Mr Prashant is a seasoned educator and author with years of experience in school administration and classroom teaching. Having served as a Principal, he brings a wealth of knowledge on effective teaching practices and classroom management. He is also the author of several books, including "Image of my Experiences - a book of poetry," "Speeches from the Desk of the Principal," and "The Legend of Inara Wali." Now retired and residing in Bangalore, he
continues blogging etc
Life, to me, is not a mere sequence of days and nights, but a sacred pilgrimage of purpose. Each step, each breath, carries an unspoken responsibility — to live by certain truths that define who we are when no one is watching. These truths, these guiding principles, form what I call my inner doctrine. They are not commandments carved in stone, but living values, breathing through my choices, my silences, and my acts of faith.
Our civilisation — from the Upanishads of India to the philosophical musings of Socrates — has celebrated the harmony between thought and action. In the realm of science, psychology, and culture, too, we find the same call: that a meaningful life arises not from abundance but from alignment — alignment of the mind, the heart, and the soul.
Integrity — The Unbroken Thread
Integrity is the first syllable in the language of virtue. It is doing the right thing, even when the applause has faded. It is truth whispered to oneself before it is spoken to the world. In a society tempted by shortcuts and illusions, integrity stands as the last fortress of self-respect. Psychologically, it stabilises the mind; culturally, it reflects the timeless Indian principle of Satyam Vada, Dharmam Chara — “Speak the truth, walk the path of righteousness.”
Compassion — The Universal Language
If integrity defines who we are, compassion defines how we connect. Across scriptures and societies, compassion remains humanity’s shared vocabulary. The Buddha’s serenity, Christ’s forgiveness, and Gandhi’s non-violence all spring from this one virtue. Socially, compassion breaks barriers; psychologically, it softens anxiety; spiritually, it makes us mirrors of divinity. To feel another’s pain and still offer a smile is to touch the hem of heaven.
Gratitude — The Science of Contentment
Gratitude, once a prayer, is now proven by neuroscience to be a healer. It releases the mind from the grip of complaint and rewires it towards joy. When I thank life even for its uncertainties, I shift from scarcity to abundance. In Indian philosophy, Prasāda Buddhi — acceptance with grace — teaches the same truth: that happiness is not the absence of struggle, but the awareness of blessings amid it.
Perseverance — The Fire of Progress
The universe itself is a testimony to perseverance. Stars are born out of chaos; rivers carve their path through resistance. In human life, too, progress bows to patience. History remembers not the ones who never fell, but those who rose again. Science thrives on trial and error; faith thrives on trust and endurance. To persevere is to converse with time — to say, “I will wait, but I will not waver.”
Simplicity — The Silent Strength
Simplicity is the art of living with clarity. It is the strength to choose less and the wisdom to value more. In an age of constant noise, simplicity is rebellion in silence. Our sages lived in huts but possessed galaxies within. Modern psychology agrees that uncluttered living nurtures peace. Simplicity, I believe, is not about denying beauty but about defining it rightly.
Faith — The Eternal Flame
Faith is the quiet companion of reason — the unseen energy that holds life together when logic loses grip. It may not always explain, but it sustains. Faith allows the human mind to walk through darkness with light unseen yet deeply felt. It is a cultural inheritance and a psychological necessity. When the night is long and the heart is weary, faith whispers, “This too shall pass, for dawn never forgets to return.”
In Reflection
My inner doctrine is not a sermon; it is a song. It is the melody of principles that blend the moral with the mystical, the scientific with the spiritual, the personal with the universal. They remind me that character is not taught, it is lived; that peace is not found, it is created; and that the greatest evolution of humanity lies not in its inventions but in its intentions.
When tempests roar and pathways blur, I seek the calm these truths confer. No wealth can buy, no power can claim, The inner light that bears my name.
When all seems lost, I close my eyes, And faith within begins to rise. For life’s true worth, I’ve come to see, Lies not in having — but in being me.
Through silence, storms, and fleeting years, These principles outshine my fears. They form my creed, my quiet art — The inner doctrine of my heart.
Book Review: The Flow of Physics by Prashant Kumar Lal
(Exploring Solids, Fluids, Thermodynamics, and Waves)
About the Book
The Flow of Physics by Prashant Kumar Lal is an engaging and insightful exploration into the dynamic world of matter and energy. Spanning 444 pages, the book presents a structured yet fluid understanding of the fundamental branches of Physics — from the rigidity of solids to the freedom of gases, from the graceful motion of fluids to the invisible rhythm of thermodynamic processes and waves. What makes this work truly distinctive is its balance between scientific precision and conceptual simplicity. The author translates complex physical phenomena into accessible ideas without compromising on depth or academic integrity.
With an elegant blend of diagrams, explanations, and practical illustrations, the book becomes more than just a scientific text — it becomes a journey through the elements of existence, where every atom and every transformation tells a story. Whether one is revisiting the foundations of Physics or discovering its marvels for the first time, this book provides a clear, coherent, and inspiring guide to the underlying principles that govern our universe.
About the Author
Prashant Kumar Lal, a seasoned educationist with decades of experience as a teacher, Principal, and trainer, brings both erudition and empathy to his writing. His deep understanding of how students learn and how concepts evolve in young minds adds a unique pedagogical value to the book. Having authored several educational works and poetry collections, Lal bridges the gap between science and art, reason and rhythm. His approach to Physics is not just analytical — it is philosophical, reflective, and deeply human.
Target Readers
This book caters to a wide spectrum of readers — from senior school and undergraduate students to educators and enthusiasts who seek to strengthen their conceptual grasp of Physics. It also serves as an excellent resource for competitive exam aspirants and teachers looking for a refreshing and structured perspective on core topics. Moreover, general readers with a curious mind will find it equally absorbing, as the language remains lucid and the illustrations engaging throughout.
Unique Selling Proposition (USP)
The book’s USP lies in its clarity, continuity, and conceptual flow. Unlike conventional textbooks that fragment topics into isolated chapters, The Flow of Physics connects them through thematic and logical progression, demonstrating how one state of matter or one principle seamlessly leads to another. It reflects the author’s conviction that Physics is not a subject to be memorised but a phenomenon to be understood and lived. The book’s design and presentation — complemented by crisp explanations, relatable examples, and a gentle narrative tone — make it stand apart as both an academic companion and a thinking reader’s delight.
Availability
The Flow of Physics is available in both print and digital formats at http://www.amazon.com, making it easily accessible to learners and educators around the world.
There are things in life we plan to do “someday.” We keep them folded neatly in the corners of our minds, like unsent letters waiting for a proper address. I have my share of such letters — words I have yet to write, melodies I have yet to play, places I have yet to visit, and promises I have yet to keep to myself. These are not mere tasks; they are fragments of dreams deferred by the quiet tyranny of time, hesitation, and perhaps, a fear of imperfection.
For me, what I have been putting off is not a grand project or an impossible feat, but something deeply personal — the task of decluttering my inner world. There are notebooks filled with half-finished poems, drawers crammed with forgotten photographs, and a heart brimming with untold stories. Each of them whispers, “When will you find the courage to begin again?”
It’s not laziness that holds me back, but rather the illusion of the “right moment.” We humans are experts at waiting — for clarity, for stability, for the perfect alignment of stars. Yet, the more we wait, the more the clock mocks us. The truth is, there is no right time, only the present moment disguised as ordinary. The longer we postpone, the heavier our spirit becomes with the weight of the undone.
Philosophers have long warned us against this habit of postponement. Seneca once said, “While we are postponing, life speeds by.” And he was right. We live under the assumption that time is an infinite stream, but it is, in fact, a fragile droplet — evaporating even as we admire its reflection. Every delay becomes a small theft from our own lives.
And yet, there is hope in realisation. Each postponed act — whether it is writing that book, rekindling an old friendship, starting that morning walk, or forgiving ourselves for past mistakes — carries within it the seed of renewal. It waits patiently for our touch, ready to bloom again.
In the end, I have learnt that putting things off is not merely about procrastination; it is about fear — fear of judgment, failure, and even success. To act is to confront ourselves. To begin is to expose our vulnerabilities. But the most beautiful art, music, and change in the world have always emerged from vulnerability.
So perhaps it’s time to open those unsent letters, dust off those forgotten manuscripts, and take that first, trembling step. Because every act we have been postponing is, in truth, a quiet plea from our soul — a reminder that life is not measured by completed tasks, but by the courage to begin.
The clock may tick, the days may fade, Dreams may rust where hopes were laid; But one small step, one whispered start, Can breathe new dawns into the heart.
Unwritten lines still call my name, Their echoes soft, yet just the same; For life’s true art, I’ve come to see, Begins where fear says, “Let it be.”
So here I stand — no grand design, Just faith that time will now be mine; For every act I once delayed, Shall bloom today — unafraid.
There comes a day when the laughter of youth begins to echo differently—when dreams once painted in bright hues start blending with shades of truth. It is a quiet transformation, almost imperceptible, yet it alters the rhythm of our heartbeat and the depth of our gaze. For me, the first time I truly felt like a grown-up was not marked by age, status, or milestones. It arrived silently, like dusk stealing light from the day—subtle, certain, and irreversible.
It was the moment I realised that life does not always unfold with fairness, that joy and sorrow are twins walking hand in hand, and that our choices often shape us more than our circumstances. That understanding, both beautiful and burdensome, felt like a curtain falling between who I was and who I was becoming.
Adulthood, I have learnt, is not a crown of achievement but a cloak of responsibility. It begins when we stop waiting for someone to guide us and start guiding ourselves—when we accept that comfort is temporary, but courage is eternal. It teaches us to listen more and react less, to forgive without forgetting, and to continue walking even when the road bends into uncertainty.
The grown-up within me emerged not through victories, but through resilience—those quiet moments of decision when fear was loud but faith was louder. It came when I learnt that silence could speak volumes, that strength could dwell in gentleness, and that success was not always measured by applause but often by endurance.
To grow up is to let go of illusions without letting go of hope. It is to understand that life is not a straight path but a symphony of gains and losses, each note teaching us grace. And amidst all the noise, it is to keep the inner child alive—the dreamer who still believes in dawn after the darkest night.
When laughter softened, and truth took stage, The child in me turned a thoughtful page, The skies grew vast, the winds grew wise, And questions bloomed where wonder lies.
Through trials faced and tempests met, Through tears that taught, through dreams once set, I found in silence, strength untold, A heart grown tender, yet calm and bold.
Now life’s great wheel moves full and free, Between who I was and who I’ll be, And though I’ve grown in mind and years, I still chase light through mist and tears.
There are lives that drift gently, almost imperceptibly, into the arms of indulgence. What begins as a harmless escape—a sip to unwind, a dinner to delight—soon becomes a quiet dependence that blurs the line between choice and compulsion. The heart begins to crave the temporary glow of pleasure, forgetting the steady warmth of responsibility.
It is strange how a person can lose himself without leaving home. The laughter that once rang true becomes a mask; the promises made to loved ones dissolve like breath on glass. A portion of his earnings, once meant for comfort and care, is spent chasing shadows in glittering places where smiles are sold and solace is rented. The world still calls him free, but freedom, perhaps, has already left by another door.
When one borrows too easily—from friends, from banks, or even from fate—each debt carries a quiet cost. The figures on paper may be paid someday, but the unseen interest accumulates in sleepless nights, unspoken guilt, and fading trust. There comes a time when even the kindest creditor—the soul itself—demands its due.
Friends who walk the same dim lanes of indulgence seem loyal at dusk but vanish at dawn. Their companionship thrives on sameness, not sincerity. Family, meanwhile, waits in another world—of silence, concern, and small prayers whispered into pillows. A wife’s eyes begin to lose their laughter; children learn early what disappointment feels like; parents sit by the window, watching not for his return, but for a trace of the man he used to be.
The law of life, unlike the law of courts, offers no appeals. A pattern of negligence often leads not to punishment but to slow erosion—of respect, reputation, and reason. The man who neglects his work may one day find that work no longer seeks him. Letters from creditors, legal notices, and warnings from employers are not merely papers; they are mirrors showing the reflection one no longer wishes to see.
Yet, all is not lost. Redemption seldom arrives in triumph—it comes quietly, like dawn after a restless night. A gentle word from a loved one, a painful moment of self-awareness, or a memory of what once was, may still awaken the sleeping conscience. Those around him can help—not by loud admonition, but by calm firmness, by reminding him of the dignity he has misplaced, not destroyed.
Philosophy whispers that a man’s greatest enemy often lives within—the one who justifies every excess and silences every warning. The battle is never truly with the bottle, or the bill, or the borrowed coin—it is with the yearning that seeks comfort instead of courage.
He sought delight in borrowed hours, Unmindful of the fading flowers; The wine was sweet, the laughter loud, Yet silence followed every crowd.
His home still waits, his child still dreams, His wife still prays in muted schemes; If once he turns from night to day, The lost may find a clearer way.
The law may bind, the world may blame, But only he can end the shame; For even ruins, kissed by rain, Can bloom with life again.
“A Million for Meaning: Where Compassion Finds Its Currency”
If fortune were to smile upon me with a million dollars—not for myself, but to give away—I would consider it not merely a windfall of wealth, but a test of conscience. For in the vast theatre of life, where desires wrestle with duties, giving becomes a sacred art—a divine act that transcends arithmetic and enters the realm of the heart.
Money, in itself, is mute—it neither sings nor sighs. But in the hands of empathy, it speaks in languages unspoken by kings and commoners alike. If I were granted this million, I would scatter it like seeds of kindness, letting it fall where hope is thirsty and dreams have dried in the dust of despair.
A good portion would go to the education of children—not the privileged few who already sit beneath the chandeliers of opportunity, but the forgotten ones, whose only classroom is a street corner and whose only teacher is hunger. For knowledge, when lit, can turn a shivering child into a shining torchbearer of tomorrow. The million might fade, but their learning would linger like a flame that no storm can quench.
Next, I would extend a hand to the aged and abandoned, those silent souls who once nurtured others, but now count their days in sighs and solitude. A home filled with care, laughter, and shared stories could give them what gold cannot—dignity in twilight. For love, when returned, is wealth multiplied.
A part would go to the artists, farmers, and healers—those unseen craftsmen of civilisation. The artists who paint hope with trembling brushes, the farmers who feed the world yet often go hungry, and the healers who walk the thin line between despair and recovery. To support their work would be to nourish the roots of humanity itself.
And I would reserve a small portion—humble yet heartfelt—for those who care for Mother Earth. Planting trees, cleaning rivers, nurturing life where greed has left scars. For money is best spent when it creates balance between man and nature, when it restores rather than merely repairs.
Philosophically, this million would not be mine—it would be a medium of mercy, a means through which divine intent finds human expression. As the Bhagavad Gita teaches, “Karmanye vadhikaraste ma phaleshu kadachana”—we are entitled to act, not to the fruits thereof. And as Saint Francis of Assisi once prayed, “It is in giving that we receive.” Perhaps, in distributing that million, I would be the richest man alive—rich not in possessions, but in purpose.
We live in a world obsessed with accumulation. Yet, life’s truest treasure lies not in the having, but in the handing over—in the quiet joy that rises from seeing another’s eyes light up with renewed hope.
And when the last note of that million is spent, I would sit beneath the evening sky, smile at the sunset, and whisper to myself—
“The purse is empty, but the heart is full; The vault is vacant, yet the soul is whole.”
If I had a million, I’d buy no car, No mansion gleaming from afar; I’d mend some hearts, repair some dreams, And float my joy on golden streams.
A bit for books, a bit for bread, A tune for souls by sorrow led; A song for trees, a smile for seas, A wish that flies on whispering breeze.
So when the notes are spent and gone, I’ll hum life’s tune from dusk till dawn— For giving’s game, when played with grace, Leaves Heaven’s smile upon one’s face.
If failure were exiled from human existence — if every endeavour I touched turned into success — I would attempt to transform the way humanity learns, lives, and loves. I would strive to recreate the very ethos of education — not as a system of evaluation but as an ecosystem of enlightenment.
The Vision Beyond Fear
Fear of failure is perhaps the most persistent enemy of progress. It paralyses the potential of millions who might have been creators, dreamers, and visionaries. If that shadow were removed, life would become an open canvas of divine possibilities. In such a world, I would dedicate myself to building Institutions of Inner Learning — places not confined by walls, timetables, or rigid syllabi, but open fields of inquiry where the mind is nurtured and the soul is awakened.
Children would learn the rhythm of the universe before learning the rigidity of equations. They would study the poetry of rivers before dissecting the rules of grammar. Education would move beyond rote and routine to become a pilgrimage — from ignorance to insight, from self-doubt to self-realisation.
Bridging Science, Philosophy, and Spirituality
If I were guaranteed not to fail, I would weave science and spirituality into a seamless fabric of truth. The rational and the transcendental would no longer be rivals; they would coexist like day and dawn — distinct yet inseparable.
– Physics would not stop at matter; it would explore the mystery of consciousness.
– Biology would teach not only anatomy but also the ethics of existence.
– Literature would cease to be just a study of words and become a study of worlds.
– History would no longer recount wars and empires but the evolution of human wisdom.
I would introduce a universal curriculum that blends intellectual rigour with emotional intelligence, where critical thinking dances hand in hand with creative empathy. Every learner would not be a mere product of schooling but a co-creator of civilisation.
Integrity as the Core of Existence
If failure were not possible, honesty would be effortless. Yet in a truly enlightened world, integrity would not be an act of moral compulsion — it would be a way of being. I would nurture environments where truth is not feared but celebrated, where success is measured not by wealth or position but by the peace one radiates.
In such a realm, leadership would mean service, and success would mean significance. Teachers would be torchbearers, not taskmasters; students, seekers, not subjects. Each act of learning would be an offering to the higher self.
A World Without the Fetters of Comparison
If failure ceased to exist, comparison too would lose its sting. People would not compete but complete each other. The architect would respect the poet; the scientist would listen to the mystic. Nations would not race for supremacy but cooperate for sustainability. The world’s progress would be measured not by GDP, but by GNH — Gross National Happiness.
The Metaphysical Dimension
Philosophically, the absence of failure would redefine existence itself. Failure is the teacher that success often forgets. Without it, the soul may lose its humility, the mind its curiosity, and the heart its compassion. Yet, for one divine moment, imagining such perfection allows us to stretch our consciousness to the realm of the infinite.
It reminds us that success without fear is not arrogance but alignment — alignment with truth, purpose, and the cosmic order. When every action resonates with sincerity and selflessness, failure naturally dissolves.
If failure fled and faith took flight, The world would glow in boundless light. No soul would shrink, no dream would die, Each heart would hum a lullaby.
If loss were gone and gain made kind, No greed would darken humankind; The crown of truth would grace each head, And love would be our daily bread.
If fear withdrew and courage led, No soul would mourn, no tear be shed; The path to peace would lie within, Beyond all doubt, beyond all sin.
If failure vanished, yet wisdom stayed, Our hands would heal the world we made; For strength lies not in flawless art, But in the purity of heart.
Epilogue
If I were guaranteed not to fail, I would attempt to awaken a generation — one that learns not for livelihood alone, but for life itself. I would dare to dream of a civilisation built not on ambition but on awareness.
Yet, deep within, I know — it is because we fail, fall, and rise again that we evolve. Failure refines purpose, tempers ego, and strengthens the human spirit. The guarantee not to fail may be a fantasy, but the courage to try despite failure — that is divine.
If failure were exiled from human existence — if every endeavour I touched turned into success — I would attempt to transform the way humanity learns, lives, and loves. I would strive to recreate the very ethos of education — not as a system of evaluation but as an ecosystem of enlightenment.
The Vision Beyond Fear
Fear of failure is perhaps the most persistent enemy of progress. It paralyses the potential of millions who might have been creators, dreamers, and visionaries. If that shadow were removed, life would become an open canvas of divine possibilities. In such a world, I would dedicate myself to building Institutions of Inner Learning — places not confined by walls, timetables, or rigid syllabi, but open fields of inquiry where the mind is nurtured and the soul is awakened.
Children would learn the rhythm of the universe before learning the rigidity of equations. They would study the poetry of rivers before dissecting the rules of grammar. Education would move beyond rote and routine to become a pilgrimage — from ignorance to insight, from self-doubt to self-realisation.
Bridging Science, Philosophy, and Spirituality
If I were guaranteed not to fail, I would weave science and spirituality into a seamless fabric of truth. The rational and the transcendental would no longer be rivals; they would coexist like day and dawn — distinct yet inseparable.
– Physics would not stop at matter; it would explore the mystery of consciousness.
– Biology would teach not only anatomy but also the ethics of existence.
– Literature would cease to be just a study of words and become a study of worlds.
– History would no longer recount wars and empires but the evolution of human wisdom.
I would introduce a universal curriculum that blends intellectual rigour with emotional intelligence, where critical thinking dances hand in hand with creative empathy. Every learner would not be a mere product of schooling but a co-creator of civilisation.
Integrity as the Core of Existence
If failure were not possible, honesty would be effortless. Yet in a truly enlightened world, integrity would not be an act of moral compulsion — it would be a way of being. I would nurture environments where truth is not feared but celebrated, where success is measured not by wealth or position but by the peace one radiates.
In such a realm, leadership would mean service, and success would mean significance. Teachers would be torchbearers, not taskmasters; students, seekers, not subjects. Each act of learning would be an offering to the higher self.
A World Without the Fetters of Comparison
If failure ceased to exist, comparison too would lose its sting. People would not compete but complete each other. The architect would respect the poet; the scientist would listen to the mystic. Nations would not race for supremacy but cooperate for sustainability. The world’s progress would be measured not by GDP, but by GNH — Gross National Happiness.
The Metaphysical Dimension
Philosophically, the absence of failure would redefine existence itself. Failure is the teacher that success often forgets. Without it, the soul may lose its humility, the mind its curiosity, and the heart its compassion. Yet, for one divine moment, imagining such perfection allows us to stretch our consciousness to the realm of the infinite.
It reminds us that success without fear is not arrogance but alignment — alignment with truth, purpose, and the cosmic order. When every action resonates with sincerity and selflessness, failure naturally dissolves.
If failure fled and faith took flight, The world would glow in boundless light. No soul would shrink, no dream would die, Each heart would hum a lullaby.
If loss were gone and gain made kind, No greed would darken humankind; The crown of truth would grace each head, And love would be our daily bread.
If fear withdrew and courage led, No soul would mourn, no tear be shed; The path to peace would lie within, Beyond all doubt, beyond all sin.
If failure vanished, yet wisdom stayed, Our hands would heal the world we made; For strength lies not in flawless art, But in the purity of heart.
Epilogue
If I were guaranteed not to fail, I would attempt to awaken a generation — one that learns not for livelihood alone, but for life itself. I would dare to dream of a civilisation built not on ambition but on awareness.
Yet, deep within, I know — it is because we fail, fall, and rise again that we evolve. Failure refines purpose, tempers ego, and strengthens the human spirit. The guarantee not to fail may be a fantasy, but the courage to try despite failure — that is divine.