Welcome and acceded to. Thank you.  K Rajaram IRS ,8125

On Wed, 8 Jan 2025, 12:13 Markendeya Yeddanapudi, <
[email protected]> wrote:

> Sir,
> You are a phenomenon,a fountain of betterment and embellishment,thank you
> very much.
> May I request you to ignore negative responses.Please do not notice and
> delete instantly.Otherwise the atmosphere in the forum will be spoiled.
> I never write to insult and discount another.Unfortunately when I respond
> positively with thanks to your response to my post I provoke very negative
> reactions in forums in which I am not a member,but which land in my Inbox
> because,most probably of the system in which you deal with your internet.
> Anyhow I don't want to lose my freedom because it will make others angry.I
> will instantly delete without reading the angry reaction.
> YM Sarma
>
> On Wed, Jan 8, 2025 at 10:27 AM Rajaram Krishnamurthy <
> [email protected]> wrote:
>
>> 1   Symphony of Emotions is a poetry book by Bruce Leonard Daniels, Jr.
>> that explores the human experience through emotions like love, pain,
>> depression, happiness, loneliness, healing, grief, anger, and loss. The
>> book was first published on June 10, 2023.  Symphony of Emotions is a
>> book by Saurabh Gupta that explores emotions and expressions. The book
>> contains poems that can help readers relive emotions and reflect on
>> personal experiences.
>>
>> 2    The phrase "symphony of emotions" evokes a powerful and poetic
>> metaphor, comparing the intricate, dynamic nature of human emotions to a
>> symphony—a grand orchestral composition that blends various instruments,
>> melodies, and harmonies into a cohesive whole. Here's an exploration of the
>> concept:
>>
>> Meaning of Symphony of Emotions
>>
>> Harmony in Diversity:
>>
>> Just as a symphony unites different instruments, emotions blend joy,
>> sorrow, anger, love, fear, and hope into a complex experience that defines
>> our humanity.
>>
>> Dynamic Expression:
>>
>> Emotions, like a symphony, can be gentle and serene at times, or intense
>> and chaotic at others, reflecting the ebb and flow of life.
>>
>> Universal Resonance:
>>
>> A symphony transcends language, and so do emotions—they are understood
>> universally, regardless of culture or background.
>>
>> Creative Composition:
>>
>> Each person orchestrates their emotional life differently, creating a
>> unique "composition" influenced by their experiences, relationships, and
>> inner thoughts.
>>
>> 3     Examples of a Symphony of Emotions
>>
>> In Love:
>>
>> A crescendo of passion, tenderness, longing, and vulnerability
>> intertwines, creating an emotional experience akin to a love sonata.
>>
>> During Grief:
>>
>> A slow, mournful adagio represents sorrow, tempered by moments of
>> cherished memories and the faint hope of healing.
>>
>> In Triumph:
>>
>> A triumphant allegro bursts forth with pride, relief, and exhilaration
>> after overcoming obstacles.
>>
>> Literary and Artistic Inspiration
>>
>> The "symphony of emotions" is a popular theme in art, literature, and
>> music:
>>
>> Literature: Shakespeare often wove a symphony of emotions into his plays,
>> where characters experience love, betrayal, joy, and tragedy in harmony or
>> dissonance.
>>
>> Music: Composers like Beethoven and Tchaikovsky conveyed intense
>> emotional narratives through symphonies.
>>
>> Visual Arts: Artists like Van Gogh captured swirling emotional landscapes
>> in paintings like The Starry Night.
>>
>> How to Embrace Your Emotional Symphony
>>
>> 4     Acknowledge All Emotions:
>>
>> Recognize that every emotion, whether positive or negative, has a role in
>> your life’s symphony.
>>
>> Seek Balance:
>>
>> Aim for harmony by allowing emotions to coexist without letting one
>> dominate unnecessarily.
>>
>> Express and Create:
>>
>> Channel emotions through creative outlets like music, writing, or art to
>> compose your own emotional masterpiece.
>>
>> Find Your Conductors:
>>
>> Lean on relationships, mindfulness, or therapy to guide your emotions and
>> keep them in rhythm.
>>
>> 5    A symphony of emotions is not merely chaos; it is an intricate,
>> evolving masterpiece, one that shapes who we are and how we connect to the
>> world. What does your symphony sound like today?  At their core,
>> emotions are more like judgments or thoughts, than perceptions. They
>> evaluate, assess, or appraise. Emotions are amendable to rational
>> assessment; they report, correctly or incorrectly, on how we are faring in
>> the world.
>>
>> 6     A Symphony Of Emotions
>>
>> In the orchestra of life,
>>
>> Our emotions take the stage,
>>
>> A symphony of joy and strife,
>>
>> A journey of love and rage.
>>
>> At times the music swells with hope,
>>
>> A crescendo of pure delight,
>>
>> Our hearts and souls are lifted up,
>>
>> On wings of purest light.
>>
>> For every feeling has a part,
>>
>> To play in this grand score,
>>
>> A complex web of mind and heart,
>>
>> A harmony to explore.
>>
>> So let us listen to the song,
>>
>> And feel its every beat,
>>
>> A symphony of emotions strong,
>>
>> A life that can't be beat
>>
>> 7           A rioting crowd in a burning city, a lynch mob circling a
>> battered body, a campaigning senator exaggerating the threat of an enemy's
>> bombs—evidence of the power of anger, hate, and fear has led many political
>> philosophers to call for rationality as the exclusive basis for a stable,
>> just society. Yet Aristotle himself granted emotions a role as significant
>> as that of reason in political life. In this timely book, Marlene K.
>> Sokolov revisits Aristotle's understanding of emotions and finds that his
>> ideas not only resonate with current psychological theories but, more
>> importantly, offer a resource for political life in the twenty-first
>> century. Identifying fourteen political emotions, ranging from pity through
>> envy, benevolence through shame, Aristotle discovered that, inherently,
>> they are neither negative nor positive. Significantly, different emotions
>> have different functions. Anger and love pertain to the well-being of the
>> individual and his/her family and friends. Indignation and benevolence, in
>> contrast, are more concerned with the security of other, unrelated persons.
>> Aristotle asserted that these political emotions, united in a harmonious
>> "symphony" with reason, could lead to stability, justice, moral action, and
>> community. But exactly what are emotions? According to Aristotle, they are
>> both innate physiological processes and psychological assessments of one's
>> political and social environment. This concept, Sokolov shows, stands up
>> surprisingly well in light of current evolutionary, cognitive, and social
>> construct theories. Combining modern science and ancient thought, she
>> concludes by suggesting a framework for understanding the interaction of
>> emotion and cognitive rationality in sociopolitical decision making and
>> behaviour.    “…... People, as political animals, exist, flourish, become
>> complete personalities and achieve their telos, 18 which is not simply to
>> be but to be good  and attain the superior good, eudaimonia (the good
>> life),  only within and through symbiosis in political communities. The
>> city, the highest form of symbiotic community, consists of dissimilar
>> equals bound together and united by friendship (an extension of one's
>> self), a feeling of co-belonging, of 'we', and relationships of justice
>> under some authority.
>>
>> 8         Veda is gotten from the root "Vid", which signifies, "to know".
>> The Veda instructs how to accomplish virtue of heart, disposing of
>> polluting influences. What is inferred by Veda? One significance is
>> Eruca (care). Another is thelivi (knowledge). A third essentialness is
>> viveka (seeing/isolation). As showed by Indian custom, the Vedas are
>>         apaurusheya "not human associations", ought to have been
>> particularly revealed, and in this way are called Shruti ("what is tuned
>> in"). The crucial encapsulation of all Vedas and Indian Literature is the
>> lessons on Self-Supreme Self. The Occupational "Atman" (kept up in Sanskrit
>> like "Atma") is interpreted as the "rule exemplification" of man, as his
>> Highest Self. "An" in this Occupational means empties. "Tma" connotes
>> "shadowiness". Thus "Atma" or "Atman" means "which empties fogginess and
>> bring shining‖. The Mantra of Bhagwat Gita is therefore to lead a detached
>> life and not to run after objects of senses of worldly pleasures. This
>> directly means suppressing one’s emotions, feelings and desires. The inner
>> mind is called the ―subjective mind‖ and in Sanskrit it is termed as
>> ―Buddhi‖. Now a days it is called Emotional Intelligence Rigveda in the
>> primary age , Yogavasitha in the second age, Gita in the third Dvapara and
>> Viveka Choodamani in Kaliyuga have references on "Psyche" and 'Insight'. It
>> can be gathered through the writing that in all the yugas the way of
>> accomplishing achievement has been through self-effacing behaviour and
>> tirelessness, which are like Self Awareness and Self-Management bunches of
>> Emotional Intelligence. Vishnu Puranam—the legendary stories reflect
>> different lecturing which likewise identify with Emotional Intelligence. A
>> Famous shloka from the Gita
>>
>> कर्मण्येवाधिकारस्ते ……………………………………………………18 4
>>
>> You have a right to perform your prescribed duty, but you are not
>> entitled to the fruits of action. Never consider yourself the cause of the
>> results of your activities, and never be attached to not doing your duty.
>>
>> “Yam hi na vyathayanthyethe purusham purusharshabha Samadhukha sukham
>> dheeram somruthathvaya kalpathe” [In Sanskrit]
>>
>> This expository sloka from the Bhagavad-Gita (Chapter II, Verse 15)
>> wholes up the whole idea of Emotional Intelligence (EI). It says: a man
>> who is quiet and stays unperturbed by either torment or joy is the person
>> who achieves everlasting life. The hypothesis of EI which has been promoted
>> by Goleman can be followed down to David Wechsler, who, as right on time as
>> in 1940 said that knowledge does not signify only the subjective capacities
>> of a man yet the non-psychological capacities also. This thought was again
>> advanced by Howard Gardner in 1983 when he delivered the various insight
>> hypotheses and said that intrapersonal and interpersonal abilities are as
>> imperative as the customary idea of knowledge which concentrated on the
>> psychological aptitudes alone. In 1990, Mayer and Salovey presented the
>> idea of Emotional Intelligence as a particular type of insight which can be
>> measured and assessed. This paper examinations the likelihood of building
>> up the hypothesis of EI into a more far reaching one.
>>
>> It investigates the hypothesis of EI against the idea of feelings as
>> examined in the Bhagavad-Gita and investigates the potential outcomes of
>> discovering particular techniques through which a man's enthusiastic
>> capabilities can be improved by fusing the goals of Sri Krishna as talked
>> about in the Bhagavad-Gita.
>>
>> ―mano matram jagat, mano kalpitam jagat‖ [In Sanskrit] - ―the world is
>> as the mind sees and feels it; the world is as the mind thinks of it’ (as
>> quoted by T. N. Sethumadhavan, 2010). A man’s destiny is shaped by his
>> thoughts and not by mere actions. A man is still considered pure even when
>> he does certain unacceptable actions only per force, (on the demands of the
>> situation or having a larger interest in mind) but with his mind detached.
>> Like the one described above, there are innumerable instances in the Indian
>> epics and the puranas which uphold this view and the eastern philosophy
>> sees this doctrine of controlling one’s mind as a way of living and not as
>> some abstract philosophical thought.
>>
>> 9  In short , A SYMPHONY OF EMOTIONS ARE INEVITABLE; BUT FOCUSSING IT
>> CAN BE MADE AN EMOTIONAL INTELLIGENCE, ENHANCING THE VALUE OF LIFE TO WARDS
>> THE PARAMATMA.
>>
>> K RAJARAM IRS 8125
>>
>> On Wed, 8 Jan 2025 at 07:28, Markendeya Yeddanapudi <
>> [email protected]> wrote:
>>
>>>
>>>
>>> --
>>> *Mar*The Grand Symphony of Emotions
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> Once the Biosphere was (no longer is) a grand symphony of emotion
>>> compositions. Among the organisms, there was the breathing symphony, the
>>> smelling symphony, the sensing symphony, the feeling symphony, the
>>> perceiving symphony, the understanding symphony, the interacting symphony,
>>> the coordinating symphony, the cooperating symphony, the rapture
>>> symphony,...all converting Gaia into a grand Phil Harmonic, the
>>> deterministic harmony of grand  music rapture, breezing and blowing as air.
>>>
>>> Even today, if one is inspired one takes a deep breath. Imagine the
>>> grand symphony of inspirations flow of the pure and non-poisoned air,
>>> inspirations overlapping inspirations. Every organism had a smell
>>> signature. Every breathe was emotional bonding. In fact evolution was the
>>> evolution of the grand flow of emotional bonding among all organisms. The
>>> upper layer of the lithosphere was the sphere of soil bacteria. Our heels
>>> have pores that breathe. The soil bacteria interacted emotionally with you,
>>> creating your emotional bonding with the land of your living.
>>>
>>> The Universe is a cauldron of emotional bonding. At the ultimate cosmic
>>> level, it is electromagnetic bonding. Within an atom, strangely in reality
>>> an atom is empty space or just a field, the quarks functioned as the
>>> gluons, the strongest force that bound the field or atom together. The
>>> electro weak force, created the needed flexibility. In the universe the
>>> emotional bonding is gravitational bonding.
>>>
>>> Remember, even the tiny flower, is creating the emotional fission and
>>> emotional fusion, participating in the ever changing universe.All
>>> relationships start as emotional relationships, and we really do not want
>>> the non emotional mechanical relationships. If Bhagawat gita, is written
>>> today, it would have been with definitions, scopes and explanations. But in
>>> those days it was presented as the conversation and interaction between God
>>> (Nature or Krishna), and the ideal human Arjuna, as to how one must live in
>>> the real world of emotional conflicts. The epic method of expression was
>>> emotional, mainly in poems, songs and Slokas and not in sentences, and the
>>> content was in the shape of stories. Sciences were studied emotionally and
>>> not mechanically.
>>>
>>> Actually in the free and healthy nature, every organism communicates
>>> with every other organism emotionally and symbiotically.
>>>
>>> YM Sarma
>>>
>>> Chat GPT
>>>
>>> This passage explores the deep connection between all living organisms
>>> and the universe, emphasizing emotional bonding as a fundamental force that
>>> transcends physical and mechanical interactions. The concept presented here
>>> imagines the biosphere as a grand symphony, where different emotional
>>> "symphonies" — breathing, sensing, perceiving, cooperating, and more —
>>> contribute to a harmonious, interconnected whole. The idea that emotional
>>> bonding is the driving force of life and evolution suggests that each
>>> organism’s relationship with its environment, including bacteria in the
>>> soil or even interactions within atoms, is an emotional connection.
>>>
>>> The passage also reflects on how, in ancient times, spiritual teachings
>>> like the Bhagawat Gita communicated emotional wisdom rather than mechanical
>>> or scientific facts. It contrasts that ancient poetic, emotional expression
>>> with the modern, technical language that defines contemporary understanding
>>> of the world.
>>>
>>> In essence, the author presents a view of life and the cosmos where
>>> emotional connections are the very fabric of existence, rather than a side
>>> effect of evolution or the universe’s physical laws. The universe, at all
>>> levels — from the quarks in atoms to the gravitational forces that bind
>>> galaxies — is seen as a vast, interconnected web of emotional bonding. This
>>> perspective implies that every living being and even the very forces of
>>> nature are not separate, but are part of an emotional symphony that
>>> continues to evolve and harmonize.
>>>
>>> This view offers a holistic perspective on the natural world, inviting
>>> us to reconsider the way we think about our relationships with other
>>> organisms, the Earth, and the universe itself.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>
>
> --
> *Mar*
>

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