Whether you're commuting by a car, train, bus or flight, the manner in which people around you will drive or behave will often cause inconvenience to you.
These are the very moments in which you need to keep your utmost calm. Trying to instill basic civic sense among the unruly who do not fear the law is a lost cause.
It is very likely that the people you're trying to reason with are actually criminal minded individuals who neither fear the consequences of their actions nor the law.
There will always be a couple of seconds before the argument escalates when you can do your bit to de-escalate. In those few seconds, think about loved ones, think about who's eagerly waiting at home for you to return.
Shun the urge to indulge in road rage and train your mind to become a road sage.
@SanjeevSanskrit There is the concept of Manas Pooja' as mentioned in Nitya karma pooja prakash. It requires no physical objects but the bhakt and his bhakti only. This pooja not just serves the purpose but gets you closer to God because you are silent and no distractions.
@DearS_o_n Smile more.
Walk more.
Listen more.
Keep silence.
Be responsive.
Correct pose.
Stand straight.
Wake early.
Sleep early.
Less mobile.
More books.
Schedule things.
@pritika_9 Well , something similar happened with me back. I lost a branded jacket of my friend in a train journey and when I informed him ,he was too casual and nonchalant. I felt bad though and bought a similar new jacket and gifted him.
I came across a quote that said:
You'll always be brave in someone's mind and coward in another`s, strong to one and fragile to another, good to one and terrible to another. You will be seen as annoying to one and comforting to another. Some will feel anxious around you and some will find peace in your company. Some will see you as "too much" while others will see you as a gift. The world will look at you from their subjective point of view. The world is never going to agree on a definition of who you are. So you might as well live the way that feels true to your heart.
Indian households may be missing one of the biggest profit-booking opportunities of the last two decades in Gold and Silver.
As per estimates, Indian households currently hold over USD 5 trillion worth of gold.
Now imagine this: if households sell just 20% of their gold holdings, that’s nearly USD 1 trillion, or roughly ₹92 lakh crore coming back into the economy.
This single shift could trigger a massive Consumption boom, fuel a Real Estate Revival, push Equity Markets higher, and flood the Banking system with liquidityb.
More liquidity means more lending, faster capital formation, and ultimately accelerated economic and infrastructure development.
Sometimes, the biggest opportunity isn’t finding a new asset — it’s knowing when to exit an old one.