Hi,
I hope everybody has seen a mosquito around him or her in life. What is the average lifespan of this mosquito? I think: 1 day = 24 hours.
3 hours = it is born and childhood period starts.
6 hours = it is still growing and becoming powerful day by day.
9 hours = it mates, gives eggs, and reproduces, technically forming a family, but due to ignorance, it may not be aware.
12 hours = its health is declining and continues to decline.
15 hours = it still declines.
24 hours = it dies and becomes a meal for ants.
This is a rough estimation by me for the life of a mosquito, but the point to emphasize is its age is approximately 24 hours.
Let's compare it to a human lifespan:
0 years = born.
5 years = go to school.
18 years = still in school but the brain and health are constantly becoming powerful.
20 years = falls in love.
24 years = marries with girlfriend or arranged marriage.
28 years = becomes a father.
40 years = all these years have been spent in bringing up the family and kids.
50 years = near to retirement.
70-80 years = can pass away anytime.
This is a rough estimation by me for the life of a man or woman, but the point to emphasize is their age is approximately 70-80 years.
My question is, does the mosquito think that its age is too short, only approximately 24 hours? I don't think so; it may be thinking 24 hours is equivalent to 80 years. For the mosquito, it did everything in its life from birth to giving birth and led a healthy life.
The point to emphasize:
1) Mosquito life = 24 hours.
2) Human life = 80 years.
But for both of them, this time period is significant. Humans think 24 hours is nothing, but for a mosquito, it's a full lifespan. There may be some species, some microorganisms who may live for 1 hour, for them, 1 hour is a complete life.
But if a mosquito were to know about this microorganism, it may laugh, saying only 1 hour.
So, are there any species above us who laugh at us, and for whom 80 years is nothing?
Yes, we do have, the one and only one, the creator of this world, the Lord, who says in BHAGWAT GEETA in one of his shlokas attached below. Please read once. In short, this Shloka means, God's one day equals millions of years for humans. So, for us, we live 80 years, for Him, it's not even measurable. In feeling the time-span, the Lord maintains the same ratio related to our lifespan time as we think for a mosquito.
Millions of human generation years equal God's one day. Our 80 years may be picoseconds for God, or even less.
In short, I want to say when the figure of 80 years comes into our minds, we think there is still plenty of time to go, but time is very short; it's running at a speed beyond our imagination. It all depends on the scale we put it in.
"Ek pal main jina yar Sikh lain, jevan ke pal han char yar, yad rakh, marana han ek bar, marne se pehle jina sekh lain."
"Har pal main zindagi jiyon."
Cheers,
Nishchal Attri
From Korea
I hope everybody has seen a mosquito around him or her in life. What is the average lifespan of this mosquito? I think: 1 day = 24 hours.
3 hours = it is born and childhood period starts.
6 hours = it is still growing and becoming powerful day by day.
9 hours = it mates, gives eggs, and reproduces, technically forming a family, but due to ignorance, it may not be aware.
12 hours = its health is declining and continues to decline.
15 hours = it still declines.
24 hours = it dies and becomes a meal for ants.
This is a rough estimation by me for the life of a mosquito, but the point to emphasize is its age is approximately 24 hours.
Let's compare it to a human lifespan:
0 years = born.
5 years = go to school.
18 years = still in school but the brain and health are constantly becoming powerful.
20 years = falls in love.
24 years = marries with girlfriend or arranged marriage.
28 years = becomes a father.
40 years = all these years have been spent in bringing up the family and kids.
50 years = near to retirement.
70-80 years = can pass away anytime.
This is a rough estimation by me for the life of a man or woman, but the point to emphasize is their age is approximately 70-80 years.
My question is, does the mosquito think that its age is too short, only approximately 24 hours? I don't think so; it may be thinking 24 hours is equivalent to 80 years. For the mosquito, it did everything in its life from birth to giving birth and led a healthy life.
The point to emphasize:
1) Mosquito life = 24 hours.
2) Human life = 80 years.
But for both of them, this time period is significant. Humans think 24 hours is nothing, but for a mosquito, it's a full lifespan. There may be some species, some microorganisms who may live for 1 hour, for them, 1 hour is a complete life.
But if a mosquito were to know about this microorganism, it may laugh, saying only 1 hour.
So, are there any species above us who laugh at us, and for whom 80 years is nothing?
Yes, we do have, the one and only one, the creator of this world, the Lord, who says in BHAGWAT GEETA in one of his shlokas attached below. Please read once. In short, this Shloka means, God's one day equals millions of years for humans. So, for us, we live 80 years, for Him, it's not even measurable. In feeling the time-span, the Lord maintains the same ratio related to our lifespan time as we think for a mosquito.
Millions of human generation years equal God's one day. Our 80 years may be picoseconds for God, or even less.
In short, I want to say when the figure of 80 years comes into our minds, we think there is still plenty of time to go, but time is very short; it's running at a speed beyond our imagination. It all depends on the scale we put it in.
"Ek pal main jina yar Sikh lain, jevan ke pal han char yar, yad rakh, marana han ek bar, marne se pehle jina sekh lain."
"Har pal main zindagi jiyon."
Cheers,
Nishchal Attri
From Korea
Hi, Mr. Arc,
You are absolutely right. We are the mosquitoes of God. But then, don't define mosquito as a bad word. It's just to prove my part. In terms of statistics, I have taken the examples of mosquitoes.
By the way, to you and Himani, at least I got some guys who have a philosophical mind to understand my theory.
Regards,
Nishchal Attri
From Korea
You are absolutely right. We are the mosquitoes of God. But then, don't define mosquito as a bad word. It's just to prove my part. In terms of statistics, I have taken the examples of mosquitoes.
By the way, to you and Himani, at least I got some guys who have a philosophical mind to understand my theory.
Regards,
Nishchal Attri
From Korea
Hi Vivek,
I may be wrong, but chances are less. One yug equals 100 days; let's see. There are 4 yugs: Sat Yug, Treta Yug, Dwapar Yug, and Kali Yug. So, if you are correct, that means 400 years ago it was Sat Yug, which is not true, brother.
Anyway, so that everybody can understand, I took picoseconds as a reference.
Regards,
Attri
From Korea
I may be wrong, but chances are less. One yug equals 100 days; let's see. There are 4 yugs: Sat Yug, Treta Yug, Dwapar Yug, and Kali Yug. So, if you are correct, that means 400 years ago it was Sat Yug, which is not true, brother.
Anyway, so that everybody can understand, I took picoseconds as a reference.
Regards,
Attri
From Korea
Hi everybody,
Mr. Nischal Atri's article is quite interesting, but I request him to send the English translation of the Bhagavad Gita verse that he has attached, or tell the shloka number and the chapter. I would like to check the details as said by Lord Krishna (I am from Karnataka).
From his article, what we have to understand is that time is one thing that should be given topmost priority and we have to make use of it. We have to live as if every moment is our last moment. There is a lesson that one can learn through this message - that we have to make use of time every moment constructively and positively. Then life will be fully alive; we do not waste our time in gossiping, hatred, lack of love, jealousy, violence, ego, non-constructive works, and such negative things that will only disturb our lives and make us lose focus. Whether it is one hour, one day, or 100 years, what matters is how we make use of it and what we contribute before we die.
At this time, I suggest everyone go through the website Light Channels. The details are self-explanatory. Become a channel of light for yourself and for the world! In case you have any questions, you may send an email to me at ramachandrak62@gmail.com.
Regards and best wishes to all,
K. Ramachandra
Bangalore
Mr. Nischal Atri's article is quite interesting, but I request him to send the English translation of the Bhagavad Gita verse that he has attached, or tell the shloka number and the chapter. I would like to check the details as said by Lord Krishna (I am from Karnataka).
From his article, what we have to understand is that time is one thing that should be given topmost priority and we have to make use of it. We have to live as if every moment is our last moment. There is a lesson that one can learn through this message - that we have to make use of time every moment constructively and positively. Then life will be fully alive; we do not waste our time in gossiping, hatred, lack of love, jealousy, violence, ego, non-constructive works, and such negative things that will only disturb our lives and make us lose focus. Whether it is one hour, one day, or 100 years, what matters is how we make use of it and what we contribute before we die.
At this time, I suggest everyone go through the website Light Channels. The details are self-explanatory. Become a channel of light for yourself and for the world! In case you have any questions, you may send an email to me at ramachandrak62@gmail.com.
Regards and best wishes to all,
K. Ramachandra
Bangalore
Hi Attri,
A nice example but wrong information. A mosquito lives on an average of more than 4-8 weeks. If it just lives for just one day we could have eradicated all mosquito related so many deadly avoidable deaths/diseases such as Dengue, Malariai. Anyway Sorry. Your explanation are plausible provided GOD is there some where in a distant universe light years away....
Mosquitoes go through four stages in their life-cycle: egg, larva, pupa, and adult or imago. Adult females lay their eggs in standing water, which can be a salt-marsh, a lake, a puddle, a natural reservoir on a plant, or an artificial water container such as a plastic bucket. The first three stages are aquatic and last 5–14 days, depending on the species and the ambient temperature; eggs hatch to become larvae, then pupae. The adult mosquito emerges from the pupa as it floats at the water surface. Adults live for 4–8 weeks.[7]
Mosquitoes have mouth parts that are adapted for piercing the skin of plants and animals(development completes normally around 21 days). While males typically feed on nectar and plant juices, the female needs to obtain nutrients from a "blood meal" before she can produce eggs.
Nice discussion
affectionate
Major Dr Sekar
From India, Madurai
A nice example but wrong information. A mosquito lives on an average of more than 4-8 weeks. If it just lives for just one day we could have eradicated all mosquito related so many deadly avoidable deaths/diseases such as Dengue, Malariai. Anyway Sorry. Your explanation are plausible provided GOD is there some where in a distant universe light years away....
Mosquitoes go through four stages in their life-cycle: egg, larva, pupa, and adult or imago. Adult females lay their eggs in standing water, which can be a salt-marsh, a lake, a puddle, a natural reservoir on a plant, or an artificial water container such as a plastic bucket. The first three stages are aquatic and last 5–14 days, depending on the species and the ambient temperature; eggs hatch to become larvae, then pupae. The adult mosquito emerges from the pupa as it floats at the water surface. Adults live for 4–8 weeks.[7]
Mosquitoes have mouth parts that are adapted for piercing the skin of plants and animals(development completes normally around 21 days). While males typically feed on nectar and plant juices, the female needs to obtain nutrients from a "blood meal" before she can produce eggs.
Nice discussion
affectionate
Major Dr Sekar
From India, Madurai
Hi Major Saab,
I accept my mistake, but I don't know the name of the species, insect, or microorganism that lives for only one day. So, a mosquito was very close to the analogy I wanted to make. The goal of the topic is the realization of time. Once that is understood, the age of a mosquito becomes mere materialistic.
Secondly, you live in India, a warm country, so yes, a mosquito can live for 4-8 weeks. The total time it takes for a mosquito to go through all four stages depends greatly on both temperature and species. In typically warm weather, the life cycle takes 14 days or less, but it can vary from 4 to 30 days. The average lifespan of a female mosquito is 3 to 100 days, while the male lives 10 to 20 days.
Thirdly, God is not light-years away, but our thinking is light-years away from God. That's why it takes birth after birth to attain oneness with Him.
Regards,
Attri
From Korea
I accept my mistake, but I don't know the name of the species, insect, or microorganism that lives for only one day. So, a mosquito was very close to the analogy I wanted to make. The goal of the topic is the realization of time. Once that is understood, the age of a mosquito becomes mere materialistic.
Secondly, you live in India, a warm country, so yes, a mosquito can live for 4-8 weeks. The total time it takes for a mosquito to go through all four stages depends greatly on both temperature and species. In typically warm weather, the life cycle takes 14 days or less, but it can vary from 4 to 30 days. The average lifespan of a female mosquito is 3 to 100 days, while the male lives 10 to 20 days.
Thirdly, God is not light-years away, but our thinking is light-years away from God. That's why it takes birth after birth to attain oneness with Him.
Regards,
Attri
From Korea
Hello Nishchal,
Though the concept of the article you posted is pretty old, the way in which you put it is quite interesting.
The example regarding spending time with a girl and sitting on a stove is actually Einstein's quote when someone asked him to explain his Theory of Relativity when he had just expounded it. He said: "When you sit with your girlfriend for 1 hour, you feel it's only a minute. When you sit for 1 minute on a hot stove, you feel it's an hour. That's Relativity."
Until he brought in the Theory of Relativity, Time, as we know it, was thought to be Absolute. But he proved that Time is also relative.
The sense of time we know of on this planet Earth is very different from what it is on any other planet—known or unknown.
You mentioned the example of a mosquito vis-a-vis human vis-a-vis God. But there are many animals itself on Earth that live longer than humans—an elephant being a well-known example. And what about trees? There are many trees in the Amazon forest that are almost 200-300 feet tall and are aged nearly 1000 years [please see the website of National Geographic to get more details on this].
Human nature being what it is, we tend to hero-worship whatever/whichever/whoever seems to have the attributes that we don't have. A case in point is our craze for film stars or some politicians—as if they are Demi-Gods [if not altogether Gods], forgetting that they too are human and will have some shortcomings.
Not that we are new to this phenomenon. It has been there since man set his foot on this Earth. Otherwise, the very Bhagavad Gita that you quoted from wouldn't be existing at all.
Regards,
TS
From India, Hyderabad
Though the concept of the article you posted is pretty old, the way in which you put it is quite interesting.
The example regarding spending time with a girl and sitting on a stove is actually Einstein's quote when someone asked him to explain his Theory of Relativity when he had just expounded it. He said: "When you sit with your girlfriend for 1 hour, you feel it's only a minute. When you sit for 1 minute on a hot stove, you feel it's an hour. That's Relativity."
Until he brought in the Theory of Relativity, Time, as we know it, was thought to be Absolute. But he proved that Time is also relative.
The sense of time we know of on this planet Earth is very different from what it is on any other planet—known or unknown.
You mentioned the example of a mosquito vis-a-vis human vis-a-vis God. But there are many animals itself on Earth that live longer than humans—an elephant being a well-known example. And what about trees? There are many trees in the Amazon forest that are almost 200-300 feet tall and are aged nearly 1000 years [please see the website of National Geographic to get more details on this].
Human nature being what it is, we tend to hero-worship whatever/whichever/whoever seems to have the attributes that we don't have. A case in point is our craze for film stars or some politicians—as if they are Demi-Gods [if not altogether Gods], forgetting that they too are human and will have some shortcomings.
Not that we are new to this phenomenon. It has been there since man set his foot on this Earth. Otherwise, the very Bhagavad Gita that you quoted from wouldn't be existing at all.
Regards,
TS
From India, Hyderabad
Dear K. Ramachandra,
The page number and the division number are also given in the .jpeg image that he has attached. The slokas in Sanskrit can probably be understood.
It is in Page 115-116, Chapter 8. The sloka numbers are 17, 18, 19.
Go to the below links for more details:
- [Bhagavad-Gita: Chapter 8, Verse 17](http://www.bhagavad-gita.org/Gita/verse-08-17.html)
- [Bhagavad-Gita: Chapter 8, Verse 18](http://www.bhagavad-gita.org/Gita/verse-08-18.html)
- [Bhagavad-Gita: Chapter 8, Verse 19](http://www.bhagavad-gita.org/Gita/verse-08-19.html)
From India, Bangalore
The page number and the division number are also given in the .jpeg image that he has attached. The slokas in Sanskrit can probably be understood.
It is in Page 115-116, Chapter 8. The sloka numbers are 17, 18, 19.
Go to the below links for more details:
- [Bhagavad-Gita: Chapter 8, Verse 17](http://www.bhagavad-gita.org/Gita/verse-08-17.html)
- [Bhagavad-Gita: Chapter 8, Verse 18](http://www.bhagavad-gita.org/Gita/verse-08-18.html)
- [Bhagavad-Gita: Chapter 8, Verse 19](http://www.bhagavad-gita.org/Gita/verse-08-19.html)
From India, Bangalore
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