Tag Archive for 'inspirational'

Stop Asking What is Life’s Purpose

To all my regular readers (are there any :-) ?) sorry for the longish break from blogging. I’ m going to aim for at least two fresh posts per week from now on so keep coming back.

Lets kick off with a wonderful article in today’s Times of India.

What is the purpose of life?

On a day when you are bursting with happiness, did you ask this question? No. Only when life gets a little sedate and depressing you ask.

You need a purpose to life only when being alive is not sufficient. Right now, the biggest thing in your life is that you are alive.

The stock market going up or down is not the biggest thing, you being alive right now is. Everything else is secondary. But most people are not aware of it. Something did not happen or did happen — these are the biggest issues for them.

The mind is always looking for a purpose because people have not experienced life in full. If your experience of life becomes deeper, your question will disappear. When the process of life becomes absolutely exuberant, it needs no purpose.

You go to work, your purpose may be to make this much money or to take care of this or that. But if you go to a party, what is the purpose? No purpose — you just like to be there. If life became like one big party you would not wonder what the hell its purpose is. You just like to be there.

Read the rest of the article

The article is a creative response to the difficult questions of “Why are we here? What is our purpose?” And I agree with the answer. Since we can never find the definitive answer to these questions, its better instead to immerse ourselves in the universe: Live life to the fullest. Accept its ups and downs. Stop wasting time endlessly on a question we can’t answer.

Some learned sages say “There is no purpose to life. Its all Maya (an illusion) ” But these kind of answers cause lethargy. They seem to imply that given everything is meaningless, one should withdraw from the world. Such answers also cause fatalism because you feel powerless to this great illusion and meaninglessness around you.

This article points out another path: the path of action and execution. When you savor each and every moment you won’t get depressed and ask yourself the meaninglessness of it. So how do I go about doing this in my own life? I’ve been through some ups and downs in the last few months and these are some of my learnings. I’d like to say that I’ve implemented these realizations in my life fully…but that would not be true. I know now that these are some of the answers. Implementing these learnings to the fullest extent could take many more years.

So here are of my learnings (an amalgamation of what I’ve read and experienced. I have no pretensions of saying something new but hopefully i have said it in a unique way):

(1) Keep telling yourself that life is a wonderful experience. Have you ever looked at the stars in a clear sky? Have you ever felt the pulse of people while walking through a busy bazaar? Have you ever felt the excitement of the great change that is sweeping our country and world?

(2) If you believe that life is wonderful and you’re just lucky to be alive then happiness becomes magnified and sadness becomes a temporary feeling. Sadness is merely the onset of change. Its your mind and body adjusting itself for a different experience in the future.

(3) Sadness is to be often welcomed. It forces you to evaluate your priorities. It forces you to change for the better. It sparks creativity. Sadness allows you to become more sensitive to the world around you. You learn a lot while you are sad. Too much sadness leads to depression which may not be healthy. But if you have a firm belief that this universe is interesting and you should just revel in it, and that happiness and sadness are just feedback mechanisms, then you won’t get depressed.

(4) We are all going to die anyways. So why not experience all the happiness and sadness that is in store for us rather than look forward to becoming an unfeeling lump of dust? Does anyone know for sure whether there is God? Does anyone know for sure there is re-incarnation or heaven? No. So until we don’t know that, lets enjoy life with its ups and downs.

(5) If you believe that life is an incredible experience, don’t withdraw from it. Jump into it headlong. Do all the things you want. Meet all the people you want. Love others to the fullest. Don’t hold back.

(6) Give to society and society will give back. Sometimes people give more and get less and vice versa. Thats possible. But no one knows what it will be for you. But you do know that giving more to the world increases your chances of getting more back. Its a positive correlation most definitely!!

(7) Stop thinking of yourself as individual always. We are part of the world. Don’t be greedy for everything. Everyone has a role to play. And everyone will take the world forward. Together. All professions are noble. We need farmers to grow our food. We need scientists to increase our understanding of the world. We need MBAs to sell us soap. All are important pursuits and each of them fulfill a need. Become a farmer if you think you can do a good job. Stay at home and look after the kids if you want. Everything is useful. Just do it well. Because if you do it well you would have lived life to its fullest. Otherwise you would have seen life in an incomplete fashion.

Yours truly in a letter to the editor in DNA!

This one was a surprise. I had written a letter to the author of a popular column in DNA India appreciating his writing. Excerpts of the letter appeared in DNA yesterday.

I had no clue. A Prof. just told me he saw my letter. Here it is:

rajiv_desai_letter.jpg

Link to Rajiv Desai’s amazing article that I had responded to.

Three talks and many insights…

The last week or so has been quite eventful at TIFR. We have had some famous/important visitors who have given public lectures and talks.

CO2 Laser photo (From wikipedia)

The first visitor was Prof. Kumar Patel of UCLA, the Indian origin inventor of the $CO_2$ laser. He gave two talks. The first talk was for graduate students where he shared his insights and gave us some tips. The next talk was about about using lasers to detect explosives and chemical warfare agents. Both talks were interesting but I want to share some of the tips he gave us during his freewheeling, informal conversation with graduate students:

  • Be extremely ambitious and try to solve tough problems. Its no point trying to do old, solved problems a new way. Instead, go for fresh problems. Often, the greatest advances have come from scientists who solved problems that others would have considered impossible but out of inexperience the scientist never knew that! Experience can also prove to be a hindrance because it teaches you that you “can’t” do a problem in certain ways. Young people bring a certain irreverence to research that helps them make progress on so-called “impossible” problems.
  • What level of research should you pick? Should you pick a system that is simplified to its core or should you study a system in all its beautiful complexity? There is no correct answer. By stripping a system to its fundamental components and modeling its essential features you can learn a lot. But you can loose understanding of the collective behavior of the components. A beautiful example is the human brain…you must understand its basic component, the neuron and their collective behavior. A complete understanding of the human brain is not possible without understanding both. You cannot understand collective behavior of the neurons (e.g. thinking, dreaming, planning etc.) without understanding the basic components and vice-versa. Therefore what should happen is an integrative approach to science: Some people work from top down and others work from bottom up. Both will have something valuable to teach each other. (My idea: We see this in physics today. Astronomy tries to understand huge aggregates of particles in the form of galaxies, stars, planets etc. Particle physics tries to understand the fundamental particles themselves. Both disciplines feed off and fertilize each other. What aspect of science you choose to study i.e. the building blocks like cells, DNA, protons, quarks etc. or complex systems like the human brain, the weather, galaxies, the immune system etc. is a matter of personal taste. All of them are important, worthy pursuits)
  • I asked Prof. Patel whether science is for young people only (He invented the laser at a young age of 26). (I’m sort of an “older” student who has commenced his Ph. D. so I was personally interested in knowing whether I could still make an impact. It helped me that my question also was very applicable to him because he was in his sixties!) The answer he gave was fascinating: He said that the work he had done in the last six years was work he could never have done in the past. Its always a trade off he seemed to imply. At a young age you know a lot about a narrow area and you don’t know what is impossible. At an older age you know something about everything but are burdened by “this can’t be done” and so on. Also you just can’t keep up with the level of detail in research. (My idea: At a young age you should pursue a specific line of research to every level of detail possible. At an older age your ability to keep up with this level of detail may be lost but you can think about science which combines different areas. Here your experience helps you).

Lorenz Attractor

The next talk was by a French Prof. Étienne Ghys on the Butterfly Effect. The Butterfly effect is popular description of chaos: How a small event can have extremely large impacts on a system. “Does the flap of a butterfly’s wings in Brazil set off a tornado in Texas?” is a one of those questions that have entered the public imagination. I have my own version of the Butterfly effect (intended to be a joke of course)

[Sid Butterfly Conjecture 1] No matter how insignificant or poorly cited your research paper is, like the flap of a butterfly wing that causes a tornado in Texas, your paper will eventually have a earth shattering impact on the world of science :-)

This has another humorous implication:

[Sid Butterfly Conjecture 2] All research papers whether by Einstein or obscure researchers have the same impact eventually.

Incidentally I shared Sid Butterfly Conjecture 1&2 with the French Prof when I bumped into him. He seemed to love it!

Abel Prize Logo

The third talk that I want to mention was by S.R. Varadhan a famous Indian origin mathematician from ISI Calcutta who is now at Courant Institute, NYU. S.R. Varadhan was the winner of the Abel Prize (considered the Nobel Prize for Mathematics) in 2007. I have blogged about him here.

Hoping to learn from him, I asked him about the secret to his success. The answer was “you should have passion in what you do”. True, it was boring answer but its worth mentioning here because sometimes the secrets to success are quite simple. We shouldn’t expect rocket science answers to everything. Too often, the expectation of rocket science answers or tricks means that we don’t want to concentrate on the basics (which are obvious but tough to implement) like hard work, perseverance, passion, excellence, time management and so on.

It was inspirational to hear from two Indian origin scientists who have reached the heights of success in their fields. Can I apply their suggestions in my life? Only time will tell.

8 Words to Gaurantee Success!

Principles of Success

Passion
Do it for LOVE not MONEY

Work
Its all HARD WORK. Nothing comes easily

Good
To be successful you need to be GOOD at what you do.

Focus
You need to focus on one area

Push
You got to physically and mentally push, push, push. Remove the self doubts.

Serve
You need to SERVE others something of VALUE to become successful.

Ideas
You need a good idea to succeed. Listen, Observe, Be curious, Ask questions, problem solve, make connections

Persist
Persist through Failure. Persist through CRAP (Criticism, Rejection, Assholes and Pressure).

See a 3 minute video about this from TED

Are you in awe of this universe?

Are there moments when you feel so lucky to be in this universe? Does a movie about space exploration or a demonstration of a new technology put you in awe of what is possible?

Do you love science and technology? I have discovered this amazing site called TED.

Every year there is a conference in Monterey,California. Famous speakers are invited to give talks on a range of issues mostly related to science, exploration, design and technology. These lectures are on the web for all to see.

I’ve just spent the last couple of hours seeing some of these video. I have goose pimples all over my body. I’ve been totally blown away at human ingenuity, creativity and goodness.

These videos are absolutely inspirational. They have just cemented my decision to be in academics. I think all academics, intrepid explorers and entrepreneurs are similar: we are at the frontiers of knowledge. We want to invent, create, understand, explore, and learn about things that did not exist before.

Hats off to TED for making these videos freely distributable and available for all to see. Go here for a direct link to all the videos.

To get a flavour, I recommend this video to get started out