Sunday 18th of March has completed 11,666 days in my life.
I was amazed to find out that I take an average of 25,000 breaths every day, which means so far in my life I have taken around 300 Million breaths… Inhale, exhale, inhale, exhale… It’s no wonder I am really starting to feel life.
In mathematics, 666 is the sum of the first 36 natural numbers (i.e. 1+2+3+4…+35+36 + 666) and thus a triangular number. A triangular number or triangle number numbers the objects that can form an equilateral triangle with a pointy end, as in the diagram below:
Interesting thought I had about this today. As life goes on, it keeps bringing things to a pointy end. Time has a natural ability to organise all aspects of one’s life and as things get better organised, they seem a lot clearer. I have recently been fascinated to observe the natural direction in which life gets organised; may it be due to our conscious efforts or not.
Marriage has given me a lot of peace of mind. Over the last few months I feel a lot more settled in mind and spirit. I don’t confuse marriage as the solution to life’s questions, challenges or demons, but rather a new set of rules which helps a man better organise his life, values, thoughts and aspirations. Marriage has also brought a feeling of content and a sense of belonging, which I feel is a fundamental need for us humans; especially those that have migrated from external cultures. There is much research in the study of migration to prove that humans are happiest when they live their whole life in one community, as our need for a sense of identity and sense of belonging supersedes any other need.
Recently I have found things to be a little contradictory with our capitalist mindset in which we seek to find happiness by means of materialistic success without realising that we are sacrificing the very essence of happiness in our pursuits of a higher salary, a bigger bank account or more material possessions. But such is life in the 21st Century and these are the self-created rules which we will continue to live by, as contradictory as it may be.
I am in no means suggesting we all become monks, although I draw a lot of inspiration and wisdom from the Buddhist philosophy which believes that the world must be thought of in procedural terms, not in terms of things or possessions. I understand that we all need to progress and challenge ourselves in our fields of endeavours to be happy. At the same time I believe that it’s even more important in today’s day and age that we maintain a balance internally as our world and individual efforts reach new heights externally. One way such internal peace can be reached is through meditation. It seems to be one of the sure ways to reach a sustained state of Nirvana; which is the ultimate measure of success and happiness isn’t it?
Time seem be the commodity that slips through our hands like grains of sand. Every day we think approximately 60,000 thoughts and most of them seem to be the reflections of the past leveraging to build our future. With this pattern of flow, how are we to improve and bring ourselves to a better place I ask myself.
The past burdens us all, may it be due to the flaws in which we have knitted our relationships by the choices we have made consciously or unconsciously. May it be our inability to manage ourselves due to sheer lack of self-awareness and inability to react or respond in the right way at the right time. Or maybe due to our naiveness that we think that everyone’s worldviews are in sync with our own.
So how do we stop becoming a prisoner of the past and become the architect of the future I often ask myself? I am of the belief that life is a walk down a very long load and like any long journey, we must learn to travel light. As far as the burdens of the past are concerned, we must learn to bring dignified closures and offload the burdens in such a way that it doesn’t affect our or our family’s future. The burden of my failure in business in my early twenties haunted me for a very long time, but with time, awareness and knowledge I have understood the consequences of my actions. I have come to realise the reasons for the failures and I have understood the meaning of taking full responsibly of my life. I have learnt what it means to build my life one day at a time, like building a house one brick at a time. I’m happy to see my current business take a direction of success and hopefully sustained growth. My biggest lesson in the last ten years has been the reassurance of my belief that our outer world is a reflection of our inner world. Keeping that in mind, I know that as long as I have peace, clarity, groundedness, growth and happiness in my mind, it will inevitably reflect in my personal life, work and business.
My recent regret has been my inability to level with my creators in making them realise in time, the repercussions of an amputated spirit which they were experiencing in me as I was rebuilding myself. To the extent that when came time to appreciate goodness, things backfired in ways that still puzzles me. I am hopeful that time will bring a dignified closure to that also.
The optimism for our future must flow from the tragic lessons learnt from our past. Recently I am learning to understand that it is our past that gives us the strength to build our future. I have also starting to understand how important it is to have a meaningful purpose in life. Nietzsche very famously said, “He who has a WHY to live can almost bare any HOW”.
Coming home from the airport this morning, I was inspired by a small boy’s pure excitement as he was with his family on his way to visit the 80th birthday celebration of the Sydney Harbour Bridge. I have always admired children, the way they are free of any burdens and therefore they sometimes carry themselves more highly evolved than grownups. As grownups we must also understand the responsibilities we have with our children. But first we need to understand the responsibilities we have with ourselves as I strongly believe that we need to first learn to be truly independent before we can learn to be interdependent.
Enough rambling for today …
John Singh.




