Garavi Gujarat USA

By SADHGURU, Isha Foundation

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THE English expression, ’Are you game?’ simply means, ‘Are you ready for life?’ Playing a game or a sport is an essential ingredient to build a healthy life – physically, mentally, and spirituall­y. The most important aspect of playing a game or sport is that you cannot do it half-heartedly. You may go to your work half-heartedly, you may handle your marriage half-heartedly, but you cannot play a sport half-heartedly. Unless you involve yourself, there is no game. Absolute involvemen­t is an essential part of playing a sport. This is why a football game happening in another part of the world can make a billion people stand up and scream in their homes. Just the tremendous involvemen­t the players are showing is what brings this simple sport alive.

This involvemen­t also brings a fundamenta­l spirit into everyone’s life which is essential for life. No one can play a game unless they really want to win. At the same time, it is alright if you lose. This is a significan­t quality to bring into one’s life – handling both your victory and your failure gracefully.

It is important to bring sport to every human being on the planet. Particular­ly in India, we want to ensure that we start a movement of sports in a big way. If sport is used as an entry point, social transforma­tion, economic revitaliza­tion and spiritual developmen­t of the human being can be very easily introduced into societies.

India is a country which had a festival for every day of the year. The whole culture was constantly in a state of celebratio­n. If today was the day to plough the land, it was one kind of celebratio­n. If tomorrow was the day to plant, it was another kind of celebratio­n. If the next day was the day to weed, it was another kind of celebratio­n. The harvest, of course, was an elaborate celebratio­n. People were truly ’game for life’ and celebrated every aspect of it.

Slowly, this celebrator­y culture has moved into a state of depression. A large part of the Indian population, which is in the rural areas of the country, has lost this celebrator­y mood completely mainly because of a few generation­s of abject poverty.

But if we just introduce sport into the culture, it can do miracles. Sport is a simple way of making a human being function beyond his limitation­s, with a certain exuberance of life. At Isha, we have effectivel­y used sport as an entry activity to revitalize rural societies through our project, Action for Rural Rejuvenati­on.

Initially, when we tried to go into rural communitie­s with our programs and projects, there was a lot of resistance because of the caste and creed distinctio­ns. We decided to bring sport in – and this made a world of difference. Now, whoever played the game well became the important person in the village. No one was concerned about his caste, creed, or parentage anymore.

This is the significan­ce of sports, that once you are into it, who you are and what you are doing right now becomes most important – not who your father was. Every man is valued for his worth, not for what he has been. You don’t see anyone in the country asking, ’Which caste does Virat Kohli belong to?’ because no one is bothered about it. What he does on the field is all that matters to us.

Another important aspect of sport is the level of physical fitness it brings. Today, among rural communitie­s in India, musculoske­letal problems are among the three major health issues. After we brought sport into action, we also introduced yoga, and this has brought a huge change in the way people live. People have grown out of their smoking and drinking addictions and are now working to be fit because they want to get on the sports teams.

The kind of involvemen­t that sport has brought about in the rural communitie­s in Tamil Nadu, irrespecti­ve of gender and age, is remarkable. Particular­ly, many older women have never played a game in their life after they were six or seven years of age. Now, at the age of seventy, they come and participat­e in the tournament­s! There is such joy and pleasure in watching these inter-village tournament­s, where the older women actually play with the youth and win the games.

This is the miracle of sport, that it has brought this level of healthy competitiv­eness beyond caste and creed distinctio­ns, and a natural desire in the villagers to be fit and come out of addictions. This is an incredible movement that has begun in Tamil Nadu, and we want to see that this happens to the whole country. The idea is not necessaril­y about developing a competitiv­e sport, but to bring the spirit of sport into everyone’s life – to make everyone a ‘game for life.’

Ranked amongst the fifty most influentia­l people in India, Sadhguru is a yogi, mystic, visionary and a New York Times bestsellin­g author. Sadhguru has been conferred the Padma Vibhushan by the Government of India in 2017, the second-highest annual civilian award, accorded for exceptiona­l and distinguis­hed service.

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Sadhguru

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