Tuesday, 12 August 2025

Supreme Court on Stray Dogs: Balancing Human Rights, Animal Rights and Safety in Delhi

The recent Supreme Court of India judgment directing the sheltering of all stray dogs in Delhi has stirred passionate debates. For animal lovers, it’s a victory for compassion and justice. For others, especially those concerned about safety and public health, it raises fears of inconvenience, disease and potential harm.

The underlying tension is not just about stray dogs—it’s about how we, as a society, balance human rights and animal rights in a complex, interdependent world.

Why This Debate Matters

Human rights are universally recognized as fundamental—protection of life, safety, livelihood and dignity. Animal rights, while historically overlooked, have increasingly found global recognition, advocating that animals deserve freedom from unnecessary suffering, cruelty and exploitation.

In India, these two sets of rights often intersect sharply, especially in urban spaces where human and animal populations live in close quarters. Stray dogs, in particular, have become both beloved companions to some and perceived threats to others.

The Indian Perspective: Service as Worship

Indian philosophy, across its diverse traditions, teaches that all life is sacred. From the Vedic view of animals as part of the cosmic order to the Buddhist and Jain emphasis on ahimsa (non-violence), there’s a long-standing moral foundation for protecting animals.

Many spiritual leaders have echoed the belief that service to a living being is service to God. This elevates animal welfare from being merely an act of kindness to being a moral and spiritual duty.

However, philosophy must walk hand-in-hand with practicality—respecting all life while ensuring that human safety, public health and order are not compromised.

The Social Challenges

  1. Public Safety Concerns – Reports of dog bites, especially involving children and the elderly, create genuine fear in communities.

  2. Health Risks – Rabies and other zoonotic diseases are still a reality in India, requiring strong vaccination drives and public awareness.

  3. Urban Space Management – Overcrowding in cities means limited safe zones for both humans and animals, increasing conflict.

  4. Public Perception Gap – Animal lovers and non-animal lovers often view the same situation through completely different emotional and moral lenses.

  5. Implementation Complexity – Sheltering thousands of stray dogs requires infrastructure, trained manpower, veterinary services and long-term funding.

Lessons from Other Countries

Many Western and Asian nations have faced similar challenges. Their solutions have included:

India can adapt these strategies while considering cultural nuances and economic realities.

Regulations & Compliance Requirements

Any humane stray management program must be backed by clear, enforceable regulations:

  1. Animal Birth Control (ABC) Rules Compliance – Ensuring sterilization and vaccination drives are carried out with transparency.

  2. Shelter Standards – Maintaining minimum space, hygiene and veterinary care as per the Animal Welfare Board of India (AWBI) guidelines.

  3. Community Participation Mandate – Encouraging RWAs (Resident Welfare Associations) to adopt responsible feeding and care practices without causing public nuisance.

  4. Grievance Redressal Mechanism – A clear, accessible system for addressing human–animal conflicts, overseen by municipal bodies.

  5. Penalties for Cruelty – Strengthening and enforcing laws under the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Act.

A Spiritually Anchored Path Forward

India’s strength has always been its deep-rooted spirituality—an understanding that all beings are part of the same cosmic family, the Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam (“the world is one family”). Our scriptures and sages have taught for millennia that the well-being of all creatures is essential for the balance of life itself.

Instead of viewing stray animals as a “problem” to be removed, we can approach them as fellow travelers in the journey of existence. This perspective shifts policy-making from fear and conflict to compassion and coexistence.

Key principles for a spiritually grounded solution:

  1. Seva (Service as Sacred Duty) – Sheltering, feeding and vaccinating animals should be seen not just as civic responsibility but as an offering to the Divine. Government, NGOs and citizens can participate in Seva Kendras—community hubs dedicated to stray animal welfare.

  2. Ahimsa (Non-violence as Policy) – Every intervention—be it sterilization, relocation or sheltering—must be done humanely, respecting the dignity and life of the animal.

  3. Daya & Karuna (Compassion in Action) – Encourage community participation where residents not only feed but also care for the health, hygiene and safe interaction zones for animals.

  4. Samatva (Balance in Rights) – Just as animals deserve freedom from suffering, humans have a right to safety and peaceful living. Policies must hold this equilibrium without allowing one to overpower the other.

  5. Samskara (Awareness & Education) – Introduce spiritual-ethical education in schools and community programs to nurture respect for all life from a young age, reducing conflict in the long term.

The Outcome:
Such a spiritually anchored approach does not just solve an urban management issue—it uplifts society’s collective consciousness. A city that coexists peacefully with its animals is also more likely to be compassionate in its human relationships, fostering social harmony.

In conclusion: The Supreme Court’s directive is an opportunity to redefine how we coexist with the beings who share our cities. It’s not a question of who is more important—humans or animals—but how we can create a framework where both thrive. By combining legal structure with spiritual wisdom, India can show the world that coexistence is not a compromise—it is an evolution of humanity.


Disclaimer: This article is intended for public awareness and discussion purposes. It does not represent legal advice. Readers are encouraged to consult official guidelines and authorities for detailed compliance requirements.


Monday, 11 August 2025

Boiragyo & Byabostha: The Forgotten Balance Between Free Thinking and Preservation

Have you noticed? People have stopped truly thinking for themselves. The air is filled with loud opinions, yet the mind is eerily silent.

I’m not one of them — and perhaps, if you’re reading this, neither are you.

In Indian mythology, Lord Shiva stands as the embodiment of Boiragyo — a free-thinking state of mind, untouched by the lure of materialism, unafraid to wander beyond the known. It’s not escapism. It’s clarity. The kind of mental liberation that makes service with no strings and return expected (Seva) and devotion (Bhakti) not duties, but natural extensions of one’s being.

There is no precise English translation for Boiragyo. It’s not just “detachment” — it’s a luminous independence of thought, a refusal to be enslaved by illusions. And the truth is, each of us carries a spark of it.

But here’s the paradox: humans have survived not on Boiragyo alone. We’re an intricate blend of mental strengths. The other great force, equally revered in mythology, is Byabostha, embodied by Lord Vishnu — the guardian of order, the preserver of life, the architect of stability. Without Byabostha, Boiragyo could drift into chaos. Without Boiragyo, Byabostha could calcify into lifeless routine.

When the two dance together, humanity thrives. When they fall out of step, we lose our rhythm.

The Blueprint Nature Gave Us

From a global perspective, human beings are nature’s most advanced tool — capable of intellect and emotion, able to shape the destiny of the planet. Nature doesn’t operate on quarterly reports; it thinks in Yugas. Each generation inherits not only a planet but a responsibility: to protect and evolve it.

At the granular level, that responsibility translates into daily decisions — how we think, feel, act and preserve. The Boiragyo mindset lets us see beyond conventions, question norms and envision better futures. The Byabostha mindset helps us preserve what matters and sustain the structures that hold life together.

In theory, they should work in unison. In practice, they’ve drifted apart.

The Modern Misalignment

Our age is dominated by a distorted Byabostha. Instead of preserving truth, beauty and harmony, we preserve comfort zones. Instead of sustaining what elevates life, we sustain habits that dull it.

Why?

  • Industrialization & Consumerism have equated “progress” with speed, convenience and acquisition.

  • Technology Dependence has outsourced not just our tasks but our mental agility and memory.

  • Fear of Loss makes us cling to safety and avoid risks that might lead to genuine growth.

Everyday Proof of the Drift

  • In Careers – We settle for high-paying but purposeless jobs because uncertainty feels like a threat.

  • In Relationships – We avoid emotional discomfort, ghost instead of confronting and prefer surface harmony over real connection.

  • In Health – We know what’s good for us (real food, movement, mindfulness) but choose what’s easy because breaking habits feels unbearable.

This isn’t preservation in the Vishnu sense — it’s stalling. A quiet surrender to mediocrity disguised as stability.

The Forgotten Strengths of Being Human

We are born with treasures: Love, Peace, Happiness, Purity of Soul and Energy. They’re not decorative values; they’re tools for survival and elevation.

Yet, these qualities fall into two categories:

QualityPrimary NatureHow It Lives in UsCurrent Misuse
LoveAttitudinal & ActionableActs of care, empathy, sacrificeReduced to convenience-based affection
PeaceState of Mind (needs upkeep)Calm clarity within chaosOutsourced to vacations & distractions
HappinessState of Mind (action influenced)Contentment beyond possessionsDependent on external validation
Purity of SoulAttitudinal & ActionableIntegrity in thought & deedCompromised for quick gains
EnergyAttitudinal & ActionablePhysical & mental vitalitySquandered on overstimulation

Where They Belong in the Mythic Balance

  • Boiragyo draws on: Peace, Happiness, Purity of Soul → fuels vision, clarity and fearless exploration.

  • Byabostha draws on: Love, Energy, Purity of Soul → sustains relationships, systems and collective stability.

Notice the overlap? Purity of Soul sits at the heart of both — the ethical spine without which vision becomes fantasy and preservation becomes corruption.

The Science Behind the Myth

Neuroscience echoes this ancient wisdom.

The problem? Modern life overstimulates the limbic system with fear and gratification, leaving the creative networks underused.

Breaking the Cycle

The goal isn’t to reject Byabostha. Without stability, free thinking collapses. But stability must serve vision — not suffocate it.

Small but radical shifts can restore the balance:

  • In work → Question the why, not just the how fast.

  • In relationships → Have the uncomfortable conversation instead of avoiding it.

  • In lifestyle → Pick the nourishing choice even when it’s inconvenient.

  • In thought → Practice mental minimalism — fewer distractions, deeper reflections.

Why It Matters Now

If we continue to choose preservation of comfort over preservation of truth, we risk becoming a civilisation that’s efficient but soulless, connected but shallow, informed but unwise.

Shiva and Vishnu were never rivals. One births the vision; the other nurtures it. Our modern tragedy is that we’ve built preservation systems without a guiding vision. We have order without purpose, and comfort without meaning.

The universe’s script is clear:
Free the mind before you organise the world.

Disclaimer

This article draws on Indian mythological symbolism and author's understanding as a philosophical framework, not as a theological claim. The psychological interpretations are for reflective purposes and not a substitute for professional mental health or spiritual guidance.

Monday, 4 August 2025

When Gods Fight: The Hidden Battle for Balance, Power and Purpose

Have You Heard Gods Fighting?

Yes — Gods. Not mortals. Not leaders. But the archetypal forces meant to safeguard, preserve, transform and realign humanity. When they clash, it’s not for vanity. It’s for balance and moral lessons. And what unfolds is the hidden war of purpose and learning.

The Forgotten Story: Shiva (Mahadeva) and Vishnu

There is a bit of God in every living being! In the cosmic theater of Indian myth, Shiva — the supreme knowledgeable, powerful, destroyer, transformer — and Vishnu — the preserver — have often embodied tension. It is not a battle of supremacy in the petty human sense, but a conflict of power, process and priority. Who comes first: transformation or preservation? Who ignites change and who holds the rebuilt world steady for balance and stability?

The truth is that neither is whole without the other. The knowledge and fierce insight of Mahadeva, without the stabilizing continuity of Vishnu with his multiple avatars, become chaos without a legacy. Preservation without the sharp fire of transformation becomes stagnation. Their clash, when it appears, is a necessary recalibration — not to crown a victor, but to restore dharma, the cosmic order or the fundamental principles in life.

Energy Behind the Clash: Adi Shakti

And yet even divine process needs fuel. Adi Shakti — the primal feminine energy, the unseen force — is the enabler. Without her, Shiva’s dance is a corpse and Vishnu’s calm is motionless. She is the surge that makes knowledge actionable, the pulse that gives preservation purpose, the power that allows transformation to manifest. Power, wisdom, maintenance — all require Shakti. In the cosmic equation of implementation, she is not ancillary; she is the system omnipresent. 

Energy can neither be created nor destroyed.

Gods at Loggerheads, Worlds in Tremor

So, if Gods can clash to re-anchor balance, what does it mean when the world outside reflects similar ruptures? The symbolic war becomes real in geopolitics, identity struggles, ideological fractures and humanitarian breakdowns signifying the ignorance and learning scarcity amongst leaders. When the divine archetypes are invoked, misused, weaponized or forgotten, the consequences cascade. The energy that should fuel awakening is diverted into justifying violence, preserving injustice or camouflaging ego as righteousness. Who Suffers??

From Myth to Today: Operation Sindoor and the Palestinian Crisis

In May 2025, Operation Sindoor emerged as a calculated and symbolic military response by India to persistent cross-border terror activities. Despite repeated international appeals and undeniable evidence of terrorism, inaction from the perpetrators' side left little room for patience. As a result, a retaliatory strike was carried out — strategically chosen in terms of time, space and target — reflecting the leadership’s prerogative to protect national interests and assert control over the narrative. The operation’s name, “Sindoor,” carried layered meaning — signifying not only a mark of power and sacrifice, but also evoking emotional and cultural symbolism, particularly linked to honor, widowhood and loss. That brings to the point that balance is important and needs to be restored through means as deemed fit while many views may signal it as a more assertive, cost-imposition military doctrine.

At the same time, across geography, the Palestinian conflict remains a profound example of what happens when preservation, identity, historical grievance and power collide without the balancing conscience of shared humanity. The humanitarian catastrophe in Gaza — massive displacement, food insecurity and collapse of basic services — is well documented, as are the international controversies over access to aid and alleged violations of law. 

There are many such instances and historic events to tell the stories of inner fight!

Both instances are not just political; they are symbolic fault lines. They mirror the cosmic tension: when transformation (retaliation, upheaval) meets preservation (identity, territory) and the enabling energy (compassion, justice) is fragmented or absent. The healing and balancing force needs to be invoked.

The Real Battlefield

The wars we see outside — whether named, televised or whispered in policy corridors — are reflections of the inner war: between ego and consciousness, inertia and evolution, self-preservation and collective well-being. When the divine forces within humanity (the Shiva of radical insight, the Vishnu of continuity, the Shakti of mobilizing will) are out of harmony, the outer world breaks.

Which God Are We Feeding?

Every choice, every narrative we propagate, every silence we keep, adds to one of those currents. Are we feeding the Shiva that destroys false constructs for the sake of a higher truth? The Vishnu that sustains systems that uphold dignity? The Shakti that energizes integrity into action? Or are we inadvertently empowering lesser selves that masquerade as divinity — ego dressed up as purpose, power disguised as protection?

Conclusion

So, have you heard Gods fighting? Listen closely. You’ll hear it not only in war zones or newsfeeds, but in your voice when you choose silence over truth, in institutions when they preserve form over substance, in leaders when they confuse dominance for guidance. When Gods clash, it is a cosmic alarm — a call to realign, to integrate, to act with the energy that sustains balance. 

The hidden battle is not about supremacy. It is about awakening.

Disclaimer

This piece uses mythological archetypes and symbolic language to reflect on contemporary conflicts and human dynamics. The interpretations are philosophical and metaphorical in nature. The events cited—such as Operation Sindoor and the Palestinian crisis—are complex geopolitical and humanitarian situations involving real people and suffering. This blog does not endorse violence and it aims to provoke reflection, not polarization. Readers are encouraged to seek multiple perspectives and verifiable sources for their own understanding.


Saturday, 2 August 2025

"খিদে: আমাদের জীবনে হারিয়ে যাওয়া এক গুরুত্বপূর্ণ শব্দ"

শেষ কবে আপনি খিদের জন্য খেয়েছেন?

মানে, সত্যিকারের খিদে — পেটের খিদে, শরীরের চাহিদা, না যে শুধু সময়মতো খাবার এসে পড়েছে বলে খাওয়া।
মনে পড়ছে না তো?
স্বাভাবিক। কারণ খিদে শব্দটাই আজ আমাদের জীবন থেকে হারিয়ে গেছে।

আজকের কর্মব্যস্ত জীবনে, মেট্রোর গতি আর মুঠোফোনের আলোর মাঝে, আমরা আমাদের শরীরের স্বাভাবিক অনুভূতিগুলোকেই ভুলে গেছি।
খাবার এখন আর প্রয়োজন নয়, যেন অভ্যেস। যেন ঘড়ির কাঁটার প্রতি দায়বদ্ধ এক “টাস্ক”।
সকালে নাশতা, দুপুরে লাঞ্চ, রাতে ডিনার — ব্যস।
অথচ, খিদে পেয়েছে কিনা, শরীর আদৌ কিছু চাচ্ছে কিনা — আমরা জিজ্ঞেস করিই না।

আড্ডা দিতে দিতে খাওয়া, পার্টিতে হুল্লোড় করতে করতে খাওয়া, মিটিংয়ের মাঝে কফি-বিস্কুট, মুড খারাপ তো খাবার চাই —
সবটাই একরকম মানসিক 'দ্রুত উত্তর' বা রিফ্লেক্স।
কিন্তু শরীর?
ও তো অনেকদিন ধরেই চুপ করে গেছে।

তাই এত খাবার খাওয়ার পরও আমরা ক্লান্ত থাকি, ওজন বেড়ে যায়, হজম ঠিক থাকে না, মন ভালো থাকে না।
তাহলে ভুলটা কোথায় হচ্ছে?

খিদে — শরীরের ভাষা, মন আর আত্মার সেতুবন্ধন

খিদে আসলে শুধু পেটের সংকেত নয়, এটা একধরনের উপলব্ধি।
খিদের অনুভব মানে শরীর সচেতনভাবে বলছে — "এখন আমার কিছু দরকার।"
যদি আমরা সেই অনুভবকে অবজ্ঞা করি, তবে একসময় শরীরও আমাদের কথা শুনবে না।
সেই কারণেই শরীর আজ ভরপুর খাবার পেলেও সুস্থ থাকে না। কারণ খাবার এসেছে, কিন্তু খিদেটা আসেনি।

🔍 খিদে না পাওয়া — শরীরের নীরব বিপদের বার্তা

খিদে না পাওয়া মানেই শরীর কিছু বলতে চাইছে। কী বলতে চাইছে?

১. হজম শক্তি দুর্বল হয়ে গেছে।
শরীর জানে, সে যা খাবে তা ঠিকমতো হজম হবে না, তাই খিদের সংকেতই দিচ্ছে না।

২. জঠরাগ্নি দুর্বল (Digestive fire কমে গেছে)।
আয়ুর্বেদ অনুযায়ী, শরীরের হজমশক্তিকে বলা হয় "অগ্নি"। খিদে মানে সেই অগ্নি জ্বলছে। কিন্তু যখন সেই অগ্নি নিভু নিভু — তখন খিদেও নিভে যায়।

৩. হরমোনাল ভারসাম্যের সমস্যা।
খিদের জন্য দায়ী হরমোনগুলোর (যেমন লেপ্টিন, গ্রেলিন) কার্যক্ষমতা কমে গেলে খিদের অনুভবও কমে যায়। স্ট্রেস, ঘুমের অভাব বা অতিরিক্ত প্রসেসড খাবার এটার জন্য দায়ী।

৪. অতিরিক্ত স্ন্যাকিং বা অনিয়মিত খাওয়া।
শরীরকে বিশ্রাম না দিলে সে নতুন খিদের সংকেত দেবে না।

৫. মানসিক অবসাদ ও দুশ্চিন্তা।
মন যখন ভারাক্রান্ত, তখন শরীরও চুপ হয়ে যায়। খিদে চলে যায়, অথবা অস্বাভাবিক হয়ে পড়ে।

তাহলে কী করব? – খিদেকে ফিরিয়ে আনার ৫টি উপায়

✔️ ১. অন্তত ৪–৬ ঘণ্টা গ্যাপ দিন দুই বেলার খাবারে।
শরীরকে নিজে থেকে খিদের সংকেত দিতে দিন। বারবার কিছু না খাওয়াই ভালো।

✔️ ২. সকালে হালকা গরম জল খান (লেবু/জিরে দিয়ে)।
এটি হজমশক্তি বাড়াতে সাহায্য করে।

✔️ ৩. ঠান্ডা, কাঁচা বা ভারী খাবার এড়িয়ে চলুন।
শরীরের অগ্নিকে দুর্বল না করে বরং সহায়তা করুন।

✔️ ৪. প্রতি সপ্তাহে অন্তত ১ দিন ‘লাইট মিল ডে’ রাখুন।
শরীরের নিজস্ব ডিটক্স প্রক্রিয়ায় সাহায্য করে।

✔️ ৫. খাওয়ার আগে ২ মিনিট নিজেকে জিজ্ঞেস করুন — “আমি সত্যিই খিদে পেয়েছি তো?”
এই প্রশ্নই আপনার সচেতনতা বাড়াবে।

⚠️ নিম্নলিখিত উপসর্গ থাকলে বুঝতে হবে আপনি খিদে অনুভব করতে পারছেন না:

  • খাবার দেখেও অরুচি বোধ

  • পেট ভরা লাগা অথচ কিছু খাওয়া হয়নি

  • হজমে সমস্যা, গ্যাস

  • মাথাব্যথা বা ক্লান্তি, কিন্তু খিদে নেই

  • খাওয়ার পরেই নিদ্রা বা অলসতা আসা

উপসংহার:

আজকের পৃথিবীতে সব আছে — খাবার, রেস্তোরাঁ, ফাস্টফুড, হেলথ ফুড।
কিন্তু নেই খিদে।
আমরা খাচ্ছি, কিন্তু শরীর খাচ্ছে না।
এ যেন ভালোবাসাহীন সম্পর্কের মতো — এক ছায়া, যার মধ্যে প্রাণ নেই।

আসুন, আবার খিদেকে ফিরে আসতে দিই।
শরীরকে অনুভব করতে শিখি।
খাবার হোক আত্মা ও শরীরের সচেতন মিলন।

Disclaimer (দায়িত্ব পরিহার):

এই ব্লগে উপস্থাপিত তথ্যসমূহ শুধুমাত্র সাধারণ জ্ঞান ও সচেতনতা বৃদ্ধির উদ্দেশ্যে লেখা হয়েছে। এটি কোন চিকিৎসা পরামর্শ, রোগ নির্ণয় বা চিকিৎসার বিকল্প নয়। যদি আপনার দীর্ঘমেয়াদী খিদে না লাগা, হজমের সমস্যা বা শরীর সংক্রান্ত কোনো জটিলতা থাকে, অনুগ্রহ করে চিকিৎসকের পরামর্শ নিন। লেখকের উদ্দেশ্য শুধুমাত্র স্বাস্থ্য সম্পর্কে অন্তর্দৃষ্টি দেওয়া এবং স্ব-সচেতনতা গড়ে তোলা।