You know it is not healthy to eat sweets every day but your routine calls for some type of dessert. You know that feeling of a quick pick-me-up from a piece of cake or bowl of ice cream, but you also know how it slows you down in about an hour. You also know that it has caused you to gain five pounds. So why can’t you break the habit?
Similarly, parents indulge their children with sweets. It sometimes even becomes a type of ritual or way to appease children as they persistently nag their parents. Parents know it might not be the best solution but they are passing this habit on to their children. This situation may be a small thing, but it can apply to other ways in which we handle our life situations. So why isn’t it so easy to stop something that really doesn’t work in anyone’s best interest?
Grace is always there in abundance, states Sadhguru. But, like the monsoon clouds, which may bring water or just pass over, the question is this: “Will I get it or not?” Since everyone may not have the best things working for them, Sadhguru urges us not to pass along to anybody what has not worked for us.