Shivji, how could the rest of the world have beaten us some centuries ago- first the Mughals and then the British- how did we lose to them so badly? Historically, the Mahabharat war had drained us of all our previous reputations and allusions of grandeur, crushing us under the weight of a missing Godhead, Krishna ever so doggedly. The invaders’ (of our recent past) main bone of contention was and still is that our culture represents ideas that are not physically and mentally safe enough for practising routinely. Also, our predominance for collective misogyny-all our Hindu boys and men have no choice but to address this issue contentiously. The Hindu male’s gaze has turned into one of scorn and disbelief nationally. As more and more women become independent financially, the dependent roles of our meek and mellow females reduce drastically. The divorce rates in India have also skyrocketed exponentially. This is mainly because the Indian woman of today has rendered any type of male subjugation and exploitation irrelevant entirely. Apart from that, the rest of the world just can’t see eye to eye with us all because they think and allude to the fact that we are too moralistic, too religious and too idealistic to be real and functional at all levels, mainly geopolitically. They think that goodness and morality are actually weaknesses at all levels intrinsically and extrinsically.
The West got the best of us after brainwashing all our natives to live their lives in total slavery. Many of our own Indian leaders sided with the Imperialists to defeat our own people historically. Many other liberal leftists like Nehru and Gandhi betrayed us shamelessly. Many of our really patriotic dissenters like Veer Savarkar, Dr Ambedkar and all their supporters were crushed rather cruelly.
The only way we can address this issue collectively is by adopting what author N D. Walsch had hinted at in his book ‘Happier than God’ most appropriately-
He wrote- 1. Nothing is real in this world
2. I give meaning to everything happening to me personally.
3. I am what I say I am, and my experience is what I say it is.
He went on to prescribe the following – the energy of attraction, the law of opposites, the gift of wisdom and the joy of wonder as remedies. He also instructed us to give other people more large-heartedly- adding to be kind to ourselves also more frequently. Adopting these ideals and practising them regularly should re-arrange our own collective mindsets to certain victory socio-economically.









