have to take care of urgent medical expenditure.
  • Private hospitals and chemists are not accepting old notes nor extending credit. The Rs 4,000 limit that has been imposed on withdrawals from banks mean it is a hand-to-mouth existence for many who are already in trouble.
  • Manual laborers and daily wage workers are unemployed as their employer lacks money to pay them in cash(online is not sufficiant).
  • Near panic in local markets. Number of transactions drop by more than 50%.
  • The people in rural areas and the farmers are also facing a great deal of hardship. Many of them do not have bank accounts or own a debit/credit card. The concept of internet banking is far removed for them. These people may be induced to rise in revolt. Already the case of looting of a fair price shop by the public in Madhya Pradesh has been reported.
  • Deep Deflation. The amount of money in circulation will drop dramatically while supply of goods will remain stable - hence prices of goods will drop. Gold prices, stock prices, commodity prices will drop.
  • The public is inconvenienced because they don’t have the cash with which to buy daily necessities.
  • Families who were holding marriage ceremonies were the one of the worst sufferers. Similarly, the budget of every common man has crashed due to the ban.
  • Senior citizens are put to grief, having to stand long hours in serpentine queues. A 73-year-old man, Vishwanath Vartak, collapsed while waiting in Mulund in Mumbai and died.
  • Foreign tourists who have withdrawn money after landing in India are among the worst hit. Instead of enjoying the sights and sounds of India, they are scampering around in an alien land, trying to secure legal currency. Incredible India indeed. The negative feedback to the tourist industry which will affect its reputation.
  • With less potential buyers in the market and fewer people having white money, the demand for the land goes down and drives down its price. (As people get black money in the future, they will be afraid of holding on to cash and would want to convert that right away into other assets, such as land and gold. This increased demand for land holding, as a form of store of value, might drive property prices higher in the future.)
  • 16 People Have Already Died After Demonetisation And It Has Only Been Five Days
  • The trader class, is affected given that most wholesale shopkeepers choose to keep liquid cash to buy material every day. Very few of them deposit money in a bank. Many of them have incurred losses because of the liquidity drying up in the market.
  • More than a quarter of a billion people in India do not have access to the formal banking sector, which means that a cashless society would be truly perilous.
  • Cores of working hours gone waste. Everything is in a frozen mode.
What solutions do you recommend for people innocently affected by currency crunch after currency ban in India?

Google images
People have started to loose their trust in the demonetization due to various reports which contradicts with the claims of government. This has lead the Citizen’s of India to be divided into skeptics and believers in their view about demonetization.
  1. Cash recovery has been less than 6% of the total undisclosed income seized from tax evaders, shows an HT analysis of data from tax raids from financial year 2012-13 onwards. In addition to cash a great deal of black money is converted into gold and jewellery, real estate including land, share holdings and so on. The present demonetization scheme does not have an impact on black money held in those forms which do not constitute cash holdings. Why govt’s demonetisation move may fail to win the war against black money
  2. If the demonetization measure introduced by the government has to be successful it should result in immobilization of a large amount of black economy. The large volume of cash deposited by the public during the last few days in banks is actually white money.
  3. More than NDA or UPA we believed in Raghuram Rajan(who was the RBI Governor till September 4th). He had said that demonetization may not help in rooting out black money. Here's What Raghuram Rajan Thinks Of Currency Demonetisation
  4. History of similar measures in various parts of the globe gives a different picture. A brief history of India pulling bank notes from circulation [Distrustful citizens and canny black marketeers: Lessons for India from the history of demonetisation]
  5. It was said that the move will crush fake currency, it too is put to question. There were currency notes worth about Rs17 lakh crore in circulation across the country, and according to the RBI, about Rs400 crore of this was believed to be fake currency. So basically to destroy Rs400-crore fake currencies, the circulation of total Rs17 lakh crore was blocked. While the black money converted into white may come into the banking system, how much of the fake currency will get weeded out? If the fake currency is already in circulation, it only means that one or two of the notes that you or I deposit in the bank, will turn out fake. Who takes the hit in that case? The common man. ‘Counterfeit notes account for just Rs. 400 crore’’
  6. The poor have become mules to turn the black money of the rich into white as they charge a premium to do so. Poor people become black money mules for rich
  7. The super rich are left unscratched.The List: Who’s Who & How Much
  8. It is said to be politically motivated. PM using it in election campaign almost confirms this fact. 10 Reasons Why BJP's Demonetization Move Is An Unmitigated — And Politically Motivated — Disaster
  9. There were reports that the currency had added security features which is said to be hoax. It was reported that the new magenta Rs. 2,000 notes have all been printed at a facility in India but, barring the design, the security features remain the same as the old Rs. 500 and Rs. 1,000 notes, a senior government official. No time to add new security features in notes says official
  10. In January 2014. The Congress-led UPA government had announced that all currency notes issued before 2005 would be withdrawn by March 31 that year and must be exchanged for new notes with more safety features. The BJP's Meenakshi Lekhi had ripped into then Finance Minister P Chidambaram."The latest gimmick of finance ministry to demonetise the notes before 2005 is an attempt to obfuscate the issue of black money stashed outside the country... This measure is strongly anti-poor," Ms Lekhi had then said.'Anti-Poor' Said BJP When Congress Government Had Announced Note Ban
As days pass by the number of skeptics is increasing. Malayalam proverb ‘എലിയെ പിടിക്കാൻ ഇല്ലം ചുടുക’(Eliye kollan illam chutuka) best explains the thoughts of many of us(skeptics). This can roughly be translated as ‘Burn the house to kill the rat’.
The demonetization scheme introduced by the government is a well-intentioned one. But poor implementation and poor planning has caused a great deal of inconvenience to the public. There is also no guarantee that the problem of black money will go away forever. It is possible that after a passage of time the people will revert to their old bad habits and the black money problem will reappear in society. Moreover the present scheme only covers the cash component.
More than anger people are confused as they don’t know whom to believe, and what really awaits them. The sentimental approach by PM is not enough to address the concerns. It will be helpful if government is able to provide logical answers. Demonetization can not be undone; only option we have is to wait and hope that it somehow helps our economy.
Edit
Demonetisation Death Toll Rises To 25 And It's Only Been 6 Days
Open letter to PM Modi questions demonetisation, taxes

Has "ACCHE DIN" the goos days arrived or yet to come?

A brief understanding of the concept of ‘Ache Din’ and how it evolved will help you determine whether “Ache Din” came already or is yet to come.
The Modi Victory - A Psychological Perspective[ACHE DIN]
The victory was overwhelming. The defeat crushing. The Victorious could not explain – they were themselves surprised – not at the victory, but its magnitude, and the vanquished – they had no explanation. It would not have mattered, even if they had one.

The galvanizing message was subtle, continuous and rhetorical – Acche Din Ayange - I will fulfill your hopes provided you fulfill my goals - Prime Ministership with a 272+ majority in parliament.
The Counter was poor – We have done it all, extended your rights.
Divisive politics will destroy you….
One was Positive, the other negative. What did the Indian people choose? The Positive. It’s a lesson that all politicians, perhaps need to learn – Always feed on the positivity of the Indian People rather than use the TINA factor to win them over.
PERCEPTION - NATION IN BAD SHAPE
As the Campaign began, the Perception was, that the nation was in bad shape – the polity was frayed by corruption in both low and high places, there was poor economic and employment growth, prices of ordinary living items were rising beyond reach, the deficits were growing wider, the centre and the states were in a constant state of confrontation, there was poor defense preparedness, due to delay and corruption in defense purchases, there was a general lack of decision making and a general deterioration of India’s position among the comity of nations.
This perception was in relation to the expectations that people had vis-à-vis these important elements of nation building. These expectations were again the result of perception shaped by the opposition in a variety of ways.

  • Perception breeds in the silence of the mind – Ultimately it shapes human thought, speech and action. It may or may not reflect ground reality. It’s molded by a number of factors - the human experience, and external inputs from a variety of sources - human, electronic and print, and in the run up to the elections, the government’s knee jerk and uncoordinated reactions to events, a policy paralysis caused by a divided UPA, a thought gap between the Congress Party and the Government, a divided parliament, and primarily a lack of interactivity with the beneficiaries of its activities and programmes which were primarily carried out by the state governments giving them the advantage of first level recognition in regard to those initiatives.
PERCEPTIONAL CHASM
  • Obviously there was a perceptional chasm, between what, those in government thought was delivered to its constituents, over the last five to ten years and the expectations the people had. This gap was widened by knee jerked action on the one hand and inaction on the other.
  • It was also impacted by an extensive and relentless campaign in this regard, within Parliament, and on Electronic and Social Media which began almost 2 years ago, which was created and run by brilliant minds, who understood human psychology better than their opponents did or even cared – their disdain for this inexact science proved costly on May 16th.

  • There was initially, a sense of disquiet, then a sense of despair, and ultimately a sense of desperation, primarily among the youth, the middle class, those employed in the private sector and those who owned the private sector – the class of people that were aspirational and wanted to live the dream just as our PM in waiting did.
He didn’t ignore them, he addressed them, with his slogan "acche din ayange" and they saluted him with an overwhelming verdict in his favor.
The Modi campaign Strategy has indeed borrowed heavily from the Obama Campaign Strategy – Primarily it was designed to be presidential in its approach, where his personality, his charisma and his track record was highlighted over that of his rivals. From the clothes he wore, to the speeches (he targeted local issues, local and national personalities and the future) he made at rallies across various cities, the interviews, the tweets and the like were choreographed so well that television channels were vying to record his presence over the others to raise their trp’s adding value to an already extremely well crafted campaign.

  • OBAMA’S CAMPAIGN
In 2008, Obama inherited similar national conditions from his predecessor George Bush. The American Economy was in shambles, its troops were stuck in a no win situation abroad, immigration, employment and healthcare were major domestic issues – Consequently his message – Hope, Change and Yes we can. He won the election on the strength of those slogans. What he emphasized was hope, what he delivered over four years was direction, and very few promised outcomes. Yet he was re elected…. Four years down the line, his slogan was “Forward” – He needed time to complete unfinished business. His campaign’s number crunching was outstanding – the various analytics that helped him address various people constituencies across the country – their concerns, their needs, their hopes was relentless in its inputs to his campaign strategy. Winning votes became a psychological game.
  • MODI’S CAMPAIGN STRATEGY
Modi’s campaign too, was scripted just as scientifically, based on numbers from previous elections. They targeted 295 constituencies for their 185 Bharat Vijay rallies. The data crunchers helped BJP identify strategic rally venues.
“Bharat Vijay is aimed at maximizing and strategizing Modi’s outreach,’’ BJP vice-president Mukhtar Abbas Naqvi said while announcing the plan. They also helped identify local concerns and needs, the aspirational concerns of the millions of first time voters and the middle class who only wanted a chance to move up the value chain and better delivery of services and most importantly a stronger nation, so that they could hold their head high – when they visited abroad.
The Analytics then scripted the message - Hope combined with the promise of delivery.
People now heard what they longed to hear and voted as they yearned to vote – for a person, not a party, for someone who promised well being and a track record that promised delivery. This message resonated well with the people of India; especially the aspirational class of citizens and the affirmations are there for all to see and what is heartening perhaps for India’s future, is that these affirmations overcame all traditional polity divides.
It is up to each one us to decide whether ‘Ache Din’ came or is yet to come(or will it ever come) .

Why did Modi implement the policy of demonetization of high value currency notes only to recover 6% of black money held in cash at great human loss?

The fact you need to understand is that any one who says any criticism against demonetization is either trying to protect the tax evaders or is against the nation. Hence you should not raise such questions and prevent yourself from being painted as an anti-nationalist.

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In this populist narrative that PM Modi has constructed and strengthened through hundreds of speeches over the years that
  • the Congress(opposition as a whole) equals the corrupt equals the black money hoarders equals the elites equals the liberals equals the Modi-critics equals the anti-nationals equals the bad people who want to destroy India.
  • At the same time, the good people equals the true nationalists equals Modi equals Modi supporters equals the Congress-haters(oppose opposition).
Neither of these concatenations is fixed — they are liable to be extended to include new categories or shrunk to focus on a select few. Eg: The media who says about the problems of common man.
But as encapsulated in Mr. Modi’s teary-eyed appeal at Goa after demonetization which is a perfect example of this , the significant aspects are three:
  1. the moralisation of politics,
  2. the infusion of emotion into policy debates, and
  3. the reduction of all debate into a single question,
are you in support of Mr. Modi or not?
  • If yes, support him.
  • If no, then it’s hardly surprising that you are criticising what he has done.
To know more this political strategy read the article The morality of binaries (Hindu Editorial 18/11/2016)
ROLE OF MEDIA IN DEMOCRACY
Media plays a crucial role in shaping a healthy democracy. It is the backbone of a democracy. Media makes us aware of various social, political and economical activities happening around the world. It is like a mirror, which shows us or strives to show us the bare truth and harsh realities of life.
Media shows the different aspects of the same problem. To empathize with the problems common man face is the role of responsible media. It is evident fact that the common man is facing the wrath of demonetization.
Role of media in democracy
CONCLUSION
Hence as a true patriot you should accept and believe the fact that demonetization is good for the nation. It is predicted to adversely affect GDP and it has already lead to unemployment to the low income groups, but still it is a good move. It is quite certain that the ripple effect demonetization created will affect our economy for a while,may be months while some say years. The effect will swallow the gain(if any) we may gain through this whole process . Hence demonetization is good move and we have to appreciate the government for the same.
[Expecting this answer to be deleted or collapsed in a short time, similar to my other answers] :-)

Why do Indians worship their political leaders?

In 1945, Churchill won the war for England but he lost in the 1946 general elections because the electorate did not think him fit to lead the country in peace time. Ditto was the case with the French President Charles De Gaulle, the chief architect of the Fifth Republic and leader of the Free French Movement in World War II. When one compares the Indian mind-set with this, it is sadly lacking in separating right from wrong.

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The Three warning which Dr. BR Ambedkar gave in his last speech to Constituent assembly are of relevance in this context. They are
  1. The first thing in my judgement we must do is to hold fast to constitutional methods of achieving our social and economic objectives.
  2. The second thing we must do is to observe the caution which John Stuart Mill has given to all who are interested in the maintenance of democracy, namely, not “to lay their liberties at the feet of even a great man, or to trust him with power which enable him to subvert their institutions”.
  3. The third thing we must do is not to be content with mere political democracy. We must make our political democracy a social democracy as well.
What does the term ‘hero’ mean ?
A hero is someone who does something for society, someone who people look up to and say I wish I could do the things he has done. A hero has the extraordinary ability to rise above those around him, he’s willing to do things that most just dream of. A hero is someone whose shoes you would like to be in. The wanting is the first step towards establishing someone as a hero. Willingness to do things and not put himself over anyone. Dhirubhai Ambani, Kiran Mazumdar Shaw, Ratan Tata, Azim Premji, Shiv Nadar—to name just a few—are some who have caused others to aspire to follow them. They are outstanding performers who we look up to.

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Is there a need for heroes?
Young people do need heroes to look up to and emulate. The coming generations do need examples to follow. Heroes are the key to any nation’s success. Each generation has produced heroes. Heroes are the only ones who change lives. Heroes can make the most impact on the minds when one is between seven and 15 years of age.
INDIAN POLITICS

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In the context of India, it is generally deemed as a normal thing to worship the politician as a super hero or even God than to simply commend him or positively highlight his actions. Though many citizens find it unacceptable, nevertheless it is a public tendency in India to praise the politician with blind adulation and reverence.
A leader who works for the downtrodden will always have our unstinted support and respect but that does not imply we have to overdo it by changing respect into a fawning submission.
It is highly important to commend the leader and felicitate him for his good work as doing so will not only encourage his actions but also ensure the news of his good work is disseminated down to the grassroots and other politicians also learn how to follow suit.
But commendation of the politician when runs into the arena of holy worship, that as history can tell leads to the ruin of the democratic system of checks and balances.
DANGERS OF HERO WORSHIP
The common masses do not realize that in their pampering of their leader they are contributing to his/her:
  • full exemption hence prone to corruption
  • unaccountability hence prone to breaking the law
  • absolute power hence prone to mistreating his underlings, workers and the civilians
Exceptions might be there, but it is too huge a risk to gamble on rare exceptions and then having to deal with a dictator in a democratic society.
Retired High Court Judge CS Dharmadhikari feels that hero worship and obsession with celebrities is a dangerous trend, as it destroys the Rule of Law. "This might be repeated in some other cases. And if it happens, even temporarily, it may destroy the democracy in our country."
SOLUTION (What can be done to change this culture?)
Praise The Worthy The Right Way
It is not unethical to seek praise for one’s work but to seek it in ways which reek of sycophantic gestures is undoubtedly an annoyance. The political party or the politician in order to show how he delivered on his/her promises can attempt the following ways to gain recognition:
  • Start a scholarship; grant in his/her name or in the name of the leader posthumously.
  • Organize competitions in his/her name
  • Name a street after the person than build a statue.
  • Open an NGO, school or institution in his/her name. Fund it.
  • Sponsor cultural, literary and sports events especially for the marginalised communities or disadvantaged schools and institutions.
  • Sponsor budding talents. Etc. etc.
These are just few guidelines to suggest a right direction. Many of these have been implemented in India but there is room for much much more. Hence time, energy and resources need to be spent in these projects than wasting resources on lavishness of public appearances, razzle-dazzle of long speeches and fancy ramp walks etc.
Praise than Worship

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Finally it might seem that in attacking hero worship, the attempt is to marginalize the efforts and hard work of the worthy leaders. This is certainly not the case and if such thinking prevails then it is a misconception. It is extremely important to acknowledge the great deeds of our worthy politicians but a line has to be drawn to ensure adulation does not turn into unchecked adulation.
A politician who works for the public day and night and who leaves no stone unturned to keep it sailing on the tide of progress needs our unbridled support, admiration and acknowledgement. If we do not do this, he/she will be left unsung, his actions unpublicised, and his work will not be known to the public to garner support or engender a public opinion.
Reference
Why do people give politicians a God like status? (quora)
The culture of hero worship - Times of India (times of India)
Hero Worship In Indian Politics: Praise The Worthy (The Logical Indian)
The Psychology of Celebrity Worship | World of Psychology (Psychcentral)
Why BR Ambedkar's three warnings in his last speech to the Constituent Assembly resonate even today