Sunday, January 30, 2011

What Can You Do When Politicians Are Failing To Make A Difference?

I want to be honest with you, there are many days we wake up and wonder 'what are we doing here in India...', yet, it only takes a few minutes on the streets and we become extremely thankful for this opportunity we have been given! There are constant reminders that make us grateful for all we have.

While there are times when it would be much easier to turn a blind eye, when you see the issues first hand, you comprehend the challenges mankind is really facing, it often feels like a losing battle. The reality is most people simply don't care about global issues, survival of endangered species, or the well-being of other people who might be less fortunate...

We may not like it, but can easily start to understand. Self preservation and personal prosperity take precedent over the welfare of other people and planet.

There are many a times when we have thought 'what is the point...', what difference can we really make when the task to improve human values, stop the extinction of earths creatures and improve environmental sustainability seem so monumental, and often an impossible one.

Thankfully, we have met many individuals, such as the volunteers of Art of Living, Family Services, Global Concern, and many more. We draw inspiration from those who dedicate their lives to being warriors, true warriors, their battles are not fought with guns, rockets, weapons... they fight their battles with their hearts, minds, their will. They are driven to make a difference. They have taken a stand because the ones we elect, put into power, the ones who should be addressing these issues, the ones who are paid to 'govern' seem to have much more important things to do. War, money and power...

Political turmoil, corruption accusations, debates with what to do with the estimated $140 billion dollars that have been siphoned out of India... just another day of politics in India...

...meanwhile: 'There are over 11 million street children in India, (Consortium for Street Children). Some are orphans; others have been abused or abandoned by their families. They live in extreme poverty on the streets and railway platforms of India, socially excluded, and survive by begging for food, working in the exploitative informal economy, or find themselves recruited by criminal gangs into invisible labor and brothels.' (from Global Concerns India website)

Even though India has experienced incredible growth over the last several years, experienced much economic prosperity, individuals making a vast amount of wealth, the people of India are still experiencing severe infrastructure, social and environmental challenges.

Poverty, labor exploitation, human trafficking, illiteracy, sanitation, infrastructure development, pollution, street trash, deforestation, urban de-greening... just a few of the challenges the majority of Indians have to deal with on a daily basis. And these issues are not just common to India, they are global challenges.

One must look at political corruption, dysfunction and bickering and even outdated superstitious religious beliefs and practices as sources for the lack of progress in so many areas of society and quality of living.

The Dalai Lama, who we saw live yesterday, said that prayer alone will not resolve these issues, we can not rely on government, only individual action and desire to make a difference.

He went on to say that while India may be leaders in 'Information Technology', they must now master 'Inner Technology'. The ancient knowledge of the Vedas is India's heritage, it is the source of Buddhism, and in many ways all religions have drawn from these sacred teachings. People will argue about which religion is best... the best religion is the one that gives you the faith and courage to be the best you can and to make a difference.

One might ask 'What can I do...?', I simply share what someone wiser than me once said, 'Do what YOU can, do YOUR best, but do something... that is all one can really do.'

Make A Difference,
Beejal Parmar

Tuesday, January 4, 2011

Project Hand in Hand: Bedsheets & Biscuits

We accompanied members of The Family Services to help with Project Hand In Hand to distribute bedsheets and biscuits at the Sheila Kothwala Institute for the hearing impaired. The children who's ages range from K-high school, have a range of hearing related disabilities and are all underprivileged. The Family Services have graciously been raising funds for Project Hand In Hand to help these types of institutes who receive very little, if any state funding.

Santa Visits our Hotel Room in India on Christmas Day

No tree, no decorations, no chimney, no turkey, no crackers, no hot chocolate and no snow... just a little love, peace, joy... and Santa still materialized on Christmas Day... and the kids were HAPPY!

Saturday, January 1, 2011

New Years Eve and Day in San Diego... AND India!

Turn Barriers Into Breakthroughs in 2011

Our New Years eve in Bangalore, India was subdued. The few friends we have made, all had other arrangements on New Years Eve. We spent the evening in our room at the guest house, Yogi and Khushi enjoyed an early nights sleep, I worked late into the night, Shivani read her book and later in the evening we watched 2012, (actually I posted Facebook at 12.12am, on 1/1/11 while we were watching 2012!). As midnight welcomed in 2011, we posted New Year messages around and called a few friends in San Diego. All in all a fairly low key New Years Eve in Bangalore, India.

At 12.30pm on the 1st Jan 2011, India (11pm on 31st Dec 2010, San Diego) we connected with our friends in San Diego via skype. The gathering was at our dear friends home, Patrick Combs and Deanna Latson, together with them were some of our dearest friends in San Diego. Our friends had gathered to celebrate the coming of 2011 with a board breaking ceremony.

We could feel the serenity and intentional energy in the living room. Our friends had written their desired breakthroughs and intentions on 12 inch x 12 inch pine boards. The computer was place on the edge of the circle of friends and we watched as one by one they came to the center, adults and kids alike, broke their board. We watched as boards resisted, yet with support, coaching, breathing, focus, inner strength, boards and barriers gave way to each of our friends breakthroughs.

While they broke their boards, we took notes, reviewed our barriers and intentions for 2011. Not sure where we are going to find 12x12x1 pine boards here in India, but when we do, we have some board breaking of our own to do!

As the board breaking came to an end, we chatted to our friends, as midnight approached in San Diego, our friends put on their party hats, readied their whistles and prepared for the countdown. HAPPY NEW YEAR… we watched as they cheered, embraced and celebrated the arrival of 2011. They wished us Happy New Year, and we wished them right back. We were brimming with smiles and happy warm emotions as we felt their love and joy from 14714 kilometers or 9144 miles away.

While Teleportation may not be possible just yet, thanks to the technology that is available today we were their with them, more than in spirit, we could hear them, feel their emotions, their joys, their love. It was if we meta-physically transported into their living room to be there with them. Time for a group photo, the camera was carefully positioned, we were picked up, and SNAP! We were in their New Years Day group photo… and we actually showed up!

As the New Year celebration faded, our friends decided to do a Polar Bear plunge in their swimming pool. A pool we have enjoyed on the more warmer San Diego days, but at 12.30am on the 1st Jan 2011, the pool was bitterly cold. We watched as they changed (not literally watched them change), and leave the comforts of the living room as they made their way to the poolside. We were carried out to the pool side in to the dark. We were not able to see them jump into the pool, but we could hear their screams and shrills. The entire experience and visuals was like something out of the horror film the ‘Blair Witch Project’, thankfully the only thing consuming our friends was the ice cold pool water.

We were carried back into the room and placed facing the fire. The mood was very relaxed, calm, as if the cooling waters of pool had shifted the mood from the energy and excitement of the arrival of the New Years, to a state of peace and contemplation.

Shivani wanted to sing for her friends, so we asked them to gather around the computer and Shivani sang ‘Never Say Never’, a fitting tribute to the evening they had created. We then asked Patrick to sing a song for us. We watched as Patrick sat by the fire with his guitar and sang. Shortly after, Patrick carried the computer around the room and we bid our friends goodbye. And with a click of the ‘End’ button we were instantly transported back to our room in Bangalore, India.

We had just experienced our friends New Years party from the other side of the world. It was a wonderful experience, and while we could not be there in body, we were aware of all the same emotions as if we had been there in body.

It was now 2.30pm in India, in a few hours we would be participating in a New Years Day candlelight ceremony with new friends we had met a few weeks earlier in Bangalore. We took a short nap, got ready and were driven to their home in a chauffeur driven vehicle… otherwise known as a Rickshaw.

We mingled with our new friends and their friends, and after a potluck dinner, we gathered in the living room around a large candle. After a few songs acknowledging the presence of God. Then it was time for the candlelight ceremony to commence. The kids went first followed by the adults. Each person lit their candle, from the central candle (representing the Divine presence) and placed it on the tray followed by the sharing of our gratitude, intentions and prayers for 2011.

I will share more about our new friends in later blogs, because they are a very special group of people, involved with human transformation work, schools for the poor, environmental sustainability… in fact everything we are passionate about.

In our (my and Yogi’s) sharing we reflected on the challenges and reward of the having to leave our home and friends in San Diego. Thankful for the support we have received in the transition process from our friends and family. While we miss our friends dearly, we have been able to enjoy a truly wonderful adventure since arriving in India, an adventure very few people will ever have the opportunity to experience. We have been fortunate to have the flexibility to travel and work from the foothills of the Himalayas to the beaches of Goa. We don’t know exactly why we have been guided here, but we know that guidance is divine in nature. We are here to learn, find, and something more than that.

We have some great things planned for this year, Karl Anthony’s (www.KarlAnthony.com) visit to India in February with a tour planned for Oct. The 123Employee 3-Day live summit in April, the launch of our training company in India mid year. I am also looking forward to the launch of Patrick Combs MightClub.org, a revolution in personal development.

Thanks to technology we are able to stay connected intimately with our friends, while we explore a new continent, enjoy new adventures and make new friends… and discover why we have been guided to India.

In 2010 we were able to turn obstacles into opportunity, barriers into breakthrough… It’s going to be an incredible 2011.

Wishing you much love, peace, joy for 2011

Beejal Parmar

Monday, December 20, 2010

Mantra Tour 2011 with Karl Anthony

We are planning 1 or 2 India tours with Karl Anthony in 2011. In addition to some sightseeing, we have planned visits to schools, to do service work, and ashrams to learn more about the power and science of Mantra's and how they can be used scientifically. Also there will also be an opportunity to participate in ceremonies to honor Ganesh, the River Ganga and much more.

This will be a unique opportunity to travel with Karl to the home of Mantra and to Rishikesh, the Yoga capital of the world.

Some of the sights you will experience as part of the tour are highlighted in the video below:



Please contact us or Karl Anthony for more information.

Our Christmas Candelight Message for Seaside Family

Every year Shivani and Khushi have been asked to light the candle representing Hinduism as part of the Seaside Christmas Candle Lighting ceremony. This year, since they are several thousand miles away in India, they recorded a special message for our Seaside Spiritual community...



Wishing You All A Merry Christmas and a Prosperous and Happy New Year

Wednesday, November 17, 2010

Parenting: Spoiling Your Kids vs. Teaching Appreciation

Parenting: Spoiling Your Kids vs. Teaching Appreciation

I received an email from my mum today, the message was very relevant to some of the growing issue parents and people in India have expressed to us over the last few weeks. I don’t think any of the these challenges are unique to India.

The story starts when we visited a school in the city of Haridwar. We wanted to learn more about the schooling and the character building education programs, we also wanted to share about Kids For Peace and empowering kids to be kind to others and the planet, and to teach kids fundamental peace principles. What the headmistress told us was eye-opening… the parents did not want the school to teach moral values or social responsibility, in fact the teachers were not even allowed to tell the kids to pick up after themselves or clean their dishes. The parents consider such tasks menial and below their kids. The parents only concern was that their child excels in school and is able to get a good job.

Since education is the key to escaping poverty, you can understand why low income parents might think this way… but the new rich in India are also experiencing challenges with their kids. Growing up with servants and getting what they want, the kids of the new rich will often develop an entitlement mind set, and while their childhood needs are fulfilled by their wealthy parents and family members, later in life, the materialistic reward based system breaks down, As parents can no longer fulfill their child’s needs, the children relate to this as ‘a loss of love’ and seeing their child’s disappointment, the parents try and fulfill their child’s needs.

The challenge is that kids are not developing their inner ‘self-worth’, they need material gifts and external appreciation, when they don’t get this, they are prone to self-destructive habits and depression.

The root of such issues is the fundamental lack of appreciation, there is a serious lack of values this is infecting the populous of India. And while India’s economy is booming, many agree that there is a decrease in basic values.

In fact many would even argue that having ‘values’ is bad for business, and that values is better embraced in later life after the money and wealth have been generated.

HOWEVER, we have been fortunate to meet different groups in India, who a pioneering a new value based lifestyle which included service and personal character. This groups are rejecting outdated ideologies of cast and ill-treatment of women. Some of these groups include service based organizations such as Art of Living, The Sai Baba movement, Amma, Crossbow, The Family and many more.

The NGO are not the only ones who seem to embrace the value based lifestyles, it seems the corporate world are also seeking their new managers to not only excel in education and qualifications, but also having a deeper sense of appreciation and compassion for fellow human beings. Maybe they recognize such qualities inherently make for a better more loyal manager.

With the daily reports corruption and that we seem to have lost our bearing & our sense of direction, there are beams of light that continue to fuel a brighter possibility.

The following is one such story that should shed some more light on the subject:

-Beejal Parmar

Received Via Email: Is Appreciation On Your Resume?


One young academically excellent person went to apply for a managerial position in a big company.

He passed the first
interview; the director did the last interview.

The director discovered from the CV that the youth's academic achievements were excellent all the way, from the secondary school until the postgraduate research, never had a year when he did not score.

The director asked, "Did you obtain any scholarships in school?"

The youth answered "none".

The director asked, "Was it your father who paid for your school fees?"

The youth answered, "My father passed away when I was one year old, it was my mother who paid for my school fees.

The director asked, "Where did your mother work?"

The youth answered, "My mother worked as laundry woman.

The director requested the youth to show his hands.

The youth showed a pair of hands that were smooth and perfect.

The director asked, "Have you ever helped your mother wash the clothes
before?"

The youth answered, "Never, my mother always wanted me to study and read more books. Furthermore, my mother can wash clothes faster than me.

The director said, "I have a request. “When you go back today, go and
clean your mother's hands, and then see me tomorrow morning.”

The youth felt that his chance of landing the job was high. When he went back, he happily requested his mother to let him clean her hands.

His mother felt strange, happy but with mixed feelings, she showed her hands to the young man.

The youth cleaned his mother's hands slowly. His tear fell as he did
that. It was the first time he noticed that his mother's hands were so wrinkled, and there were so many bruises in her hands. Some bruises were so painful that his mother shivered when they were cleaned with water.

This was the first time the youth realized that it was this pair of hands that washed the clothes everyday to enable him to pay the school fee. The bruises in the mother's hands were the price that the mother had to pay for his
graduation, academic excellence and his future.

After finishing the cleaning of his mother’s hands, the youth quietly washed all the remaining clothes for his mother.

That night, mother and son talked for a very long time.

Next morning, the youth went to the director's office.

The Director noticed the tears in the youth's eyes, asked: "Can you tell me
what have you done and learned yesterday in your house?"

The youth answered, "I cleaned my mother's hand, and also finished
cleaning all the remaining clothes'

The Director asked, "Please tell me your feelings."

The youth said
:

1. I know now what appreciation is. Without my mother, there would not have been the successful me today.

2. By working together and helping my mother, only I now realize how difficult and tough it is to get something done.

3. I have come to appreciate the importance and value of family relationships.

The director said, "This is what I am looking for to be my manager.
I want to recruit a person who can appreciate the help of others, a person who knows the sufferings of
others to get things done, and a person who would not put money as his only goal in life. You are hired.

Later on, this young person worked very hard, and received the respect of his subordinates. Every employee worked diligently and as a team. The company's performance improved tremendously.

Failings of Entitlement Mentality

A child, who has been protected and habitually given whatever he wanted, would develop "entitlement mentality" and would always put himself first. He would be ignorant of his parent's efforts. When he starts work, he assumes that every person must listen to him, and when he becomes a manager, he would never know the sufferings of his employees and would always blame others. For this kind of a person, who may be good academically, may be successful for a while, but eventually would not feel sense of achievement. He will grumble and be full of hatred and fight for more. If we are this kind of protective parents, are we really showing love or are we destroying the children instead?*

You can let your children live in a big house, eat a good meal, learn piano, watch a big screen TV. But when you are cutting grass, please let them experience it. After a meal, let them wash their plates and bowls together with their brothers and sisters. It is not because you do not have money to hire a maid, you want them to understand, no matter how rich their parents are, one day their hair will grow gray, same as the mother of that young person. The most important thing is your children learn how to appreciate the effort and experience the difficulty and learn how
to work with others to get things done.

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

As I mentioned earlier in this article, these challenges are not unique to India, this is global parenting challenge, it is our challenge, bringing up our kids with an inner self-worth value system, such that they grow up to be more better more compassionate custodians of this planet.

-Beejal Parmar