Wednesday, September 13, 2017

Life is flowing, Let it flow!

Life is flowing, Let it flow!

Everything that comes to us, comes to pass. Not just the money in our purse but wisdom, ideas, objects even opportunities, all come to us so that as the right moment, we can pass. this is called a flow.  Being in the flow means being aware that the river of the life is flowing. flowing as the moments flow continuously. The river flows to merge with the sea and life flows to merge in the space.
Being in the flow means accepting whatever
comes and putting into  good use, before passing them. Going with the flow means allowing whatever comes to move on freely without holding on to it in anyway.
Life is flowing let it flow!

Tuesday, September 12, 2017

The Mind Bold and Beautiful




We are always infatuated by the outer world always.we seldom think about the glory and potentials of the mind. All the sense organs stimulated by the outer world and we find ourselves blind to perceive the universe within.
To look with in and perceive the universe that lies within we need to think first the downside .The mind is passionate, prejudice, fearful and jealous.It may be innate or inherited.We don't even try to know about it whether we have inherited or these are innate traits of our personality, rarely we put efforts to know . Is it the outer world and its allure that we have to enjoy and rejoice  in or is there something even more wonderful in the inner world.
Lets have a fresh look and cultivate a new outlook. The mind is a wide panorama. Its expanse and power both are infinite. Don't get bound by negative thoughts, understand that the mind is capable of spinning and weaving enormous confidence , creating immeasurable loftiness, impenetrable  depth and immense magnitude.
When we start dwelling upon these positive and pleasant features of mind, our fears about the negative will disappear.
We can see the beauty of our face in the mirror only, and how long can we see it, as long as we are placed in front of the mirror. the beauty of the mind becomes experiential and enjoyable everywhere and all the time.Start unfolding the possibilities of the mind to experience its beauty.once you know master your mind you will be able to understand its infinite potentials.Just try to think of the vast empire of your mind and rule it like a king. You are the king and the kingdom of self.Make a shift from negative to positive, stop condemning self, elevate yourself.
Start thinking about the beautiful, pleasant and expansive, bold and beautiful nature of the mind.
Be 'PRASANG'  
(Positive, Responsible, Ambitious, Supportive, Abreast, Noble Generous) 
Be Joyous

Picture courtesy: Google search

Thursday, September 7, 2017

Make home an educational lab

Make home an educational lab
The school, home and community are a melting pot of emotions, desires, attitudes and aspirations. The energies that reside in these places are positive because learning, values and education are an integral part of all of them. However a great deal lies at a subconscious level with in the collective humanity that inhabits these places. Thoughts of religious intolerance, stress disorder, child neglect, caste and community feelings, environmental insensitivity and personal competition, which create an atmosphere of discord. The mind is a garden that contain seeds of understanding, forgiveness and love along with seeds of ignorance, fear and hatred that make us violent or peaceful, understanding or intolerant.
An enriched nurturing environment will help to water the positive seeds and weed out the negative ones. A thinking school can create a learning environment filled with compassion and communication.
Recognition is perhaps the most important aspect of nurturing. ‘I see you is the ability to recognize each other’s identity and value. Among the tribes of northern Natal in South Africa, the most common greeting equivalent to hello in English is the expression: Sawu bona. It is literally means, ‘I see you.’ If you are a member of the tribe you might reply by saying Sikhona, ‘I am here”. The order of the exchange is important. Until you see me, I do not exist. Its as if, when you see me you bring me into existence. It’s the same with children, if we don’t bring them into existence, they will remain invisible, irrespective of their nature.
An enlightened educator would look dispassionately at her own personal vision and mastery before the shared vision process begins. How do we communicate? What pressures are we under? How so we respond? Do we give enough of our time? Are we mindful of the vision, goals and feelings of children we interact with? Are we watering the right seeds?
Teaching is a moral undertaking: it is not just a set of technical skills for imparting knowledge to students.it invovolves caring for children and for being responsible for their development in a complex democratic society. Teachers need to think not just about the “means” by which they teach but the ‘ends’ they are teaching for. And that places a heavy obligation on those who teach.
There is no guidebook that is automatically sort out ethical dilemmas for us in a world where interpretations are ambiguous and awareness is incomplete. The greatest teachers whether the Buddha, Christ, Ramakrishna or Nanak-never taught in classrooms. They had no black boards or charts. They used no subject outlines, kept no records, and gave no grades. Their students were often poor and their methods were the same for all who came to hear and learn. They opened eyes, ears and heart with faith, truth and love. They won no honour for their wisdom or expertise. And yet, these quiet teachers fulfilled the hopes and changed the lives of millions.
The concept of education has differed greatly from its context. Every humans conceptual value is bilateral like love growth and harmony and contextual aspects are unilateral like hate, injustice and violence. Learning has no place for exclusives. We have to continually create an environment whereby our schools and home become laboratories of learning, compassion, pre-emptive justice, empathetic listening, reflective thinking and a concern for rural, national and global issues.


Wednesday, August 30, 2017

Creating Nurturing Environments for Children


"The sun illuminates only the eye of man, but shines into the eye and the heart of the child." 

                                                                                                               – Ralph Waldo Emerson
For the first seven years of life children need their home and family to be their most nurturing environment. Since many young children now spend more of their waking hours away from home than at home, they need a nurturing home environment more than ever.

 Given a choice, young children will usually choose to be in a natural environment. They want to be outdoors, in the fresh air and sunlight, barefoot and naked, surrounded by grass, trees, and flowers, hearing the birds and the wind, playing in water with sticks and rocks. If you ask most grade school children what is their favorite part of school, they say outdoor recess. When children spend time outside where they can run, jump, climb, swing, swim, and play, they eat better, sleep better and are happier. We all know that children thrive in the outdoors.

Yet we often forget how much the environment can affect a child's mood and behavior. When children spend too much time inside breathing stale air, hearing the hum of all the lights, electrical appliances, and the television, surrounded by synthetic fabrics, playing with plastic toys, eating foods that contain artificial coloring and preservatives, they get cranky and disagreeable.
The author, educator John Holt, compared human beings to bonsai trees. If you take a tree seedling and clip its roots and branches in a certain way and limit its supply of water, air and sun you can produce a tiny, twisted tree. A bonsai tree is a deformed miniature of the tall, straight tree the seedling had the potential to be had it been given the sun, air, water, soil and food it needed. And so it is with children. They cannot realize their potential if they are given only a limited supply of the things they need to thrive.

Children have very little control over their environment. They must depend on us to keep them safe and to meet their basic physical needs. They must also depend on us to do our best to provide for them the most nurturing physical and emotional environment possible.
 When a child's environment is not meeting his needs or is causing stress, he may not be able to identify those needs or stresses let alone communicate them with words. Children communicate their stress and their needs through their behavior.

A child's behavior is always telling us something. Acting-out behavior is usually a call for help. A child's behavior may be telling us, "I'm over-stimulated" or "I need space to move around." When we tell a child to "stop behaving that way" what they may hear is "stop trying to tell me what's wrong or what you need." My many years of experience of being with children has taught me that when we take the time to try to figure out what their behavior is telling us, looking at their environment is a useful place to begin.
A child's behavior is always telling us something.

If a child melts down at the grocery store when you tell her she may not have a candy bar, is her behavior manipulation or is it a communication that she can't handle disappointment on top of sensory overload from the florescent lights and the hum of the refrigeration units? If a child continues to climb over the back of the couch when you have repeatedly told him to stop, is the child trying to get the attention he needs or is he expressing his body's need for something appropriate to climb on? How will we know when a child's behavior is a communication of a stress or an unmet need related to the environment? When we look at a child's environment to try to figure out what might be causing his behavior, we need to consider every part of it. The air children breathe, the light they see by, the words and sounds they hear, the food they eat, the water they drink, the feel of the clothes they wear, the things they play with, and the attitudes and emotions of the people around them all affect how they grow, develop, think, feel and behave.

There is considerable research confirming that when children are given what they need to build a solid foundation in the early years, they have more strength to deal with whatever comes their way later.
Children are like seedlings. When we raise seedlings in a greenhouse, in rich soil with good drainage and provide them the right amount of water and sunlight, and protect them from the wind, they grow deep roots and sturdy stocks. When it's time to transplant them out into the world they will be not only hardy enough to survive, but vigorous enough to thrive.  We must make their home their greenhouse. The family must be a rich soil that nourishes them. We must provide them with the water of our love, the sunshine of our attention and our protection from the winds of stress that weaken them.

Providing our children with nurturing environments is more of a challenge in today's world than it has ever been. Many children do not live in homes with yards and gardens to explore or in neighborhoods where they can spend hours playing outside. Even the children who do live in such places often have so many scheduled activities that they have very little time to spend in their yards and gardens. Many children are spending more of their time inside buildings than outdoors at earlier and earlier ages. When children are in school, unless they participate in outdoor sports, they spend most of their time inside.
Just as children have little control over their environment, there are many things parents have little control over in our world environment. None of us alone has the power to end all the crime, violence, hunger, pollution, and injustice in the world. Every day when we step outside our door, these dangers are still going to be out there. What we do have the power to do is to create home, school and community environments that nurture and protect our children's potential. To do this will require that we make some changes. Many parents already feel stretched to their limit trying to juggle earning a living and just making sure their children are in a safe environment. We may think we don't have the time or the energy to make the changes we would need to make to create a better environment.

 The more time children spend in environments that nurture them, the more delightful they are to be with. Give them many hours of joy and comfort, telling and reading stories, cuddling and watching the clouds go by together. Creating more nurturing spaces will look different for every family depending on what they have to work with. The size doesn't matter. Even small changes can make a big difference in our children's lives. Whether we plant a big garden full of flowers or put little pots of marigold on our stairs, seeing and smelling those flowers will nurture everyone in the family.
So, how do we create more nurturing environments for children? Think of creating a more nurturing environment for the child in you and for the children in your life.

Have you ever heard young children talk about how much they love it when the power goes out? Without electricity no one is on the computer or watching television. The whole family gathers in one room by candlelight and tells stories or plays games. Our lives today are often so hectic that many homes feel more like a home base where the family sleeps, showers, does laundry, stores their belongings, sometimes cooks and eats meals, and watches television.
In a nurturing environment the family spends more time gathered around the table than around the television. The family table is where the family is both nourished and nurtured. Working on projects, drinking juices, playing board games, learning to peel carrots and roll out cookie dough, having tea parties and eating birthday cake together turns the family table into a nurturing "center" where many of the most important, interesting and nurturing things happen in the home.

A rocking chair is an essential piece of furniture in a nurturing environment. Children crave the nurturing of touch. Whether we are soothing a baby or reading stories to a young child, rocking is nurturing to both the adult and the child. Children rarely refuse an invitation to be rocked, especially if it also means hearing a story or a song. The rocking chair should be in the room where we will use it the most.

Gathering around a fire has always been a symbol of physical and emotional warmth. Children love gathering around a campfire or fireplace. Even if we don't go camping or have a fireplace or wood stove to gather around, simply lighting a candle at the dinner table can create the warm feeling of gathering around the fire.

Children love to be in or near water. Just filling a plastic tub with water and some empty containers provides hours of contentment for young ones.
When we do gardening with children they feel connected to the earth and nature. Children need to touch the earth and feel connected to living things. They love to dig in the dirt, plant seeds and seedlings and watch them grow. Even if we don't have space for a garden or know the first things about it we can still give our children the nurturing experience of gardening. We can put a seed in a jar of soil, transplant marigolds into a window box, plant a tree on a child's birthday or measure and record the amazing daily growth of it during the holidays. Any connection to living, growing things creates a nurturing environment for children.

The living things most children love to be connected to are animals. Most children dream of having a pet to love and care for. I once read that it is a good thing for children to have animals to care for - it reminds them that humans are not the only living creatures on the earth. Children love to feed the birds and squirrels in the park. Hanging a bird feeder where children can watch it through the window is a great way to give children a connection to nature. Even if our living situation does not allow pets, we can provide children with access to animals through friends, relatives, neighbors and community.
Part of creating nurturing environments is spending time with our children in nurturing places. With everyone in the family so often going in different directions, it's important that families have places to go together.

 For many families their place of worship provides a nurturing environment. One of the most family-friendly, nurturing environments is a local family dance at any fixed day in a month or a week. The dances are taught each time so parents and children can learn them together. There is live music and children dance with their parents, siblings and other families.  Parents have as much fun as the children do - it's great exercise, and a wonderful opportunity to experience community.

As children get older they have a greater need for the nurturing of community. Parenting never used to be and was never intended to be a one- or two-person job. It does take a village to raise a child. Since we no longer live in villages, creating a community for our children is vital to creating a nurturing environment. The calendar in Parent & Family is a rich resource that lists many activities and events families can do together. When we create opportunities for children to spend time with people who play musical instruments, tell stories, dance, sing, paint, garden, and cook, sew, knit, weave and build things, we provide a nurturing environment for their imagination, creativity, and self-esteem.

One of the most important aspects of a nurturing environment is ritual. If we grew up in a family where rituals were an important part of family life we are more likely to perpetuate rituals in our own family, but even if we don't recall many rituals, we can create new ones for our family. When we do something consistently becomes a ritual. Daily, weekly, and seasonal rituals give children a sense of security, stability, and belonging. These family rituals become an anchor for children as they navigate their way through a world filled with inconsistency and uncertainty.

One of the reasons children love the holidays is the nurturing rituals that accompany them. The things we do with our children give them more than anything we can ever buy for them. Decorating our home, preparing special foods, making gifts of love, and attending special services, gatherings, and performances together create the nurturing environment that families need throughout the year. When we learn to incorporate all the nurturing elements of the holidays into our daily lives we can keep the spirit of the holidays alive in our hearts and our homes all year.

Parents Be the First Teachers: Create an Enriched Home Learning Environment.


Friday, August 11, 2017

Transform the students by making them more aware

Transform the students by making them more aware

You are Hanuman
Conceptually Hanuman is the mind. Rama is the soul, it is the surrender of mind to soul. Matter to spirit, Hanuman is power personified. The Hanuman in is fearlessness and doing what comes naturally to us, maintaining a balanced and steady approach. Identify your latent potential, realize the Hanuman in you.
Swami Akshara
One may have all the knowledge but not clarity one may know a lot and yet understands nothing. There is a difference between knowing and understanding. Not knowing difference between these leads to confusion.
To transform the students a teacher needs to change his thinking for this we need to make them aware of their emotions like malice, jealous, anger and pride. They need to look these emotions in themselves and learn to control them or release them in a positive manner.

1 Awareness helps in transforming the people by understanding the consequences all the aspects of the situation and aids to the right decision. 
2 With awareness students can make better use of their negative energies.
3 Awareness helps in seeing beyond the situation.

It can be achieved by keeping relaxed and unconditional love.

Let there be a choice to be relaxed 
Let the students be aware that stress limits them only to one option whereas relaxation gives many options. Choose the best for yourself out of many options.
Never be judgmental, you may become the victim of your judgments. Judgment again gives ont option only, either this or that.  

(Teachers should not be judgmental. It has many a times seen that students who do not do well in their younger years do wonders later on or the very bright student of the younger years may not achieve very high goals).
The danger of judgment is that you stop seeing the object of judgement and you are more in your judgement.

If you meet the child whom you had judgmental in his early life, do you still judge him from your memory lane that he had been duffer, idiot, dud, dodo etc.or you will change your judgment.
How to make awareness?
Be alert about your nasty emotions (anger) sadist nature like do we drink dirty water
Do not allow such emotions. There is a sufficient time between the sensations to the response. Utilize that time to convert your impulse or reduce the intensity of it by associating the situation with (never react, always respond).

Some humours episodes or divert the currant in positive direction.
Be very aware or alert of negative emotions even make the students aware of it.
Let the negative emotions come and go don’t identify with them.
Do not allow yourself to participate with them if you will involve with them they will deplete your energy.
Punishment
(The punishment depletes the energy of both the parties the teacher and the taught).
It becomes harmful and heavy punishment makes the students life complicated, never compare students. There are individual differences.
If a teacher goes on comparing, the life of the child becomes miserable. If you want to ask a child as successful as others ask him to learn from them. let them learn to appreciate others.
Comparison can never allow a child to enjoy the success of others and appreciate others. No one can have all the good qualities, nobody can be the best all the time. Someone will always be better tha you at some level. Do not whip the child with comparisons; instead inspire them by the success of others. Inculcate the habit of enjoying the competition.
Does not your hand tremble as you slap a child?
Does not your heart miss a beat when you witness the gory scenes of gloom (gloomy face of the child?) 
Embrace humanity and learn to love you are no different from all other.
The students who have beaten by you all might tomorrow be your own son.
The test of teachers tolerance and patience comes when she’s in a bad mood or the class room situation is bad or there is a chaos in the class or the students of her class are naughty.
Bad listeners
It is the mark of an educated mind to be able to entertain a thought without accepting it. Aristotle
All the students are guided by their original qualities of which there is no duplicate of the same.
A teacher who is disturbed is also angry. He seems angry with his life. He is frustrated to others. He is panic to achieve goals soon. He does not want to apply techniques of teaching to reach the minds of various students. At times they themselves are not aware what is missing in them.
Needs: a healthy attitude. Attitude creates attitude.
How to have a healthy attitude?
Apply A B C technique
A- Is for attitude, open and explorative
B- B- is for having a belief which is powerful
C- C is to bring in caring energy
Talk to yourself: actions are an expression of one’s thoughts and thoughts are an expression of one’s belief system. To change ones actions, it is necessary to change ones thoughts and to change ones thoughts one must change ones belief. The source of one’s action is belief.

How to change the belief system?

Whenever a negative belief comes, kick it off like you kick a ball towards the goal. Your goal should be both successful and satisfied. Keep this thought always and do not allow the student to shake you.
An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure.
Ask questions what’s the reason. A conversation is a fair exchange of thoughts not a monologue. Don’t tell them what not to do. Tell them what to do. Teach them mistakes are a natural part of growing up. Ti err is human but don’t repeat them. Don’t expect too much or too little. Don’t demand perfection, it paralyses healthy growth of the individual.

Let Go technique 
Breathe. Let go and remind yourself that this very moment is the only one you know you have for sure. Oprah Winfrey
If a child does not perform as per the teachers expectations it upsets her and the teacher gets frustrated The teacher as well as the child suffers. Understand the link between your expectations and your frustration as well as the result of this process.
(Whenever you expect something to be a certain way)
But when you let go your expectations, when you accept the child as he is, you are lighten up. Learn to be calm. Have a certain set of attitude.
Cultivate awareness 

Make the students aware that the result you achieve will be in direct proportion to the effort you apply.
Self motivation patience, tolerance reason out
Support the rights of the students they will listen to you.

Relax please
A mind filled with tension and unhappiness is the result of a toxic centre, such a mind creates problems for self and others. In contrast, a mind which is relaxed and happy comes from a nourishing centre. Transforming a toxic centre into a nourishing centre is the hallmark of wisdom
Swami Sukhabodhananda