In Buddhism , controlling the mind is not viewed as “suppressing thoughts,” but as training awareness so the mind becomes steady, clear, and less driven by craving, fear, anger, and distraction. Different Buddhist traditions vary, but the core framework is remarkably consistent. Core Buddhist View The mind is compared to: a monkey jumping from branch to branch, a wild elephant needing training, or muddy water that becomes clear when left undisturbed. The goal is: Awareness of the mind, Understanding why suffering arises, Gradual cultivation of calm, discipline, wisdom, and compassion. Main Buddhist Methods for Controlling the Mind 1. Mindfulness (Sati) This is the foundation. You observe: thoughts, emotions, bodily sensations, impulses, without immediately reacting. Instead of: “I am angry” you learn to see: “Anger is arising.” That small separation weakens compulsive reactions. Basic Practice Sit quietly. Focus on the breath. ...
A Duncan Brothers executive and a Balmer Lawrie executive both belonged to the elite British commercial ecosystem of colonial India, but their lifestyles and operating cultures differed quite a bit. The biggest distinction: Duncan executives were heavily tied to the tea plantation world and managing agency culture. Balmer Lawrie executives were more urban-industrial, logistics, shipping, and engineering oriented. 1. Core Identity Duncan Executive The Duncan world revolved around: tea gardens, plantations, jute, managing agencies, and export trade. A Duncan executive was often: a tea planter, agency house manager, or plantation administrator. There was a stronger “planter sahib” culture. Balmer Lawrie Executive More corporate-industrial: shipping, lubricants, engineering, travel, logistics, port operations. Closer to: docks, warehouses, industrial operations, and wartime supply chains. Less romanticized than tea plan...