"The twenty-first century is the century of high transience and to survive this transience, one must learn to do more things in comparatively shorter durations and to change relatively faster. The rule is to categorically believe that everything (what you see, feel, touch, experience, enjoy and think) is temporary and what is constant is ‘change’. If you won’t change with the changing time, you’ll be stagnated and remember, stagnation is ‘death’. You have to keep changing steadily amongst the turbulent waters of transient life. However, pragmatically and theoretically, change is always accompanied with resistance (psychological, social, political, cultural, economic and emotional). So, keeping pace with the change, one must learn to integrate, unite, affiliate and attach quickly with new places, people, things, situations and ideas, and more to learn is to be even quicker to dis-integrate, dis-unite, dis-affiliate, and de-attach for still newer places, people, things, situations and ideas. And today, all this process is occurring at a breath-breaking speed.
So, if you won’t change, you’ll die stagnated. If you resist change and linger to the ‘olds’, you’ll die frustrated. If you flow with the change, you’ll die normal. If you go one step ahead and bring in even more change, you’ll die dynamic."
Abhay S. D. Rajput
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Further, I reccommend to read Alvin Toffler's book "The Future Shock"