Showing posts with label Book Summary. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Book Summary. Show all posts

Monday, March 16, 2026

In the Realm of Hungry Ghosts (Book Summary)


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Addiction, the Hungry Ghost, and the Emptiness We Keep Feeding

A shocking story, and a larger problem

Friends, a little while ago I came across a piece of news that honestly shocked me. You may have heard it too. A young man from Bihar—what you would probably call lower middle class, or maybe somewhere around that modest middle-class reality—ended up under a debt of ₹96 lakh. Ninety-six lakh. Almost one crore rupees.

Why?

Because he got trapped in an addiction: online gaming.

The same online gaming ecosystem that is advertised everywhere. The same one promoted by major celebrities and cricketers. The same one that is sold to people as harmless fun, entertainment, excitement. He got so deeply trapped in it that he began borrowing money. The fees that had been paid for his tuition, the money his family had saved and handed over for his B.Tech education—he put all of that into online gaming. Everything was ruined.

The situation became so bad that he reportedly got involved in fraudulent activities as well. His mental state deteriorated. He stopped speaking properly with people around him. His relationships and social ties started collapsing. Naturally, all of this must have been mentally exhausting. And things reached such a dark point that he even attempted suicide.

This came out when a News18 anchor, Prateek Trivedi, was taking what seemed like a random interview, and then this reality surfaced.

But the point is not just that one boy.

If you look carefully at Indian society today, you will see that many people are trapped in addictions—big addictions, small addictions, respectable addictions, shameful addictions. And these addictions are quietly, steadily, literally ruining lives.

That is why today’s conversation matters.

This is not just about “those” addicts. This is about all of us

Recently I was reading and listening to discussions around a book called In the Realm of Hungry Ghosts. At first I thought this would be a book only about extreme addiction, about people on the margins, about severe cases. But when I started learning more about the book, about its author, and about the ideas in it, I found them deeply interesting.

Because yes, the book talks about addiction—but it is not limited only to people we normally label as “addicts.” In fact, it is relevant to you, to me, to almost everyone living in modern society.

Why do I say that?

Because the author gives a very striking definition. He says addiction can be understood as any short-term behavior that gives us short-term pleasure, but harms us in the long term.

Listen to that carefully.

Any short-term behavior that gives us temporary pleasure, but causes long-term harm—that is addiction.

Now if you apply this definition honestly, then addiction is no longer a word reserved only for drugs, alcohol, or gambling. Suddenly it becomes a mirror. A very uncomfortable mirror.

Because then you and I both have to admit that we engage in many such behaviors. Things that feel good in the moment, give relief in the moment, distract us in the moment—but slowly damage our lives.

So when this definition is expanded, many different addictions begin to appear in front of us.

Eleven addictions hiding in plain sight

Now if I start naming different forms of addiction, I am almost certain that at least one of them will be found in your life, or in the life of someone around you.

Social media addiction.
Procrastination.
Addiction to consuming too much knowledge without action.
Addiction to unhealthy food.
Sedentary lifestyle.
Negative thinking.
Alcohol and other substances.
People-pleasing.
Impulse spending.
Poor time management.
Sleep deprivation.

All of these, by that definition, can fall under addiction.

And this is important, because many people imagine addiction only as some dramatic external collapse. But a person’s life can be damaged slowly as well. Quietly. Respectably. Through patterns that society almost normalizes.

So I really want you to think about this seriously: how many of these problems are there in your own life? And even if not in your life, then in the lives of people around you? Because if even one such pattern is there, then this entire conversation becomes relevant.

The “Hungry Ghost” and the endless hunger of modern life

There is a concept in Buddhist philosophy often described as the “Wheel of Life.” At the top there is heaven, where the most virtuous beings go. Below that are other realms. And one of these is the human realm, where there is neither total goodness nor total evil, but a mixture—a field of struggle, confusion, craving, suffering, and possibility.

Then there are darker realms too. But one idea that becomes especially powerful here is about “The realm of hungry ghosts.”

This is the concept from which the book takes its title.

What is a hungry ghost? It is a being that keeps consuming and consuming and consuming, but is never satisfied. No matter how much it takes in, it cannot fill itself. Its hunger remains. Its emptiness remains.

Is that not an extraordinary metaphor for our age?

People keep eating, scrolling, buying, chasing, watching, drinking, consuming, seeking validation, seeking thrill, seeking distraction—and yet remain empty. The stomach of the hungry ghost does not fill. The inner hole remains open.

That is why this concept is so useful. It helps us understand that addiction is not just about consumption. It is about insatiability. It is about trying to fill an emptiness with things that cannot truly fill it.

Addiction is everywhere—and society sees only one kind of addict

If you ask people to imagine an addict, what image comes to mind? Usually they picture a person taking drugs, intoxicated, visibly unstable, someone on the streets or someone in obvious crisis.

But that is only one image.

The author’s point is that addicts can also be highly functional, highly successful, even admired people. Sometimes their addiction is not to heroin or alcohol. Sometimes it is to power. To status. To work. To success. To domination. To achievement.

And here, there is a correction worth making: when an example comes up around historical obsession and conquest, the right reference is not Napoleon Hill. It is Napoleon Bonaparte.

The point being made is larger than one person. Society often celebrates certain addictions when they produce outward success. We glorify relentless ambition, compulsive achievement, obsession with winning, obsession with legacy. We do not always ask: what inner emptiness is driving this person? What are they running from? What are they trying to prove? What wound is hidden beneath all this conquest?

So the addict is not always the person we pity. Sometimes the addict is the person society praises.

What is “addiction culture”?

The podcast’s next important idea is about culture.

In science, especially in biology, the word “culture” can refer to a controlled environment in which microorganisms—fungi, bacteria, cells—are grown and maintained. If that environment supports life, the organisms thrive. If it becomes toxic, then those living things start becoming unhealthy or begin to die.

Now take that idea and apply it to society.

What kind of culture are we living in?

A healthy one? Or a toxic one?

The argument here is that we are living in a toxic culture—one that is deeply out of sync with actual human needs. Human beings need security, connection, affection, belonging, rest, meaning, and emotional safety. But the culture around us keeps pushing speed, comparison, insecurity, distraction, overstimulation, and performance.

So what happens? Anxiety rises. Depression rises. Loneliness rises. Disconnection rises. And addictions rise.

In that sense, addiction is not just an individual defect. It is also the result of an unhealthy social environment.

The childhood wound: what happens to a child becomes a pattern in the adult

The author also speaks from personal experience, and this is where things become very human. He talks about how traumatic his childhood was, during the Nazi period. His mother had to send him away in order to protect him, to save him. From the outside, this was an act of love and survival.

But what does a child understand?

A child does not understand geopolitics, war, fascism, historical catastrophe. A child experiences separation. A child may interpret it as abandonment. A child may think: maybe I am the reason. Maybe I was not worth keeping close. Maybe I am unsafe. Maybe love disappears.

This is one of the key insights: children personalize emotional reality. If the mother is stressed, the child may feel, “I caused it.” If the parent is happy, the child may feel, “I am the reason.” Children are not rational analysts. They are receivers of emotional atmosphere.

So when a child grows up with fear, instability, neglect, or emotional absence, that child does not simply “move on.” That child becomes an adult carrying certain beliefs: I am not enough. I must earn love. I must perform to matter. I must keep others pleased. I am safe only if I am useful. I am lovable only when I achieve.

And then later in life, many addictions grow on top of these old wounds.

Trauma is not only what happened. Trauma is also what did not happen

This is another very important point.

When people hear the word trauma, they think only of very dramatic bad events—violence, abuse, major loss, severe crisis. And yes, those are traumas. But trauma can also be something else.

Trauma can be what did not happen.

A child who needed comfort but was not comforted.
A child who needed affection but did not receive it.
A child who was frightened and nobody said, “It’s okay, I’m here.”
A child who needed one hug, one moment of protection, one sense of safety—and did not get it.

That absence can shape a life.

Sometimes the hole inside a person is not huge in a theatrical way. Sometimes it is simple and devastating. Maybe all that was missing was safety. Maybe all that was missing was one emotionally available adult.

And when that missing experience is not provided, the person may spend decades searching for substitutes.

Why punishment does not solve addiction

When society sees addiction, its instinct is often punishment.

Put them in jail. Shame them. Cut them off. Make them suffer. Teach them a lesson.

But one of the strongest arguments in this framework is that you cannot punish pain out of a person. If addiction is rooted in suffering, loneliness, trauma, inner fragmentation, and unmet emotional needs, then punishment very often intensifies the original problem.

If the reason someone became addicted was loneliness, then prison may deepen loneliness. If shame was part of the wound, public humiliation deepens shame. If the person already feels broken, then being treated as fully disposable only confirms the wound.

That does not mean harmful actions should be ignored. It means that if the goal is healing, then understanding matters more than moral grandstanding.

Someone once put this beautifully: you cannot end a person’s pain by punishing them for having pain. If you really want to reduce pain, you have to understand it.

That is the difference between a system that merely reacts and a system that actually heals.

Even the word “addiction” points to slavery

There is also a fascinating point about the word itself.

The idea is traced to a Latin root related to a person who fell into debt and could not repay it. Such a person could become enslaved. Bound. Claimed. Reduced to dependence and submission.

That history matters because it reveals something symbolic: the addict becomes a slave. Not necessarily to a master in the old physical sense, but to a behavior, a craving, a substance, a pattern, a compulsion.

And that image is powerful.

Many people today are walking around carrying chains they cannot even see clearly. Chains of phone use. Chains of approval-seeking. Chains of consumption. Chains of nicotine. Chains of lust. Chains of gambling. Chains of work. Chains of thought patterns.

They are walking, functioning, talking—but still bound.

Pleasure and pain: the two engines behind addiction

Another important point is that addiction is usually serving one of two functions: either it is chasing pleasure, or it is reducing pain.

Sometimes both at once.

That is why it is not enough to say, “This thing is bad, stop it.” You have to understand what that behavior is doing for the person. What need is it meeting? What discomfort is it softening? What emptiness is it covering?

Because if you only remove the surface behavior without understanding the root, then either the same addiction returns, or it gets replaced by another.

This is why root-cause thinking matters.

If someone has a cold, you do not just keep wiping the nose forever without understanding what is going on in the body. In the same way, addiction treatment cannot stop at visible symptoms. You have to ask why this person is needing this pattern in the first place.

The gambling brain: anticipation can be more intoxicating than winning

There is a very striking point made about gambling. When researchers studied what happens in the brain, an interesting pattern emerged. The brain did not simply light up at the moment of winning. In many cases, the strongest activation came in anticipation—in the betting, in the uncertainty, in the possibility.

That means the thrill is not only the reward. The thrill is also the suspense.

And suddenly many things start making sense.

Why do people keep returning to betting even after loss? Why does online gaming, online gambling, and speculative digital behavior become so sticky? Because the person gets hooked not only on the outcome, but on the emotional high of expectation.

In simple words: sometimes the excitement before the result is as powerful as, or even more powerful than, the result itself.

And this applies beyond gambling. Social media works this way too. Refreshing, waiting, checking, scrolling—the next thing might give pleasure. That anticipation becomes its own drug.

Loneliness is one of the biggest roots

Among the biggest drivers of addiction, loneliness stands out.

Why do people smoke, drink, binge, scroll, numb themselves, or keep returning to harmful patterns? Often because disconnection is unbearable. The act becomes a substitute companion. A ritual. A way of not being alone with oneself.

This also connects back to parents and families. Children absorb the emotional environment of the home very deeply. If parents are bitter, chronically stressed, emotionally absent, or full of unresolved pain, then children grow inside that climate.

And often, generational problems keep repeating like loops.

The weaknesses, wounds, emotional deficiencies, and unhealed patterns of one generation can flow into the next. Addiction sometimes brings these hidden wounds to the surface. In that sense, painful as it is, addiction can also become an opportunity—a golden opportunity for healing, for honest family conversations, for breaking old cycles.

But only if people are willing to talk.

Cue, routine, reward: how addictions are built

Now this brings us to the behavioral pattern.

A cue appears. Then comes a routine. Then comes a reward.

For example, imagine you have a friend with whom you always drink. Just seeing that friend becomes the cue. Meeting them, going to the same place, following the same pattern becomes the routine. Then drinking gives the reward.

Cue. Routine. Reward.

And this cycle is how habits and addictions become reinforced.

So if you want to weaken an addiction, you have to break this pattern somewhere. Reduce the cues. Change the routine. Replace the reward.

Do not meet the friend who always drags you into the same destructive behavior. Do not go to the same place. Do not follow the same script. Get a different reward—food, exercise, conversation, reading, movement, creative work, anything healthier.

This is also why environment matters so much. Recovery is not just about inner willpower. It is also about restructuring the pattern of life.

Treatment begins with one honest question

When it comes to treatment, the first question is not, “How do I stop?”

The first question is: what did I get from this behavior? And what was missing in my life that this behavior fulfilled?

That is a difficult question, but a necessary one.

Maybe the addiction gave you community. Maybe it gave you relief. Maybe it made you feel seen. Maybe it gave structure to your day. Maybe it numbed emotional pain. Maybe it made you feel alive. Maybe it helped you avoid despair.

Once you understand what function it was serving, then you have to replace it with something healthier that meets the same need without destroying you.

This is the core idea: nobody becomes addicted for no reason. There is pain somewhere. There is lack somewhere. There is a missing piece somewhere. The addictive behavior rushes in to fill that gap.

So healing is not just subtraction. It is replacement with care.

How to deal with addicted people: compassion, not superiority

From years of experience, the strongest message here is that the best way to deal with addicted people is compassion.

Not superiority. Not disgust. Not preaching.

Compassion means trying to understand the gap inside them, the wound inside them, the pain they are trying to manage. You may not be able to forcefully heal someone. But you can stop making them more ashamed of being hurt.

And that matters.

Because addicts are often already drowning in self-hatred, guilt, and humiliation. What they need is not always more scolding. Often what they need is to be seen without contempt.

If you are struggling yourself: a four-step process

Now if you yourself are dealing with an addiction or harmful habit, one practical process can help:

1. Notice the urge

The first thing is to notice that the urge is arising. Not after you have acted. Before.

2. Pause and observe

Do not immediately obey it. Watch it. Feel it. Notice what is happening in the body and mind.

3. Let it pass

If you do not act on every urge, something interesting happens: the wave rises, but then it starts fading. Its force weakens.

4. Repeat

Keep repeating this. Daily. Again and again. That is how one gradually builds distance from automatic compulsion.

This sounds simple, but it takes practice. Still, it is one of the most useful ways of reclaiming agency.

Support systems and leverage matter

We are social creatures. That is a fact.

If you are always around people who normalize your worst habits, then recovery becomes harder. If you are around people who normalize better habits, then recovery becomes easier.

Suppose you are addicted to the phone, but you spend time with people who naturally keep their phones away and read books. Over time, a social pressure appears. The environment itself begins helping you.

That is why support systems matter. Recovery is easier when you are not trying to do it in isolation.

There was also an example of someone who had a severe gambling problem from a young age, even borrowing against future income, making life miserable for himself. But what changed him was that he redirected that energy. Instead of gambling destructively, he got involved in flipping houses and real estate activity in a more constructive way.

Now, of course, not every replacement is equal, and not every story will look the same. But the principle is useful: sometimes an addictive drive can be redirected into a healthier channel if the underlying hunger is understood.

The deepest healing is inner healing

Still, all the tips and tricks in the world are not enough if inner healing does not happen.

That is the central point.

A person has to understand what hollowness exists within. What is missing. What pain remains unresolved. What love, safety, meaning, or emotional completion is absent.

Only when that inner gap is approached with honesty and care does deeper recovery begin.

Otherwise a person will keep jumping from one thing to another. From money to achievement, from achievement to pleasure, from pleasure to distraction, from distraction to more emptiness. And each time they will think: maybe the next thing will finally give peace.

Money can give comfort. Achievement can give satisfaction. Material success can absolutely make parts of life easier. But peace is something else.

Peace does not arrive automatically with deals, income, purchases, or status.

Spirituality, peace, and the path to healing

And here the speaker turns personal, and I think that matters. Because at some point this is no longer just theory.

For many people, real peace comes through spirituality. Through prayer. Through remembrance of God. Through religious practice. Through surrender. Through silence. Through returning to something deeper than the ego’s endless chasing.

This is not being said as a slogan. It is being said from lived experience: that the peace one gets from remembering God, from prayer, from devotion, from spiritual practice, is not the same as the temporary pleasure of earning more, closing bigger deals, or acquiring more material success.

Those things may feel good. But their effect is often superficial and temporary.

Deep peace is different.

And in a country like India, where spirituality still has meaning for millions, it is worth saying openly that for many people this can become a real path toward healing. Not the only path, but an important one.

Healthy anger, attention, and what we still do not know how to express

There is also a brief but important point about healthy anger. Many people in India do not know how to express anger in a healthy way. Either anger gets suppressed, or it comes out destructively. But learning how to feel and express anger cleanly, truthfully, and without self-destruction is part of psychological health.

There is also a reflection on attention deficiency and ADHD-like patterns—how when a person cannot fight, cannot flee, cannot resolve something, the mind begins scattering. Attention splinters. Focus collapses. The person starts moving from one thing to another.

These are not small matters. They remind us that many behaviors we casually judge may have deeper roots in stress, survival, and unresolved emotional states.

Final thought

So yes, this whole discussion may have begun with one shocking news story. But it does not end there.

It opens into a much larger question: what is addiction really, where does it come from, why are so many people trapped in it, and what would actual healing require?

If you are struggling with any major addiction, or if someone in your family is struggling—something that is damaging mental health, physical health, finances, peace, and relationships—then this conversation is not abstract. It is urgent.

The biggest takeaway is this: do not stop at the surface. Do not reduce addiction to weakness. Do not reduce healing to punishment. Look deeper. There is almost always pain. There is almost always emptiness. There is almost always something missing that the person has been trying to replace in the wrong way.

And if you can understand that, then recovery stops looking like mere control and starts looking like compassion, awareness, replacement, support, inner repair, and peace.

That is the real path.

And that is why this topic deserves much deeper discussion.

Tags: Book Summary,Psychology,Behavioral Science,

Japanese System for Breaking Bad Habits & Addiction


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The System That Can Actually Break Your Worst Habit

Friends, do you know someone who desperately wants to remove a bad habit from life, but that habit simply refuses to leave?

It may not be alcohol or drugs. Addiction has many forms. It can be endless mobile scrolling. It can be lying around in laziness all day. It can be junk food. It can be procrastination. It can be the habit of choosing comfort every single time. And the worst part is this: it is not that the person has never tried. They have tried many times. They have promised themselves again and again. They have started. They have failed. Started again. Failed again.

Maybe that person is someone you know. Maybe that person is you.

And that is why this matters. Because many people think bad habits are defeated by motivation. They are not. Motivation comes and goes. What changes life is a system.

Today I want to show you one such system, built from five powerful Japanese philosophies: Kaizen, Hara Hachi Bu, Ikigai, Wabi-Sabi, and Ganbaru. Each of these ideas is powerful on its own. But when you combine them, they stop being philosophy and start becoming transformation.

Let me explain it through a story.

David at Rock Bottom

David was 40 years old. He weighed 140 kilos. He had two children, a wife, bills to pay, responsibilities to carry, and like many middle-class men, he had become so trapped in duty that he forgot he also had a body.

His life was falling apart quietly.

He ate whatever he found, whenever he found it. Breakfast during travel. Lunch from wherever. Dinner in front of the TV because he was too exhausted to even talk. Weekends meant pizza, beer, and the sofa. For some time, these habits felt like pleasure. Then they started feeling like punishment.

His body had begun sending signals. He ignored them.

Walking even a little made him breathless. Tying shoelaces felt like solving a puzzle. Sitting down required effort. His wife would ask him to go for a walk; he had no strength. His children wanted to play; he had no strength. The saddest part was not even his weight. The saddest part was that his seven-year-old daughter had stopped asking him to play, because she had already understood that Papa would not come.

That realization hurts more than any medical report.

And yes, David had tried before. Three different gyms. Trainers. Diet plans. He always quit after a few weeks. He had failed enough times to start believing that maybe this was just who he was.

Then one day, while watching his children play, the ball rolled into the neighbor’s garden. His child asked, “Daddy, will you get it for me, please?” Somehow David got up from his chair. He slowly walked. He bent down to pick up the ball. And then he lost balance and fell on his knees.

Nothing dramatic happened. No serious injury. No accident. Just one brutal truth.

His legs no longer had the strength to lift his own body.

His little son saw it. His wife saw it. That night, David cried.

The First Principle: Kaizen

David went to a doctor recommended by a friend. He expected a strict diet chart, magic exercises, new medicines, blood tests, some dramatic plan.

Instead, the doctor said, “From tomorrow morning, when you wake up, drink one glass of water.”

That was all.

David was shocked. Angry, even. He wanted to lose fifty kilos. And this man was telling him to drink water? But he had promised, so he did it. One day. Two days. Three days. Two weeks.

When he returned, frustrated, he said, “Doctor, I did exactly what you said. My weight hasn’t changed.”

The doctor smiled and said, “My goal was never to make you lose weight in two weeks. My goal was to make you keep a promise.”

That was the first breakthrough.

So many times, David had promised himself big things and broken them. Gym every day. No junk food. New life from Monday. But now, for the first time in a long time, he had made a promise and kept it.

That is Kaizen: small, continuous improvement.

We think life changes with giant decisions. Often, it changes with a tiny act repeated honestly.

There is another important idea hidden here. Every big change usually begins with one base habit—or what you may call a trigger habit. This is the first small action that starts shifting your identity. It looks tiny from the outside, almost foolishly small, but it has power because it breaks inertia. For David, that habit was not running, dieting, or lifting weights. It was simply drinking one glass of water every morning. That one act became proof that he could listen to himself, trust himself, and follow through. Once that happened, the next habit became easier. Then the next. This is how real change begins—not with a dramatic overhaul, but with one stable habit that quietly opens the door for all the others.

The Second Principle: Hara Hachi Bu

Once the first habit was established, the doctor gave David a second instruction: cut each meal in half. If you are still hungry after 20 minutes, eat a little more. If not, stop.

It sounded too simple again. But David tried.

At first it was uncomfortable. Then something surprising happened. After 20 minutes, he often realized he did not actually want more food. He had been overeating because his brain had never been given enough time to register fullness.

This is Hara Hachi Bu: eat until you are 80% full.

Not punishment. Not starvation. Balance.

In three weeks, David lost a few kilos. Not much. But the doctor told him something important: “This is not about the weight. It is about the direction.”

That sentence matters. Because sometimes progress feels small only because we are staring at the scale instead of the direction.

The Third Principle: Ikigai

Then came movement. But again, the doctor did not say, “Join a gym.”

He asked, “What is one physical activity you are capable of doing, but have been avoiding?”

David thought about it and answered: walking to the mailbox.

It sounded ridiculous. Just 20 or 30 meters. But the doctor understood something David did not: the body that has forgotten movement must first remember movement.

So David began walking to the mailbox every day.

Then something beautiful happened. His daughter asked if she could come with him. She had wanted to talk to her father for so long. Now she finally could. They walked together. They talked together. In one month, David lost eight kilos.

That is when the doctor introduced Ikigai.

Your purpose cannot be “lose weight.” That is too weak. Real purpose is deeper. David’s purpose was to be available for his family with energy, dignity, and presence. To play with his children. To stand by them. To live long enough and well enough to truly be there.

When action is tied to purpose, discipline stops feeling empty.

The Fourth and Fifth Principles: Wabi-Sabi and Ganbaru

Then David slipped.

One bad day. One messy day. He panicked. He thought he had ruined everything. But the doctor told him about Wabi-Sabi: the beauty of imperfection. Life is not perfect. Progress is not perfect. One mistake does not erase months of effort.

Perfectionism is the enemy of consistency.

Then came Ganbaru: keep going, especially when it gets hard. Do not give up. Stay with the process. Stand your ground in difficulty.

David returned to his habits. Not because he felt perfect. Because he finally understood he did not need to be.

Six months later, he had lost 23 kilos. One year later, 35 kilos. In a year and a half, 52 kilos.

But the real transformation was not the number.

One day, while playing with his son, a toy fell to the ground. David bent down, picked it up, stood up—and did not lose breath.

His wife watched from a distance and smiled. Because the man returning was not just thinner. He was becoming himself again.

What This Really Means

This system is not only for weight loss. It is for any bad habit. Any stuck life. Any cycle of self-disappointment.

Start small. Keep promises. Reduce excess. Find purpose. Accept imperfection. Refuse to quit.

That is how I have built my own work too. Not through dramatic bursts of motivation, but through one consistent habit repeated over years. One step at a time. One percent at a time.

So do not wait for a perfect Monday. Do not wait for a perfect plan. Do not wait to become a perfect person.

Pick one small habit. Protect it. Repeat it.

Give it a year.

And then look in the mirror.

You may still not see perfection. But for the first time in a long time, you may see someone you are proud of.

Sunday, March 15, 2026

What Really Makes Me Who I Am


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Taken from the 4th chapter of the book: Goals by Brian Tracy

“One universe made up of all that is: and one God in it all, and one principle of being, and one law, the reason shared by all thinking creatures, and one truth.”

What really makes me the person I am? Is it my habits, my tone of voice, my choices, my successes, my failures, the way I treat people, or the things I believe about myself when no one else is watching? I have come to believe that personality is not something superficial. It is not just charm, confidence, talent, style, or social ease. My personality is built from the inside out.

At the center of who I am are my values. Everything else grows from there.

If I do not know my values, I may still move through life, make decisions, chase goals, and react to people and events. But I do so in a fog. I become inconsistent. I say one thing, feel another, and do something else. I may even appear successful while feeling strangely disconnected from myself. The more clearly I know what matters most to me, the more coherent my life becomes. My personality stops feeling random and starts feeling rooted.

Values: The Center of My Inner Life

I think of my personality as a set of rings radiating outward. At the center are my values. They are the deepest standards by which I judge what is good, meaningful, right, worthwhile, and worthy of commitment. They shape what I admire, what I reject, what I endure, and what I pursue.

If I value honesty, then dishonesty unsettles me even when it benefits me. If I value kindness, then cruelty feels wrong even when it is socially rewarded. If I value dignity, then I cannot comfortably live by humiliation, manipulation, or self-betrayal. My values define the moral climate of my inner world.

That is why personality, to me, is not just outward behavior. It is the structure beneath behavior.

Beliefs: The Story My Values Create

My values do not stay hidden at the center. They shape my beliefs. What I value becomes what I believe about myself, other people, and life itself.

If I value compassion, I am more likely to believe people deserve patience. If I value growth, I am more likely to believe change is possible. If I value resentment, fear, or superiority, then those values also become beliefs: that people are threats, that the world is harsh, that I must dominate before I am dominated.

This is why values matter so much. They become the lens through which I interpret reality.

My beliefs are not floating ideas detached from my character. They are often the natural extension of what I honor deep inside. If I believe I am capable of decency, effort, courage, and renewal, that belief usually rests on values I have either consciously chosen or unconsciously absorbed.

Expectations: The Future I Quietly Prepare For

From beliefs come expectations. What I believe starts teaching me what to expect.

If I believe I am fundamentally powerless, I begin to expect disappointment. If I believe life is only struggle, I expect betrayal, loss, and frustration. If I believe that effort matters, that goodness is possible, and that meaning can be made, I begin to expect something different. I become more open, more resilient, more future-oriented.

My expectations affect the emotional atmosphere in which I live. They shape whether I approach life with dread or readiness, suspicion or openness, bitterness or hope.

And this matters because I often behave in anticipation of what I expect. If I expect rejection, I may withdraw before anyone rejects me. If I expect growth, I may keep working through difficulty. The future I expect begins influencing the person I become in the present.

Attitude: My Inner Weather on Display

My attitude is not an isolated trait. It is an outward expression of what is already happening inside me. It reflects my values, my beliefs, and my expectations.

That is why attitude is rarely just about being cheerful or gloomy. It is deeper than mood. It is the way I stand before life. It is the tone I bring into work, relationships, setbacks, and possibility. My attitude reveals whether I secretly trust life, whether I respect myself, whether I think effort matters, whether I think people are worth meeting with generosity.

When I look at attitude this way, it stops being cosmetic. It becomes diagnostic. It tells me something about what I truly believe.

Actions: Where My Personality Becomes Visible

At the outermost ring are my actions. This is where the invisible becomes visible.

I can claim almost anything about myself, but my actions eventually tell the truth. Under comfort, I may be able to perform a certain identity. Under pressure, my real priorities emerge. What I do repeatedly, especially when it is inconvenient, reveals what I value most.

That is why one of the hardest but most honest ways to understand myself is to watch my behavior. Not my intentions. Not my image. Not my explanations. My behavior.

When I am stressed, rushed, afraid, tempted, or disappointed, what do I actually do? That question humbles me. It also helps me. Because if my actions are the outer ring of my personality, then they are not random either. They are often the final expression of an inner chain: values, beliefs, expectations, attitude, and then action.

As Within, So Without

I keep returning to one hard truth: my outer life often reflects my inner life.

That does not mean life is mechanically fair or that all suffering is self-created. It means something simpler and deeper. The quality of my inner world affects the quality of my outward conduct, my relationships, my consistency, and the atmosphere I create around myself. A chaotic inner life often spills outward. A grounded inner life usually does too.

This is also why achievement alone does not satisfy me. Success without alignment can feel empty. I can climb hard, work hard, earn praise, and still hear the haunting question, “Is this all there is?” I can reach a ladder’s top only to discover that, as Stephen Covey warned, “Be sure that, as you scramble up the ladder of success, it is leaning against the right building.”

That question cuts deep because it exposes a painful possibility: I can win in public and lose in private. I can gain results that impress others while drifting away from what I actually value. And when that happens, another question rises with even greater force: “What does it benefit a man if he achieves the whole world but loses his own soul?”

Happiness, Self-Respect, and Congruence

I do not think happiness is merely pleasure, comfort, or applause. My deepest happiness comes when the outside of my life is congruent with the inside of my life. I feel strongest when my actions agree with my values.

The simplest definition of self-esteem I know is this: “How much you like yourself.” The older I get, the more I see how true that is. I like myself more when I act in ways I can respect. I like myself less when I betray what I know to be right.

Self-respect is not built by image management. It is built by congruence.

When I speak honestly, keep my word, do difficult work, show kindness when it costs me something, and refuse to bend myself into shapes that violate my convictions, I feel steadier inside. But when I act against my own conscience, I do not just make a mistake; I divide myself. Stress, resentment, and inner friction often follow.

That is why living in alignment with my values is not a luxury. It is the basis of peace. It is the basis of dignity. It is the basis of real confidence.

The Work of Examining Myself

This kind of clarity does not happen accidentally. It demands examination.

Socrates said, “The unexamined life is not worth living.” I feel the force of that most strongly when I pause long enough to ask myself difficult questions. Not once, but repeatedly. Reflection is not a one-time breakthrough. It is something I must do on a “go-forward” basis.

I have to stop and ask, “What are my values in this area?” Sometimes I need to go further and ask, “In what way am I compromising my innermost values in this situation?” Those questions are uncomfortable, but they save me from self-deception.

They also help me hear the quieter part of myself, the “still, small voice” within that is easy to drown out beneath urgency, vanity, comparison, and noise. When I ignore that voice, I usually become scattered. When I listen to it, I become more whole.

I also find it useful to ask what truly gives me a sense of meaning. Dale Carnegie put it sharply: “Tell me what gives a person his greatest feeling of importance, and I will tell you his entire philosophy of life.” That question forces honesty. What do I really live for? Praise? Control? Comfort? Service? Integrity? Love? Achievement? Recognition? Peace?

And beyond all these, what is my “Heart’s Desire.” What do I most deeply want my life to stand for? As another piercing question puts it, “What do you want to be famous for?” Not famous in the celebrity sense, but known for in the moral sense. What do I want people to feel when they have been in my presence? What kind of memory do I want my life to leave behind?

Integrity: The Force That Holds Everything Together

If values are the center of personality, integrity is what protects that center from erosion.

I once came across a line that has stayed with me ever since: “Integrity is not so much a value in itself; it is rather the value that guarantees all the other values.” That feels exactly right to me. Without integrity, values remain decoration. I can admire courage, honesty, discipline, compassion, and loyalty, but without integrity I will abandon them whenever they become costly.

Integrity is what turns admiration into embodiment.

It also keeps me from becoming trapped by my past. I take strength from the reminder that “It doesn’t matter where you’re coming from; all that really matters is where you’re going.” My past may explain me, but it does not have to define me. I can change my life by changing what I live by.

The Person I Become

When I ask what constitutes a person’s personality, my answer is no longer vague. My personality is not just the surface impression I make. It is the total pattern by which my inner life becomes outer life. My values shape my beliefs. My beliefs shape my expectations. My expectations shape my attitude. My attitude shapes my actions. And my actions, repeated over time, shape both my character and the life I inhabit.

So the real work, for me, is inward before it is outward.

If I want a better life, I have to ask for a truer life. I have to examine what I value, reorder what I have allowed to drift, and live with greater consistency. I have to stop chasing goals that do not belong to my soul. I have to listen more carefully, choose more honestly, and act with more integrity. I have to become someone I can respect in private, not just someone who appears successful in public.

That is the kind of personality I want: not impressive at the edges and empty at the center, but clear at the center and therefore trustworthy at the edges.

Clarify Your Values:

1. Make a list of your 3-5 most important values in life today. What do you really believe in, and stand for?

2. What qualities and values are you best known for today among the people who know you?

3. What do you consider to be the most important values guiding your relationships with others in your life?

4. What are your values regarding money and financial success? Are you practicing these values daily?

5. Describe your picture of an ideal person, the person you would most want to be, if you had no limitations?

6. Write your own obituary, to be read to your friends and family at your funeral, exactly as you would like to be remembered.

7. What one change could you make in your behavior today that would help you to live in greater harmony with your values?
Tags: Book Summary,Personality Types,

Monday, March 9, 2026

A Promised Land (by Barack Obama) -- Is it worth reading in 2026?


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Yes — reading A Promised Land in 2026 is still very worthwhile. In fact, the distance of a few years can make it more valuable, because you can see the events it describes with hindsight.

Let me explain what you would actually get from the book.


1. A Rare Look Inside Real Power

The book covers Barack Obama’s life up to about 2011, including the early part of his presidency and major events like the raid that killed Osama bin Laden. en.wikipedia.org

What makes it interesting is that it shows how decisions are actually made at the highest level.

You’ll learn things like:

  • How presidents weigh conflicting advice from experts

  • How crises (financial meltdown, wars, terrorism) are handled

  • Why political decisions are often trade-offs where someone will always be unhappy steve-anderson.co

If you’re interested in leadership, strategy, or geopolitics, this is one of the most detailed insider accounts.


2. Leadership Under Extreme Pressure

One of the strongest aspects of the book is Obama’s self-reflection about leadership.

You’ll see:

  • How leaders deal with uncertainty and incomplete information

  • The psychological burden of high-stakes decisions

  • The tension between idealism and political reality

Many readers and reviewers describe the book as an introspective exploration of the craft and limits of governing, showing how even the most powerful person faces constraints. spectrummagazine.org

This makes it almost a case study in decision-making.


3. A Personal Story About Identity and Ambition

Beyond politics, the book is also about:

  • Identity

  • Race

  • Family

  • Personal ambition

It traces his journey from community organizer to becoming the first Black U.S. president, exploring the cultural and personal influences that shaped him. shortform.com

So the book works on two levels:

  • Personal autobiography

  • Political history


4. Understanding the 21st-Century World

The book is almost a historical document about the early 2000s.

You’ll see detailed accounts of:

  • The 2008 financial crisis

  • The wars in Iraq and Afghanistan

  • Healthcare reform debates

  • U.S.–China and Middle East politics

Reading it now helps you understand why the world looks the way it does today.


5. A Masterclass in Writing and Communication

Many critics note that Obama is actually a very strong writer and storyteller. Wikipedia+1

You’ll notice:

  • Clear explanations of complex issues

  • Structured storytelling

  • Calm, analytical tone

If you like well-written nonfiction, this is one of the better political memoirs.


One Honest Warning

The book is long (around 700–760 pages) and sometimes very detailed. Wikipedia

Some readers feel parts — especially the campaign sections — are a bit wordy. reddit.com

So it’s best read slowly, not rushed.


Who will benefit most from reading it:

  • People interested in leadership and decision-making

  • Students of politics or geopolitics

  • Readers who enjoy serious memoirs

  • Anyone curious about how modern governments really work

Tags: Book Summary,Biography,Politics,

Wednesday, March 4, 2026

Conclusion (Genesis by Eric Schmidt, 2024)


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AI and the Leap of Faith

Human history has always been shaped by discoveries that forced us to rethink our place in the universe. The Copernican revolution moved Earth from the center of creation. Darwin revealed that humanity was part of a long evolutionary chain rather than a singular divine event. The digital revolution transformed information into the organizing principle of modern civilization.

Artificial intelligence may represent the next shift—one that challenges not just what we know, but what we are.

Unlike previous inventions, AI is not merely a tool that extends human strength or speed. It touches something deeper: intelligence itself. And as machines begin to perform tasks that once defined human uniqueness—reasoning, learning, even creativity—we find ourselves confronting questions that are as philosophical as they are technological.

The emergence of AI is therefore more than a scientific milestone. It is the beginning of a new chapter in humanity’s long search to understand itself.


The Universe as a Game We Are Learning to Play

For centuries, scientists and philosophers have tried to describe the universe as a system governed by discoverable rules. One evocative metaphor imagines reality as a cosmic chessboard—a vast game whose patterns we gradually learn by observing the moves.

At first, humanity was merely a spectator. We watched the stars move across the sky, studied the rhythms of nature, and slowly uncovered the mathematical laws underlying the cosmos.

But now something remarkable is happening. Humanity is no longer just observing the game—we are beginning to play.

Artificial intelligence represents one of the boldest moves humans have ever made on this cosmic board. It is a technology capable of discovering patterns beyond the limits of human cognition, uncovering insights hidden within the immense complexity of nature and society.

Yet participating in the game also requires something more than logic. It requires judgment, courage, and often a leap of faith. Even the most brilliant scientists cannot fully predict the consequences of the tools they create.


The Limits of Understanding

The physicist Albert Einstein once described humanity’s relationship to the universe with a striking image. Imagine a child wandering into an enormous library whose walls are filled with books written in languages the child cannot read. The child senses that someone must have written those books and that there is a pattern in how they are arranged—but the meaning remains mysterious.

This metaphor captures the human condition remarkably well.

Despite our scientific progress, we still understand only fragments of the deeper laws shaping reality. Artificial intelligence may help us decipher more of those patterns, but it also introduces new mysteries of its own. We have created systems whose internal reasoning can sometimes exceed our ability to interpret them.

In other words, the creators are beginning to struggle to understand their creations.

That paradox lies at the heart of the AI age.


Acting Without Certainty

Throughout history, leaders have faced difficult decisions without the luxury of perfect information. The rise of artificial intelligence amplifies this dilemma.

Waiting for complete certainty before acting is not an option. Technological progress moves too quickly. Yet acting too confidently can create risks whose consequences may unfold across decades or centuries.

The path forward therefore requires a delicate balance: humility about what we do not know, paired with enough confidence to continue exploring.

This balance has always defined human progress. Scientific breakthroughs, political revolutions, and cultural transformations all required people to move forward despite uncertainty. AI is simply the latest—and perhaps most consequential—instance of that pattern.


The Moral Foundation of Progress

If technical knowledge alone were enough to guide civilization, the future would be relatively straightforward. But human societies are shaped not only by logic and data, but by moral purpose.

The values that guide our decisions—ideas like dignity, responsibility, and justice—form an invisible foundation beneath technological progress. Without them, even the most powerful tools can lead to destructive outcomes.

Artificial intelligence forces us to confront this reality more directly than ever before. As machines begin to make decisions that affect human lives, the question arises: whose values will guide those decisions?

Ensuring that AI reflects humanity’s moral aspirations rather than merely its technical capabilities may become one of the defining challenges of the century.


A World Divided Over the Future

Not everyone will respond to the rise of AI in the same way.

Some people will see it as a stabilizing force—an anchor capable of helping humanity solve problems ranging from climate change to disease. Others will see it as a dangerous acceleration of forces that already threaten social cohesion and political stability.

These diverging reactions are not new. Every transformative technology has generated both optimism and fear. But AI may amplify these tensions because its impact touches so many aspects of life simultaneously: economics, security, science, and identity.

The result could be a world where some groups race forward with technological development while others attempt to slow or resist it.

Such divergence could shape the geopolitical dynamics of the coming decades.


The Question of Authority

Perhaps the most difficult question raised by artificial intelligence is also the most practical.

Who decides?

Who determines when an AI system is safe enough to deploy? Who sets the ethical boundaries for its use? Who decides how much authority should be delegated to machines?

These decisions will not be made in a single room or by a single institution. Governments, corporations, scientists, and citizens will all play roles in shaping the trajectory of AI.

But coordination among these actors will be difficult. Different societies hold different values and priorities. In a world of competing political systems and economic interests, consensus will not come easily.

The future of AI may therefore be shaped not only by technological breakthroughs but by the ability of human institutions to cooperate in managing them.


A New Beginning

It is tempting to interpret the rise of artificial intelligence as a dramatic ending—the moment when human dominance over the planet begins to fade.

But another interpretation is possible.

Rather than an ending, the emergence of AI may represent the beginning of a new phase in the story of human creativity. Humanity has always evolved by creating tools that expand its capabilities. AI may simply be the most powerful extension of that process yet.

Whether this new chapter becomes a story of flourishing or catastrophe will depend less on the machines themselves and more on the choices humans make.

In that sense, the future remains profoundly human.

Artificial intelligence may transform how we live, work, and understand the universe. But the deeper question will remain the same one humanity has faced for centuries: how to use newfound power with wisdom.

And perhaps that is the real beginning of the AI age—not the birth of intelligent machines, but the moment when humanity must decide what kind of civilization it wishes to become.

Conclusion from the book: Genesis by Eric Schmidt