The Past is a Teacher 'Not prison respect Past

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Just take deep breath and Imagine life as a classroom, Every time we regard our past, whether good or bad, if our past is bad we recall them again and again and cry; by this, we disrespect our teacher. Teacher means we learn from our past. If such incident didn't happen in past, today we are not what we have. By learning from past, we become what we have. If our past was good, we recall and cry and wish, "Please, past moments come back," but they never come back, and we feel bad and become sad. We need to not recall past because they never come back and we can't change the past. If we recall past, we have to respect past as a teacher. As we respect our teacher, we need to respect past as teacher taught many things; same past helps us to learn.life has a simple formula: look back and thank God, look ahead and trust God, and always respect Past and enjoy life and become a living, working monk . In conclusion life has a simple formula look back and thank God look ahead a...

How Hindu achieves Heaven?



Completely the Vedas and the Puranas do mention SVARGA and NARAKA. Svarga being derived from the su- varga = which simply means a good or pleasant state of being. And Naraka = beneficial suffering. According to the Puranas these are transient states in which our Karma is fast-tracked - either good or bad. But since these are compounded states they are IMPERMANENT and are unpleasant - since once we wasted our credit or deficit we return to earth to continue our spiritual evolution.

Indra and the other Devas achieve their temporary state of being in the heavenly worlds 🌍  (svarga) through the accomplishment of tremendously good deeds. So while the Vedas do mention the achievement of Svarga through good deeds - such as self-sacrifice for the advantage of others, these are paltry and petty states the attainment of which should be eschewed by the serious practitioner (sādhaka).

Comparing the Hindu hell realm to the monotheistic hell — the principle difference is that the Hindu hells are places where people are punished for crimes only. The others faithful hells are mainly for the disbelievers - i.e. those guilty of “thought-crime.”

But from a philosophical point of view (Vedānta) both heaven and hell are metaphorical states which are used to encourage or dissuade the uneducated, common folk from beneficial and harmful acts — they are the simplistic carrot and stick - not to be taken literally. Neither states are ever communicated, commented on or promoted in civil, ethical oration.

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The Past is a Teacher 'Not prison respect Past

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