HomeNewsTrendsSpiritual guide to keep calm and carry on amid market volatility, bad news

Spiritual guide to keep calm and carry on amid market volatility, bad news

How to survive a teetering market: As the Bank of Japan resets its interest rates and the US is tipped to slide into a recession, here’s a Zen guide to staying unrattled even as the markets quiver.

August 10, 2024 / 07:34 IST
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How to overcome tough times: The difference between a learned man and an unlearned man, the buddha said, is not the outcome of the changing circumstance, the change will hit us all, but how he understands and accepts it. (Illustration by Suneesh K.)
How to overcome tough times: The difference between a learned man and an unlearned man, the buddha said, is not the outcome of the changing circumstance, the change will hit us all, but how he understands and accepts it. (Illustration by Suneesh K.)

Olympian wrestler Vinesh Phogat and the sedate Central Bank of Japan were both desperately trying to keep their weights down against an inching percentage gain getting the better of them.

In February, Japan had unexpectedly slipped into a recession, only to narrowly pick itself out of said ditch by March. Phogat faced challenging circumstances, confronting police violence in 2023 when she was seeking justice in the case of her alleged sexual harassment, struggling with injury and post-operative recovery, visa delays, and just about making it to the Olympics, to fight in a category under her normal weight.

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Outmaneuvering the setting sluggishness, the Bank of Japan raised rates for the first time in 15 years but rattled the markets, depreciating the Yen and sending the Nikkei plunging last week. Phogat handed Japan’s undefeated Yui Susaki her first dethronement to take the silver in a stunning upset.  Immediately after, both were forced back, the sedate central bank assuring the trembling markets there would be no more hikes even as Phogat’s silver was revoked the following morning, at the weigh in. (As of August 8, the Court of Arbitration for Sports was deliberating on Vinesh Phogat's plea against her disqualification. The decision is expected to come before the end of the Olympic Games.)

What Shakyamuni buddha said about loss and gain

With galloping US unemployment and a looming recession, in a world arena of war, conflict and coup, the fall of governments and the uncertainty of anything but brutal identity politics, we face a Shakespearean landscape where, as a blinded Gloucestor says in 'King Lear' as he roams the heath: “As flies to wanton boys are we to the gods; they kill us for their sport.”

Being disheartened seems inevitable in this volatile environment. And yet, we must hedge our bets wisely and get through the tough times.