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IT damaging India BCZ Info Tec careers and modern life with more flow of money. Lucky Pak

Jhon Smith

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After effects of IT boom and more flow of money are damaging the peace of Indian public. AS that are detrimental to clam relaxing culture of India as she going under massive urbanisation and construction of skyscrapers along metro train culture. South Asian country India has one of the best culture but flow of more money and modern life style are particularly destroying the beautiful Indian culture. Still God has saved the Pak from this menace.
Pak is still better as people used to spend more time with family and are not driven by tec. IT graduates are burning with career thoughts and desire of money. In Pak 80% people belong to Agriculture therefore people in Pak are more happy prosperous than to India.
The more metro trains culture and thirst to rush will make Indians insane and mad as what it did with China. Though Indian youth are burning themselves for sake of world to provide them with IT solutions. Why China are not stepping in this field!
Modi is a good man , he understood the problem and are in effort to bring more religion in Hindu country to provide masses with some peace as Religion always help to heal


Cases of "burnout" among busy professionals are on the rise. A psychoanalyst tells how he helps his patients cope with the pressures of modern life


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For people suffering from burnout, being told to relax doesn’t work
And what’s causing it might not always be obvious



A patient of mine named Elliot recently took a week off from his demanding job as a GP. He felt burnt out and badly needed to rest. The plan was to sleep late, read a novel, take the odd leisurely walk, maybe catch up on “Game of Thrones”. But somehow he found himself instead packing his schedule with art museums, concerts, theatre, meetings with friends in hot new bars and restaurants. Then there were the visits to the gym, Spanish lessons, some flat-pack furniture assemblage.





this is the basic predicament of the burnout sufferer: a feeling of exhaustion accompanied by a nervy compulsion to go on regardless, a double bind makes it very difficult to know how to cope. Burnout involves the loss of the capacity to relax, to “just do nothing”. It prevents an individual from embracing the ordinary pleasures – sleep, long baths, strolling, long lunches, meandering conversation – that induce calm and contentment. It can be counterproductive to recommend relaxing activities to someone who complains that the one thing they cannot do is relax.


In such cases, it is worth turning in the first instance to more external solutions – cutting working hours as much as possible, carving out more time to relax or for contemplative practices such as yoga and meditation. This is as much a matter of discovering a remedy as the remedy itself. Merely listening and attending to the needs of the inner self as opposed to the demands of the outside world can have a transformative effect.

But such solutions will seem unrealistic to some sufferers both practically and psychologically.

So while there are many means by which we can be helped to relax, the predicament of severe burnout is precisely that you cannot be helped to relax. Where burnout has psychological roots, psychoanalysis may be able to help.



Insight like this can be helpful to challenge our unthinkingly internalised habits of working and our dogmas as to what constitutes a “productive” use of our time. It encourages us to think about what kind of life would be worth living, rather than simply living the life we assume we’re stuck with.

Stressful tormented Indian youth are now driving Taxis instead to work in IT companies and bank for mental peace. Poor India, please feel pity on India.


Some highly educated execs prefer to drive for Uber, Ola
Shilpa Phadnis & Avik Das | TNN | Sep 22, 2015, 02.23 AM IST
NGALURU: Mohit R is an MBA in corporate finance from Leeds Metropolitan University, UK. He began his corporate career in Siemens, moved to HSBC and his last stint was with Ernst & Young in their project management team in Bengaluru. In April, he quit E&Y to become a driver on taxi-hailing app Uber's platform.
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/...o-drive-for-Uber-Ola/articleshow/49052610.cms
 
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What are you actually trying to convey ??? Well with a still flourishing silicon valley, millions of skyscrapers and countless number of expressways/metros, if you don't feel sorry for your stressed out youths, why should India.

And what is this absurd comparison of IT with culture and happiness ?? I suppose you defense personnel in Iraq, Syria, Libya, Afghanistan and all other overseas deployment may be more than happy since they are always together with their family. At-least lives of our IT guys are safe. LOL :p:
 
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WHAT THE FCK DID I JUST READ ...???????????????? :eek: :man_in_love: :crazy:
 
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