From "aging" to "life expert"?
From "aging" to "life expert"?
"The dharma that Thai organizations and society must listen to in an age when words run faster than ideas."
On one of the nights I had the opportunity to hear a lecture from one of my fathers at the Temple of Chon Chon Chon Chon Rong, what was left in my heart was not just a religious word, but a "life framework" that could be thought of in the working world, the business world, and today's Thai society.
Your dharma does not teach you to flee the world, does not take you away from complex truths, but instead teaches you to "live with the world without hurting yourself and others," a dharma that stands on the same ground as real life, and reflects the great problems of an era in which people face constant pressure, rush, and noise from information.
There are at least three points from my father's teachings that I believe readers, especially working people, executives, and those at this juncture of life, should stop reading, stop thinking and ask themselves seriously.
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1. Stop calling "Swan" old, but call "Schch" or life expert.
Thailand is entering a full age society, but the concern is not the number of elderly people, if it is the "framework" that society uses to view this group of people.
Often bound to the image of regression, slowness, or unconscious burden, the Father invites us to stop thinking and to offer a simple but extremely powerful reinterpretation of that.
"The senator is not" old, "but should be a" schist "or a life expert."
* This is not a play on words for beauty, but a reframe of the role of adults in society, such as the root to the root of "life experts," not measured by age or position, but by experience, through success, mistakes, losses, and learning that crystallize into wisdom.
* In the corporate world, this group of people is a very high-value resource, but it is the least used. Many organizations value speed, novelty, and technology to forget that what they want equally is a "life compass" that reminds them what to do, what to watch, and what to stop before it is too late.
* The role of "Choch" is not a claim of age or seniority, but to be a Role Model that later generations want to follow, a thought-based and a reflection of organization and society.
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2. "G Corrupt in the Digital Age" When Words Become Our Own Price?
Another point that the Reverend reiterated was "corrupt" or absent-minded speech, whether in anger, satisfaction or emotion.
In the past, bad words may have ended up in a small conversation circle, but in an age when everyone has a smartphone and social media, one sentence of speech can spread far beyond what the speech owner expected, and leave a trail forever.
The Reverend warned with a harrowing sentence that
"To say or post something bad is to lower your price."
* If translated into working language, this is about Personal Branding and Reputation. Frankly, every post, every comment, every share is about telling the world what kind of people we are, what level of maturity, and how conscious we are to use the power of speech.
* The Digital Footprint and society is always valuing people from what they communicate. Before typing or saying anything, stop asking yourself if this is enriching us or discounting ourselves.
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3. "2 s. 2 ti" = a success structure that stands at a real distance.
The last set of Dharma that Father left, what he called "two seconds and two times," sounded simple, but it was actually a strong, worldly and legitimate success structure.
1.Discipline (Discipline)
Discipline is the foundation of every success, whether work, finance, or health. Many people are capable, but do not reach the dream side because of a lack of consistency.
2. Viriya (Perseverance)
Indefatigable perseverance. Even the results have not yet come. In the modern world, we call this Grit, the ability to walk on without leaving a goal in the middle of the way.
3. Resilience
Patience for pressure, disappointment and criticism, a small number of leaders do not fall for lack of brilliance, but fall for not being strong enough.
4. Mindfulness (Mindfulness)
All game guards, because if there is a lack of consciousness, discipline becomes a compulsion, gravity becomes a pressure, and perseverance becomes a cumulative suffering.
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So, "How much will the world change? Dharma is still necessary."
* No matter how fast the world rotates with AI technology, information, or intense competition, the core of human life remains the same.
* Society also needs exemplary adults; organizations also need people with discipline, perseverance, and patience; and everyone still needs to be conscious of using their own words and ideas.
The last question that this Dharma leaves us to think about may not be religion at all, but life itself.
"We are living as" life experts "or are accidentally" reducing ourselves "every day through our own words and fingertips."
# Discipline and consciousness
# PersonalBranding






















































































