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| The 8 Principles of Moksha Productivity |
The 8 Principles of Moksha Productivity
Reading time: 4 minutes (425 words).
There are two types of moksha productivity — good and bad. Real, good productivity is not measured by how busy you are, but by what you actually experience. It is reflected through eight core dimensions: sex, purity, love, pleasure, peace, wisdom, bliss, and liberation.
1. Sex: If you engage in sexual activity, it is real productivity.
2. Purity: If you express your genuine opinions and work on your own thoughts, it is real productivity.
3. Love: If you love your life partner, parents, family, friends, or pets, it is real productivity.
4. Pleasure: If you listen to music, eat tasty food, dance, watch entertainment, gossip, have fun, or go on a date or picnic — it is real productivity.
5. Peace: If you give yourself time to experience peace, it is real productivity.
6. Wisdom: If you learn something, research, or plan, it is real productivity.
7. Bliss: If you enjoy shopping or victory, or work toward achieving them, it is real productivity. (Supporting and enjoying others’ victory is also bliss.)
8. Liberation: If you work to gain freedom from debt or responsibilities, it is real productivity. (Quitting responsibility isn’t freedom; finishing duty is.)
Rules of Productivity
- Productivity changes based on your goal and mission.
- If your goal is moksha, productivity becomes spiritual and inward-focused, along with disciplined household life.
- If your goal is building a company, institute, or empire, productivity becomes practical and work-oriented.
- If you work for someone else’s mission, your productivity is defined by them, not you.
- Your freedom to define productivity depends on who owns the mission.
- My goal is moksha. My mission is to share wisdom so others can also reach moksha.
- For me and like-minded seekers, this is real productivity aimed at achieving moksha.
- Productivity is not what you do — it is what you experience and achieve within a specific time period.
- Productivity depends on timing. The right activity at the right time is real productivity; the same activity at the wrong time is wasted productivity.
- Earning money is only a source for experiencing good productivity; working for money and experiencing productivity are not the same.
- Mentally rich people spend money to achieve productivity; mentally poor people save money to avoid productivity.
Conclusion: These 8 Principles of Moksha Productivity are for moksha seekers. Everyone’s ultimate priority should be to attain moksha to achieve a higher birth in heaven. We all must go through seven bodily births across seven living planets to attain the final birth on Hiranyaloka in Vaikuntha.
"Free to learn. Free to share. If you feel it — feed the mission 🙏"

