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              The Purpose of life 1. Introduction to the purpose of life Every now and again, we hear the clichéd question, ‘What is...

The purpose of life

              The Purpose of life

Purpose and meaning of life

1. Introduction to the purpose of life

Every now and again, we hear the clichéd question, ‘What is the meaning of life?’ or ‘What is the purpose of life?’ or ‘Why are we born?’. In most cases, we have our own agenda on what our purpose in life is. However from a spiritual perspective, there are two generic reasons why we are born. These reasons define the purpose of our lives at the most basic level.  They are:
  • To complete the give-and-take account we have with various people.
  • To make spiritual progress with the final aim of merging into God and therefore getting out of the cycle of birth and death.

2. Completing our give-and-take account

Over many lifetimes, we accumulate many give-and-take accounts that are a direct result of our deeds and actions. The accounts may be positive or negative depending on the positive or negative nature of our actions. As a rule of thumb, in the current era approximately 65% of our lives are destined (not within our control) and 35% of our lives are governed by our own freewill. All major events in our life are by and large destined. These events include our birth, the family we are born into, the person (or persons) we marry, the children we have, serious illnesses and the time of our death. The happiness and pain that we give and receive from loved ones and acquaintances are by and large simply a case of prior give-and-take accounts directing the way relationships unravel and play out.


However even our destiny in the current lifetime is just a fraction of the accumulated give-and take account that we amass over many lifetimes.
In our lifetime, while we do complete our give-and-take account and destiny earmarked for this particular lifetime of ours, we also end up creating more accounts by using our wilful action. This in turn finally adds up to our overall give-and-take account known as the accumulated account. As a result, we have to be born again after death to settle further give-and-take accounts and are stuck in the cycle of birth and death.
Refer to the article on, ‘Liberation from the cycle of birth and death’ as it explains how we get stuck in the cycle of birth and death.

3. Making spiritual progress

Samashti spiritual level refers to the spiritual level attained through spiritual practice for the sake of society (samashti sādhanā), while vyashti spiritual practice refers to the spiritual level attained through individual spiritual practice (vyashti sādhanā). In the current times, spiritual progress for the sake of society has 70% importance while individual spiritual practice has 30% importance.
The ultimate in spiritual development in any Spiritual path is merging with God. ‘Merging with God’ means experiencing God within us and all around us and not identifying with our five senses, mind and intellect. This happens at the 100% spiritual level. Most people in today’s world are at the 20-25% spiritual level and are disinclined to any spiritual practice for spiritual development. They also heavily identify with their 5 senses, mind and intellect. This is reflected in our lives when we focus mainly on our looks or are arrogant about our intelligence or success.
By spiritual practice when we grow to the spiritual level of 60% (samashṭi) or 70% (vyashṭi), we are liberated from the cycle of birth and death. After this spiritual level, we can settle whatever remaining give-and-take accounts we have from the higher subtle realms of Maharlok and above. Sometimes however, people above the 60% (samashti) or 70% (vyashti) spiritual level may choose to be born on Earth to guide humanity in Spirituality.

Spiritual development is only possible through spiritual practice which conforms to the six basic principles of spiritual practice. Spiritual paths that do not conform to the six basic principles of spiritual practice lead to stagnation in an individual’s spiritual development.

4. What does this mean in terms of our life goals?

Most of us have our own life goals. They may include becoming a doctor, being rich and famous or representing one’s country in a certain field. Whatever the goal is for the vast majority of us, more often than not, it is predominantly a worldly one. Our entire education system is set up to help us pursue these worldly goals. As parents too, we instill the same worldly purpose in our children by encouraging them to study and enter professions that give them more benefits monetarily as compared with one’s own profession.
One may ask, “How does having these worldly goals reconcile with the spiritual purpose of life and the reason for our birth on Earth?”
The answer is quite simple. We strive for worldly goals primarily to achieve satisfaction and happiness. The pursuit of the elusive ‘superlative and lasting happiness’ is intrinsically what drives all our actions. However even after we accomplish our worldly goals, the resultant happiness and satisfaction is short lived, we then search for the next dream to chase.
‘Superlative and lasting happiness’ can only be attained through spiritual practice which conforms to the six basic principles of spiritual practice. The highest form of happiness which is Bliss (Ānand) is an aspect of God. When we merge into Him we too experience perpetual Bliss.
This does not mean that we have to give up what we are doing and just focus on spiritual practice. What it does mean is that only by introducing spiritual practice in conjunction with worldly life are we likely to experience superlative and lasting happiness. The benefits of spiritual practice have been discussed in detail in our section on ‘Spiritual research for lasting happiness’.
In short, the more our life goals are in line with the intent of spiritual development, the more rich our lives become and the less pain we experience from life. The following is an example of how our perspective in life changes as we develop and mature spiritually.

5. Example of how a worldly life can work with spiritual goals

In SSRF, we have a number of volunteers, who serve God by offering their time and work experience. For example:
  • One of our members is an IT consultant and looks after the technical aspects of the website during his free time.
  • One of the members of the editorial team is a psychiatrist and helps in checking the information being uploaded from a medical and spiritual standpoint.
  • Another member of SSRF travels to different countries on work. She uses her free time to tell other like-minded organisations in that country about the website.
  • A housewife helps to prepare refreshments for spiritual gatherings.
Members of SSRF have seen a quantum positive change in their lives when they sprinkle Spirituality throughout their lives. One of the key differences is an increase in happiness and a reduction in sadness. Even when SSRF members encounter a situation that should be painful or traumatic, they have experienced being shielded from the pain.

6. What is wrong with being born again and again?

Sometimes people think, “What is wrong in being born again and again?”
As we go deeper into Kaliyug (the Era of Strife), the current era of the Universe, life will be mostly riddled with problems and pain. Spiritual research has shown that worldwide, the average human being is happy only 30% of the time while 40% of the time he is unhappy. The remaining 30% of the time a person is in a neutral state where he does not experience happiness or unhappiness. For example, when one is walking on the road or doing some mundane task etc. and not having happy or unhappy thoughts.
The primary reason for this is because most people are at a lower spiritual level. Therefore our decisions and actions quite often give others pain or end up increasing the Raja and Tama in the environment. As a result, we end up accumulating negative karma or give-and-take accounts. Therefore for most of humanity our subsequent births will be more painful than our current.
While the world has made giant steps in economic, scientific and technical progress, we are poorer than previous generations in terms of happiness which is our most basic meaning in life.
Given that all of us want happiness; rebirth and future lives will not give us the superlative and lasting happiness we desire. Only spiritual evolvement and merging into God will provide us with sustainable and lasting happiness.

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 Important Features of Indian Society (Caste-Stratified Society) 1.  Segmental Division of Society: The Indian society stands div...

Important Features of Indian Society (Caste-Stratified Society)

 Important Features of Indian Society (Caste-Stratified Society)


1. Segmental Division of Society:

The Indian society stands divided into several castes and the position of each caste is based on traditional importance. The position of each individual is related to the position of his caste group and right at the time of his birth he becomes a member of either a high caste or a low caste.
Each caste group has a definite and determinate set of rules in respect of relation with other castes. Usually inter-caste marriages are prohibited and no one can ever get out of his caste.

2. Social and Religious Hierarchy:

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Each caste group stands alone as a particular social group. For example, several castes are considered to be Brahmin castes while several others are considered to be Kashtriya castes.
Some castes are considered to be higher castes while others are considered to be lower castes. All the castes are bound by a well defined system of social and religious functions and relations. Social and religious hierarchy runs along the caste hierarchy.

3. Restrictions of Food-sharing and Social-intercourse:

The members of each social group are involved in exchange of relations among themselves. The higher class always tries to secure the formal purity of his caste. Each caste has its own caste culture which defines the food sharing and social intercourse rules which are to be followed by the members of the caste.

4. Endogamy System:

Each person gets placed in a particular caste at the time of his birth and he remains a member of his caste group throughout his life. Each member can marry persons belonging to his own caste groups. People of a Kshatriya caste can marry only in other Kshatriya castes. Usually no one can marry in his own sub-caste.

5. Caste-based Occupational Groups:

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Traditionally castes in the Indian society have been inseparably associated with several professions. Parental occupation is always considered a good and essential occupation for the new generation. Only the son of a purohit or pundit can perform the functions of a purohit or pundit.

6. Civil and Religious Disabilities:

Right from ancient times, the member of each class, particularly the members belonging to the lower class have to live with certain disabilities. A system of civil and religious disabilities has been traditionally associated with different caste groups. In ancient India persons belonging to some low castes were even not allowed to enter the cities and they were even not allowed to enter the schools.
Even some people used to be denied the right to study Vedas and other religious scriptures. As such several civil and religious disabilities were part and parcel of the Indian caste system and consequently of the Indian system of social stratification.
The Constitution of India prohibits inequalities and discriminations based upon caste, colour, creed, religion, race, sex, place of birth and any similar factor. Untouchability is a crime. Equal citizenship, equal rights and equal opportunities for development have been granted to all persons.
However, some Special protections have been given to the persons belonging to the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes. This has been done to secure social equality in Indian society.
Indian society has been traditionally a caste-based stratified society. In the past, such stratification acted as a source of inequalities and exploitation of members of some castes by the members of the so-called high castes.
Now the system has been changing and the Constitution of India has laid down several laws for securing the objective of social, economic political justice and equality of status and opportunity for all. Caste based rigid social stratification has been now undergoing changes and the role of the caste is getting diluted in the Indian society.

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         Indian Society and Ways of Living Hierarchy India is a hierarchical society. Whether in north India or south India, Hind...

Indian Society and Ways of Living

         Indian Society and Ways of Living


Hierarchy

India is a hierarchical society. Whether in north India or south India, Hindu or Muslim, urban or village, virtually all things, people, and social groups are ranked according to various essential qualities. Although India is a political democracy, notions of complete equality are seldom evident in daily life.
Societal hierarchy is evident in caste groups, amongst individuals, and in family and kinship groups. Castes are primarily associated with Hinduism, but caste-like groups also exist among Muslims, Indian, Christians, and other religious communities. Within most villages or towns, everyone knows the relative rankings of each locally represented caste, and behavior is constantly shaped by this knowledge.
Individuals are also ranked according to their wealth and power. For example, some powerful people, or “big men,” sit confidently on chairs, while “little men” come before them to make requests, either standing or squatting not presuming to sit beside a man of high status as an equal.
Hierarchy plays an important role within families and kinship groupings also, where men outrank women of similar age, and senior relatives outrank junior relatives. Formal respect is accorded family members—for example, in northern India, a daughter-in-law shows deference to her husband, to all senior in-laws, and to all daughters of the household. Siblings, too, recognize age differences, with younger siblings addressing older siblings by respectful terms rather than by name.

Purity and Pollution

Many status differences in Indian society are expressed in terms of ritual purity and pollution, complex notions that vary greatly among different castes, religious groups, and regions. Generally, high status is associated with purity and low status with pollution. Some kinds of purity are inherent; for example, a member of a high-ranking Brahmin, or priestly, caste is born with more inherent purity than someone born into a low-ranking sweeper, or scavenger, caste. Other kinds of purity are more transitory—for example, a Brahmin who has just taken a bath is more ritually pure than a Brahmin who has not bathed for a day.
Purity is associated with ritual cleanliness—daily bathing in flowing water, dressing in freshly laundered clothes, eating only the foods appropriate for one’s caste, and avoiding physical contact with people of significantly lower rank or with impure substances, such as the bodily wastes of another adult. Involvement with the products of death or violence is usually ritually polluting.

Social Interdependence

One of the great themes pervading Indian life is social interdependence. People are born into groups—families, clans, subcastes, castes, and religious communities—and feel a deep sense of inseparability from these groups. People are deeply involved with others, and for many, the greatest fear is the possibility of being left alone, without social support. Psychologically, family members typically experience intense emotional interdependence. Economic activities, too, are deeply imbedded in a social nexus. Through a multitude of kinship ties, each person is linked with kin in villages and towns near and far. Almost everywhere a person goes, he can find a relative from whom he can expect moral and practical support.
In every activity, social ties can help a person and the absence of them can bring failure. Seldom do people carry out even the simplest tasks on their own. When a small child eats, his mother puts the food into his mouth with her own hand. When a girl brings water home from the well in pots on her head, someone helps her unload the pots. A student hopes that an influential relative or friend can facilitate his college admission. A young person anticipates that parents will arrange his or her marriage. Finally, a person facing death expects that relatives will conduct the proper funeral rites ensuring his own smooth passage to the next stage of existence and reaffirming social ties among mourners.
This sense of interdependence extends into the theological realm. From birth onward, a child learns that his “fate” has been “written” by divine forces and that his life is shaped by powerful deities with whom an ongoing relationship must be maintained.

Family and Kinship

Family Ideals

The essential themes of Indian cultural life are learned within the bosom of a family. The joint family is highly valued, ideally consisting of several generations residing, working, eating, and worshiping together. Such families include men related through the male line, along with their wives, children, and unmarried daughters. A wife usually lives with her husband’s relatives, although she retains important bonds with her natal family. Even in rapidly modernizing India, the traditional joint household remains for most Indians the primary social force, in both ideal and practice.
Large families tend to be flexible and well suited to modern Indian life, especially for the more than two-thirds of Indians who are involved in agriculture. As in most primarily agricultural societies, cooperating kin help provide mutual economic security. The joint family is also common in cities, where kinship ties are often crucial to obtaining employment or financial assistance. Many prominent families, such as the Tatas, Birlas, and Sarabhais, retain joint family arrangements as they cooperate in controlling major financial empires.
The ancient ideal of the joint family retains its power, but today actual living arrangements vary widely. Many Indians live in nuclear families—-a couple with their unmarried children—-but belong to strong networks of beneficial kinship ties. Often, clusters of relatives live as neighbors, responding readily to their kinship obligations.
As they expand, joint families typically divide into smaller units, which gradually grow into new joint families, continuing a perpetual cycle. Today, some family members may move about to take advantage of job opportunities, typically sending money home to the larger family.

Family Authority and Harmony

In the Indian household, lines of hierarchy and authority are clearly drawn, and ideals of conduct help maintain family harmony. [i] All family members are socialized to accept the authority of those above them in the hierarchy. The eldest male acts as family head, and his wife supervises her daughters-in-law, among whom the youngest has the least authority. Reciprocally, those in authority accept responsibility for meeting the needs of other family members.
Family loyalty is a deeply held ideal, and family unity is emphasized, especially in distinction to those outside the kinship circle. Inside the household, ties between spouses and between parents and their own children are de-emphasized to enhance a wider sense of family harmony. For example, open displays of affection between husbands and wives are considered highly improper.
Traditionally, males have controlled key family resources, such as land or businesses, especially in high-status groups. Following traditional Hindu law, women did not inherit real estate and were thus beholden to their male kin who controlled land and buildings. Under Muslim customary law, women can—and do—inherit real estate, but their shares have typically been smaller than those of males. Modern legislation allows all Indian women to inherit real estate. Traditionally, for those families who could afford it, women have controlled some wealth in the form of precious jewelry.

Veiling and the Seclusion of Women

A significant aspect of Indian family life is purdah (from Hindi parda, or “curtain”), or the veiling and seclusion of women. In much of northern and central India, particularly in rural areas, Hindu and Muslim women follow complex rules of veiling the body and avoidance of public appearance, especially before relatives linked by marriage and before strange men. Purdah practices are linked to patterns of authority and harmony within the family. Hindu and Muslim purdah observances differ in certain key ways, but female modesty and decorum as well as concepts of family honor and prestige are essential to the various forms of purdah. Purdah restrictions are generally stronger for women of conservative high-status families. [ii] Restriction and restraint for women in virtually every aspect of life are essential to purdah, limiting women’s access to power and to the control of vital resources in a male-dominated society. Sequestered women should conceal their bodies and even their faces with modest clothing and veils before certain categories of people, avoid extramarital relations, and move about in public only with a male escort. Poor and low-status women often practice attenuated versions of veiling as they work in the fields and on construction gangs.
Hindu women of conservative families veil their faces and remain silent in the presence of older male in-laws, both at home and in the community. A young daughter-in-law even veils from her mother-inlaw. These practices emphasize respect relationships, limit unapproved encounters, and enhance family lines of authority.
For Muslims, veiling is especially stressed outside the home, where a conservative woman may wear an all-enveloping black burka. Such purdah shelters women—-and the sexual inviolability of the family-— from unrelated unknown men.
In south India, purdah has been little practiced, except in certain minority groups. In northern and central India today, purdah practices are diminishing, and among urbanites and even the rural elite, they are rapidly vanishing. Chastity and female modesty are still highly valued, but as education and employment opportunities for women increase, veiling has all but disappeared in progressive circles.

Life Passages

The birth of an infant is celebrated with rites of welcome and blessing, typically much more elaborate for a boy than for a girl. Although India boasts many eminent women and was once led by a powerful woman prime minister, Indira Gandhi, and while goddesses are extensively worshiped in Hindu rituals, statistics reveal that girls are, in fact, disadvantaged in India. The 2001 Census counted only 933 females per 1000 males, reflecting sex-selective abortion, poorer medical care and nutrition, and occasional infanticide targeting females. [iii] Parents favor boys because their value in agricultural activities tends to be higher, and after marriage a boy continues residing with his parents, supporting them as they age. In contrast, a girl drains family resources, especially when a large dowry goes with her to her husband’s home. In recent decades, demands for dowries have become quite exorbitant in certain groups.
Marriage is deemed essential for virtually everyone in India, marking the great watershed in life for the individual. For most of Hindu northern and central India, marriages are arranged within the caste between unrelated young people who may never have met. Among some south Indians communities and many Muslims, families seek to strengthen existing kin ties through marriages with cousins whenever possible. For every parent, finding the perfect partner for one’s child is a challenging task. People use their existing social networks, and increasingly, matrimonial newspaper advertisements. The advertisements usually announce religion, caste, educational qualifications, physical features, and earning capacity, and may hint at dowry size (even though giving or accepting dowries is actually illegal).
Among the highly educated, brides and grooms sometimes find each other in college or professional settings. So-called love marriages are becoming less scandalous than in previous years. Among Indian residents of North America, brides and grooms often meet through South Asian matrimonial websites. Many self-arranged marriages link couples of different castes but similar socioeconomic status.
Usually, a bride lives with her husband in his parental home, where she should accept the authority of his senior relatives, perform household duties, and produce children—especially sons—to enhance his family line. Ideally, she honors her husband, proudly wears the cosmetic adornments of a married woman, and cheerfully fulfills her new role. If she is fortunate, her husband will treat her with consideration, treasure her contributions to his household, and allow her continuing contact with her natal relatives. For many young wives, this is a difficult transition. While some negative stigma is still attached to women’s employment in many circles, an increasing number of women are working in a variety of occupations.
Death causes the restructuring of any family. The demise of a woman’s husband brings the dreaded status of inauspicious widowhood. Widows of low-status groups have always been allowed to remarry, but widows of high rank have been expected to remain chaste until death.

Caste and Class

Varna, Caste, and Other Divisions

Social inequality exists throughout the world, but perhaps nowhere has inequality been so elaborately constructed as in the Indian institution of caste. Caste has existed for many centuries, but in the modern period it has been severely criticized and is undergoing significant change.
Castes are ranked, named, endogamous (in-marrying) groups, membership in which is achieved by birth. There are thousands of castes and subcastes in India, involving hundreds of millions of people. These large kinship-based groups are fundamental to South Asian social structure. Caste membership provides a sense of belonging to a recognized group from whom support can be expected in a variety of situations.
The word caste derives from the Portuguese casta, meaning species, race, or kind. Among Indian terms sometimes translated as caste are varna, jati, jat, biradri, and samaj. Varna, or color, actually refers to four large categories that include numerous castes. The other terms refer to castes and subdivisions of castes often called subcastes.
Many castes are associated with traditional occupations, such as priests, potters, barbers, carpenters, leatherworkers, butchers, and launderers. Members of higher-ranking castes tend to be more prosperous than members of lower-ranking castes, who often endure poverty and social disadvantage. The so-called “Untouchables” were traditionally relegated to polluting tasks. Since 1935, “Untouchables” have been known as “Scheduled Castes,” and Mahatma Gandhi called them Harijans, or “Children of God.” Today, the politically correct term for these groups, who make up some 16% of the population, is Dalit, or “Oppressed.” Other groups, usually called tribes (often referred to as “Scheduled Tribes”) are also integrated into the caste system to varying degrees.
In past decades, Dalits in certain areas had to display extreme deference to high-status people and were barred from most temples and wells. Such degrading discrimination was outlawed under legislation passed during British rule and was repudiated by preindependence reform movements led by Mahatma Gandhi and Bhimrao Ramji (B.R.) Ambedkar, a Dalit leader. After independence in 1947, Dr. Ambedkar almost single-handedly wrote India’s constitution, including provisions barring caste-based discrimination. However, Dalits as a group still suffer significant disadvantages, especially in rural areas.
Within castes, explicit standards are maintained. Rules of marriage, diet, dress, occupation, and other behaviors are enforced, often by a caste council (panchayat). Infringements can be punished by fines and temporary or permanent outcasting. Individuals and caste groups can hope to rise slowly on the hierarchy through economic success and adoption of high-caste behaviors. However, it is virtually impossible for an individual to raise his own status by falsely claiming to belong to a higher caste; a deception of this kind is easily discovered.
In rural areas, many low-caste people still suffer from landlessness, unemployment, and discriminatory practices. In the growing cities, however, caste affiliations are often unknown to casual associates, and traditional restrictions on intercaste interactions are fading fast. In some urbane circles, intercaste marriages linking mates of similar class status have become acceptable. Correlations between caste and occupations are declining rapidly.
In recent years, key changes have occurred in caste observances. It is now legally and socially unacceptable to openly advocate any caste’s superiority or inferiority, and lower caste groups are flexing their political muscle. Even as traditional hierarchies weaken, caste identities are being reinforced, especially among disadvantaged groups with rights to special educational benefits and substantial quotas reserved for them of electoral offices and government jobs. In protest against Hinduism’s rigid rankings, thousands of Dalits have embraced Buddhism, following the example of the revered B.R. Ambedkar. [iv]

Classes

Most Indians reside in villages, where caste and class affiliations overlap. Large landholders are overwhelmingly upper caste, and smallscale farmers middle caste, while landless laborers typically belong to the lowest-ranking castes. These groups tend to form a three-level class system of stratification in rural areas, and members of the groups are drawing together within regions across caste lines in order to enhance their economic and political power. For example, since the late 1960s, some of the middle-ranking cultivating castes of northern India, spurred by competition with higher-caste landed elites, have cooperated politically in order to advance their common economic interests.v In cities, class lines adhere less obviously to caste affiliations, as vested interests strongly crosscut caste boundaries.
When looking at India as a whole, defining classes is a difficult task, rife with vague standards. According to various estimates, the upper classes include about one percent of the population, or some ten million people, encompassing wealthy property owners, industrialists, former royalty, top executives, and prosperous entrepreneurs. Slightly below them are the many millions of the upper middle class. At the other end of the scale is approximately half of India’s population, including low-level workers of many kinds, as well as hundreds of millions of extremely poor people, who endure grossly inadequate housing and education and many other economic hardships.
But the big development in India is the rapid expansion of a prosperous middle class increasingly dictating the country’s political and economic direction. [vi] Estimated at perhaps 300 million people—-more than the entire population of the United States-—this new vanguard, straddling town and countryside and all religious communities, is mobile, driven, consumer-oriented, and, to some extent, forward-looking. This group includes prosperous farmers, white-collar workers, business and professional people, military personnel, and a multitude of others, all enjoying decent homes, reasonable incomes, and educated and healthy children. Most own televisions and telephones, and many possess cars and computers. Large numbers have close ties with prosperous relatives living abroad.

Village Structure and Unity

About three-fourths of India’s people live in some 500,000 villages, where India’s most basic business—agriculture takes place. Most villages have fewer than 1,000 inhabitants, but some have as many as 5,000 people. Indian villages are often quite complex and are not isolated socially or economically. Most villages include a multiplicity of economic, caste, kinship, occupational, and even religious groups linked vertically within each settlement. Residents typically range from priests and cultivators to merchants, artisans, and laborers. Various crucial horizontal linkages connect each village with many others and with urban areas both near and far. In daily life and at colorful festivals and rituals, members of various groups provide essential goods and services for one another.
Traditionally, villages often recognized a headman and a panchayat, a council composed of important local men. Usually, disputes were adjudicated within the village, with infrequent recourse to the police or courts. Today, the government supports an elective panchayat and headman system, which is distinct from the traditional system, and, in many cases, mandates the inclusion of members who are women or very low caste. According to a schedule rotating every few years, the head of the council of a certain percentage of villages must be a woman or a Dalit. State and federal government regulations increasingly intrude into village life, diminishing traditional systems of authority. Further, dissent and competitiveness seem to have increased in many parts of rural India as a result of the expanding involvement of villagers with the wider world via travel, work, education, and television, and increased pressure on land and resources as village populations grow.

Urban Life

The acceleration of urbanization is profoundly affecting the transformation of Indian society. Slightly more than one-quarter of the country’s population is urban. Mumbai (Bombay) is currently the sixth largest urban area in the world at 18 million, and Kolkata (Calcutta) ranks fourteenth at 13 million. In recent years, India’s largest cities have grown at twice the rate of its small towns and villages, with many of the increases due to rural-urban migration.
The largest cities are densely populated, congested, noisy, polluted, and deficient in clean water, electricity, sanitation, and decent housing. Slums abound, often cheek-by-jowl with luxury apartment buildings, with the roads overrun with pedestrians, cattle, refuse, and vehicles spewing diesel fumes.
Traditional caste hierarchies are weak in cities, but caste ties remain important, as scarce jobs are often obtained through caste fellows, relatives, and friends. Ingenuity and tenacity characterize poor urban workers supporting themselves through a multitude of tasks as entrepreneurs, petty traders, and menial laborers.
The ranks of the growing middle class are increasingly evident in cities, where educational and employment opportunities benefit them. For them, as for all in the city, linkages are affirmed through neighborhood solidarity, voluntary associations, and festival celebrations.
Cities, of course, are the great hubs of commerce, education, science, politics, and government, upon which the functioning of the nation depends. India’s movie industry is the world’s largest, centered in Mumbai and Chennai, and popular television stations are proliferating. These bring vivid depictions of urban lifestyles to small-town dwellers and villagers all over the country, affecting the aspirations of millions.
Social revolutions, too, receive the support of urban visionaries, such as those shaping the growing women’s movement. Largely led by educated urban women, the movement seeks gender justice on a wide variety of issues, focusing particularly on the escalating issue of dowry-related murders of young wives, which number in the thousands annually. The overwhelming economic needs of poor female workers are being addressed by organizations such as the Self-Employed Women’s Association (SEWA) of Ahmedabad, led by Ela Bhatt.

Future Trends

Now numbering over one billion, India’s population grew by more than 18 million—the equivalent of an Australia—every year over the past decade. In ten years, the most populous state, Uttar Pradesh, expanded more than 25 percent to some 166 million, equal to 60 percent of the population of the United States. India supports a population more than three and a half times the size of the American population in an area about one-third the size. Family planning is gaining in popularity, so the rate of population increase is gradually declining, but it is estimated that by the year 2050, India’s people will number some 1.5 billion, and India will have surpassed China as the world’s most populous nation.
In India’s vociferous democracy, different groups are increasingly demanding their share of scarce resources and benefits. While new agricultural crops and techniques are expanding productivity, forests, rangeland, and water tables are diminishing. As competition grows, political, social, ecological, and economic issues are hotly contested. Justice in matters pertaining to class, gender, and access to desirable resources remains an elusive goal.
India is but one of many nations facing these crucial problems and is not alone in seeking solutions. For many centuries, the people of India have shown strength in creating manageable order from complexity, bringing together widely disparate groups in structured efforts to benefit the wider society, encouraging harmony among people with divergent interests, knowing that close relatives and friends can rely upon each other, allocating different tasks to those with different skills, and striving to do what is morally right in the eyes of the divine and the community. These are some of the great strengths upon which Indian society can rely as it seeks to meet the challenges of the future.

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       ਇਨ੍ਹਾਂ ਕਾਰਨਾਂ ਕਰਕੇ ਔਰਤਾਂ ਦੇ ਝੜਦੇ ਹਨ ਤੇਜ਼ੀ ਨਾਲ ਵਾਲ Women hair fall reason : ਜਿਨ੍ਹਾਂ ਔਰਤਾਂ ਨੂੰ  ਵਾਲਾਂ ਦੇ ਝੜਨ ਦੀ ਸਮੱਸਿਆ  ਹੈ, ...

ਇਨ੍ਹਾਂ ਕਾਰਨਾਂ ਕਰਕੇ ਔਰਤਾਂ ਦੇ ਝੜਦੇ ਹਨ ਵਾਲ

       ਇਨ੍ਹਾਂ ਕਾਰਨਾਂ ਕਰਕੇ ਔਰਤਾਂ ਦੇ ਝੜਦੇ ਹਨ ਤੇਜ਼ੀ ਨਾਲ ਵਾਲ




Women hair fall reason : ਜਿਨ੍ਹਾਂ ਔਰਤਾਂ ਨੂੰ ਵਾਲਾਂ ਦੇ ਝੜਨ ਦੀ ਸਮੱਸਿਆ ਹੈ, ਖਾਸਤੌਰ ਤੋਂ ਤਦ ਜਦੋਂ ਕਿ ਇਹ ਇੱਕ ਜੈਨੇਟਿਕ ਪ੍ਰਵ੍ਰਿਤੀ ਹੈ ਤਾਂ ਉਨ੍ਹਾਂ ਵਿੱਚ ਬਹੁਤ ਛੋਟੀ ਉਮਰ ਵਿੱਚ ਗਰਭਨਿਰੋਧਕ ਗੋਲੀਆਂ ਲੈਣ ਨਾਲ ਵਾਲਾਂ ਦਾ ਝੜਨਾ ਸ਼ੁਰੂ ਹੋ ਸਕਦਾ ਹੈ। ਆਮਤੌਰ ਉੱਤੇ ਗਰਭਨਿਰੋਧਕ ਗੋਲੀਆਂ ਲੈਣਾ ਬੰਦ ਕਰਨ ਦੇ ਛੇ ਮਹੀਨੇ ਬਾਅਦ ਵਾਲ ਫਿਰ ਤੋਂ ਵਧ ਜਾਂਦੇ ਹਨ। ਔਰਤਾਂ ਵਿੱਚ ਵਾਲ ਝੜਨ ਦੇ ਅਜਿਹੇ ਹੀ ਕੁੱਝ ਪ੍ਰਮੁੱਖ ਕਾਰਨ ਅੱਜ ਅਸੀਂ ਤੁਹਾਨੂੰ ਦੱਸਣ ਜਾ ਰਹੇ ਹਾਂ।
Women hair fall reason
Women hair fall reason
Polycystic ovary syndrome (ਪੀਸੀਓ) — ਇਸ ਹਾਲਤ ਵਿੱਚ ਪੀੜਤ ਔਰਤਾਂ ਵਿੱਚ ਕਈ ਵੱਖਰਾ ਪ੍ਰਕਾਰ ਦੇ ਸੰਭਾਵਿਕ ਲੱਛਣ ਦਿੱਖ ਸਕਦੇ ਹਨ। ਜਿਨ੍ਹਾਂ ਵਿੱਚੋਂ ਇੱਕ ਵਾਲਾਂ ਦਾ ਝੜਨਾ ਵੀ ਹੋ ਸਕਦਾ ਹੈ। ਇਸ ਹਾਰਮੋਨ ਦੇ ਅਸੰਤੁਲਨ ਦੀ ਜਟਿਲਤਾ ਨੂੰ ਸਾਰਿਆਂ ਉਪਰਾਲਿਆਂ ਦੇ ਰਾਹੀ ਸੰਬੋਧਿਤ ਕਰਨਾ ਸਭ ਤੋਂ ਵਧੀਆ ਹੈ।Women hair fall reason
Women hair fall reason
ਗਰਭ ਅਵਸਥਾ ਜਾਂ ਬੱਚੇ ਦੇ ਜਨਮ — ਜਿਵੇਂ ਕਿ ਪਹਿਲਾਂ ਹੀ ਚਰਚਾ ਕੀਤੀ ਗਈ ਹੈ, ਕਿ ਕੁੱਝ ਔਰਤਾਂ ਨੂੰ ਹਾਰਮੋਨ ਵਿੱਚ ਉਤਾਰ ਚੜ੍ਹਾਅ ਦੀ ਵਜ੍ਹਾ ਕਰਕੇ ਆਪਣੇ ਵਾਲਾਂ ਵਿੱਚ ਬੜੇ ਬਦਲਾਅ ਦਾ ਅਨੁਭਵ ਹੁੰਦਾ ਹੈ। ਇਸ ਦਾ ਮਤਲਬ ਇੱਕੋ ਜਿਹੇ, ਸੰਘਣੇ ਵਾਲਾਂ ਦੀ ਆਸ਼ਾ ਘੁੰਗਰਾਲੇ ਜਾਂ ਸਿੱਧੇ ਵਾਲ ਅਤੇ ਅਕਸਰ ਵਾਲਾਂ ਦਾ ਝੜਨਾ ਹੋ ਸਕਦਾ ਹੈ। ਕੁੱਝ ਔਰਤਾਂ ਨੂੰ ਗਰਭ ਅਵਸਥਾ ਦੇ ਦੌਰਾਨ ਇਸ ਬਦਲਾਅ ਦਾ ਅਹਿਸਾਸ ਹੁੰਦਾ ਹੈਸ ਜਦੋਂ ਕਿ ਹੋਰ ਔਰਤਾਂ ਨੂੰ ਗਰਭ ਅਵਸਥਾ ਤੋਂ ਬਾਅਦ ਇਸ ਦਾ ਅਹਿਸਾਸ ਹੁੰਦਾ ਹੈ। ਜ਼ਿਆਦਾਤਰ ਮਾਮਲਿਆਂ ਵਿੱਚ, ਇਹ ਆਪਣੇ ਆਪ ਪੂਰੀ ਤਰ੍ਹਾਂ ਤੋਂ ਠੀਕ ਹੋ ਜਾਂਦੇ ਹਨ।Women hair fall reason

Women hair fall reason

ਥਾਇਰਾਈਡ ਰੋਗ — ਬਹੁਤ ਸਰਗਰਮ ਥਾਇਰਾਈਡ ਅਤੇ ਘੱਟ ਸਰਗਰਮ ਥਾਇਰਾਈਡ ਦੋਨੋਂ ਵਾਲਾਂ ਦੇ ਝੜਨ ਦਾ ਕਾਰਨ ਬਣ ਸਕਦੇ ਹਨ। ਥਾਇਰਾਈਡ ਅਸੰਤੁਲਨ ਦਾ ਨਿਦਾਨ ਇੱਕ ਪ੍ਰਯੋਗਸ਼ਾਲਾ ਪ੍ਰੀਖਿਆ ਦੇ ਰਾਹੀ ਤੁਹਾਡੇ ਡਾਕਟਰ ਦੁਆਰਾ ਕੀਤਾ ਜਾ ਸਕਦਾ ਹੈ। ਇਹ ਅਸੰਤੁਲਨ ਸਾਰਿਆਂ ਉਪਰਾਲਿਆਂ ਦੇ ਰਾਹੀ ਪੂਰੀ ਤਰ੍ਹਾਂ ਤੋਂ ਠੀਕ ਕੀਤੇ ਜਾ ਸਕਦੇ ਹਨ।Women hair fall reason

Women hair fall reason

ਪੋਸ਼ਕ ਖਾਣੇ ਦੀ ਕਮੀ — ਕਈ ਵਿਹਾਰਕ ਖੁਰਾਕ ਅਤੇ ਬਾਜ਼ਾਰ ਦੇ ਚਰਮ “ਵਿਸ਼ਹਰਣ” ਯੋਜਨਾਵਾਂ ਤੋਂ ਅਨਜਾਣੇ ਵਿੱਚ ਔਰਤਾਂ ਦੇ ਵਾਲਾਂ ਦੀ ਬਨਾਵਟ ਅਤੇ ਸੰਘਣੇਪਣ ਨੂੰ ਪ੍ਰਭਾਵਿਤ ਕਰਨਾ ਬਹੁਤ ਆਸਾਨ ਹੈ। ਆਮਤੌਰ ਉੱਤੇ, ਖਾਣੇ ਵਿੱਚ ਅਚਾਨਕ ਬਦਲਾਅ, ਵਿਸ਼ੇਸ਼ ਰੂਪ ਤੋਂ ਪ੍ਰੋਟੀਨ ਖਾਣੇ ਵਿੱਚ ਕਮੀ, ਚਰਮ ਕੈਲੋਰੀ ਰੋਕ ਜਾਂ ਇੱਕ ਮੁੱਖ ਤੌਰ ਉੱਤੇ ਜੰਕ ਫੂਡ ਦੇ ਸ਼ਾਕਾਹਾਰੀ ਭੋਜਨ ਨਾਲ ਪ੍ਰੋਟੀਨ ਦੀ ਕਮੀ ਦੇ ਕਾਰਨ ਭਾਰੀ ਰਾਸ਼ੀ ਵਿੱਚ ਵਾਲਾਂ ਦਾ ਝੜਨਾ ਸ਼ੁਰੂ ਹੋ ਸਕਦਾ ਹੈ।ਜੋ ਅਕਸਰ ਖਾਣੇ ਵਿੱਚ ਬਦਲਾਅ ਦੀ ਸ਼ੁਰੂਆਤ ਦੇ ਦੋ ਜਾਂ ਤਿੰਨ ਮਹੀਨੇ ਤੱਕ ਚੱਲਦਾ ਹੈ। ਆਪਣੇ ਖਾਣੇ ਲਈ ਇੱਕ ਉਚਿੱਤ ਸੰਤੁਲਨ ਬਣਾ ਕੇ ਵਾਲਾਂ ਦਾ ਝੜਨਾ ਬੰਦ ਕੀਤਾ ਜਾ ਸਕਦਾ ਹੈ।Women hair fall reason
ਥੈਰੇਪੀਆਂ — ਚਿੰਤਾ ਅਤੇ ਉਦਾਸੀ ਦੇ ਨਾਲ ਨਾਲ ਬਲੱਡ ਪ੍ਰੈਸ਼ਰ ਦੀ ਨੁਸਖ਼ੇ ਦੀਆਂ ਦਵਾਈਆਂ ਇੱਕ ਛੋਟੇ ਫ਼ੀਸਦੀ ਲੋਕਾਂ ਵਿੱਚ ਅਸਥਾਈ ਰੂਪ ਵਿੱਚ ਵਾਲਾਂ ਦੇ ਝੜਨ ਦਾ ਕਾਰਨ ਹੋ ਸਕਦੀ ਹੈ। ਔਰਤਾਂ ਲਈ ਇਹ ਜਾਣਨਾ ਮਹੱਤਵਪੂਰਣ ਹੈ, ਦੀ ਕਈ ਔਰਤਾਂ ਜਦੋਂ ਜੀਵਨ ਵਿੱਚ ਉਨ੍ਹਾਂ ਨੂੰ ਤਬਦੀਲੀ ਦੇ ਪ੍ਰਮੁੱਖ ਦੌਰ ਵਿੱਚ ਨੁਕਸਾਨ ਤੋਂ ਗੁਜ਼ਰਨਾ ਪੈਂਦਾ ਹੈ, ਤਦ ਉਹ ਮਨੋਦਸ਼ਾ-ਸਥਿਰਕਾਰੀ ਦਵਾਈਆਂ ਦਾ ਸਹਾਰਾ ਲੈਂਦੀਆਂ ਹਨ। ਜ਼ਿਆਦਾਤਰ ਮਨੋਦਸ਼ਾ-ਸਥਿਰ ਅਤੇ ਉਦਾਸੀ ਵਿਰੋਧੀ ਦਵਾਈਆਂ ਦੇ ਕਾਰਨ ਇਹ ਮਾੜੇ-ਪ੍ਰਭਾਵ ਪੈਦਾ ਹੋ ਸਕਦੇ ਹਨ।Women hair fall reason
ਸੀਰਮ ਆਇਰਨ ਦੀ ਕਮੀ — ਆਇਰਨ ਦੀ ਕਮੀ ਵਾਲਾਂ ਦੇ ਝੜਨੇ ਦਾ ਕਾਰਨ ਬਣ ਸਕਦੀ ਹੈ। ਜਿਨ੍ਹਾਂ ਔਰਤਾਂ ਨੂੰ ਅਕਸਰ ਬਹੁਤ ਜ਼ਿਆਦਾ ਜਾਂ ਜ਼ਰੂਰਤ ਤੋਂ ਜ਼ਿਆਦਾ ਮਾਸਿਕ ਸਤਰਾਵ ਹੁੰਦਾ ਹੈ, ਉਨ੍ਹਾਂ ਵਿੱਚ ਆਇਰਨ ਦੀ ਕਮੀ ਹੋ ਸਕਦੀ ਹੈ। ਇਸ ਦੀ ਕਮੀ ਦਾ ਪ੍ਰਯੋਗਸ਼ਾਲਾ ਵਿੱਚ ਪ੍ਰੀਖਣ ਦੁਆਰਾ ਪਤਾ ਲਗਾਇਆ ਜਾ ਸਕਦਾ ਹੈ ਅਤੇ ਪੂਰੀ ਖ਼ੁਰਾਕ ਦੇ ਨਾਲ ਠੀਕ ਕੀਤਾ ਜਾਂਦਾ ਹੈ।Women hair fall reason

Women hair fall reason

ਤਣਾਅ — ਤਣਾਅ ਵਾਲਾਂ ਦੇ ਝੜਨ ਸਬੰਧਿਤ ਇੱਕ ਦਿਲਚਸਪ ਕਾਰਨ ਹੈ। ਪ੍ਰਮੁੱਖ ਤਣਾਅ ਘਟਨਾ ਦੇ ਨਤੀਜੇ ਸਵਰੂਪ ਇਹ ਸਮੱਸਿਆਵਾਂ ਹੋ ਸਕਦੀਆਂ ਹਨ ਅਤੇ ਘਟਨਾ ਤੋਂ ਬਾਅਦ ਤਿੰਨ ਮਹੀਨੇ ਤੱਕ ਜਾਰੀ ਰਹਿੰਦੀ ਹੈ। ਨਾਲ ਹੀ ਤਿੰਨ ਮਹੀਨੇ ਤੋਂ ਬਾਅਦ ਫਿਰ ਤੋਂ ਵਾਲ ਵਧਣੇ ਸ਼ੁਰੂ ਕਰ ਸਕਦੇ ਹੋ। ਕਈ ਔਰਤਾਂ ਲੰਬੀ ਮਿਆਦ ਸ਼੍ਰੇਣੀ ਦੇ ਤਣਾਅ ਦਾ ਸਾਹਮਣਾ ਕਰਦੀਆਂ ਹਨ, ਅਤੇ ਉਨ੍ਹਾਂ ਦੀ ਜੈਨੇਟਿਕ ਪ੍ਰਵ੍ਰਿਤੀ ਉੱਤੇ ਇਸ ਪ੍ਰਕਾਰ ਦੇ ਤਣਾਅ ਤੋਂ ਸ਼ੁਰੂਵਾਤੀ Androgenic ਵਾਲਾਂ ਦਾ ਝੜਨਾ ਨਿਰਭਰ ਕਰ ਸਕਦਾ ਹੈ। ਵਾਲਾਂ ਨੂੰ ਝੜਨਾ ਰੋਕਣ ਦੇ ਲਈ, ਗਰਭਨਿਰੋਧਕ ਜਾਂ ਉਦਾਸੀ ਵਿਰੋਧੀ ਗੋਲੀਆਂ ਜਦੋਂ ਤੱਕ ਬਹੁਤ ਲੋੜ ਨਾ ਹੋ, ਲੈਣ ਤੋਂ ਬਚੋ।Women hair fall reason

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