Monday, December 12, 2011 10:28:24 AM
@ tara_purswani
I will give you a mathematical problem to solve. Try to do it with utmost sincerity, according to your knowledge and ability without bothering about whether you are going to get the answer right or wrong. This is dispassion. Most probably you will love to do it this way. Here love and dispassion exist together. Nor is dispassion negetive as you are trying your best to solve the problem. In the end if your answer happens to be wrong, yet you feel that it bothers you at the least, you have equanimity. Here, you have the ability to accept the result without being disturbed. You cannot complain that the outcome is disfavourable. In a sense equanimity is negetive. It is a negetive approach to the result.
I will give you a mathematical problem to solve. Try to do it with utmost sincerity, according to your knowledge and ability without bothering about whether you are going to get the answer right or wrong. This is dispassion. Most probably you will love to do it this way. Here love and dispassion exist together. Nor is dispassion negetive as you are trying your best to solve the problem. In the end if your answer happens to be wrong, yet you feel that it bothers you at the least, you have equanimity. Here, you have the ability to accept the result without being disturbed. You cannot complain that the outcome is disfavourable. In a sense equanimity is negetive. It is a negetive approach to the result.







