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IRCTC launches 14-day Bharat-Bhutan Mystic Mountain Tour from June 28; all key details
IRCTC launches 14-day Bharat-Bhutan Mystic Mountain Tour from June 28; all key details

Time of India

time28-05-2025

  • Time of India

IRCTC launches 14-day Bharat-Bhutan Mystic Mountain Tour from June 28; all key details

T he Indian Railway Catering and Tourism Corporation (IRCTC) has announced the launch of the 'Bharat-Bhutan Mystic Mountain Tour', a 14-day journey commencing on June 28, 2025. This tour will offer travellers an opportunity to explore the natural beauty and cultural heritage of Northeast India and Bhutan. Tour itinerary Departure: The tour begins from Delhi's Safdarjung Railway Station with a train journey to Guwahati, Assam. Guwahati: Upon arrival, travellers will get to visit the Kamakhya Temple, situated atop the Nilachal Hills. From here, they will continue by road till Shillong. Shillong: En route to this place, travellers will halt at Umiam Lake, which is famed for its scenic beauty. In Shillong, the itinerary is further complemented with visits to the Cathedral of Mary Help of Christians, Ward's Lake, and the Don Bosco Museum. Read more: 7 offbeat hill stations in Uttarakhand you'll instantly fall for Cherrapunji: After that, there will be a full-day trip to Cherrapunji, which includes stops at the Mawsmai Caves, Nohkalikai Falls, and the Seven Sisters Falls. Elephant Falls in Shillong is visited on the way back. Bhutan: After Meghalaya, the tour proceeds to Hasimara Railway Station in West Bengal, the nearest railhead to Bhutan. Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Top Public Speaking Course for Children Planet Spark Book Now Undo Travellers will cross into Bhutan via Phuentsholing after completing immigration formalities. Thimphu: The Bhutan segment starts in Thimphu, the capital city. Notable stops include Buddha Point, featuring a towering statue of Shakyamuni Buddha; the Motithang Takin Preserve, home to Bhutan's national animal; the National Library; and the Thimphu Handicraft Market. The day ends with a visit to the Tashi Chho Dzong, a religious and administrative fortress. Punakha : En route to Punakha, a stop at Dochula Pass is included, followed by a visit to the Punakha Dzong, located at the confluence of the Pho Chu and Mo Chu rivers. Paro : The last stop is Paro, where guests can see the National Museum, Tamchog Lhakhang Iron Bridge, Paro Dzong, the base of Tiger's Nest Monastery, and Lamperi Royal Botanical Park. A cultural performance and a traditional hot stone bath are also included in the tour. Read more: 9 picture-perfect destinations to visit in India this June Tour details and pricing Duration: 14 days/13 nights Total seats: 150 Classes and prices (per person, double occupancy): Superior AC I (Coupe): INR 1,58,850 Superior AC I (Cabin): INR 1,44,892 Deluxe AC II Tier: INR 1,29,495 Comfort AC III Tier: INR1,18,965 For more information and bookings, travelers can visit the official IRCTC Tourism website. One step to a healthier you—join Times Health+ Yoga and feel the change

IRCTC launches 14-day Bharat-Bhutan tour from June 28. All you need to know
IRCTC launches 14-day Bharat-Bhutan tour from June 28. All you need to know

India Today

time26-05-2025

  • India Today

IRCTC launches 14-day Bharat-Bhutan tour from June 28. All you need to know

The Indian Railway Catering and Tourism Corporation (IRCTC) is set to launch the 'Bharat-Bhutan Mystic Mountain Tour,' a meticulously curated 14-day journey that offers travelers an unparalleled opportunity to explore the natural beauty and cultural richness of Northeast India and from Delhi's Safdarjung Railway Station on June 28, 2025, this tour promises a blend of spiritual experiences, scenic landscapes, and cultural NORTHEAST INDIA'S TREASURESThe adventure begins with a train journey to Guwahati, the gateway to Northeast India. Upon arrival, participants will visit the revered Kamakhya Temple, perched atop the Nilachal Hills. This ancient temple, dedicated to Goddess Kamakhya, is one of the most significant Shakti Peethas and attracts devotees from all over the Guwahati, the journey continues by road to Shillong, often referred to as the 'Scotland of the East' for its rolling hills and colonial charm. En route, travelers will pause at the picturesque Umiam Lake, renowned for its tranquil waters and scenic Shillong, guests will explore local attractions such as the Cathedral Church, Ward's Lake, and the Don Bosco Museum, which offers insights into the region's diverse cultures.A highlight of the tour is a day excursion to Cherrapunji, famed for its abundant rainfall and breathtaking visitors will witness the majestic Seven Sisters Falls, the plunging Nohkalikai Falls, and the intriguing Mawsmai Caves, known for their limestone journey back to Shillong includes a stop at the Elephant Falls, adding to the array of natural wonders INTO THE LAND OF THE THUNDER DRAGONAfter exploring Meghalaya, travelers will board the train to Hasimara Railway Station in West Bengal, the nearest railhead to the Bhutan Hasimara, the group will proceed to Phuentsholing, the gateway to Bhutan, completing immigration formalities before entering the Himalayan Bhutanese segment of the tour begins in Thimphu, the capital city, where guests will visit notable sites including Buddha Point, home to a towering statue of Shakyamuni Buddha; Motithang Takin Preserve, which houses Bhutan's national animal; the National Library; and the vibrant Thimphu Handicraft day concludes with a visit to Tashi Chho Dzong, an impressive fortress that serves as a religious and administrative journey then takes travelers to Punakha, the former capital of Bhutan. En route, a stop at Dochula Pass offers panoramic views of the snow-capped Punakha, participants will explore the Punakha Dzong, an architectural masterpiece situated at the confluence of the Pho Chu and Mo Chu final Bhutanese destination is Paro, a valley town known for its scenic beauty and historical include the Lamperi Royal Botanical Park, Tamchog Lhakhang iron bridge, and the iconic Paro Dzong, which is listed on Bhutan's tentative list for UNESCO inclusion.A trek to the base of the famed Tiger's Nest Monastery (Taktsang Lhakhang) provides a memorable experience, offering stunning views and a glimpse into Bhutanese day concludes with a visit to the National Museum and an opportunity to experience a traditional hot stone bath, followed by a cultural performance during DETAILS AND BOOKING INFORMATIONThe Bharat-Bhutan Mystic Mountain Tour is designed to accommodate 150 travelers, offering various classes of travel to suit different preferences:Superior AC I (Coupe): Rs 1,58,850 per personSuperior AC I (Cabin): Rs 1,44,892 per personDeluxe AC II Tier: Rs 1,29,495 per personComfort AC III Tier: Rs 1,18,965 per personThese all-inclusive prices cover train travel, accommodation in 3-star hotels, vegetarian meals, transfers, sightseeing, travel insurance, and the services of a tour escort. Bookings can be made through the IRCTC website, with seats allocated on a first-come, first-served basis.

Hungry Ghosts Are Busting Government—How Leaders Can Be Ghostbusters
Hungry Ghosts Are Busting Government—How Leaders Can Be Ghostbusters

Forbes

time01-04-2025

  • General
  • Forbes

Hungry Ghosts Are Busting Government—How Leaders Can Be Ghostbusters

From the Hungry Ghosts Scroll at the Kyoto National Museum. The scroll depicts the realm of the ... More hungry ghosts, with this section showing Ananda, nephew and disciple of Shakyamuni Buddha, as a ghostbuster. Hungry ghosts, as described in Buddhist texts, occupy the second lowest of six realms of human experience, right above the rage of hell, and well below the consciousness of a healthy human being, much less the bliss of heaven. Hungry ghosts are consumed with greed, often depicted as sorrowful, teardrop figures with tiny, little mouths and great, big bellies that can never get enough food. The U.S. government is being busted by a couple of men who, for whatever other strengths they may have, are functioning as hungry ghosts. President Trump and Elon Musk are demonstrating an insatiable greed for power and its proxy, money. Both men show us that when greed goes unsatisfied or gets challenged, it lashes out in even more dangerous or outlandish ways. Both men vividly demonstrate that greed does not satisfy itself but only fuels more greed. Both show us that hungry ghosts drag those around them down to being hungry ghosts as well who can be held in check by the promise of more power and wealth or the fear of losing it. While some of us are accustomed to thinking of heaven and hell as regards an afterlife, their use in the Buddhism also applies to our life right now. They represent the peak and pit of human experience and, like six floors of a building, we're capable of riding an elevator up and down to any of them. So, anyone can descend to the level of being a hungry ghost and, because greed feeds more greed, it can be hard to escape from that realm. Unlike in the comedy classic, Ghostbusters, there's no magic energy device for busting the hungry ghost that can surface in us. But there is a key word that leaders do well to follow to bust the grip of being a hungry ghost, free up hungry ghosts around them and move to action to stem the damage from those who are still acting as hungry ghosts. That ghostbusting word is 'enough.' The first sense of 'enough' that breaks the grip of greed is knowing what enough is. As humans, we come with a set of needs. Those needs have been characterized by Maslow, McClelland and others to include physical needs such as food and safety, social-emotional needs like love and belonging, and psychological needs like power, achievement and self-actualization. Getting our needs met to some level of sufficiency motivates our actions. If our needs are expressed in a healthy way, we know what enough is. To use food as an example, if we have a healthy relationship with food, we know when we've eaten enough. Natural, healthy needs have natural, healthy fill lines. But the fact is, there are many ways our need system can get messed up and fill lines can fail us. One way this happens was researched by psychologist Arthur Janov to understand the roots of neurosis. He found that if infants and young children, who are dependent on others to get their needs met, go through extended periods of deprivation—lacking food, love, safety, whatever—they are prone to seal off that pain and substitute another need for it. So, for example, if a child doesn't feel loved enough, they may substitute getting attention as a form of personal power and act out. Janov's key finding was that, while real needs have natural fill lines, substitute needs do not because they were never what was really needed. The result is neurotic behavior—a hungry ghost—where there's never enough. Far from being rare, a never-enough mindset is often promoted or glamorized in leaders, as in never enough ambition, achievement, power, wealth, growth, or in the words of Frederick Seidel, 'Too much is almost enough.' The problem is that when we go past healthy fill lines, unintended consequences build up, largely outside of conscious awareness. Just as the never-enough growth of cancer destroys the ecology of the body, so unbounded greed destroys the ecology of relationships, societies, governments and even the earth. I first heard this antidote to greed from one of my Zen teachers, Tanouye Roshi. He was referring, of course, to meeting all needs just enough and not just food. Looking at my own needs and how they were expressed in my life and leadership, I could see that I had a healthy relationship with most of them, but an outsized need for control and achievement. I was always trying to fix things and felt that no matter what I did, I was never achieving enough. In many ways, life rewarded me for this drive, but as a leader I could also see where it was holding me back. I was trying to control more than was controllable and doing too much myself rather than developing others. I also saw where my leadership was more about meeting my own hungry-ghost needs than simply being of service. The beauty and freedom of seeing that a fill line is missing and a need is off scale is that we can start to see through it. It's like having a car where we know that the gas gauge is broken. We learn not to trust the gauge and adjust around it or see beyond it. Being able to see beyond our needs and serve the situation is a crucial flip in Zen Leadership from 'It's all about me' to 'I'm all about it.' It orients us toward serving others or serving the situation and busts us out of the realm of being a hungry ghost. If we sense that one or more of our needs has no fill line, it's a good bet that it pulls our decisions and behaviors toward serving itself. We might ask ourselves: How do I know that I don't already have enough wealth, power, achievement, fill-in-the-blank? If the truth is we don't know or we feel there's never enough, it's most likely a substitute need and the 'gas gauge' is broken. To break the grip of a need that makes everything about itself and make this flip toward greater service, questions we might ask ourselves in facing an important decision or situation are: Questions like these help us see through our own hungry ghost, attain a more neutral, bird's-eye perspective on the situation and orient us toward adding value. This flip makes leadership expansive, purposeful and in service of something greater, which is also a human need, often called spiritual or self-transcending. Just as never-enough-ness can be glamorized for leaders, it can be cherished in the competitive world of business and politics and richly rewarded from the stock market to the ballot box. Yet greed not only begets more greed in ourselves but infects those around us. It also throws systems wildly out of balance, as unintended consequences pile up until something breaks. So, while greed can pay off in the short term, longer term it feeds a boom-bust cycle, which is how complex systems of competing forces—i.e., polarities or paradoxes—manage themselves when not managed wisely. Since Barry Johnson's work nearly 30 years ago, leaders have been skilled in the art of managing paradox by knowing what enough is, both what's enough of a good thing and enough sign of trouble that it's wise to change course. For example, a classic paradox in organizational life is between money and people, because, of course, an organization needs both to be healthy. Focusing purely on money can lead to disengagement and burnout, especially if people perceive leaders as lining their own pockets while asking others to sacrifice—i.e., the hungry ghost at work. On the other hand, focusing only on employee health and development could cost more than the company can afford. Obviously, there's a sweet spot between these extremes based on knowing what's enough money, what's enough on the people side, and what's enough of a warning sign that either side is sinking into danger. As leaders mature, knowing what enough is enables them to bust their own hungry ghosts and makes them fit to lead complex systems and organizations. Moreover, only leaders who have made the flip from 'It's all about me' to 'I'm all about it' can authentically ask others to do the same. A final sense of 'enough' brings us full circle to our political situation in the U.S. Most of us have full-enough lives with plenty to do without getting involved in politics. But at what point in watching the work of greed and vengeance do we say 'enough?' At what point have we seen enough slide toward authoritarianism and disrespect of human beings? What do we take as the warning sign that moves us to do something: contact our people in Congress, work with our companies to take a stand, build coalitions, contribute funds, protect the vulnerable, join a protest, organize our community, or engage in some form of nonviolent resistance that is true to us? Many have already reached the point of enough and are bravely doing what they can to bust the ghosts of greed. According to social scientist, Erica Chenoweth, nonviolent resistance is historically far more successful than its violent cousin and a surprisingly small percentage of the population is sufficient to reach a tipping point for change. Her research shows only 3.5% or, in terms of the U.S. population, about 12 million ghostbusters is enough.

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