Practise what you preach..
It is very easy to wax eloquent and misappropriate other people’s ideas and ideologies, but to live according to some previous established theory, one has to know oneself and not just follow anything or anybody mindlessly.
In the Vigyan Bhairav Tantra, Lord Bhairav holds that each person, whether material or spiritual should practise some sort of mindfulness regularly. Most materialists can become more focused on their daily accomplishments; they can become moral instead of practising their middle-class corruptibility.
It is really hard to practise morality, especially if you are born with a defective gene or DNA that soaks up all your greatness and scruples impeccably. Nowadays, to be part of society, one has to stoop really low and disregard all personal theorems of goodness and godliness tragically.
To be honest, sincere, hardworking, caring and thoughtful- these practices make a man a seer and sage whom everyone resents and hates internally. Such people are mostly seen as non-belonging and isolated and they also suffer from other people’s misguided misjudging and labeling ruthlessly.
But the strongest person is one who refuses to become corrupted, no matter how hard the punishment and circumstances. Such a person is ready to feel and see that he is Brahman and experience the feeling that he is self pervading, immortal and inexorably free most naturally.









