3/15/23, 3/22/23, 3/29/23
- Tamas (laziness/lethargy): stress manifests as escapism
- Rajas (aggression): manifests as anxiousness, frustration- amplifies stress
- Sattva (balance): the mind is balanced and stress manifests as motivation to meet the challenge and deal with the problem head-on
- The more we can train our minds (sattva) the more our minds can be cool-calm-collected
- When we are trying to move to sattva, we can’t just jump from tamas to sattva. We have to move from tamas to rajas to sattva
- Moving from tamas to rajas
- Acceptance: the circumstances we are faced with in life are beyond our control- it’s inevitable had to happen that way
- Law of Karma 1) Every cause has an effect 2) There is a do-er of every action 3) Every action is the result of an action
- Examples: wrongful conviction, 2 people born at the exact same time- one the song of a beggar and one the song of a king– this is a chain of causes and effects from previous lifetimes
- When we accept a situation we should see the silver lining- seemingly negative, surprisingly positive
- In summary: 1) can’t control circumstances 2) find silver lining 3) find purpose
- Finding the motivation to act comes from our ability to know what’s important (prioritization)
- Visualize your own funeral- what would we want people to say about us
- Review from last week- moving from tamas to rajas comes from acceptance- accept the circumstance we are faced with in the present- confront the challenge head-on
- Try and overcome the feeling of “why is this happening to me”
- It could not have happened in any other way- find the positives in the circumstance- an opportunity for growth
- Plan–
- Prioritize- understanding what is important- ask myself “Is what i am about to do taking me where i genuinely want to go in life?”
- What we geniunely want in life is to be virtuous
- When we are focused on a goal (i.e. becoming a doctor) don’t just focus on the final outcome but the habits and virtues of the journey
- Review of the Eisenhower Matrix: (https://www.productplan.com/glossary/eisenhower-matrix/)
- First Quadrant (upper left): urgent and important
- Second Quadrant (upper right): important, but not urgent
- Third Quadrant (lower left): not important, but urgent
- Fourth Quadrant (lower right): neither important nor urgent
- Spend more time in Q2- where virtue development happens
- In order to make good habits easy to engage in: 1) craft environment that forces these habits to be easy to engage in 2) break down a good habit into manageable chunks
Moving from tamas to rajas: accept, plan, visualize
- Focus on effort-redefine success to be something within your control (not result driven i.e. sticking to a schedule)
- Focus on intent- be motivated by love/selflessness instead of selfishness (this naturally reduces stress because then the action itself becomes its own reward)
- Focus on the present- don’t project into the future and also have the faith that Bhagavanji is watching over us– be the confidence that we can overcome any challenge presented to us