3 episodes

Good Behaviour and Social Life.

Real Legacy Shahwal Shahzad

    • Education

Good Behaviour and Social Life.

    The Art of Manipulation Chapter_1

    The Art of Manipulation Chapter_1

    THE ART OF MANIPULATION offers you a powerful framework to master powerful and practical ways to influence and control people's behavior, negotiate better, make your pitch and manipulate others to get what you want. People who manipulate others attack their mental and emotional sides to get what they want. The person manipulating — called the manipulator — seeks to create an imbalance of power, and take advantage of a victim to get power, control, benefits, and/or privileges at the expense of the victim. Manipulation is when a person uses controlling and harmful behaviors to avoid responsibility, conceal their true intentions, or cause doubt and confusion. Manipulation tactics, such as gaslighting, lying, blaming, criticizing, and shaming, can be incredibly damaging to a person's psychological well-being.

    • 22 min
    Jinnah - A Political Saint (The Leader) Episode 1

    Jinnah - A Political Saint (The Leader) Episode 1

    In just over seven years, from 1940 to 1947,
    Quaid-e-Azam Mohammad Ali Jinnah transformed
    Asia. He woke sleeping giants, the Muslims of South
    Asia, and gave them a free homeland they had never
    dreamed of. He ended their slavery, which had
    consumed their vitality, dignity and wealth for nearly
    two centuries since their treacherous defeat at Plassey
    in 1757. He gave them back their pride as a ruling
    power of the vast sub-continent for over 1000 years.
    In the words of historian Stanley Wolpert: “Few
    individuals significantly alter the course of history.
    Fewer still modify the map of the world. Hardly any
    one can be credited with creating a nation-state.
    Mohammad Ali Jinnah did all three.” These are the
    most astounding historical developments any one of
    anxious readers is likely to experience and ask: What
    was the kind of man who could do what he has done.
    This book is an attempt to answer that question
    by looking at that remarkable man through a window
    of his personal habits, traits and attitudes.
    This window has been opened by a person no
    less than Quaid-e-Azam’s own trusted Aide-de-Camp Mian Ata Rabbani. Inside the window we see an
    extraordinarily elegant, graceful, tastefully dressed,
    tall, handsome, erect and witty man with a monocle
    on grey silk cord and a stiff white collar which the
    famous British journalist Beverly Nicholas saw him
    wearing even in the hottest weather of Bombay in
    1944.
    These are manifestations of his outside
    elegance. What was his inside like? The more you
    read about the day-to-day characteristics, attributes
    and temperament of the charismatic personality inside
    the window, the more closeness you find between his
    outside elegance and inside flawless approach to life.
    Confident, indomitable, steadfast, resolute,
    impeccable, unpurchaseable, courageous, full of pride!
    You keep coming across many other superlatives; a
    man of cold logic, deft reasoning and topmost legal
    brain, superbly eloquent, invincible, unconquerable.
    These statements are not false ornaments of flattery.
    They have come directly from the heart of the author
    and his well-researched knowledge.
    What to talk of the author? Even contemporaries
    of Quaid-e-Azam were full of amazement at the
    strength of his character and did not hesitate to shower
    lavish praises over his achievements. The celebrated British diplomat Lord Listowel rated Mr. Jinnah as a
    bigger political giant of the twentieth century than
    even General de Gaulle. American President Harry S.
    Truman considered him as the recipient of a devotion
    of loyalty seldom accorded to any man. His highness
    Sir Agha Khan III said of him: “Of all the statesmen
    that I have known in my life—Clemenceau, Lloyd
    George, Churchill, Curzon, Mussolini, Mahatama
    Gandhi—Jinnah is most remarkable. None of these
    men in my view outshown him in strength of character
    and that almost scanny combination of precision and
    resolution.” Even Quaid-e-Azam’s bitter critics
    considered him as outweighing Truman, Stalin, and
    Attle put together (Daily Amrit Bazar Patrika of 8th
    August 1947) and as hard as diamond with all the
    diamond’s brilliance (Daily Statesman).
    Peeping through the pages of this book the
    reader will see Mian Ata Rabbani in a constant state
    of love and mesmerism while serving Quaid-e-Azam
    as his Aide-de-Camp. He found his job as the
    toughest, hardest and at times most grinding but loved
    every moment of it for it turned out to be most
    rewarding, engaging, exciting and enjoyable. And
    why it should not have been so because he was
    spending the most precious moments of his life with aman whom Beverly Nicholas called as the most
    important man in Asia who could sway the battle of
    politics in Asia this way or that as he chose, for his
    100 million Muslims would move to the left, to the
    right, to the front, to the rear at his bidding, and
    nobody else’s.

    • 30 min
    Real Legacy

    Real Legacy

    Good Behaviour will give you fame.

    • 2 min

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