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Yoga
helps you achieve the impossible.
If Sharad Pawar wants
to become the prime minister of India, he needs yoga. So does Hilary
Clinton, if she wants to become the president of the United States.
Sachin Tendulkar
can retire fighting gloriously at the top. Anil Ambani needs yoga if he
wants to become the # 1 industrialist not just in
India, but the world. The
Times of India, the world’s largest selling
English broadsheet newspaper, took 53 years to
beat Hindustan Times
in Delhi. If HT,
launched in 2005 in Mumbai, wants to repay the
compliment, they can do so in probably three years flat through yoga.
Ditto for DNA,
another newspaper launched in Mumbai in 2005. Launching a product, say
a cola, to compete with a name firmly entreched worldwide, for example Coca-cola,
is passe. But
launching a newspaper to compete successfully with another already
existing in that particular city, is a different ball-game altogether.
Because of its own unique set of rules, this definitely falls
within the realm of the impossible. When Durge came to me for help, he
admitted later, that we were attempting the impossible. Trying to open
blocked arteries without operation or, a heart bypass without
surgery. Even after taking a look at the before and after ANGIOGRAMS,
some people may still wonder wether it is possible to achieve the
impossible.
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Yoga
doesn’t end with just stress-busting or putting a leg around
your neck trying to touch your ear. If there is one single word in the
English language that defines yoga, that word is “excellence”.
Yoga frowns upon competition but yoga helps you deliver to the best of
your ability. Whether it is the boardroom or the battlefield or
whatever you do, yoga helps you excel. Yoga is the difference between
winning the Olympic gold medal, or losing it, like P T Usha did, by
one-hundredth of a second.
This entire website is an example of achieving the impossible through
yoga. Not many would believe that it is possible to open blocked
arteries without surgery.
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