Feeling of Deprivation
Submitted by admin1 on Sun, 08/22/2021 - 10:30Deprivation is not just a lack of something. Rather, it is, at the same time, also possession of something else—a strength and an incentive to overcome the sense of lack.
Deprivation is not just a lack of something. Rather, it is, at the same time, also possession of something else—a strength and an incentive to overcome the sense of lack.
All of us experience in our daily lives something of the utter helplessness. All of these give us a feeling that we are dependent on some superior force. This feeling can be said to be a psychological proof of God’s existence.
A person who considers himself to be deprived of or lacking something develops an urge to make efforts to acquire that which he thinks he is deprived of or lacks. This inner urge keeps him active until he reaches his goal.
Killing another human being without a legitimate reason is the most serious crime because just one such incident can easily rob people of their respect for the sanctity of human life.
Challenges of life are for our own good. They come to train us, to increase us in wisdom and to strengthen us.
Human life is an opportunity that we are blessed with to fulfill the purpose of our creation. It is a chance that we are given to discover the purpose for which we have been created, and then to spend our lives trying to fulfill that purpose.
In order to acquire higher knowledge, you need a mindset that admits that you do not know, not a mindset that insists that you do know.
Differences of opinion are immensely beneficial. They help bring to the fore new dimensions of issues under discussion and to uncover hitherto hidden aspects of a subject.
A scientific temper demands judging of matters on their true merit, not because they are for or against one.
Favourable external conditions make people complacent and inactive. Someone who faces unfavourable external conditions develops discontentment, which, in turn, drives him to make efforts to change things for the better.