Nolini Kanta Gupta
Contributor
Articles by Nolini Kanta Gupta (10)

Origin and Nature of Suffering
By Nolini Kanta Gupta - Apr 24, 2025
Suffering there is, some say, because the soul takes delight in it: if there was not the soul’s delight behind, there would not be any suffering at all. There are still two other positions with regard to suffering which we do not deal with in the present context, namely, (1) that it does not exist at all, the absolute Ananda of the Brahman being the sole reality, suffering, along with the manifested world of which it is a part, is illusion pure and simple, (2) that suffering exists, but it comes not from soul or God but from the Anti-divine: it is at the most tolerated by God and He uses it as best as He can for His purpose. That, however, is not our subject here. We ask then what delight can the soul take when the body is suffering, say, from cancer. If it is delight, it must be of a perverse variety. Is it not the whole effort of mankind to get rid of pain and suffering, make of our life and of the world, if possible, a visible play of pure and undefiled Ananda?

True charity
By Nolini Kanta Gupta - Apr 24, 2010
What is the aim of all medicine? To relieve suffering? All the drugs, surgeries, medical case and medical research are ultimately geared to that end. Yet surprisingly no one asks — why do we suffer? How does one really cure it? Is there another way? This article explores these questions deeply.

Fatigue and Work
By Nolini Kanta Gupta - Oct 15, 2025
Fatigue, it is said, comes from overwork. The cure for fatigue is therefore rest, that is, do-nothing. But the truth of the matter is that most often fatigue is due not to too much work, but rather too little work, in other words, laziness or boredom. In fact, fatigue need not come too soon or too easily, provided one knows how to set about his work. If you are interested in your work, you can continue for a very long time without fatigue; and precisely one of the means of recovering from fatigue is not to sit down and slip into lethargy and tamas, but to take up a work that rouses your interest. Work done in joy and quiet enthusiasm is tonic: it is dynamic rest. A work done without interest, as a sort of duty or task, will naturally tire you soon. The remedy therefore against fatigue is to keep the interest awake. Now, there is a further mystery. Interest does not depend upon the work: any work can be made interesting and interesting to a supreme degree. There is no work which is by itself dull, insipid, uninteresting. All depends upon the value you yourself put upon it; you can choose to make it as attractive as a romance, as significant as a symbol. How to do it? How to find interest in anything or all things? Is there not a work that conforms to your nature, adapted to your character and capacity? And are there not works that are against the grain with you that lie outside your scope and province?

The new humanity
By Nolini Kanta Gupta - Oct 15, 2012
The world is in the throes of a new creation and the pangs of that new birth have made mother Earth restless. It is no longer a far-off ideal that our imagination struggles to visualise, nor a prophecy that yet remains to be fulfilled. It is Here and Now.

Equality of the body – Equality of the soul
By Nolini Kanta Gupta - Oct 15, 2010
(Collected works of Nolini Kanta Gupta, Vol.3. Nolini Kanta Gupta Birth Centenary Celebrations Committee, Calcutta; 1989, p. 373).