Beyond
Mid-Day Meals
Nutritious
Food- Positive Habits
Clean
& Supportive Environment -Calm & Focused Mind
Equal
Standards for All Students-Government-Private-All Schools
Future
Nation Builders Empowered to
Lead
Pragmatic-Responsible-Rational Life
Mid Day Meal; No animal meat, no fish, no egg, no soya, no animal milk no
animal milk-based paneer.;
Include Millets, boiled sprouts, mixed vegetables, leafy greens, fresh fruits.;
Seed & nut powders, wood-pressed oils (no oil heating, no deep fries).; Herbal
decoctions, spices, palm jaggery, Licorice; Mandatory Mid-day
meals in All Schools (Govt Private) Standard Dynamic menu ; Ban on personal
lunch box, & water bottle; Schools provide standard nutritious food
+ water bottle on arrival- reduces burden on parents- creates equality of
treatment Categorised Meals for Obese, Normal, and Underweight
Children; Additional Health &
Nutrition Items in Mid-Day Meals; Small quantity of Siridhanya millet java.;
Sweet potato, palm jaggery, black seeds.; Hibiscus/red sorrel tea, fresh
garlic, wheat grass (for anaemia), moringa.; especially beneficial for
adolescent girl students.; National Palm Jaggery Revolution- Govt Support Plam
Jaggery Making in every Village Cooking & Oil Reforms;
No deep fries, no refined oil usage.; Use only slow RPM
wood-pressed oils in all mid-day meals, commercial Restaurants, Street Foods
& Religious places.; Standard quality control & advanced
cleaning of raw vegetables, fruits, leafy greens to remove pesticides,
bacteria, and pathogens.; Menu
Planning & Home-School Coordination; Government to provide advance lunch menu (one or two weeks) to parents via app./printed chart
to enable parents plan breakfast & dinner accordingly to avoid repetition
of same vegetables/fruits; Mandatory weekly home food routine (breakfast
& dinner) diary to be submitted to teacher.; Government suggests balanced
home food options menus based on school mid day meal.; App/toll-free
number for parents to report illness (diarrhoea, fever, vomiting, pus in
wounds, etc.) for school adjusts Mid Day meal & recovery guidance
School Bag & Study
Material Government to provide textbooks as
laminated loose papers (chapter-wise).; Students carry only required chapters
as per timetable + loose plain sheets in file form (instead of heavy
notebooks).; GPS-enabled
school bag for real-time location update to parents and teachers.; This
drastically reduces weight of school bags.;
Uniform &
Personal Items; Standard 100% Cotton Uniform & 100% Cotton
Undergarments - Standard Foot Wear-Shoes -100% Cotton Socks for All Students, Teachers
All Schools (Govt Private); Ban on Jewellery, Gadgets, Makeup, Scents, Deodorants,
Tight synthetic leggings & Uniform haircut for equality and simplicity.; Complete ban on tattoos, ear/nose/belly button piercing in all
educational institutions.;
Dignity of
Labour & Personal Hygiene; Teaching dignity of labour — every
student must do personal work (polish shoes, clean table/room, clean toilets in
home/school etc); Educating on genital hygiene, personal hygiene, home hygiene; Daily Practices & Health Education;
Daily storytelling to children about how foods on the menu
help health.; Educating on gut health, constipation, insulin resistance,
hormonal balance, post-meal walks.; Oral hygiene education; Mandatory
morning sunlight exposure, ergonomic furniture, incandescent lights
(sunlight-like lux levels) in classrooms and homes.; Celebrations, Gifting & Lifestyle; Change celebration habits (birthdays, functions) to palm jaggery sweets
with nuts & seeds (non GE/ GM) , fresh fruits instead of cakes, colas,
chips.; Change gifting culture to nuts, seeds, palm jaggery sweets, fresh
fruits, Live herbal plants (Tulsi, Rosemary, Oregano,..) instead of plastic
gifts.; Promotion
of clutter-free, hygienic, minimalist homes for peace of mind and better health.; Physical Activity &
Transport; Ban personal vehicle usage for school
drop/pick-up. Mandatory school buses or bicycle useTo reduce exposure to pollution, save
time for student, parents reduced
traffic congestions for general public; Bicycle riding
training for all students from Class 5 onwards.; Promotion of home-based
exercises, simple yoga, strength training Regulation of gyms — mandatory gender
segregation for safety and decency.; Media, Sleep & Discipline; Default night 9 PM Wi-Fi cut, limited
mobile usage.; Ban 24/7 news channels and commercial TV after 10 PM to
ensure better sleep and less stress.; Monitoring of sleep for
students (linked to marks) Sleep linked to Health Insurance; Teaching value of time,
disciplined daily schedule, and avoiding gossip/celebrity discussions.; Community & Leadership;
Community Student Study Centres for downtrodden and
low-income students.; Teaching social responsibility and public duties.;
Replace class leaders with rotating class committees to
provide leadership opportunity for all students in every class by rotation Teach leadership
principles from Bhagavad Gita for self-confidence; Ban student union elections
and political affiliations; Medicinal Plants & Environment; Planting of Tridax procumbens
and Changeri for natural wound/bruise treatment.; Planting of medicinal
& aromatic plants (Lemongrass, Lavender, Leaf of Life) in Schools & Communities.;
Abundant Neem, Peepal, Eucalyptus trees in all public
places.; Plant Fruit Trees (Guava, Lemon, Goose Berry Avocado.) in All public places; National Tree Planting
Scheme for Fresh Air, Fresh Fruits & Lasting Legacy (Planting Trees on
Marriage, New Born Celebrations) Kitchen Gardening in Every home RWA
Colony ; Profession Education; Educating
students on dignity of all professions (farmer, weaver, cobbler, barber,
mechanic, nurse).. Financial
& Habit Discipline in Parents
; Provision debit card for parents with 25% earnings
locked in it useful only to buy groceries, ensuing food security to
family from parents earnings; All
Loans through Central banking System; Restricting spending from
Earnings – EMI’s 30%, Home Rent 25%, Cash withdraw 10% for Salaried & Daily Wage to Contain
occurrence of Financial Distress; Regulation of Alcohol Sale and
Consumption- Ban lose sale, Close Wine Shops, alcohol severed in
exclusive Bars in Limit with Pre Booking for Health, Reduced Domestic violence;
Contain under aged alcohol Consumption Religiousness –
Self Belief - Power of Sub Conscious Mind; Teaching Students Universal Goodness and Moral Values from All Religions — Building
Harmony, Humanity, and Free Choice; Motivation, Power of Subconscious Mind,
Body Language, Mudras for Self Confidence and Self Belief
to Be Taught to Every Student for Achieving Success in Life
Pradeep Kumar Kunche
Introduction
Group 1: Food
Items to Avoid or Limit in School Children’s Diet
1)
Why School Children and General Children Should
Not Be Fed Soy Products (Tofu, Soy Chunks, Soy Milk, Soy Protein, etc.)
Regularly
2)
Why Paneer Made from Commercial Dairy Milk
Should Not Be Given Regularly to School Children (or All Children)
3)
Paneer Made from Chickpea Milk (or Other
Plant-Based Milks) Be Given Occasionally
4)
Why Commercial Poultry Eggs Should Be Avoided
for School Children (and General Children)
Group 2:
Healthy Plant-Based Protein & Nutrient Sources
5)
Nutrients in Sprouted Chickpeas (Chana) and
Black-Eyed Beans (Lobia/Chawli) with Moringa Powder — Especially for Children
6)
Animal Protein, Insulin Resistance, and the
Protective Power of Plant-Based Foods — For General Population Children
(Especially School-Going Kids)
7)
Why Children Should Be Given Only Plant-Based
Milk at Home, Schools, and Welfare Hostels — Strict No to Animal Milk
Group 3:
Mid-Day Meal Structure & Core Food Recommendations
8)
Why School Children Should Be Given at Least a
Small Quantity of Siridhanya Millet Java (Especially Fermented) at the
Beginning of Mid-Day Meals
9)
Why Daily Include Carrot, Beetroot, Tomato &
Radish in Meals (Curry or Sambar) for Children — Especially Grated or in Tiny
Pieces
10) Why
Sweet Potato & Potato Should Be Rotated & Included Every Day or Every
Alternate Day in School Mid-Day Meals — How They Help Children
11) How
Giving a Small Piece of Palm Jaggery at the End of Mid-Day Meal Helps Children
with Better Digestion and Nutrition
12) Why
Children Should Be Given Homemade Amla Candy (Made with Palm Jaggery) Daily or
on Alternate Days in Mid-Day Meals
13) Why
Cane Sugar and High Fructose Corn Syrup Must Be Completely Avoided
14) National
Palm Jaggery Revolution; Establishing 100% Government-Funded Mini Palm Jaggery
Processing Centres in Every Village and Mandal Across India
15) Why
Children (Especially in Mid-Day Meals) Should Be Given Crunchy Nuts or Sesame
Seed Laddoos Daily — One Variety at a Time
16) Why
No Deep Frying or Tampering with Oils — Use Freshly Ground, Slow RPM
Wood-Pressed Oils on Boiled Vegetables + Tasty Roasted Seed/Chana Powders for
Children
17) Why
Refined Oils Must Be Completely Discarded and Why Fresh Cold-Pressed Slow RPM
Wood-Pressed Oils Are the Best Choice
18) Government
Must Ban Deep Frying in All Commercial Cooking to Protect Public Health
19) How
Incorporating Black Seeds (Nigella Sativa / Kalonji) into Children’s Meals 2–3
Times a Week help immunity
20) Why
Every School Should Provide a Small Piece of Fresh Washed Licorice Root for
Children to Chew
21) Why
Chia Seeds with Buttermilk: A Nutritious Mid-Day Drink for Children
Group 4: Oral
Hygiene & Its Whole-Body Impact
22) Oral
Hygiene in Children — Its Powerful Influence on Gut Bacteria, Memory, Anxiety,
Depression, Nutrient Absorption & Overall Health
23) Natural
Oral Hygiene Practices for Children — Clove-Infused Water, Gargling, and
Coconut Oil + Turmeric Brushing
Group 5:
Special Supportive Foods & Herbs for Children (Especially Girls)
24) Benefits
of Providing Hibiscus (Roselle / Gongura / Red Sorrel) Decoction or Tea Daily
in School Mid-Day Meals — Especially for Adolescent Girls
25) Benefits
of Fresh Garlic (One Clove Daily) for Adolescent Girls and School Children —
Support for PCOS/PCOD, Ovarian Health, and Vaginal Fungal Issues
26) Why
Government Should Identify Anemic Girls & Boys in Schools and Provide
Wheatgrass Juice or Powder (Mixed with Water + Palm Jaggery) Instead of Tablets
or Fortified Rice
Group 6:
Government Nutrition Programs & School Meal Policies
27) Government-Led
School Nutrition Program — Categorised Meals for Obese, Normal, and Underweight
Children (Especially Adolescent Girls)
28) Why
Government Must Ensure Every School (Government & Private) Provides Free
Standardised, Hygienic Mid-Day Meals, Breakfast & Daily Drinking Water — No
Child Needs to Bring Tiffin Box or Water Bottle
29) Why
Healthy Breakfast at Home is Essential — Best Options and Practical Solutions
for Students and Families
30) Government
Providing Standard Lunch Menu in Advance and Mandatory Home Food Routine — For
Balanced Nutrition, Better Planning, and National Agricultural Coordination
31) Provision
Debit Card System — Ensuring Balanced Nutrition, Food Security, and Honest
Financial Practices for Every Family
32) Government
App or Toll-Free Number for Parents to Report Child’s Illness — For Adjusted
School Food and Faster Recovery
33) Strict
Quality Control, Hygiene & Advanced Technologies for All Mid-Day Meal
Kitchens & Large Private Kitchens/Restaurants
34) How
Daily Storytelling (Like Fairy Tales) About Vegetables, Fruits, Leafy Greens,
Nuts & Seeds Helps Children Eat Better — With Age-Specific Education on
Their Benefits
Group 7:
Lifestyle, Sleep, Screen Time & Morning Routine
35) Educating
Parents & Students on Sleep, Screen Time, Sunlight & Simple Exercises
for Sharp Brain & Healthy Body
36) Why
Government Should Implement Default Night-Time Internet & Call Limits for
Better Sleep, Health & Life Balance Across India
37) Why
the Government Must Regulate or Ban 24/7 News Channels and Late-Night
Broadcasting — For True Journalism, Public Health, and Good Governance
38) Government
Monitoring Sleep and Linking It to Health Insurance, Increments &
Promotions — For Better Health and Productivity
39) Why
the First 30 Minutes After Waking Up Shape the Whole Day — Important Morning
Routine for All Students & Parents
Group 8:
Natural First-Aid, Plants & Environmental Health
40) Why
Government Must Ensure Every School Playground, Apartment Gated Community,
Village Sports Place, and Common Area Has Abundant Tridax procumbens and
Changeri (Oxalis corniculata) Plants — Natural Instant Treatment for Children’s
Bruises & Cuts
41) Why
Government Should Teach First Aid, Emergency Response & Use Technology for
Quick Help — For All Students & Parents
42) Why
Every School (Especially Rural), Classroom, Apartment, Gated Community, and
Village Home Should Have Medicinal & Aromatic Plants Like Lemongrass,
Lavender, Lemon Balm, Tulsi, etc.
43) Why
Every School, Gated Community, Apartment, Municipal Park, Roadside, and
Religious Place Should Have Abundant Neem, Peepal (Pipal), and Eucalyptus Trees
— Government Promotion for Better Health & Environment
44) Why
Government Should Ensure Every Municipality Plants Fruit Trees (Guava, Mango,
Lemon, Gooseberry, Palm & Local Seasonal Varieties) on All Government
Lands, Parks, Roads & Highways, Religious places
45) Real
Green Revolution: National Tree Planting Scheme for Fresh Air, Fresh Fruits
& Lasting Legacy
46) Why
the Government Should Mandate and Encourage Kitchen Gardening (Terrace &
Pot Gardening) in Every Home, Apartment, Gated Community, and Colony
Group 9:
Celebration, Gifting & Social Culture Changes
47) Why
People Should Change Celebration Habits (Birthdays, Anniversaries, Functions)
to Healthier Foods — Government & Community Advocacy Needed
48) Why
Governments and Schools Should Promote Palm Jaggery Sweets with Nuts &
Fresh Fruits (Instead of Cakes, Colas, Chips & Bakery Items) for Birthday
& Celebration Distributions
49) Gifting
Culture (Nuts, Seeds, Palm Jaggery Sweets & Fresh Fruits) Shifting from
Sweets, Cakes & Plastic to Healthier, Meaningful Gifts
50) Why
Governments Should Promote Gifting Live Herbal Plants (Tulsi, Rosemary,
Oregano, Leaf of Life, etc.) for Birthday Celebrations Instead of Plastic Gifts
51) Why
All Seeds, Nuts, Fruits, Vegetables & Pulses Should Be Non-GE/GM — And Why
the Government Must Promote Their Cultivation
Group 10:
Hygiene, Cleanliness & Minimalist Living
52) Why Government Should Educate Students &
Parents on Clutter-Free, Hygienic & Minimalist Homes for Peace of Mind,
Better Health & Simple Happy Living
53) Teaching
Personal Hygiene, Cleanliness & Discipline to Every Student & Parent —
Daily Practices for Healthy Life
54) Disciplined
Footwear & Bag Practices — Keeping Outdoor Dirt, Bacteria, Viruses &
Fungi Out of the Home A disciplined life includes simple daily habits that
protect the entire family’s health.
55) Educating
Students on the Dignity of Labour, Self-Cleaning & Hygienic Living — From
Young Age for a Responsible & Equal Society
57) Pet
Hygiene at Home — Protecting Family Health While Enjoying the Love of Pets
Group 11 Personality
58) Why
Government Should Educate Teachers, Students & Parents on Identifying &
Preventing Depression & Addiction in Children — With Safe Reporting,
Natural Support & Strict Laws
59) Mental
& Emotional Health for Students — Stop Comparing, Forgive, Smile, Control
Anger, and Stay Happy
60) Why
Avoid Quarrelling and Fights — How to Be Friends, Win Hearts, and Live
Peacefully
61) Advantages
of Being Truthful and Honest — Why You Should Never Tell Lies or Conceal
Information
62) Success
and Failure Are Not Measured by Marks — Real Success Comes from Knowledge
Gained and Learning from Failure
63) Mandatory
Martial Arts and Self-Defence Training for All Students — Building Physical
& Mental Strength from Class 3/5 Onwards.
Group 12
Parents Role
64) Why
Parents Should Not Put Pressure on Students for Marks, Ranks, or Comparisons —
Focus on Knowledge, Interest, Freedom, and Contentment
65) Why
Teachers Must Regularly Educate Parents on How Their Daily Life, Habits, and
Behaviour Affect Children’s Upbringing
66) Why
Parents Must Be 100% Straightforward and Honest in Life — Especially in
Finances
67) Inducing
Financial Discipline in Parents and Citizens Through Default Settings and
Government Policies
68) Strict
Regulation of Alcohol Sale and Consumption — Protecting Families, Health, and
Society; Ban lose sale, Close Wine Shops, alcohol severed in exclusive Bars
with Pre Booking
Group 13 Media & Social Media
69) Why
Government Should Restrict or Ban Social Media Reels & Inappropriate
Posting by Students, Teachers, Government Employees, Doctors, Medical Staff,
Police & Armed Forces Personnel
70) No
Shortcuts in Life to Earn Money — Preserving Self-Respect, Dignity, and Decency
Group 14
General Health Genital Health Sex
71) Teaching
Students General Hygiene & Genital Health from a Young Age (Class 3
Onwards) — For Safety, Cleanliness & Healthy Life
72) Menstrual
Hygiene and Care for Young Girls – Including Early Puberty, Common Issues,
Natural Management, Rest, and Safety
73) Why
Government Should Educate Students on Premarital Sex, Consent, Health Risks
& Safe Reporting Mechanisms — For Healthy Future of Students
Group 15 Gut Health, Digestion & Constipation
Relief
74) Why
Guava Should Be Included Every Day or Every Alternate Day in School Mid-Day
Meals (as Fruit) — Benefits & Ideal Timing
75) Educating
Students from a Young Age About Gut Health & Relieving Constipation — For a
Healthy Life
76) Teaching
Students About Better Digestion & Healthy Eating Habits
Group 16 Insulin resistance Hormonal imbalance Obesity
77) Hormonal
Imbalance in Adolescence — What It Is, Why It Happens, How It Shows Up, and How
to Keep Hormones Balanced Naturally
78) Insulin
Resistance — What It Is, How It Happens, How It Affects Health, and How
Students Can Prevent or Improve It from a Young Age
79) Why
a 5–10 Minute Post-Meal Walk Is Necessary — A Simple Habit That Brings Big
Health Benefits
Group 17
Transport, Bicycle Multi-mode
80) Why
Government Should Ban Personal Vehicle Usage for School Drop/Pick-up by
Teachers, Staff & Students — Mandatory School Buses & Bicycle Use
81) Mandatory
Bicycle Riding Training for All Students (Class 6 Onwards)
Group 18
Community – Social Responsibility
82) Community
Student Study Centres (CSSC) — How They Help All Students, Especially from
Downtrodden Sections, and Similar Study Rooms in Every Gated Community,
Apartment, RWA & Colony
83) Teaching
Every Student Social Responsibility & Public Duties — Building Better
Citizens
Group 19
School Infrastructure, Safety & Equality Measures
84) Measures
to Reduce the Weight of School Bags — For the Health & Comfort of Students
85) Mandatory
Morning Sunlight Exposure for All Students in Every School — For Freshness,
Calmness & Brain Activation
86) Mandatory
Provision of Ergonomic, Height-Adjustable Study Furniture for Students at Home
& in Schools
87) Mandatory
Use of Incandescent Lights with Sunlight-Like Lux Levels in Schools &
Student Homes — To Protect Eyes, Reduce Stress & Support Overall Health
Group 20
Footwear & Jewellery
88) Standard
Footwear, Ban on Jewellery & Gadgets, and Equal Treatment for All Students
— Towards True Equality and Ram Rajya in Education
89) The
Importance of Correct Footwear — Why Plastic & Synthetic Footwear Should Be
Discarded and How to Choose Healthy Options
90) Why
High Heels Must Not Be Worn — Health, Biomechanical & Safety Issues for
Women (and Men)
91) Why
All Socks Should Be 100% Cotton — Health Benefits and Disadvantages of
Synthetic Socks
92) Why
People Should Not Wear Artificial Imitation Jewellery Daily — Health Risks and
the Need for Simple, Safe Practices
Group 21
Clothing
93) Mandatory
100% Cotton School Uniforms & Hygienic Undergarments for All Students —
Ensuring Comfort, Health & Dignity
94) Why
School Children (and Everyone) Should Wear Only Loose, Comfortable 100% Cotton
Clothes for Exercise — Complete Ban on Skin-Tight Synthetic Gym Wear
95) Why
Tight Leggings (Especially Synthetic/Polyester) Should Not Be Worn — Especially
by Girls and Adult Women — And Why the Government Should Ban Their Manufacture,
Sale, and Use
Group 22
Appearance, Simplicity & Discipline Rules
96) Ban
on Makeup, Scents, Deodorants & Related Items in Schools + Natural Hygiene
Practices
97) Uniform
Haircut & Natural Hair Colour — Mandatory for Equality & Simplicity in
Schools
98) Complete
Ban on Tattoos, Ear Piercing, Nose Piercing & Belly Button Piercing in
Schools & Educational Institutions
99) Tattoos
and Lifelong Immune System Interaction: Key Scientific Insights
Group 23 Exercises
100)
Educating School Children on the Importance of
Home-Based Exercises, Simple Yoga, and Strength Training
101)
Government Regulation of Existing Gyms —
Mandatory Gender Segregation for Safety, Decency and Comfort
Group 24 Value of Time and Money
102)
The Value of Time — Why Students Must Invest in
Knowledge, Not Gossip or Glorification, and Why Government Must Regulate Social
Media & Media Use
103)
The Value of Time and Discipline — A Must for
Every Student’s Success and Happy Life
104)
Why Every School (Government or Private) Must
Create Active Group Discussion Clubs for Students
105)
Financial Discipline for Every Student — Saving,
Investing & Valuing Hard-Earned Money
Group 25 Food Based Health Care- Portion Control
106)
Teaching Students the Sacredness of Food, Water
& Nature — From Farm to Table, Conservation, and Sustainable Living
107)
Portion Control — A Very Important Habit to
Teach Children from a Young Age
108)
Religion, Health, and the Need for Thoughtful
Review of Festival food verity Practices in Religious Texts- verity and portion
control
109)
Comprehensive Government-Led School &
Community Food-Based Healthcare Education & Nutrition Program
110)
Teaching All School Children Food-Based
Healthcare for Prevention and Management of Common and Chronic Diseases
111)
Why Packed & Processed Foods Are Unhealthy —
Large-Scale Production, Chemicals & Why Fresh Home-Made Food is Always
Better
Group 26
Professions
112)
Every Profession is Important — Respect the
Dignity of Labour in Every Job
113)
Teaching Students About All Professions with
Respect and Dignity — From Farmer to Doctor, Weaving to Air Hostess Business to
Scientist To choose what they want
Group 27
Leadership
114)
Why the Government Should Replace Class Leaders
and Class Captains with Rotating Class Committees, Ban Student Union Elections,
and Teach Leadership Principles from the Bhagavad Gita
Group 28
Religiousness – Self Belief - Power of Sub Conscious Mind
115)
Teaching Students the Universal Goodness and
Moral Values from All Religions — Building Harmony, Humanity, and Free Choice
116)
Motivation, Power of Subconscious Mind, Body
Language, Mudras & Balanced Approach to Religion — To Be Taught to Every
Student for Achieving Success in Life
Conclusion
Introduction
The Government of India and State
Governments are providing mid-day meals in Anganwadis, all government primary
and secondary schools, and welfare hostels with the noble intention of ensuring
at least one nutritious, balanced meal daily for school children. This is a
vital step towards building healthy bodies and healthy minds, ultimately
creating a strong and prosperous nation. However, the good intention is not
yielding the desired results due to several gaps in the delivery system and the
lack of a holistic, integrated approach.
People believe that all private
school children are healthy, but in reality, it is not s the tiffin box they
carry from their homes mostly lack of nutrient, empty carbohydrates, PUFA’s due
to deep fries.
In addition, the mid-day meal
system must be streamlined to provide truly balanced and nutritious food with
categorised menus tailored for obese, normal-weight, and underweight children
rather than a single one-size-fits-all meal. A simple reporting system through
a government app or toll-free number should allow parents to inform the school
about illnesses such as vomiting, diarrhoea, fever, or wounds so that the meal
can be adjusted or light food provided on those days. Schools should share the
mid-day meal menu 5 days to one week in advance with parents, along with
practical suggestions for locally available breakfast and dinner options,
ensuring families can prepare a complete balanced diet for the full day without
repetition of the same vegetables or fruits. Parents should submit a simple
weekly or fortnightly food chart of home breakfast and dinner to the school,
creating a useful data bank for teachers and nutritionists to assess each
child’s overall health and nutritional status. The Provision Debit Card system
will ensure that a fixed portion of family earnings is automatically used first
for food and nutrition, securing basic provisions even during financial stress
and acting as a temporary credit during lean periods with automatic recovery
from future earnings. Kitchen gardening and community terrace gardening in
every home, apartment, and gated community, along with large-scale government
planting of fruit trees such as guava, neem, orange, mango, gooseberry, palm,
and avocado in public places, roadsides, and parks, will provide free or
low-cost fresh fruits and leafy greens to families. All supplies for mid-day
meals must be centralised with stringent quality controls and advanced cleaning
technologies to remove bacteria, viruses, fungi, heavy metals, and
contaminants, guaranteeing safe and high-quality food for students. The
government must educate students on food-based preventive and curative
healthcare so that children naturally choose the right foods. Changing
celebration culture from cakes, colas, chips, pizzas, and burgers filled with
empty carbohydrates and processed foods to palm jaggery-based sweets using
nuts, dry fruits, seeds, and fresh fruits, along with gifting these healthy
items or live herbal plants (oregano, thyme, rosemary, mint, etc.) instead of
plastic, will promote better health during celebrations. National Palm Jaggery
Mission promoting Palm Jaggery making in every village with Quality will help bring Health to all people.
A truly effective system must go
beyond merely providing food. It should enable every student to develop
physically, mentally, emotionally, and morally — becoming disciplined,
confident, strong-willed, and positive individuals capable of leading a meaningful
and quality life.
For this, an integrated approach
is essential to be implemented in All Schools Government and Private,
The government must streamline
and strengthen the entire ecosystem — from sourcing of raw materials to food
preparation, delivery, and consumption — with stringent quality controls,
default monitoring mechanisms, and zero tolerance for lapses.
Simultaneously, students must be
educated on how food works, Food based health care preventive and cure, the
importance of lifestyle habits, personal and environmental hygiene, dignity of
labour, financial discipline, social responsibility, and simple natural
practices that amplify the benefits of nutrition.
Government must ensure all
children all students irrespective of income group in all government and all
private Schools get uniform facilitates, Same
menu mid-day meals in all Government and Private Schools
Only through this comprehensive,
multi-dimensional strategy can we transform mid-day meals into a powerful tool
for nation-building.
In addition to mid-day meals Government
must ensure every student will get same facility equal treatment in Government
and Private Schools start with same type of 100% clothing for comfort, Same
types of 100% cotton under garments, Same type of Shoes, Same type of 100%
Cotton Socks, Same type of GPS enabled bag, Same type of Ergonomic Table- Chair
at school and Home, Same type of
Transport – Bus- Bicycle with no personal vehicle, Same type of environment after school to
study home work
In addition inculcate disciplined
living personal hygene, clutter free
home, good environment, personal habits, self-care, financial
discipline, exercises, fitness , parents must support with their financial
stability and no bad habits to ensure they provide the required support for the
education, food , Shelter, stress free life at home with their
disciplined conduct; for this Govt
ensure default settings in system to ensure financial stability is ensured form
parents earning with no stress of repayments
of loans, by ensure loan limit restricted to part
of earning, ensure they are not addicted to alcohol. Marginalise scope for
financial distress and domestic violence ensure peace prevails at home by and
large
Also need to inculcate religious harmony,
freedom of choice of religion, induce self-confidence morale motivation through
power of subconscious mind to achieve everything in life with righteousness
Group 1: Food Items to Avoid or Limit in School Children’s
Diet
1.
Why School Children and General Children
Should Not Be Fed Soy Products (Tofu, Soy Chunks, Soy Milk, Soy Protein, etc.)
Regularly
Soy products like tofu, soy
chunks (soya nuggets), soy milk, edamame, soy protein isolate, and hidden soy
(lecithin, textured vegetable protein) are promoted as cheap, high-protein
vegetarian options in school meals, hostels, or home diets. While soy has some
nutritional value in small, occasional, traditionally prepared amounts, regular
or large consumption in growing children is not recommended by many health
experts. Children’s developing bodies (brain, hormones, gut, immune system) are
especially vulnerable. Over-reliance on soy can create avoidable risks.
1. High Glyphosate Residues
(Especially in GM Soy)
Most commercial soy is
genetically modified (GM) and heavily sprayed with glyphosate (Roundup).
Residues are often much higher than in other crops.
- Glyphosate acts as an antibiotic in the gut → kills
beneficial bacteria, promotes dysbiosis (imbalance), leaky gut, and
inflammation.
- In children: Linked to digestive issues
(constipation, bloating, diarrhea), poorer nutrient absorption, and
possible effects on behavior, mood, and learning.
- Long-term exposure concerns in animal and population
studies include disrupted microbiome development during critical growth
windows.
School context: Bulk school meals
using cheap soy products can lead to repeated daily exposure.
2. Phytoestrogens and Hormonal
Disruption (Especially Critical in Children)
Soy contains isoflavones
(genistein, daidzein) that mimic estrogen in the body.
- In developing children: Can influence puberty timing,
hormone balance, and reproductive development.
- Concerns include early puberty signs, thyroid
interference (goitrogenic effects — soy can block iodine uptake needed for
thyroid hormone), and potential impacts on brain development and behavior.
- Boys: Possible effects on testosterone levels or
genital development with very high intake.
- Girls: Hormonal fluctuations that may affect mood or
cycle regulation later.
- Infant soy formula has raised particular caution in
some studies due to high phytoestrogen load relative to body weight.
Children in school age
(especially 5–12 years) are in a key window of hormonal and brain development —
regular soy can add unnecessary interference.3. Digestive and Allergic Issues
- Soy is one of the top 8 common food allergens. Many
children react with skin rashes, digestive upset, or respiratory symptoms.
- Anti-nutrients in soy (phytates, lectins, trypsin
inhibitors) can reduce absorption of important minerals like iron, zinc,
calcium, and magnesium — nutrients already critical for growing brains,
bones, and immunity.
- Processed soy (chunks, isolates) is harder to digest
and can worsen gut symptoms in sensitive children.
- In schools: Undiagnosed sensitivities may show up as
poor concentration, tummy aches, or frequent absences.
4. Processing Concerns and
Additives
- Most school or packaged soy products are highly
processed → contain refined oils, additives, salt, or MSG-like compounds.
- These add oxidative stress, advanced glycation
end-products, and extra calories with low overall nutrient density.
- GM soy + processing often means higher chemical
residues and lower natural protective compounds.
5. Other Developmental and
Long-Term Concerns
- Potential contribution to oxidative stress and
mitochondrial burden in sensitive children.
- Displacement of more nutrient-dense foods (fresh
vegetables, fruits, millets, eggs, dairy, nuts, seeds, or properly
prepared legumes).
- In large-scale school feeding programs,
over-dependence on soy can lead to monotonous diets lacking variety, which
affects microbiome diversity and overall growth.
Note on Benefits: Small amounts
of organic, traditionally fermented soy (e.g., small portions of tempeh or
miso) are better tolerated by some children because fermentation reduces
anti-nutrients and phytoestrogens. Whole organic non-GM soy in rotation (not
daily) is different from daily processed soy chunks or soy milk.
Practical Guidance for Parents,
Schools, and Caregivers
- Avoid or Strictly Limit regular soy in school meals,
tiffins, or daily home cooking. Read labels carefully — soy hides in many
processed vegetarian items.
- Better Protein Alternatives (varied and
nutrient-dense):
- Millets (ragi, jowar, bajra), lentils (properly
soaked/sprouted), beans, chickpeas, nuts/seeds, paneer.
- Fresh vegetables, fruits (guava, kiwi, berries),
sprouts, and whole grains for balanced nutrition.
- School Recommendations: Advocate for diverse menus
with rotation of proteins. Prioritize organic or low-residue sources where
possible.
- Transition Tips: Gradual changes, sensory-friendly
preparations (textures, flavors children accept), and monitoring of
symptoms (digestion, energy, mood, skin).
- Testing/Support: If a child has frequent tummy
issues, allergies, or developmental concerns, consult a pediatrician or
nutritionist familiar with children’s gut and hormone health. Consider
allergy testing or stool analysis if needed.
Feeding of soy products (tofu,
chunks, soy milk, etc.) to school and general children is not ideal due to
glyphosate load, hormonal effects, digestive/allergen risks, and nutrient
interference during critical growth years. Variety, whole foods, and moderation
support better long-term health, learning ability, and comfort. Schools and homes should aim for diverse,
minimally processed proteins instead of soy-heavy meals.
2.
Why Paneer Made from Commercial Dairy
Milk Should Not Be Given Regularly to School Children (or All Children)
Paneer (Indian cottage cheese) is
popular in school meals because it is a good source of protein and calcium.
However, when made from regular commercial dairy milk, it carries several
risks, especially when fed daily or to large groups of children (e.g.,
hundreds, thousands, lakhs or crores in school programs).
Here’s why it should be limited
or avoided in regular school feeding.
1. Growth Hormones (IGF-1) and
Hormonal Disturbances
- Cow’s / Buffalo milk naturally contains IGF-1
(Insulin-like Growth Factor-1), a growth hormone. Commercial dairy farming
practices can increase these levels.
- Regular consumption in children can over-stimulate
growth pathways.
- This is linked to:
- Early puberty (earlier development of breasts, body
hair, etc.).
- Estrogen dominance (excess estrogen-like activity)
— milk from pregnant cows contains natural estrogens.
- Insulin resistance — higher risk of weight gain,
sugar cravings, and later diabetes risk.
- Children’s bodies are still developing. Extra
hormones from milk/paneer can disturb natural hormone balance during
critical growth years (especially 5–15 years).
2. No Guarantee of Quality Milk
(A2 / Organic / Pure)
- Most commercial milk in India comes from mixed breeds
and large dairies.
- There is no guarantee it is pure A2 milk (better
digested) or organic.
- Common problems in commercial milk:
- Antibiotics and medicines given to cows → residues
in milk/paneer.
- Pesticides from cattle feed.
- Adulteration or poor hygiene in some supply chains.
- When paneer is mass-produced for schools, quality
control can be inconsistent. One bad batch can affect thousands of
children.
3. Milk Intolerance and Digestive
Issues (Very Common in Children)
- Many children (especially Indian/Asian background)
have lactose intolerance or sensitivity to A1 beta-casein (protein in most
commercial cow milk).
- Symptoms: Bloating, stomach pain, loose motions, gas,
constipation, or skin issues.
- Paneer still contains casein and some lactose.
Regular feeding can cause ongoing tummy problems, poor nutrient
absorption, and discomfort — affecting concentration in school.
- Undiagnosed intolerance is very common; children may
not clearly complain.
4. High Risk of Contamination
& Food Poisoning Due to Improper Storage
- Paneer is a high-moisture, high-protein food — it
spoils very quickly if not stored correctly.
- Dangers in school settings:
- Schools often prepare paneer in large quantities in
advance.
- If kept at room temperature even for 2–4 hours
(common in hot Indian climate or during transport), bacteria multiply
rapidly.
- Common bacteria: Staphylococcus, Salmonella, E.
coli, Listeria → cause vomiting, diarrhea, fever, and severe food
poisoning.
- Children have weaker immune systems → dehydration
and complications are more dangerous.
- In large feeding programs (thousands or lakhs of
children), one bad batch can cause mass food poisoning outbreaks.
- Refrigeration is often unreliable in many schools
(power cuts, poor facilities). Paneer left in warm conditions becomes
unsafe fast.
5. Risks When Given to Large Numbers of Children
- In school programs feeding 1 crore+ children daily:
- Even small risks (hormonal effects, intolerance,
residues) multiply across millions.
- Harder to monitor individual reactions or
allergies.
- Uniform menu means sensitive children have no easy
alternative.
- Long-term population effects on puberty timing,
obesity, or hormone-related issues become a bigger concern.
6. Other Concerns
- Processing (heating, coagulating) does not remove
hormones, IGF-1, or residues.
- High intake of paneer can displace more varied foods
(vegetables, fruits, millets, lentils, eggs) needed for balanced growth.
- Cost vs benefit: Cheap paneer often means lower
quality milk.
Better & Safer Alternatives
for School Children
- Sprouted lentils / chickpeas or well-cooked dal.
- Millets (ragi, jowar) porridge or khichdi.
- Paneer from certified A2 organic milk — only
occasionally, in small amounts, for children who tolerate dairy well.
- Eggs, nuts/seeds (if no allergy), seasonal
vegetables, curd from good sources (in moderation).
- Focus on variety and whole foods instead of one
protein source daily.
Paneer from commercial dairy milk
is not ideal for school or daily child feeding because of added hormones
(IGF-1, estrogens), possible insulin resistance, estrogen imbalance, digestive
issues, and lack of quality guarantee. For large-scale school programs it is
better to rotate proteins and choose safer, varied options. This protects
natural growth, hormones, and gut health in children.
3.
Paneer Made from Chickpea Milk (or Other
Plant-Based Milks) Be Given Occasionally
Paneer made from chickpea milk
(or other plant-based milks like almond, soy-free options) can be given
occasionally (1–2 times a week in small portions). It is much safer and better
than regular commercial dairy paneer for school children and general children.
However, it should not become a daily staple — variety is still important.
Why Chickpea Milk Paneer (or
Plant-Based Paneer) Is a Good Occasional Choice
No animal hormones or IGF-1 — No
estrogen dominance or early puberty risks.
No antibiotics or veterinary drug
residues — Cleaner than commercial dairy.
Plant-based protein — Good source
of protein from chickpeas, which is easier for many children to digest than cow
milk.
Lower allergy risk — Better for
children with cow milk intolerance or lactose issues.
No cholesterol — Plant foods
naturally have zero cholesterol.
Can be homemade with
soaked/sprouted chickpeas, so you know exactly what goes in.
Nutrient boost — Chickpeas
provide fiber, iron, and other minerals that support growth and energy.
Other plant-based milks (almond, pumpkin
seeds etc.) can also be used to make paneer-like dishes, but chickpea-based is
one of the best for protein content.
Things to Watch (Even with
Plant-Based Paneer)
Portion size — Keep it small
(50–100g per serving for school-age children).
Occasional only — Not daily.
Rotate with other proteins (sprouted dals, millets, eggs from good sources if
tolerated, nuts, seeds).
Digestion — Some children may
still feel heavy if overeaten. Start with small amounts.
Added ingredients — Homemade is
best. Avoid store-bought plant paneer with lots of additives, thickeners, or
preservatives.
Nutrition balance — Pair with
vegetables, grains, and healthy fats for complete meals.
How to Make Simple Chickpea Milk
Paneer at Home (Easy Method)
Soak chickpeas overnight → blend
with water → strain to get chickpea milk.
Boil the milk → add a coagulant
(lemon juice or vinegar) to curdle.
Strain and press the curd to make
fresh paneer.
Use within 1–2 days and store in
the fridge.
Bonus Tip: Add a little moringa
leaf powder while making or serving to boost vitamins, iron, and extra
protein/amino acids.
Comparison with Commercial Dairy
Paneer
|
Aspect |
Commercial Dairy Paneer |
Chickpea/Plant-Based Paneer |
|
Hormones (IGF-1) |
Present |
Absent |
|
Antibiotics |
Possible residues |
None |
|
Cholesterol |
High |
Zero |
|
Digestion |
Harder for intolerant children |
Generally easier |
|
Safety in schools |
Higher spoilage & contamination risk |
Lower risk if fresh |
|
Best use |
Rare/avoid regular |
Occasional & good choice |
Occasional & good choice
Final Advice for Schools &
Parents
Occasionally (1–2 times/week):
Chickpea milk paneer or other plant-based versions are safe and nutritious
alternatives.
Daily preference: Sprouted
chickpeas/black-eyed beans (48–96 hours), dals, millets, and moringa powder —
these are even better for regular use.
In large school programs:
Homemade-style or small-batch plant-based options reduce risks of hormones,
antibiotics, and spoilage.
This approach supports healthy
growth, better digestion, and fewer hormonal concerns while keeping meals tasty
and affordable.
4.
Why Commercial Poultry Eggs Should Be
Avoided for School Children (and General Children)
Commercial eggs (from
factory-farmed poultry) are often used in school meals because they are cheap
and easy. However, they carry several risks, especially when given regularly to
growing children.
Here’s why they should be limited
or avoided, along with safer replacements.
1. Chickens Are Fed GM Soy and
Cotton Seeds
- Most commercial poultry is fed genetically modified
(GM) soy and cotton seeds.
- These crops are heavily sprayed with glyphosate
(Roundup herbicide).
- Glyphosate residues pass into the chicken’s body and
into the eggs (especially the yolk). Studies have detected glyphosate in
conventional eggs from grocery stores.
- Glyphosate can disrupt gut health, cause oxidative
stress, and affect the developing bodies of children who eat these eggs
regularly.
2. High Use of Antibiotics in
Poultry Farming
- Factory-farmed chickens are routinely given
antibiotics to prevent disease in crowded conditions.
- Antibiotic residues can remain in the eggs.
- Regular consumption may contribute to antibiotic
resistance (a growing global health problem) and affect children’s gut
microbiome (good bacteria in the stomach), which is important for
digestion, immunity, and even mood.
3. High Cholesterol and Other
Concerns
- Commercial eggs are high in cholesterol.
- While cholesterol from food is not the main problem
for most healthy children, regular large amounts combined with other
processed foods can add unnecessary load.
- The overall quality of factory-farmed eggs is lower
due to poor diet and living conditions of the hens.
4. Risks When Given to Large
Numbers of School Children
- In school feeding programs serving lakhs or crores of
children, even small risks multiply.
- Quality and safety checks are difficult across
mass-produced eggs.
- Children may develop sensitivities, digestive issues,
or long-term effects on hormones/gut health without anyone noticing
immediately.
Safer & Better Replacements:
Sprouted Legumes + Moringa
Replace eggs with boiled/sprouted
chickpeas (chana) or black-eyed beans (lobia/chawli)
Why Sprouts Are Excellent:
- Sprouting (48 to 96 hours) makes legumes much easier
to digest.
- It reduces anti-nutrients (phytates, lectins) that
block mineral absorption.
- Protein becomes more bioavailable (easier for the
body to use) — up to 30% more digestible than unsprouted.
- Increases vitamins and minerals naturally.
- Less gas and bloating compared to regular cooked
beans.
- Provides good quality plant protein, fiber, and
complex carbs for steady energy in school.
How to Prepare Sprouts (Simple
Method):
- Soak chickpeas or black-eyed beans overnight (8–12
hours).
- Drain and rinse 2–3 times daily.
- Keep in a clean, covered container in a cool place.
- Sprout for 48 hours (short sprouts) to 96 hours
(longer, more nutritious).
- Boil or lightly steam before eating (never eat raw
sprouts in large quantities for safety).
- Make simple dishes: Sprout salad, sprout khichdi,
sprout chaat, or add to vegetables.
Add Moringa Leaf (Fresh / Powder) for complete nutrition
Why Moringa is Great:
- Called a “miracle tree” — extremely nutrient-dense.
- Contains all 9 essential amino acids (complete plant
protein).
- Very high in iron, calcium, vitamins A, C, and
antioxidants.
- Helps fill nutritional gaps in vegetarian or
plant-based diets.
- Supports growth, energy, immunity, and brain
development in children.
- Just 1 teaspoon to 1 tablespoon of good quality
moringa leaf powder per serving adds significant protein and
micronutrients.
How to Use:
- Mix moringa powder into porridge, khichdi, dal,
sprout dishes, or roti dough.
- Start with small amounts (½ teaspoon) and increase
gradually as children get used to the taste (it has a mild earthy flavor).
- Use good quality, clean, dried moringa leaf powder.
Final Simple Advice for Schools
and Parents
- Avoid or strictly limit regular commercial eggs in
school tiffins/meals.
- Replace with:
- Sprouted & boiled chickpeas or black-eyed beans
(48–96 hours sprouting).
- Add moringa leaf powder for complete proteins and
extra nutrition.
- These options are cheaper or comparable in cost
long-term, easier to store, safer, and more nutritious for growing
children.
- They support better digestion, steady energy, and
overall health without the risks of GM residues, antibiotics, or high
cholesterol load.
This change can make school meals
healthier, safer, and more suitable for large groups of children. Focus on
variety — rotate different sprouts, millets, dals, and seasonal vegetables.
Group 2: Healthy Plant-Based Protein & Nutrient
Sources
5.
Nutrients in Sprouted Chickpeas (Chana)
and Black-Eyed Beans (Lobia/Chawli) with Moringa Powder — Especially for
Children
Sprouted chickpeas (chana) and
black-eyed beans (lobia/chawli) are excellent, affordable, and safe foods for
school children and all growing kids. They are far better regular protein
sources than many commercial options. When sprouted (48–96 hours) and lightly
cooked, their nutrients become even easier to absorb. When combined with
moringa leaf powder, they provide a complete, plant-based nutrition package.
Why Sprouted Chickpeas &
Black-Eyed Beans Are Excellent for Children
1. High-Quality Protein + Better
Digestion
Sprouting (48–96 hours) makes the
protein up to 30% more digestible than regular cooked beans.
The body absorbs the protein more easily, helping muscles, brain development,
and steady growth.
Less gas and bloating compared to unsprouted beans — children feel more
comfortable after eating. Chickpeas: About 8–9g protein per 100g cooked (higher
when sprouted).
Black-eyed beans: About 7–8g
protein per 100g cooked.
Benefit for children: Supports
muscle building, brain development, and steady energy. Sprouting makes the
protein more digestible. Combined with moringa powder, it provides all
essential amino acids (complete protein).
2. Rich in Thiamine (Vitamin B1)
and Other Important Nutrients
Thiamine (B1): Very good amount —
helps convert food into energy, supports brain function, nerves, and
concentration in school.
Other B vitamins, iron (for blood
and energy), magnesium (for muscles and calm), zinc (for immunity and growth),
and fiber.
Sprouting increases natural
vitamins and makes minerals easier to absorb.
Provides complex carbohydrates
for long-lasting energy without sugar spikes.
3. Folate (Vitamin B9) — Very
Important
Chickpeas: High in folate
(especially when sprouted).
Black-eyed beans: Also rich in
folate.
Benefit for children: Helps make
DNA and red blood cells, supports brain development, and prevents anemia. Very
important during fast growth years.
4. Zinc (for Immunity &
Growth)
Both beans are good sources of
zinc.
Benefit for children: Boosts
immunity (fights infections), helps wound healing, supports brain function, and
normal growth. Zinc deficiency is common in children with poor diets.
5. Magnesium (for Energy &
Calm)
Good amounts in both chickpeas
and black-eyed beans.
Benefit for children: Helps
convert food into energy, supports muscle and nerve function, improves sleep,
and reduces irritability or cramps.
6. Iron (for Blood & Energy)
Both are rich in iron (especially
black-eyed beans).
Benefit for children: Prevents
anemia, improves concentration in school, and gives steady energy. Pair with
vitamin C (lemon or vegetables) for better absorption.
7. Other Key Nutrients
Fiber: High in both — good for
digestion, prevents constipation, and keeps blood sugar steady.
Complex Carbohydrates: Provide long-lasting energy without sugar crashes.
B Vitamins (including
Thiamine/B1): Support brain, nerves, and energy production.
Phosphorus & Calcium: Help build strong bones and teeth.
Antioxidants: Protect cells and
support immunity.
Why Sprouting Makes Them Even
Better
Reduces gas-causing compounds and
anti-nutrients (phytates and lectins) that can block mineral absorption or
cause discomfort.
Increases bioavailability of
vitamins, minerals, and protein.
Makes them gentler on children’s
stomachs.
Safer & Gentler on Children’s
Gut: Better for children with sensitive digestion or mild food intolerances.
In many people with anxiety, or
high stress — GABA levels or signaling can be lower, making it harder to calm
down. Simple sprouting (controlled germination) of lentils, grams, and millets
dramatically increases GABA content — often by 10–68 times — turning everyday
foods into powerful natural supporters of calm and balance.
How Sprouting Creates So Much
GABA
When you soak and sprout legumes
(lentils, beans, grams), the seed “wakes up” and starts growing. During this
process:
·
Enzymes activate and convert stored glutamine
into GABA.
·
GABA content rises sharply — peaking at 48–96
hours of sprouting.
·
Long sprouting (especially 72–96 hours) gives
the highest levels without losing much when lightly cooked.
From research (CFTRI Mysore,
2011):
·
Black-eyed beans (cow peas) → highest GABA after
24 hours, continues rising to 72–96 hours.
·
Moth beans → massive increase (~68-fold at 96
hours).
·
Chickpeas (Bengal gram) → strong rise,
especially at 48–96 hours.
·
Horse gram → excellent GABA boost (up to
~14-fold).
·
Green gram, black gram, green pea, lentils → all
show big jumps.
·
Finger millet and other Siridhanya millets also
increase GABA during sprouting/fermentation, though legumes usually rise
higher.
GABA survives light cooking
(steaming or low-water boiling — never discard the water). Raw sprouts give
maximum benefit, but even cooked ones help a lot.
|
|
Gennination |
period (p) |
|
||||
|
Samples |
Native |
0 |
24 |
48 |
72 |
96 |
|
|
Sorghum |
24.9'± 1.5 |
88.1'±2.0 |
68.9' ± 4.1 |
59_3dc ± 4.5 |
51.6'd± 5.1 |
49_(jde ± 4.3 |
|
|
Finger millet |
21.4• ± 1.1 |
83.8° ± 2.5 |
256.5'± 3.2 |
311.2d± 6.3 |
345.0' ± 3.9 |
361.s1"± 6.7 |
|
|
Little millet |
38.2· ± 0.8 |
77.2b ± 3.2 |
84.6'b ± 5.7 |
65.6d ± 5.9 |
59.Q'd± 1.2 |
55_4fde ± 3.0 |
|
|
Bengal gram |
10.9' ± 2.7 |
312.4b ± 5.5 |
238.1'± 2.9 |
290.0'1± 3.0 |
323.1'±3.8 |
367.7±4.4 |
|
|
Green gram |
20.&± 2.8 |
385.ot ± 3.4 |
610.4' ± 6.9 |
644.5d±4.7 |
699.6' ± 3.7 |
781.(i ± 5.6 |
|
|
Black gram |
11.1· ±
1.6 |
349.4t ± 5.7 |
208.9'± 1.1 |
312.2d± 3.1 |
352.S'b ± 3.9 |
385.5r ± 3.3 |
|
|
Horse gram |
16.9' ± 2.1 |
63.5b ± 3.6 |
104.2' ± 1.6 |
162.7d± 1.9 |
197.7'±5.1 |
241.(i± 5.7 |
|
|
Lentil |
12.& ± 3.2 |
139_5t ± 3.3 |
207.9' ±4.7 |
301.4d± 5.6 |
347.4' ± 1.1 |
384.d ± 6.8 |
|
|
Moth bean |
20.7· ± 2.8 |
531.&± 3.0 |
947.6'± 4.9 |
1242.5d ± 5.3 |
1313.4' ± 5.8 |
1401.7 ± 7.7 |
|
|
Green pea |
14.2a ± 0.9 |
89.cP ± 1.8 |
305.6"± 2.3 |
447.6'1± 3.5 |
500.0' ± 3.9 |
573.lr±5.8 |
|
Table 1: Gamma-aminobutyric
acid content in native, soaked and germinated millets
and legumes
Why Eat Sprouted Lentils, Grams,
and Nuts Daily?
Sprouting makes these foods:
·
Much richer in GABA → natural calming effect,
reduces stress, anxiety, irritability, and sensory overload.
·
Higher in bioavailable protein, fiber, vitamins,
minerals, and antioxidants.
·
Easier to digest (less gas/bloating when soaked
and sprouted properly).
·
Support gut health → better absorption of
nutrients that help GABA and brain calm.
Daily sprouted lentils/grams
provide:
·
Protein for strength and growth.
·
Fiber for gut health and weight balance.
·
Micro-nutrients for energy and mood.
·
GABA to reduce stress, improve sleep, and ease
hyperactivity.
Power Combo: Sprouts + Moringa
Leaf Powder = Complete Protein
Moringa leaf powder contains all
9 essential amino acids (the building blocks of protein that the body cannot
make itself).
When mixed with sprouted
chickpeas or black-eyed beans, it gives a complete protein similar to eggs or
meat — but fully plant-based and gentle.
Extra benefits of moringa: High
in iron, calcium, vitamins A & C, and antioxidants — supports immunity,
strong bones, eyesight, and brain development in children.
Just ½ to 1 teaspoon of
good-quality moringa powder per serving adds big nutrition without changing
taste much.
Add Ginger or Cumin Powder for
Even Better Digestion
Ginger powder (small pinch):
Reduces gas, soothes the stomach, and improves nutrient absorption.
Cumin powder (jeera): Excellent for digestion, reduces bloating, and adds mild
flavour children often like.
Both are traditional, safe, and make the meal easier on children’s tummies.
Best Way to Prepare & Serve
for Children (Easy for Home or School)
Soak chickpeas or black-eyed
beans overnight (8–12 hours).
Drain and rinse 2–3 times a day.
Sprout for 48 hours (mild) to 96
hours (maximum nutrition) in a clean container.
Lightly boil or steam the sprouts
(never serve large amounts raw).
Mix in a little moringa powder +
pinch of ginger or cumin powder.
Simple Dishes Children Like:
Sprout khichdi or salad with
vegetables.
Sprout chaat (mild spices).
Mix into dal, roti dough, or
porridge.
Summary for Parents & Schools
Chickpeas and black-eyed beans
are nutrient powerhouses — rich in protein, folate, zinc, magnesium, iron,
fiber, and B vitamins.
They support growth, brain
development, immunity, energy, and digestion. Sprouting + moringa makes them
almost complete foods for children. They are safer, cheaper, and more
nutritious than many processed or commercial options when prepared properly.
Rotate with other dals, millets,
and vegetables for best results. Daily/Weekly Tip: Serve sprouted beans 3–5
times a week.
Add moringa powder daily in small
amounts for complete amino acids and extra vitamins/minerals.
Ginger or cumin makes digestion
smooth and comfortable. Start small so children get used to the taste and
texture. Use fresh, clean ingredients. This is a simple, powerful way to give
children the best plant-based nutrition naturally. This combination is safe,
affordable, nutritious, and supports healthy growth, energy, immunity, and
school performance without the risks of commercial eggs, dairy paneer, or
processed foods. It is especially good for vegetarian families and large school
feeding programs.
6.
Animal Protein, Insulin Resistance, and
the Protective Power of Plant-Based Foods — For General Population Children
(Especially School-Going Kids)
Insulin resistance is a condition
in which the body’s cells become less responsive to insulin, the hormone that
helps move sugar (glucose) from the bloodstream into cells for energy. Over
time, this can lead to higher blood sugar levels, fatigue, brain fog, mood
swings, weight gain, and increased inflammation. In growing children, it can
affect concentration, energy levels, behaviour, and long-term health.
School children are particularly
at risk because of common dietary patterns: high intake of refined
carbohydrates (chocolates, cakes, biscuits, colas, white rice, etc.) combined
with frequent animal proteins (meat, eggs, dairy).
This combination promotes insulin
resistance more than either factor alone
How Animal Protein Contributes to
Insulin Resistance in Children
Regular consumption of animal
proteins from dairy, fish, red meat, poultry, and processed meats can raise
insulin resistance through several mechanisms:
- Branched-Chain Amino Acids (BCAAs): Animal proteins
are rich in leucine, isoleucine, and valine. In excess, these interfere
with insulin signalling in muscle and liver cells.
- Saturated Fat and Heme Iron: These promote low-grade
inflammation and oxidative stress, making cells less responsive to
insulin.
- Lack of Protective Plant Compounds: Animal foods lack
the fibre, polyphenols, magnesium, and antioxidants found in plants, which
normally help regulate blood sugar and reduce inflammation.
- Combined with Excess Carbs: School snacks and meals
high in refined sugars and starches cause repeated blood sugar spikes.
Adding animal protein on top overloads the system, as the body struggles
to handle both the sugar surges and the inflammatory effects of animal
foods.
Over time, this can lead to
tiredness after meals, difficulty focusing in class, irritability, and
increased risk of weight gain or future metabolic issues.
How Plant-Based Foods Improve
Insulin Sensitivity in Children
Plant-based foods — especially
whole grains, legumes, vegetables, fruits, nuts, and seeds — actively improve
insulin sensitivity and support healthy growth:
- High Fibre Content: Soluble fibre slows sugar
absorption, feeds beneficial gut bacteria, and produces short-chain fatty
acids (SCFAs) like butyrate that support metabolism and reduce
inflammation.
- Lower BCAA Load with Protective Compounds: Plants
provide balanced protein with fewer BCAAs and are rich in polyphenols,
magnesium, and antioxidants that protect insulin receptors.
- Stable Energy and Better Focus: Plant foods prevent
energy crashes, supporting steadier mood, concentration in school, and
physical activity.
- Gut Health Support: A diverse microbiome from plant
foods helps overall digestion, immunity, and nutrient absorption —
important for growing children.
Even small daily shifts, such as
millet porridge or sprouted legumes instead of animal-based meals, can bring
noticeable improvements in energy, mood, and learning ability.
Why This Matters for General
Population Children (Especially School Kids)
Modern school diets are often
high in refined carbs and convenient animal proteins. This combination can
quietly promote insulin resistance, affecting:
- Concentration and academic performance.
- Mood stability and behaviour.
- Energy levels throughout the day.
- Long-term risk of obesity, diabetes, and
inflammation-related issues.
Shifting toward more plant-based
proteins helps balance the diet without compromising growth when done
thoughtfully with variety and adequate calories.
Recommended Plant-Based Protein
Sources for Children
- Siridhanya Millets (foxtail, little, kodo, barnyard,
etc.): Gluten-free, nutrient-dense staples. Use as porridge, upma, or rice
replacement.
- Boiled Sprouted Lentils & Legumes:
Easy-to-digest, complete protein with fibre.
- Fermented or Soaked Grains/Legumes: Improves
digestibility and nutrient availability.
Practical Everyday Tips for
School Children
- Focus on gentle plant foods: Fermented or soaked
millets, sprouted legumes, boiled vegetables, and soaked seeds.
- Simple meal ideas:
Lunch: Millet +
sprouted lentils + vegetables.
- Supportive additions: Small amounts of palm jaggery
(instead of refined sugar), ginger-turmeric water, and plenty of
vegetables.
Animal protein is not “bad,” but
excessive intake — especially alongside high refined carbs common in school-age
diets — can promote insulin resistance. Plant-based foods improve insulin
sensitivity, provide steady energy, support gut health, and help children feel
more focused and balanced throughout the school day.
Small, consistent shifts toward
more whole plant proteins (millets, sprouts, seeds) are one of the most
effective, gentle, and sustainable ways to support better energy, mood,
concentration, and long-term health in children.
This approach is flexible,
affordable, works well in Indian households with Siridhanya millets as a
staple.
7.
Why Children Should Be Given Only
Plant-Based Milk at Home, Schools, and Welfare Hostels — Strict No to Animal
Milk
Animal milk (cow or buffalo) has long been promoted for
calcium and protein, but for growing children, fresh, home-made plant-based
milks (especially sesame seed milk, almond, coconut, or sunflower seed milk)
are a far healthier, safer, and more nutrient-balanced choice. Governments,
schools, and hostels should actively promote and shift to plant-based options
for breakfast and daily use.
Nutrient Comparison: Animal Milk vs Sesame Seed Milk
Cow Milk (per 100 ml approx.):
- Calcium:
~120 mg ; Cholesterol: ~14 mg ; Fat: ~3.9 g ; Protein: ~3.5 g
Buffalo Milk (per 100 ml approx.):
- Calcium:
~180 mg ; Cholesterol: ~8 mg ; Fat: ~8 g ; Protein: ~4.5 g
Sesame Seed Milk (from 100 g white sesame seeds soaked
overnight, ground into paste, mixed with 900 ml water to make ~1 litre,
filtered):
- In
100 ml: ~1.8 g protein, ~100 mg calcium, zero cholesterol, ~5 g fat.
- Rich
in magnesium (~35 mg), manganese (~0.25 mg), copper (~450 mcg), niacin,
and many other micronutrients.
Sesame seed milk provides magnesium (essential for nutrient
absorption, digestion, immunity, DNA formation, blood sugar balance,
muscle/nerve function, bones, teeth, concentration, and mood) — which animal
milks lack in meaningful amounts. It also delivers zero cholesterol and a
better overall micronutrient profile for growing children.
Other Excellent Plant Options: Almond milk, coconut milk,
and sunflower seed milk — all fresh and home-made — offer similar advantages
with variety in taste and nutrients, Rotate every week one verity of plant based milk .
How to Make Sesame Seed Milk (Simple Daily Method)
- Soak
100 g white sesame seeds overnight in 100 ml water.
- Grind
into a fine paste.
- Mix
the paste with 900 ml water to make 1 litre.
- Filter
to remove residue.
- Consume
fresh (100 ml per serving for children).
- Can
be gently warmed using double-boiler method (heat water in a big vessel,
place sesame milk in a smaller vessel inside, cover — ready in 5 minutes
at ~55°C). Never direct flame/stove heat.
- Use
for drinking, making curd, or buttermilk (bacteria in curd help produce
B12).
This fresh, home-made method ensures purity and maximum
nutrition.
Why Strict No to Animal Milk for Children
- Adulteration
& Spurious Milk
Huge gap between milk production and demand in India leads to widespread adulteration — mixing with urea, vegetable oils (palm oil), detergents, or synthetic powders. This “synthetic milk” is extremely harmful, especially for children’s developing organs. - Hormones
& Growth Factors
Animal milk contains natural hormones and IGF-1 (Insulin-like Growth Factor 1), which can promote rapid growth but is linked to insulin resistance, estrogen imbalance, and early puberty in children. Regular consumption may disrupt natural hormonal development. - Cholesterol
& Fat Load
Even though some animal milks have lower cholesterol than others, the overall saturated fat load is unnecessary for children when better plant sources exist. - Lack
of Magnesium & Other Micronutrients
Animal milks do not provide meaningful magnesium, manganese, or the broad spectrum of protective compounds found in sesame or other seed milks. - Contamination
Risks
Possibility of antibiotics, steroids (used in commercial dairy), and other residues from animal feed or farming practices. - Better
Alternatives Exist
Plant-based milks made fresh at home are cleaner, cholesterol-free, magnesium-rich, and customisable. They support immunity, digestion, brain development, and steady growth without the risks.
Government & Institutional Role (Schools, Hostels,
Public Education)
- Strict
Shift in Schools & Welfare Hostels: Replace animal milk with
home-style plant-based milks (sesame, almond, coconut) for breakfast and
meals. Educate on preparation.
- Public
Awareness Campaign: Teach parents how to make fresh plant milks and
highlight risks of adulterated/synthetic animal milk.
- Transparency
Measures: Mandate registration of all milking animals (unique ID, breed,
daily yield, etc.), real-time tracking of milk production vs demand,
mandatory commercial packaging, and source disclosure for all dairy
products (curd, paneer, sweets, etc.). Ban loose milk for commercial users
where possible and promote glass-bottled or traceable supply.
- Discourage
Large-Scale Adulteration: Strong penalties (including life imprisonment
for synthetic milk makers) and real-time data systems to close the
supply-demand gap.
- Promote
Local Plant Milk Culture: Encourage home-making and small-scale production
of sesame/almond/coconut milks.
Long-Term Benefits for Children
- Cleaner
growth without hormonal disruption or adulterant risks.
- Better
magnesium intake → improved digestion, immunity, focus, mood, and bone
health.
- Stronger
natural immunity and fewer digestive issues.
- Development
of healthy, plant-forward eating habits from a young age.
Animal milk can be occasional for adults (tea, coffee, or
traditional sweets/curd in moderation), but for children, fresh plant-based
milks made at home are clearly superior. This shift protects millions of young
minds and bodies while reducing adulteration-related health disorders across
all age groups.
Group 3: Mid-Day Meal Structure & Core Food
Recommendations
8.
Why School Children Should Be Given at
Least a Small Quantity of Siridhanya Millet Java (Especially Fermented) at the
Beginning of Mid-Day Meals
Siridhanya millets (foxtail,
little, kodo, barnyard, browntop, proso, etc.) are ancient, nutrient-dense,
gluten-free grains that make an excellent addition to school mid-day meals.
Starting the meal with a small serving of fermented millet java (porridge)
provides fibre, prebiotics, resistant starch, and gentle plant protein while
supporting stable energy, digestion, and focus throughout the school day.
Why Introduce Millet Java in
Mid-Day Meals?
School children often eat high
refined-carb meals (white rice, biscuits, sweets, colas) that cause blood sugar
spikes and crashes, leading to mid-afternoon tiredness, poor concentration, and
irritability. A small portion of millet java at the beginning of the meal
gently prepares the gut and stabilises blood sugar.
Key Benefits:
- Good Fibre & Gut Health: Millets are rich in
soluble and insoluble fibre. When fermented, they become excellent
prebiotics that feed beneficial gut bacteria, improving digestion,
immunity, and the gut-brain axis. This reduces constipation, bloating, and
inflammation.
- Resistant Starch Formation: Soaking, cooking, and
overnight resting (as in your method) increases resistant starch. This
acts like a prebiotic, produces short-chain fatty acids (e.g., butyrate),
heals the gut lining, and supports steady energy without spikes.
- Stable Blood Sugar & Focus: Lower glycemic index
than white rice. Starting the meal with millet java blunts the blood sugar
rise from the rest of the meal, helping children stay attentive in
afternoon classes.
- Nutrient Boost: Provides B vitamins (including
thiamine for carb metabolism), magnesium, zinc, and antioxidants —
nutrients often low in typical school diets.
- Plant Protein & Satiety: Gentle protein from
millets + fibre keeps children fuller longer, reducing mid-day hunger or
unhealthy snacking.
- Insulin Sensitivity Support: As discussed earlier,
this counters the effects of excess refined carbs + animal proteins common
in many diets.
Especially Beneficial When Rice
Is Still Served: If rice continues as the main staple, millet java at the start
acts as a “gut primer” — delivering fibre and good bacteria first, improving
overall digestion and reducing the negative effects of refined rice.
Siridhanya Millets — The Five
Miracle Millets for Health & Nutrition
Siridhanya (also called Positive
Millets or Miracle Millets) refers to a special group of five traditional,
nutrient-dense millets that are highly valued in India, especially in
Karnataka. These millets are considered superior for daily consumption because
they are rich in fibre, minerals, antioxidants, and low in glycemic index,
making them excellent for overall health, blood sugar control, digestion, and
preventing lifestyle diseases.
The Five Siridhanya Millets
|
Millet (English) |
Local Name (Kannada) |
Key Highlights |
|
Foxtail Millet |
Navane |
High in protein, iron, and
antioxidants. Good for diabetes and weight management. |
|
Little Millet |
Samai / Saame |
Very easy to digest, rich in
B-vitamins and minerals. Excellent for children. |
|
Barnyard Millet |
Oodhalu / Udalu |
Highest fibre content among
millets. Helps in constipation and weight loss. |
|
Browntop Millet |
Andu Korale |
Highest in fibre and iron.
Supports detoxification and blood purification. |
|
Kodo Millet |
Araka / Varagu |
Rich in antioxidants and low
glycemic index. Good for heart health and diabetes. |
Why Siridhanya Millets Are
Special
- High Nutritional Value
These millets
are packed with dietary fibre, plant protein, iron, calcium, magnesium, zinc,
B-vitamins, and powerful antioxidants. They have a better nutrient profile
compared to polished rice or wheat in many aspects.
- Low Glycemic Index
They release
sugar slowly into the blood, making them ideal for children, diabetics, and
people wanting stable energy and better focus in school or work.
- Excellent for Digestion & Gut Health
High fibre
content improves bowel movements, prevents constipation, and supports healthy
gut bacteria.
- Helps in Lifestyle Diseases
Regular
consumption is traditionally believed to help manage diabetes, obesity, high
blood pressure, and anaemia. They are considered “positive” millets because
they are said to have a healing effect on the body.
- Suitable for Children
Easy to digest,
provide sustained energy, support brain development (through B-vitamins and
minerals), and strengthen immunity. Perfect for mid-day meals, porridge (java),
dosa, idli, upma, or khichdi.
Practical Use in Schools &
Homes
- Mid-Day Meals: Use Siridhanya millets for java
(porridge), khichdi, or rice substitute. Rotate varieties daily for better
nutrition and taste.
- Preparation: Soak millets for 4–6 hours before
cooking for better digestibility and reduced cooking time.
- Combination: Serve with boiled vegetables, sprouts,
curd, or grated carrot-beetroot for complete nutrition.
- Rotation: Foxtail on Monday, Little on Tuesday, etc.,
to give variety and balanced nutrients.
Comparison with Regular Grains
Siridhanya millets generally
have:
- Higher fibre and minerals than polished rice.
- Lower glycemic load than white rice or maida.
- Better suitability for long-term daily consumption.
Schools and families should
gradually shift to Siridhanya millets as the primary grain in meals. They are
cost-effective, locally available in many regions, and offer tremendous health
benefits for growing children — better immunity, digestion, energy, and disease
prevention.
These five millets truly deserve
the title “Siridhanya” (wealthy grains) because of their rich nutrition and
healing potential. Incorporating them daily can be one of the most powerful
steps toward building a healthier generation.
Ideal Preparation Method You
Described (Highly Recommended)
- Ratio: 1 part millet to 10 parts water (makes a nice
soft java/porridge).
- Soaking: Morning ~10 am — soak the millet.
- Cooking: Evening ~10 pm — cook gently.
- Resting: Overnight (this step is crucial for
resistant starch formation).
- Serving: Before 12 noon next day (fresh and at room
temperature or slightly warm).
Rotation Tip: Use one variety of
Siridhanya millet every two days. This prevents boredom and provides a broad
range of nutrients and phytochemicals for better microbiome diversity.
Practical Implementation in
Mid-Day Meals
- Serve a small bowl (50–100 ml for younger children,
150–200 ml for older) of fermented millet java first.
- Follow with the regular meal (rice + dal + vegetables
if needed).
- Over time, gradually increase the millet portion and
reduce refined rice as children adapt.
Advantages for Schools:
- Low-cost, locally available, and scalable.
- Improves children’s nutrition, immunity, and learning
ability.
- Supports national goals for millet promotion
(nutritious, climate-resilient crops).
- Easy to prepare in large quantities and ferment in
batches.
How This Fits with Broader Health
Goals
- Gut & Brain Support: Better microbiome → better
mood, focus, and behaviour.
- Blood Sugar Balance: Reduces energy crashes and
supports insulin sensitivity (especially important with snacks like
biscuits or sweets).
- Plant-Based Shift: Complements the move toward more
plant proteins (sprouted lentils, soaked seeds) while keeping meals
familiar and acceptable.
- Long-Term Benefits: Builds healthy eating habits,
stronger bones (lower acid load), and better overall resilience.
Starting mid-day meals with a
small quantity of fermented Siridhanya millet java is a simple, powerful, and
practical step.
It gives children good fibre and
gut bacteria right at the beginning of the meal, balances the effects of rice
or other carbs, and supports steady energy, digestion, and concentration
throughout the school day.
This small change can bring
noticeable improvements in children’s health, attention, and well-being with
very little extra effort.
9.
Why Daily Include Carrot, Beetroot,
Tomato & Radish in Meals (Curry or Sambar) for Children — Especially Grated
or in Tiny Pieces
Including small amounts of
carrot, beetroot, tomato, and radish daily in curries, sambar, or other dishes
is one of the simplest and most effective ways to boost nutrition in children’s
meals. These vegetables are packed with vitamins, minerals, antioxidants, and
fibre that support growth, immunity, digestion, energy, and overall
development.
Best Practice for Children: Grate
them finely or cut into very tiny pieces so they blend into the gravy or
sambar. This makes it difficult for picky eaters to separate or pick them out,
ensuring they get the nutrients without fuss.
Benefits of Each Vegetable for
Children1. Carrot
- Rich in beta-carotene (which converts to Vitamin A) —
essential for healthy eyes, vision, and immune function.
- Excellent source of fibre — supports good digestion,
prevents constipation, and feeds beneficial gut bacteria.
- Contains antioxidants that protect cells and support
skin health.
- Helps in steady energy release and can improve focus
during school hours.
- Low in calories and naturally sweet, making it
child-friendly.
2. Beetroot
- Contains natural nitrates that support healthy blood
flow and oxygen delivery — helpful for energy, stamina, and brain
function.
- Rich in betalains (powerful antioxidants) that
support liver detoxification and reduce inflammation.
- Good source of folate (important for growth and cell
division) and some iron.
- Supports healthy blood pressure and overall vitality.
- Adds natural sweetness and beautiful colour to
dishes, making meals more appealing.
3. Tomato
- High in lycopene (a strong antioxidant) — supports
heart health, immunity, and protects cells from damage.
- Excellent source of Vitamin C — boosts immunity,
helps iron absorption, and supports skin and gums.
- Provides potassium for healthy blood pressure and
muscle function.
- Contains fibre that aids digestion.
- Cooking tomatoes (as in curry/sambar) actually
increases the availability of lycopene.
4. Radish
- Good source of Vitamin C and antioxidants that
strengthen immunity.
- High in fibre and water content — promotes digestion,
prevents constipation, and supports gut health.
- Contains compounds that may help with detoxification
and liver support.
- Low in calories and has a mild, slightly peppery
taste that blends well when grated finely.
- Supports hydration and overall freshness in meals.
Combined Benefits When Included
Daily (Especially Grated/Tiny Pieces)
- Better Nutrient Density: Even small quantities add
multiple vitamins (A, C, folate), minerals (potassium, iron),
antioxidants, and fibre without increasing meal volume much.
- Gut & Digestion Support: The combination of fibre
from all four helps maintain healthy bowel movements and feeds good gut
bacteria — very useful for children who eat refined carbs or have
irregular digestion.
- Immunity & Growth: Vitamin A, C, and antioxidants
support the immune system and healthy growth.
- Energy & Focus: Nitrates (beetroot) + steady
carbohydrates + fibre help maintain stable blood sugar and energy levels,
reducing mid-day tiredness or irritability in school.
- Anti-Inflammatory Support: Antioxidants help calm
low-grade inflammation, which can indirectly support better mood, sleep,
and concentration.
- Easy Acceptance: Grating or mincing makes them almost
“invisible” in gravy/sambar while still delivering full benefits.
Practical Tips for Home &
School Meals
- Preparation: Grate carrot, beetroot, and radish
finely. Chop tomatoes into small pieces or puree them. Add at the
beginning of cooking so flavours meld well.
- Quantity: Start with 1–2 tablespoons of the mixed
grated vegetables per child in curry or sambar. Gradually increase as
acceptance grows.
- Frequency: Include daily or at least 5–6 days a week
for best results.
- Rotation: Use different combinations — e.g., carrot +
tomato one day, beetroot + radish another day.
- With Your Mitochondrial Protocol: These vegetables
perfectly complement fermented millets, sprouted lentils, soaked seeds,
and vegetable juices. They add extra antioxidants and fibre while keeping
the meal plant-based and gut-friendly.
Sample Simple Addition: In sambar
or vegetable curry, add a handful of finely grated carrot + beetroot + tomato +
a little radish along with the usual ingredients. The natural sweetness from
carrot and beetroot often makes the dish more acceptable to children.
Daily inclusion of these four
vegetables (grated or in tiny pieces) in curry or sambar is a low-effort,
high-impact way to improve children’s nutrition, digestion, immunity, energy,
and focus. They blend easily into familiar Indian meals and help compensate for
common gaps in picky or school-age diets.
This small habit supports
long-term health and works beautifully alongside millet-based meals and other
plant-forward changes.
10. Why
Sweet Potato & Potato Should Be Rotated & Included Every Day or Every
Alternate Day in School Mid-Day Meals — How They Help Children
Sweet potato and potato are
affordable, tasty, and highly nutritious root vegetables. Including them every
day or on alternate days (rotating between the two) in school mid-day meals is
a simple and effective way to give children steady energy, strong immunity,
better digestion, and overall growth.
Rotation prevents boredom and
provides complementary benefits.
Why Include Them Daily or
Alternate Days
- They are complex carbohydrates that give sustained
energy without sharp blood sugar spikes (especially when combined with
millets and fibre-rich vegetables).
- Easy to cook, store, and make tasty for children.
- Locally available and low-cost.
- Fill nutritional gaps that many children face due to
limited diets.
Specific Benefits for Children
Sweet Potato (Orange or other
varieties):
- Extremely rich in Vitamin A (beta-carotene) —
excellent for vision, immunity, and skin health.
- Good source of Vitamin C, fibre, B6, manganese, and
potassium.
- Supports immunity, fights infections, and helps with
growth and development.
- Antioxidants protect cells and reduce inflammation.
- Helps maintain healthy weight when eaten in balanced
meals.
Potato (with skin when possible):
- High in potassium (important for heart, muscles, and
fluid balance).
- Provides Vitamin C, B6, and fibre.
- When cooked and cooled (e.g., in salads or after
resting), forms resistant starch — excellent for gut health, better
digestion, and steady blood sugar.
- Gives good energy for active school days.
- Supports brain function and mood through B vitamins.
Combined Rotation Benefits:
- Covers a broad range of vitamins, minerals, and
antioxidants.
- Supports immunity, strong bones, healthy digestion,
steady energy, and better focus in studies.
- Helps prevent nutritional deficiencies common in
children.
- When added to millet-based meals with vegetables and
sprouts, they make complete, balanced plates.
Practical Way to Include in
Mid-Day Meals
- Daily or Alternate Days: One day sweet potato, next
day potato (or mix in small amounts).
- Easy preparations:
- Boiled or steamed and mashed lightly with minimal
wood-pressed oil and roasted seed powder.
- Added to sambar, vegetable curry, or millet upma.
- Small portions of cooled potato/sweet potato salad
with grated vegetables.
- Roasted or lightly spiced for taste (no deep
frying).
- Children love the mild sweetness and soft texture —
easy to accept.
Overall Help for Children
- Energy & Focus: Steady carbohydrates keep energy
levels stable for studies and play.
- Immunity: Vitamins A and C strengthen the body’s
defence against common illnesses.
- Digestion & Gut Health: Fibre and resistant
starch support healthy gut bacteria.
- Growth: Minerals and vitamins support bone, muscle,
and brain development.
- Healthy Weight Management: When part of balanced
meals, they help avoid unhealthy snacking and support normal growth (good
for both underweight and overweight children when portions are
appropriate).
This simple addition works
excellently with your other recommendations (daily leafy greens, millet java,
roasted seed powders, plant-based foods, etc.). It makes mid-day meals more
complete, tasty, and nutritious without extra cost.
Government and schools should
ensure regular supply and creative, child-friendly preparations so every child
benefits daily.
11. How
Giving a Small Piece of Palm Jaggery at the End of Mid-Day Meal Helps Children
with Better Digestion and Nutrition
Giving a small piece of palm
jaggery (about the size of a small peanut or half a teaspoon) as a treat at the
very end of the mid-day meal is a simple, traditional, and effective practice.
Palm jaggery (made from palm sap) is unrefined, mineral-rich, and far gentler
than white sugar or commercial sweets.
Why This Small Ending Piece Is
Beneficial
- Better Digestion
- Palm jaggery acts as a mild digestive aid. In
traditional systems, it is known to stimulate digestive enzymes and help
move food through the gut smoothly.
- It can relieve mild bloating or heaviness after a
meal, especially when children have eaten rice, dal, or vegetables.
- Its natural fibre and prebiotic-like properties
support gut bacteria, promoting regular bowel movements and reducing
constipation (common in school children with low-fibre diets).
- Balanced Blood Sugar & Steady Energy
- Palm jaggery has a lower glycemic index than white
sugar. A tiny piece at the end provides gentle, sustained energy without
a sharp spike and crash.
- This helps prevent the mid-afternoon energy dip or
irritability that many children experience after school meals.
- Rich in Key Nutrients
- Contains natural iron (helps prevent anaemia and
supports energy and concentration).
- Good amounts of magnesium (important for muscle
relaxation, sleep, and nerve function).
- Provides potassium and small amounts of B vitamins.
- These minerals complement the vegetables (carrot,
beetroot, tomato, radish) and millets in the meal.
- Positive Psychological Effect (The “Treat” Factor)
- Ending the meal with a small sweet treat makes
children look forward to finishing their food properly.
- It encourages them to eat the main nutritious items
(vegetables, millets, sprouts) without resistance.
- Creates a happy association with healthy meals.
- Overall Nutrition Support
- Helps compensate for common gaps in school diets
(low minerals, low fibre).
- Supports the benefits of your recommended millet
java, grated vegetables, and plant-based proteins by aiding absorption
and gentle closure of the meal.
6. Nutritional
Composition: Cane Jaggery vs Palm Jaggery (per 100 gm)
|
Nutrient |
Cane Jaggery |
Palm Jaggery |
|
Calories |
383 kcal |
380 kcal |
|
Moisture Content |
3–10% |
8.50% |
|
Carbohydrates |
98.96 g |
91.48 g |
|
Protein |
0.9 g |
2.19 g |
|
Fat |
0.1 g |
0 g |
|
Iron |
11 mg |
120–130 mg |
|
Fructose & Glucose |
10–15 g |
– |
|
Sugar |
– |
83.78 g |
|
Sucrose |
65–85 g |
65.80 g |
|
Calcium |
80–100 mg |
900–1000 mg |
|
Potassium |
1000–1100 mg |
800–900 mg |
|
Magnesium |
160 mg |
30–50 mg |
|
Thiamine |
21.00 mg |
– |
|
Nicotinic Acid |
– |
5.24 mg |
|
Riboflavin |
432.00 mg |
– |
|
Ascorbic Acid |
11.00 mg |
– |
Note: Palm jaggery is generally
richer in iron and calcium, while cane jaggery has higher magnesium. Values can
vary slightly depending on processing and source.
Palm jaggery is often considered
more nutrient-dense, especially for minerals.
Health benefits of palm jaggery
Palm jaggery delivers the
following health benefits
i. Rich in Minerals- Palm jaggery
contains important minerals in abundance. It is a good source of minerals like
calcium, phosphorous and iron. According to studies, palm jaggery contains 60
times more nutrients than white sugar. Furthermore, it contains a lot of
vitamins B and C.
ii. Improves Digestive Health-
Jaggery from palm trees has digestive properties. To promote efficient
digestion, it is occasionally consumed in tiny amounts after meals in various
parts of India. According to anecdotal evidence, it also stimulates the digestive
enzymes and aids in intestinal and mouth cleansing.
iii. Rich in Nutrients- Palm
jaggery is a good source of iron and
magnesium. Regular consumption of
iron-rich foods increases hemoglobin levels and helps treat anemia as well.
Similarly, Magnesium helps regulate the nervous system. Palm jaggery which is a
natural sweetener helps protect the body cells from damage caused by free
radicals due to its high antioxidant content. It is also rich in minerals like
potassium, calcium, and phosphorus.
iv. Acts as an Energy Booster-
Palm jaggery constitutes several
composite carbohydrates. As a
result, it can be digested faster than white sugar. It provides instant energy
and hence be used as an energy booster. It helps the consumer stay fresh and
active for hours after consumption.
v. Acts as an Active Cleanser-
Palm jaggery helps clear the intestines, food pipe, lungs, stomach, and
respiratory tract. It also removal of toxins from the body.
vi. Helps relieve Constipation-
Palm Jaggery is enriched with dietary fibers. Hence, it helps relieve
indigestion and constipation. They can also help cleanse the system by flushing
out any unwanted entities. Furthermore, it also stimulates bowel movement upon
consumption.
vii. Helps relieve several Common
Ailments- Palm jaggery has
been historically utilized for
its medicinal properties. It was used to treat dry cough and cold during
ancient times. Palm jaggery helps dissolve the mucus present in the respiratory
tract thus clearing it.
viii. Helps Reduce Migraines-
Natural medicinal entities and minerals present in palm jaggery help to reduce
this pain associated with the onset of migraines.
ix. Helps with Weight Loss- Palm
jagger which is rich in minerals
like potassium helps with weight
loss. The high potassium levels associated with this raw sweetener help reduce
water retention and bloating. Hence, it can very well be used as a supple- ment
in one’s weight loss regime.
x. Boosts body immunity - It has
a plethora of antioxidants and
micronutrients like iron,
manganese, magnesium, etc. It is also adept at strengthening the bone marrow in
young children, in a few weeks. It also helps boost their immunity and health
as well.
xi. Exhibits cooling effect- Upon
regular consumption palm jaggery has a cooling effect on the body owing to its
alkaline nature. Therefore, it helps conserve the body’s energy.
Best Way to Implement
- Timing: After the child has finished the main meal
(rice/millet + dal + vegetables).
- Quantity: Very small piece — just enough to taste
sweet (avoid large amounts to prevent excess sugar).
- Quality: Use pure, chemical-free palm jaggery
(preferably organic or traditional).
- Frequency: Daily in mid-day meals or at least 5–6
days a week.
- Combination: Works beautifully after fermented millet
java or sambar with carrot, beetroot, tomato, and radish.
How This Fits with Broader
Healthy Eating
- After starting with millet java (fibre + gut support)
and having vegetables (antioxidants + vitamins), the small palm jaggery
piece provides a gentle sweet close that aids digestion and adds minerals.
- It balances the meal without the problems of refined
sweets or chocolates.
- Supports stable blood sugar, better nutrient
absorption, and positive eating habits in school children.
This small traditional practice —
millet java at the beginning + nutritious vegetables + tiny palm jaggery at the
end — turns an ordinary mid-day meal into a balanced, digestion-friendly,
nutrient-dense experience that helps children feel satisfied, energetic, and
healthy throughout the afternoon.
12. Why
Children Should Be Given Homemade Amla Candy (Made with Palm Jaggery) Daily or
on Alternate Days in Mid-Day Meals
Instead of giving plain pieces of
palm jaggery, schools should provide small, homemade Amla (Indian Gooseberry)
Candies made with Palm Jaggery to children in mid-day meals every day or on
alternate days. This is a simple, tasty, and highly nutritious upgrade that
offers far greater health benefits than plain jaggery alone.
Why This Combination is Excellent
1. Superior Iron Absorption
Whole millets (widely used in mid-day meals) contain phytates that can reduce
iron absorption. Amla is one of the richest natural sources of Vitamin C, which
significantly improves iron absorption from food. Palm jaggery itself is rich
in iron. Together, they create an ideal combination that helps prevent
iron-deficiency anemia in children — a common problem in growing kids.
2. Rich Source of Vitamins &
Minerals
- Vitamin C from amla → boosts immunity, helps fight
colds/coughs, and supports tissue repair.
- Iron, Thiamine (B1), Riboflavin (B2) from palm
jaggery → support energy production, digestion, and overall growth.
- Antioxidants and phytonutrients → protect cells,
reduce inflammation, and support long-term health.
3. Better Digestion & Gut
Health
Improved iron and thiamine levels
support better release of stomach acid (HCl), which aids overall digestion and
nutrient absorption (including zinc). The fibre in amla also supports gut
motility and prevents constipation.
4. Additional Health Benefits
- Strengthens immunity and helps fight common
infections.
- Purifies blood and supports heart & liver health.
- Improves skin and hair quality through collagen
support.
- Provides natural sweetness without the empty calories
of commercial candies.
- Acts as a healthy treat that children love
(sweet-sour taste).
5. Much Better than Commercial
Candies/Toffees
Normal toffees and sugar candies
offer only empty calories, promote tooth decay, obesity, and blood sugar
spikes. Amla-palm jaggery candy is nutrient-dense, supports dental health (due
to Vitamin C and chewing action), and is guilt-free.
Practical Implementation in
Mid-Day Meals
- Serve 1–2 small pieces of homemade amla candy (made
with palm jaggery) after the main meal.
- Prepare in bulk using simple methods: Cook de-seeded
amla pieces in palm jaggery syrup, dry them, and optionally add mild
spices like black pepper for extra taste.
- Rotate with plain palm jaggery pieces if needed, but
amla candy should be the preferred daily option.
- Easy to store and hygienic when made properly.
Recommended Recipe (Simple
Home/School Method)
- Boil or steam 1 kg de-seeded amla pieces.
- Prepare syrup with 600 gm palm jaggery.
- Soak amla in the syrup for 1–2 days, then sun-dry for
2 days.
- Optional: Sprinkle black pepper and salt for
khatta-meetha flavour.
Important Note
- Give in moderation (1–2 pieces per child).
- Children with any specific medical conditions should
consult a doctor.
- Always use good-quality, fresh ingredients.
Replacing plain palm jaggery or
unhealthy candies with homemade Amla Candy made with Palm Jaggery is a smart,
tasty, and highly effective way to boost children’s nutrition. It significantly
improves iron absorption (countering millet phytates), strengthens immunity,
supports digestion, and provides multiple vitamins and minerals in a form
children love. This small change in mid-day meals can play a big role in
reducing anemia, improving overall health, and building better eating habits
from a young age. It is a practical, low-cost step toward healthier, stronger
children across the country.
13. Why
Cane Sugar and High Fructose Corn Syrup Must Be Completely Avoided
Cane sugar (white sugar) and High
Fructose Corn Syrup (HFCS) are two of the most common sweeteners used in homes,
packed foods, juices, bakery items, sweets, and commercial products. They look
sweet and make food tasty, but they are very harmful when consumed regularly.
They should be 100% avoided at home and in daily eating.
What Are Cane Sugar and High
Fructose Corn Syrup?
- Cane sugar is made from sugarcane. It is highly
refined and contains almost no nutrients — only empty calories.
- High Fructose Corn Syrup (HFCS) is made from corn. It
is even more processed and contains a very high amount of fructose. It is
cheaper and is widely used in packed juices, soft drinks, sweets, bakery
products, and many processed foods.
Both are empty carbohydrates —
they give quick energy but no real nutrition (no fibre, vitamins, or minerals).
Why Cane Sugar and HFCS Should Be
Completely Avoided
These sugars cause many health
problems because they are absorbed very quickly into the blood:
- Obesity and Weight Gain: They add a lot of calories
without making you feel full. Regular use leads to fat accumulation,
especially around the belly.
- Insulin Resistance: They cause sudden spikes in blood
sugar. The body releases too much insulin again and again. Over time,
cells stop responding properly to insulin. This leads to insulin
resistance, prediabetes, and Type 2 diabetes.
- High Phosphorus Levels: Many processed sugars and
corn-based products disturb the calcium-phosphorus balance in the body.
This can affect bones and teeth over time.
- Inflammation and Other Problems: Regular intake
increases inflammation in the body, which can lead to tiredness, poor
immunity, hormonal imbalance (especially in girls — worsening PCOD/PCOS
and acne), fatty liver, and higher risk of heart problems later in life.
- Poor Digestion and Nutrient Loss: They do not contain
fibre, so they disturb gut health. They also reduce the body’s ability to
absorb nutrients from real food.
Empty carbohydrates from sugar
give quick energy but leave you hungry again very soon. This creates a cycle of
overeating and weight gain.
Why Corn-Based Products (Corn
Powder, Corn Starch, Corn Syrup) Should Also Be Completely Avoided
Corn-based products like corn
starch, corn powder, and corn syrup are highly processed. Many are made from
genetically modified (GMO) corn. They behave similarly to sugar in the body:
- Cause rapid blood sugar spikes.
- Contribute to insulin resistance and obesity.
- Often contain hidden chemicals and are used in many
packed juices, sweets, sauces, and bakery items.
Avoid:
- Packed fruit juices made with corn syrup or
corn-based sweeteners.
- Commercial sweets, cakes, biscuits, and snacks that
use corn starch or corn syrup.
- Any home preparation that uses corn starch as a
thickener if possible.
Better and Healthier Alternatives
Instead of cane sugar or
corn-based sweeteners, use natural options that have some nutritional value:
- Palm Jaggery (Karupatti) — Rich in iron, minerals,
and has a lower glycemic index than white sugar.
- Dates — Natural sweetness with fibre, potassium, and
other minerals. Soak and blend them to make paste or use chopped dates.
How to Use Them Wisely:
- Use palm jaggery or dates only on special occasions
(festivals, family functions, birthdays) in limited quantities.
- Do not make vermicelli payasam, kesari, or other
sweet dishes regularly at home.
- When you feel like eating sweets on special days,
take a small portion only. Do not make it a habit.
These natural alternatives are
much better than white sugar or corn syrup because they come with some minerals
and fibre.
Simple Rules for Home and Daily
Life
- 100% avoid cane sugar and corn-based sweeteners in
daily cooking and drinks at home.
- Do not buy packed juices, soft drinks, bakery items,
or sweets that contain cane sugar, HFCS, or corn syrup.
- When eating outside, choose fresh fruits, nuts, or
simple homemade-style food instead of commercial sweets and juices.
- Teach children from a young age that “sweet” does not
always mean healthy. Real sweetness comes from fruits and natural jaggery
in limited amounts.
Cane sugar and high fructose corn
syrup are empty and harmful. They make you gain weight, disturb your hormones,
cause insulin resistance, and affect your health in many ways. Completely avoid
them at home and in daily life. Use palm jaggery or dates only on special
occasions in small quantities. Choose fresh fruits, millets, sprouts, and
vegetables instead. When you eat real, natural food, your body stays energetic,
your mind stays sharp, and you remain healthy for life. Small changes in what
you eat every day create big results for your future health.”
Avoiding these empty sweeteners
is one of the most powerful steps you can take for better energy, weight
control, hormonal balance, and long-term health. Combine this with eating
millets, sprouts, vegetables, post-meal walks, good sleep, and fresh home-made
food for excellent results.
14. National
Palm Jaggery Revolution; Establishing 100% Government-Funded Mini Palm Jaggery
Processing Centres in Every Village and Mandal Across India
India stands at a critical
juncture where public health, water scarcity, environmental sustainability, and
rural employment demand urgent, integrated solutions. One powerful intervention
lies in leveraging the country’s vast palm resources to promote palm jaggery
(also known as palm sugar or karupatti / panai vellam) as a superior, natural
alternative to refined cane sugar.
India has approximately 110
million palm trees (primarily palmyra palms), concentrated in states like Tamil
Nadu, Andhra Pradesh, Telangana, Karnataka, Kerala, Odisha, and parts of
Maharashtra and Gujarat. These trees can produce large quantities of sap that
can be processed into nutrient-rich palm jaggery with minimal resources.
The proposal is to establish 100%
government-funded mini processing centres in every village and mandal across
the country. These centres will collect fresh palm sap early in the morning,
boil it hygienically using steel vessels and reliable power supply, and produce
high-quality palm jaggery ready for packing and distribution. This initiative
aims to gradually replace a significant portion of cane sugar consumption in
households and commercial sectors.
The Problem with Cane Sugar
Refined cane sugar is essentially
empty calories — pure sucrose with negligible nutritional value. Its excessive
consumption is strongly linked to:
- Obesity and overweight
- Insulin resistance and Type-2 diabetes
- Fatty liver disease
- Cardiovascular problems
- Dental issues
Additionally, sugarcane
cultivation is highly water-intensive, requiring 1,500–2,500 mm of water per
crop cycle. In water-stressed regions, this diverts precious water resources
away from food crops like pulses, oilseeds, and millets.
The government currently spends
thousands of crores annually on health insurance schemes, hospital
infrastructure, and treatment of lifestyle diseases — much of which can be
reduced through dietary shifts.
The Solution: Palm Jaggery Mini
Processing Centres
The government should immediately
launch a National Palm Jaggery Mission with the following core components:
- Infrastructure
- 100% central and state government funding for
constructing small, hygienic mini processing units in every village and
mandal.
- Each centre will be equipped with stainless steel
boiling vessels, filtration systems, clean water supply, and reliable
electricity (or solar backup).
- Centres will operate daily, receiving fresh sap
collected before sunrise by trained toddy tappers and palm farmers.
- Quality Assurance & Hygiene
- Specially designed collection pots with built-in
fine mesh or muslin cloth filters to ensure 100% pure sap with zero
contamination from insects, dust, or debris.
- Double filtration process after collection.
- Mandatory ISI-standard or FSSAI quality testing at
every centre.
- Strict protocols to prevent flies and contaminants
during boiling and packing.
- Use of food-grade packaging materials.
- Production Process
Fresh sap
collected in the early morning hours is boiled in steel vessels until it
thickens and condenses into palm jaggery. The process is simple, traditional,
and requires only heat and clean equipment. No chemicals or additives are
needed.
Major Benefits
1. Health Revolution
Palm jaggery is a natural,
unrefined product rich in minerals (iron, calcium, magnesium, potassium),
vitamins, antioxidants, and fibre. It has a lower glycemic index compared to
refined sugar. Regular consumption can help:
- Reduce risk of obesity and diabetes
- Improve energy levels without blood sugar spikes
- Support better digestion and immunity
- Act as a natural source of micronutrients
Indirect benefits may include
improved overall vitality, better metabolic health, and reduced lifestyle
diseases — leading to lower hospitalization rates and reduced burden on
government health schemes.
2. Water Conservation &
Agricultural Sustainability
Palm trees require very little
additional water compared to sugarcane. Shifting focus to palm jaggery will
free up enormous quantities of water currently used for sugarcane cultivation.
This saved water can be redirected to:
- Pulses and oilseeds (improving self-sufficiency)
- Other food crops
- Drinking water and industrial needs
3. Massive Employment Generation
This initiative can create millions of direct and indirect jobs:
- Direct employment in sap collection (hundreds of
thousands of toddy tappers and farmers)
- Processing, boiling, packing, and quality control at
village centres
- Transportation, distribution, and marketing
- Ancillary industries (packaging, equipment
manufacturing)
It will provide meaningful,
respectable livelihood opportunities for rural youth, reducing migration and
involvement in unproductive or risky activities.4. Environmental & Economic
Advantages
- Lower carbon footprint compared to large-scale
sugarcane processing.
- Reduced government expenditure on health and
subsidies related to sugar.
- Boost to rural economy and value addition at the
village level.
5. Social & Broader Impact
A shift towards nutrient-dense
natural sweeteners like palm jaggery can contribute to better public health
outcomes, improved energy and vitality across the population, and stronger
family and community well-being over time.
Implementation Roadmap
Phase 1 (Year 1): Pilot in
high-palm-density districts of Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh, Telangana, and
Odisha.
Phase 2 (Years 2–3): Scale up to all states with significant palm populations.
Phase 3 (Years 4–5): Achieve
nationwide coverage with quality certification and branding (“Swadeshi Palm
Jaggery”).Policy Support Needed:
- Target: Reduce cane sugar production capacity by 80%
over 5 years (retain only 20% for specific industrial/commercial uses
where alternatives are not feasible).
- Mandate gradual shift of household consumption and
commercial users (tea stalls, bakeries, sweet shops, religious
institutions, etc.) toward palm jaggery.
- Provide subsidies, training, and market linkages for
farmers and processors.
- Strict quality control and branding under “Make in
India” / “Vocal for Local” initiatives.
- Awareness campaigns highlighting health and
environmental benefits.
Conclusion
This is not merely a sugar
substitution programme — it is a comprehensive health, water, employment, and
rural development revolution. By investing in village-level palm jaggery
processing centres with 100% government support and rigorous quality standards,
India can:
- Improve public health
- Conserve water
- Generate massive rural employment
- Reduce burden on the healthcare system
- Promote sustainable agriculture
Palm jaggery represents true
“Swadeshi” nutrition — pure, natural, nutrient-rich, and aligned with India’s
traditional wisdom. With 110 million palm trees already available, the raw
material is ready. What is needed now is decisive government action to establish
the processing infrastructure, ensure quality, and drive the transition from
cane sugar to palm jaggery.
This single initiative has the
potential to transform India’s health landscape, rural economy, and
environmental sustainability for decades to come.Jai Hind. Let us make India
healthier, self-reliant, and truly Swadeshi through the Palm Jaggery Revolution.
15. Why
Children (Especially in Mid-Day Meals) Should Be Given Crunchy Nuts or Sesame
Seed Laddoos Daily — One Variety at a Time
It is very important that every
school, especially through the mid-day meal programme, gives children a small
amount of crunchy nuts or hard sesame seed laddoos daily, rotating one variety
at a time. Many children today eat mostly soft or processed foods and do not
chew properly. This leads to weaker jaw muscles, poor teeth alignment, weaker
digestion, lower nutrient absorption, and reduced focus in class.
Giving a small portion of
dry-roasted chickpeas, peanuts, or hard sesame laddoos encourages proper
chewing. This simple habit strengthens teeth and jaw development, improves
brain blood flow and concentration, activates the vagus nerve for better
digestion, and provides excellent nutrition (protein, healthy fats, calcium,
iron, and antioxidants). When combined with millet java, vegetables, and palm
jaggery treats, it creates a complete, balanced meal that supports strong
physical growth, sharp minds, and lifelong healthy eating habits
Key Benefits for Children
- Strengthens Teeth and Jaw Line
Chewing crunchy
foods exercises the jaw muscles and teeth. This helps develop stronger jaw
bones, better alignment, and healthier teeth. In growing children, regular
chewing supports proper facial development and reduces risk of dental issues.
- Improves Oral Health
Crunching
stimulates saliva production, which naturally cleans the mouth, neutralises
acids, and reduces tooth decay risk. It also helps remove food particles stuck
between teeth.
- Enhances Brain Function & Focus
Chewing
increases blood flow to the brain and stimulates nerves. This can improve
concentration, memory, and cognitive function — very useful during school hours
after the mid-day meal.
- Improves Vagus Nerve Function & Digestion
Thorough chewing
activates the vagus nerve (the main nerve of the parasympathetic
“rest-and-digest” system). This leads to better digestion, increased enzyme and
bile release, reduced bloating, and improved gut motility. Good vagal tone also
supports calmer mood, better emotional regulation, and overall nervous system
balance.
- Nutritional Boost
Nuts and seeds
provide high-quality plant protein, healthy fats, fibre, magnesium, zinc,
vitamin E, and antioxidants. Sesame seeds are especially rich in calcium and
iron. A small daily portion adds sustained energy without heaviness.
- Habit Building
Starting this in
mid-day meals teaches mindful eating. Children learn to chew slowly instead of
gulping food, which improves nutrient absorption and prevents overeating.
Practical Implementation in
Mid-Day Meals
- Quantity: Very small — 1–2 teaspoons of dry-roasted
chickpeas/peanuts or 1 small hard sesame laddoo per child.
- Rotation: One variety per day (e.g., Monday: roasted
chickpeas; Tuesday: peanuts; Wednesday: sesame laddoo). This keeps it
interesting and provides a range of nutrients.
- Preparation: Dry-roast without excess oil/salt.
Sesame laddoos can be made with palm jaggery for natural sweetness.
- Integration: Serve after millet java or vegetables so
children start with fibre and end with crunchy protein.
- School-Friendly: Easy to prepare in bulk, hygienic,
and appealing as a “special crunchy treat.”
How This Fits with Broader
Healthy Eating
This habit complements millet
java at the beginning, grated vegetables in sambar/curry, and palm jaggery
treats at the end. Together they create a balanced mid-day meal that supports:
- Steady energy and focus in class.
- Strong digestion and gut health.
- Better oral and jaw development.
- Overall nutrient intake without excess processed
foods.
Daily crunchy nuts or sesame
laddoos in mid-day meals is a low-cost, high-impact habit. It strengthens teeth
and jaws, improves brain function and vagus nerve activity, enhances digestion,
and builds lifelong healthy chewing habits — all while providing excellent
nutrition.
Children enjoy the crunch,
parents see better eating behaviour, and schools get an easy way to boost
nutrition.
16. Why
No Deep Frying or Tampering with Oils — Use Freshly Ground, Slow RPM
Wood-Pressed Oils on Boiled Vegetables + Tasty Roasted Seed/Chana Powders for
Children
Deep frying, high-heat tampering
(tadka), and refined oils are common in many meals, but they are not ideal for
children’s regular diet, especially in school mid-day meals or daily home
cooking. Switching to freshly ground, locally made, slow RPM wood-pressed oils
poured on boiled vegetables after they cool to room temperature, combined with
simple roasted seed or chana powders, gives super taste while protecting
health.
Why Avoid Deep Frying, High-Heat
Tampering & Refined Oils
- Damage to Good Fats (PUFA Oxidation)
Polyunsaturated
fats (PUFAs) in many oils are delicate. High heat (frying or tadka) oxidises
them, creating harmful compounds that increase inflammation and oxidative
stress. Children’s developing bodies are more sensitive to this load.
- Increased Inflammation & Oxidative Stress
Oxidised oils
promote free radicals that can affect mitochondria, gut health, brain function,
and overall immunity. Frequent exposure adds to low-grade inflammation, which
can worsen focus, mood, digestion, and long-term health risks.
- Loss of Phytonutrients & Natural Goodness
Refining strips
away natural antioxidants, vitamins, and beneficial compounds. Heating further
destroys many of them. Wood-pressed oils retain these naturally.
- Digestive Burden
Fried or heavily
tempered foods are heavier to digest, can cause bloating or sluggishness, and
are less suitable for regular school meals.
- Better for Growing Children
School kids need
clean, nutrient-dense food for energy, brain development, immunity, and steady
growth. Avoiding damaged fats supports better insulin sensitivity, gut health,
and reduces unnecessary inflammation.
Recommended Healthy Oil Practice
- Use Freshly Ground, Slow RPM Wood-Pressed Oils
(coconut, groundnut, sesame, mustard, etc., as per local availability and
tradition).
- These are cold-pressed at low speed with wooden
methods — retaining natural flavour, aroma, and phytonutrients.
- Rotate
One Variety of Oil per Week or per Fortnight: This ensures a broad range
of beneficial compounds (different fatty acids, antioxidants, and
flavours) while preventing over-reliance on any single oil. For example:
Week 1 – Coconut or Sesame
Week 2 – Groundnut or Mustard
And so on.
- How to Use: Boil or steam vegetables lightly. Let
them come to room temperature. Then drizzle a small amount of wood-pressed
oil on top.
- This preserves the oil’s goodness and gives a
delicious, fresh taste children love.
Make It Super Tasty with Roasted
Powders (No Need for Deep Frying/Tadka)Children enjoy crunchy, flavourful food.
Create simple toppings:
- Lightly roast chana (chickpea), groundnuts, or sesame
seeds until slightly brown.
- Mix with roasted cumin, dry-roasted red chilli (as
per taste), and a pinch of salt.
- Grind into a coarse powder.
- Sprinkle generously on the oil-drizzled boiled
vegetables.
Result: Children get the
satisfying taste and crunch they love, without the harmful effects of frying or
heavy tempering. The powders add extra plant protein, fibre, healthy fats, and
minerals.
Benefits for Children (Especially
School Meals)
- Reduced Inflammation & Oxidative Stress: No
damaged oils = better mitochondrial function and overall health.
- Better Nutrient Absorption: Fresh oils and powders
preserve phytonutrients and good fats that support brain development,
immunity, and growth.
- Improved Digestion: Lighter, fibre-rich vegetables
with natural oils are easier on the gut.
- Steady Energy & Focus: Avoids blood sugar swings
and heavy digestion that can cause afternoon tiredness.
- Healthy Habits: Teaches children to enjoy simple,
natural flavours instead of fried or processed tastes.
- Long-Term Protection: Lowers risk of future metabolic
issues, supports strong immunity, and builds lifelong healthy eating
patterns.
How This Fits with Your Broader
Recommendations
- Pairs perfectly with millet java at the start, grated
carrot-beetroot-tomato-radish in sambar/curry, crunchy nuts for chewing,
palm jaggery treat at the end, and natural oral hygiene.
- Supports the plant-based shift, gut health, insulin
sensitivity, and reduced acid load discussed earlier.
- Keeps meals tasty and child-friendly while staying
chemical-light and nutrient-dense.
This method (boiled vegetables +
wood-pressed oil drizzle + roasted seed/chana powder sprinkle) is practical for
home and school kitchens, cost-effective, and loved by children. It eliminates
the need for deep frying or heavy tempering while delivering super taste and
real health benefits.
17. Why
Refined Oils Must Be Completely Discarded and Why Fresh Cold-Pressed Slow RPM
Wood-Pressed Oils Are the Best Choice
Oil is used every day in our
cooking, yet most of the refined oils sold in packets are harmful for health
and should be completely avoided. Instead, we must shift to freshly made
cold-pressed slow RPM wood-pressed oils prepared right in front of us using
clean local seeds.
Why Refined Oils Should Be
Completely Discarded
Refined oils go through heavy
industrial processing that destroys their natural benefits and makes them
harmful.
How Refined Oils Are Made:
- Seeds are crushed using very high heat and pressure.
- Harmful chemical solvents (like hexane) are used to
extract maximum oil.
- The oil is then bleached, deodorised, and filtered at
high temperatures.
- In many cases, mineral oils (cheap petroleum-based
oils) are mixed to increase quantity and reduce cost.
- The final oil looks clean and has a long shelf life,
but it has lost almost all its natural nutrients, vitamin E, and
antioxidants.
Major Problems with Packaged
Refined Oils:
- Adulteration: Many oils are mixed with cheaper or
harmful oils. Duplicate brands and contaminated oils are very common in
the market.
- High Omega-6 Content: Most refined oils (sunflower,
soybean, corn, safflower) contain very high amounts of omega-6 fatty
acids. When eaten regularly without enough omega-3, they cause chronic
inflammation in the body.
- Loss of Natural Goodness: High heat and chemicals
destroy beneficial compounds.
- Formation of Harmful Substances: The refining process
and repeated heating during cooking create trans fats and other toxic
compounds.
Health Issues Caused by Refined
Oils:
- Increases inflammation in the body
- Raises risk of heart disease
- Contributes to insulin resistance, weight gain, and
Type 2 diabetes
- Disturbs hormonal balance
- Harms digestion and gut health
- Increases long-term risk of lifestyle diseases
Regular use of refined oils is
one of the major reasons behind rising health problems today.
Why Fresh Cold-Pressed Slow RPM
Wood-Pressed Oils Are the Best
These oils are extracted using
traditional methods with modern slow-speed machines. They retain their natural
nutrients and are far healthier.
Benefits of Fresh Cold-Pressed
Slow RPM Oils:
- Made at low temperature, so natural nutrients,
flavour, and antioxidants are preserved.
- No harmful chemicals are used.
- You can see the fresh, clean seeds being used right
in front of you.
- Oil is ready in just 1 to 2 hours.
- Better taste and natural aroma.
- Healthier balance of fatty acids.
- Supports local farmers and traditional healthy
practices.
Recommended Fresh Oils (choose
according to local availability and season):
- Groundnut (Peanut) oil
- Sesame oil
- Coconut oil
- Mustard oil
- Sunflower oil (when made fresh and cold-pressed)
Ideal Government Policy: Slow RPM
Wood-Pressed Oil Machines in Every Colony
The Government should ensure that
one slow RPM wood-pressed oil machine is available in every:
- Residential Welfare Association (RWA)
- Apartment complex
- Colony or Village
1. Slow RPM Wood-Pressed Oil
Machines in Every Colony
The Government should ensure that
one slow RPM wood-pressed oil machine is available in every RWA, apartment
complex, and colony. People can bring their own clean seeds and get fresh oil
made right in front of them within 1–2 hours. This guarantees 100% quality with
no adulteration and will generate millions of employment opportunities.
2. Mandatory Fresh Oil Production
in All Large Kitchens
The Government must make it
mandatory for every large kitchen — whether for mid-day meals in schools,
packed meal services, large restaurants, wedding catering, or any commercial
catering — to possess their own slow RPM wood-pressed oil machine. These kitchens
should not be allowed to buy refined oils. They must mandatorily make their own
fresh oil daily according to the exact quantity needed for that day. This
single measure will protect the health of millions of people who eat outside
food regularly.
3. Ban on Deep Frying in
Commercial Cooking
The Government should ban deep
frying in commercial cooking, especially in street foods and regular
restaurants. Exception: Only five-star
hotels may be allowed to do limited deep frying, but they must strictly ensure
that oil is never reused.
For all small restaurants and
street food vendors: They must use only freshly ground own oil made that day or
oil bought from registered cold-pressed wood-pressed oil sources.
This measure of banning deep
frying in most commercial places and mandating the use of fresh oils will
greatly reduce the consumption of harmful rancid oils and help save the health
of millions of people.
Benefits of This System:
- People can bring their own clean seeds and get fresh
oil made right in front of them.
- 100% quality is guaranteed — no adulteration, no
mineral oils, no duplicate or contaminated brands.
- Only fresh, good-quality seeds are used.
- Oil is made within 1–2 hours.
- This will generate millions of employment
opportunities across the country (machine operators, seed collectors,
maintenance staff, etc.).
- It reduces dependence on harmful packaged refined
oils and supports local economy and health.
This is a simple, practical step
that can greatly improve the health of millions of families while creating
jobs.
Simple Rules for Daily Life
- Completely stop using refined or packaged oils at
home.
- Switch to fresh cold-pressed slow RPM wood-pressed
oils.
- Get oil made in front of you whenever possible using
your own clean seeds.
- Rotate between different fresh oils (for example,
groundnut one week, sesame the next).
- Never reuse oil for frying multiple times.
Refined oils may look clean and
last long, but they are made using chemicals and high heat. They harm our body
slowly and cause many diseases. Always choose fresh, cold-pressed wood-pressed
oils made right in front of you using clean seeds. These oils keep their
natural goodness and are much better for health. When the government sets up
slow RPM oil machines in every colony, we can easily get pure oil and also
create jobs for many people. Small daily changes in the oil we use can protect
our health and the health of our entire family for life.
Using fresh natural oils is one
of the simplest and most powerful steps for better health. This habit goes
perfectly with eating millets, sprouts, fresh vegetables, avoiding sugar and
processed foods, and following other healthy practices you are learning.
18. Government
Must Ban Deep Frying in All Commercial Cooking to Protect Public Health
The Government of India should
immediately ban deep frying in all commercial settings. This includes street
food vendors, regular restaurants, ready-to-eat food outlets, bakery sweet
shops, office canteens, mid-day meal kitchens, and wedding catering services.
Why This Ban is Necessary
Commercial deep frying uses large
volumes of oil that is heated repeatedly for many batches. This makes the oil
rancid (oxidised) and highly harmful. Most street foods and small restaurants
use cheap refined oils, often mixed with low-quality substances like beef
tallow or other adulterants. Even branded oils and ghee in packets frequently
suffer from quality issues and adulteration. There is no reliable guarantee of
purity in commercial deep frying.
Health problems caused by this
practice are very serious:
- High levels of harmful compounds from rancid oil
- Excessive omega-6 fatty acids leading to chronic
inflammation
- Increased risk of obesity, insulin resistance, heart
disease, and hormonal imbalance
- Special harm to children and youth who eat street
food and restaurant meals regularly
Exceptions (Very Limited and
Strictly Controlled)
Only a small number of
high-standard sweet shops By lottery from Govt to operate may be allowed
limited deep frying for occasional sweets (like jalebi or laddoos on festivals)
under continues monitoring from govt & public the process of making the
sweets.
Conditions:
- Use AI-based CCTV monitoring.
- Discard the entire oil or ghee after one single
batch.
- Use only limited quantity of oil.
- Follow strict standard procedures.
Sweets are not daily items — they
should be eaten only occasionally and in small quantities.
Recommended Alternatives for
Commercial Food
- Street foods and restaurants should shift to oil-less
or very low-oil cooking methods (steaming, baking, roasting, shallow
pan-frying with fresh oil, or using non-stick surfaces).
- Examples: Oil-less samosas, vadas, punugulu, and
other snacks using the same traditional materials but with almost zero
oil.
- For packaged chips and deep-fried snacks: The ban
should also apply. Factories should stop deep frying or use only fresh
cold-pressed oil with strict single-use rules.
Additional Rules for Daily
Commercial Meals
- Office canteens, school mid-day meals, and regular
restaurants must completely stop using refined oils, no deep frying in
daily preparations.
- All commercial kitchens should be encouraged (and
later mandated) to use only freshly made cold-pressed wood-pressed oils
prepared the same day.
Why This Measure is Very
Important
Children, youth, and common
people eat street food and restaurant meals very frequently. Protecting their
health from harmful rancid oils and adulterated products is a national
priority. This single policy will prevent millions of cases of obesity, diabetes,
heart disease, inflammation, and other lifestyle disorders. It will also
encourage innovation in healthy cooking methods and support the use of fresh,
natural oils.
Deep-fried foods from outside may
taste good, but they are made with reused and harmful oils that damage your
body. The government must ban deep frying in most commercial places so that the
food you eat outside becomes safer. Choose fresh, home-made, or properly
prepared low-oil food. Your health is more important than taste for a few
minutes.”
This policy perfectly supports
the larger goal of using only fresh cold-pressed oils, avoiding refined oils
and processed foods, and building a healthier India.
19. How
Incorporating Black Seeds (Nigella Sativa / Kalonji) into Children’s Meals
Daily or 2–3 Times a Week Helps
Black seeds, also known as
Nigella sativa, kalonji, or black cumin, are small, dark seeds with a slightly
bitter, peppery, and oregano-like flavour. They have been used for centuries in
traditional medicine (Ayurveda, Unani, and Middle Eastern systems) as a natural
remedy. Modern research supports many of their traditional uses, especially for
immunity, digestion, and inflammation.
When added regularly (daily or
2–3 times a week) in small amounts to children’s meals, they provide meaningful
support for overall health without being overwhelming.
Key Nutritional Profile &
Active Compounds
- Rich in antioxidants (especially thymoquinone — the
main active compound).
- Good source of fibre, healthy fats, protein, and
minerals (iron, calcium, magnesium, zinc).
- Contains essential fatty acids and phytochemicals
with anti-inflammatory and antimicrobial properties.
Main Benefits for Children
- Boosts Immunity
Black seeds have
natural antimicrobial, antiviral, and anti-inflammatory effects. Regular use
helps strengthen the body’s defence against common infections (colds, coughs,
respiratory issues). Studies in children show benefits for upper respiratory
tract infections and general immune support.
- Supports Digestion & Gut Health
Acts as a
carminative (reduces gas and bloating). Helps improve digestion, relieve mild
constipation, and support a healthy gut microbiome. Better digestion leads to
better nutrient absorption and fewer tummy troubles.
- Respiratory & Allergy Support
Traditionally
used for asthma, allergies, and cough. Helps reduce inflammation in the
respiratory tract and eases breathing discomfort.
- Anti-Inflammatory & Antioxidant Effects
Reduces
low-grade inflammation in the body, which can support overall comfort, skin
health, and recovery from minor illnesses.
- Nutrient Boost
Adds iron and
other minerals that support energy, growth, and blood health — helpful if the
child’s diet is limited.
- Other Gentle Benefits
May support skin
health (less dryness or irritation), blood sugar balance (when part of a
balanced diet), and overall vitality. Some research also points to
neuroprotective effects.
Possibly
Effective for
Acne. Applying a
gel containing black seed extract to the skin might help to improve acne.
Hay fever.
Taking black seed oil by mouth daily might improve allergy symptoms in people
with hay fever.
Asthma. Taking
black seed by mouth along with asthma medicines can improve coughing, wheezing,
and lung function in some people with asthma. But it seems to work only in
people with very low lung function before treatment.
A lung disease
that makes it harder to breathe (chronic obstructive pulmonary disease or
COPD). Taking black seed oil by mouth helps to improve lung function in people
with COPD who are also using prescribed inhalers.
Diabetes. Taking
black seed powder or black seed oil by mouth daily seems to improve blood sugar
levels in people with diabetes.
A digestive
tract infection that can lead to ulcers (Helicobacter pylori or H. pylori).
Taking black seed powder along with standard therapies might help to get rid of
this infection.
High blood
pressure. Taking black seed powder or black seed oil by mouth might reduce
blood pressure by a small amount in healthy adults. But it's not clear if it
helps people with high blood pressure.
High levels of
cholesterol or other fats (lipids) in the blood (hyperlipidemia). Taking black
seed supplements by mouth can slightly lower total cholesterol, low-density
lipoprotein (LDL or "bad") cholesterol, and triglycerides, and
increase high-density lipoprotein (HDL or "good") cholesterol in
people with or without hyperlipidemia.
Breast pain
(mastalgia). Applying a gel containing black seed oil to the breasts during the
menstrual cycle seems to reduce pain.
How to Incorporate Black Seeds
into Meals (Practical & Child-Friendly)
- 2–3 Times a Week: Start with ¼–½ teaspoon of whole or
lightly crushed seeds per day for older children (adjust lower for younger
kids). Grind into powder for easier mixing if needed.
- Easy Ways to Add:
- Sprinkle on dal, rice, curries, or vegetable
stir-fries.
- Mix into yogurt, raita, or salads.
- Add to millet porridge, upma, or fermented millet
dishes (pairs beautifully with your existing protocol).
- Use in homemade bread, parathas, or idli/dosa
batter.
- Make a simple “black seed laddoo” with dates or
palm jaggery (small portion).
- Infuse in warm water or herbal tea (mild flavour).
Rotation Tip: Use one day with
chickpeas/peanuts, another with sesame laddoo, etc., to keep variety.
Safety & Dosage Guidelines
for Children
- Food Amounts Are Safe: Black seeds are commonly used
in cooking and are generally well-tolerated in small culinary doses.
- Start small (a pinch to ¼ tsp) and observe tolerance.
- Avoid large medicinal doses without professional
guidance.
- Not recommended in very high amounts or for long
periods without advice.
- Consult a paediatrician or Ayurvedic doctor before
regular use, especially if the child has any medical conditions, is on
medication, or is very young.
- Possible mild side effects (rare in food amounts):
stomach upset or allergic reaction in sensitive children.
Synergy with Your Mitochondrial
Food Protocol
Black seeds complement your
existing approach beautifully:
- Add to fermented millets or sprouted lentil dishes
for extra gut and immune support.
- Pair with soaked chia/pumpkin seeds for a powerful
nutrient mix.
- Use alongside vegetable juices and palm jaggery for
balanced meals.
- Supports the overall goals of stable energy, better
digestion, reduced inflammation, and stronger immunity.
Expected Timeline & Results
- Short-term (weeks): Better digestion, less bloating,
fresher breath, and improved energy.
- Longer-term (months with consistent use): Stronger
immunity, fewer minor illnesses, better overall resilience, and support
for growth and focus.
Incorporating black seeds
regularly is a simple, affordable, and traditional way to give children an
extra layer of natural support for immunity, digestion, respiratory comfort,
and overall vitality. It works gently alongside a balanced diet (including your
millet-based protocol, vegetables, and crunchy nuts) and helps build lifelong
healthy eating habits.
Most children tolerate small
amounts well when mixed into familiar foods. Start slow, make it tasty, and
enjoy the benefits!
20. Why
Every School Should Provide a Small Piece of Fresh Washed Licorice Root for
Children to Chew
Licorice root (Glycyrrhiza
glabra), commonly known as Mulethi in India, is a traditional sweet-tasting
medicinal herb that children generally enjoy. Giving every child a small,
fresh, properly washed piece of licorice root (about 2–3 cm) to chew, extract
the juice, and discard the pulp outside is a simple, low-cost, and enjoyable
practice that schools can easily adopt.
Licorice root (Glycyrrhiza
glabra), commonly known as Mulethi in India, is a traditional medicinal herb
with a naturally sweet taste that children generally enjoy. Introducing a
simple daily or periodic practice in schools — giving every child a small, fresh,
washed piece of licorice root to chew, extract the juice, and discard the pulp
outside — can offer multiple health and developmental benefits. This low-cost,
natural habit deserves serious consideration as part of school health
programmes.
1. Natural Antibacterial and
Anti-Infection Support
Licorice root contains compounds
with proven antibacterial, antiviral, and anti-inflammatory properties.
Research indicates it can help inhibit the growth of Streptococcus mutans (a
major cause of tooth decay) and other oral bacteria. Some studies also show
that licorice extracts, when used alongside standard treatment, can support the
eradication of Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) infection in the stomach — a
common bacterial issue linked to digestive problems and, in some cases,
contributing to anemia through chronic inflammation or blood loss. By allowing children to chew fresh licorice
root, schools can provide a gentle, natural way to reduce oral bacterial load
and support overall microbial balance. This is especially useful in group
settings like schools where infections can spread easily.
2. Support Against H. pylori and
Related Issues
H. pylori is a common stomach
bacteria that can cause persistent digestive problems, inflammation, and in
some cases contribute to anemia (through chronic blood loss or impaired
nutrient absorption). Research shows that licorice root compounds have natural
antibacterial activity against H. pylori. When used as a supportive measure
(often alongside standard treatment), it may help reduce bacterial load.
Chewing fresh licorice can provide gentle, daily natural support, especially in
high-risk areas. This may indirectly help reduce H. pylori-related anemia by
supporting better gut health and nutrient absorption
3. Stronger Teeth, Jaw
Development, and Better Oral Health
Chewing licorice root stimulates
saliva production, which naturally cleanses the teeth, neutralizes acids, and
helps prevent plaque buildup. The mechanical action of chewing also exercises
the jaw muscles, promoting stronger jawline development, better neck muscle
tone, and improved facial structure in growing children. Regular jaw movement through chewing has
broader benefits: it enhances blood flow to the brain, supports better focus
and cognitive function, and aids in proper digestion by stimulating digestive
juices. Children who chew fibrous or firm natural items tend to develop
stronger teeth and better oral health over time.
4. Sweet Taste Makes It
Child-Friendly
Unlike many bitter medicines,
fresh licorice root has a pleasant sweet taste due to glycyrrhizin. Children
are more likely to enjoy and consistently follow this habit without resistance,
making it an effective and sustainable school-level intervention.
5. Compensation for Potassium
with Banana
One important precaution with
licorice is that excessive or long-term use can lead to potassium depletion
(hypokalemia) in some individuals. To safely implement this in schools, it is
recommended to give one small banana on the same day after chewing the licorice
root.
Bananas are rich in potassium and
help restore any minor depletion while also providing natural energy, fibre,
and additional nutrients. This simple pairing makes the practice safer and more
balanced for growing children.
6. Additional Benefits
Digestive Support: Licorice has
traditional use in soothing the stomach and supporting gut health.
Immunity and Overall Wellness:
Its anti-inflammatory and antimicrobial properties may contribute to better
general health when used regularly in moderation.
Low-Cost and Sustainable: Fresh
licorice root is affordable, widely available in many regions, and easy to
distribute in schools.
Recommended Implementation in
Schools
Provide a small, fresh, properly
washed piece of licorice root (about 2–3 cm) once or twice a week under teacher
supervision.
Instruct children to chew slowly,
extract the sweet juice, and discard the fibrous pulp outside (not inside the
classroom).
Follow with one small banana on
the same day.
Combine with proper handwashing
and oral hygiene education.
Start with a pilot programme in
selected schools and monitor for any side effects.
School Routine Suggestion
- Offer the licorice root 2–3 times a week under
teacher supervision.
- Children chew slowly, swallow the juice, and discard
the pulp outside.
- Follow immediately with one small banana.
- Combine with handwashing and basic oral hygiene
education.
- Start with a pilot programme and monitor results.
Important Precautions
- Use only good-quality, fresh licorice root from
reliable sources.
- Limit to moderate frequency (not daily high amounts).
- Children with known kidney, heart, or blood pressure
conditions should consult a doctor.
- This is a supportive traditional practice — not a
replacement for medical treatment when a child is ill.
Overall Advantages for Schools
This habit is low-cost, enjoyable
for children, and supports multiple areas: oral health, jaw development,
potential H. pylori and anemia support, respiratory comfort, better digestion,
and nutrient absorption. When combined with other healthy practices (balanced
meals, good sleep, sunlight, etc.), it contributes to stronger, healthier
children with better focus and immunity
Schools adopting this simple
ritual can play a big role in building natural health habits while making use
of an age-old, child-friendly remedy. It is a practical step toward stronger,
healthier generations through small daily habits.
If implemented thoughtfully
across schools, this practice can contribute to healthier children with
stronger jaws, better focus, and reduced risk of common infections — all while
making use of an age-old natural remedy in a modern, practical way.
21. Why
Chia Seeds with Buttermilk: A Nutritious Mid-Day Drink for Children
Chia seeds mixed with buttermilk
(chaas or lassi) is a popular, tasty, and healthy drink that works wonderfully
as a mid-day meal addition for children. It is easy to make, cooling, filling,
and loved in many Indian homes. It is especially useful for school tiffins or
home lunch.
Why This Combination is Great for
Mid-Day Meals
- Nutrient Powerhouse from Chia Seeds: Packed with
plant-based omega-3s (good for brain development, focus, and mood), high
fiber (helps digestion and prevents constipation), calcium (stronger
bones), protein, iron, magnesium, and antioxidants.
- Buttermilk Benefits: Probiotic-rich for gut health,
hydrating, cooling in hot weather, light on the stomach, and provides
extra protein and calcium.
- Perfect Together: Chia seeds soak up the buttermilk
and turn into a soft gel. This keeps children full longer, avoids mid-day
hunger, balances energy, and supports steady blood sugar.
Extra Benefits for Children with ADHD
Many children with ADHD have
lower omega-3 levels and gut issues.
This drink can gently help:
- Omega-3s (ALA) support brain function, attention,
calmness, and sleep.
- High soluble fiber improves digestion, reduces
constipation, and supports the gut-brain connection (may lead to better
focus and fewer meltdowns).
- Magnesium and antioxidants help calm the nervous
system.
- Soft gel texture is easy for picky eaters and
sensory-sensitive children.
How to Prepare for Mid-Day Meals
(Simple & Safe)Basic Recipe (for 1 child):
- ½ – 1 tsp chia seeds (for 2–6 years) or 1 tsp (older
children)
- 1 cup thin buttermilk
- Soak chia in a little water or buttermilk for 10–30
minutes (or overnight) until it gels.
- Mix with buttermilk.
- Add flavour: pinch of roasted cumin, rock salt, mint
leaves, or a little mashed fruit (banana/mango).
Serve chilled in a small bottle
or cup. It takes only 2 minutes in the morning.
Daily Use Guidelines
- Normal weight children: 4–6 days a week
- Overweight/obese children: Daily (helps with fullness
and weight management)
- Autism/ADHD support: Daily is good, but start with ½
tsp and increase slowly
- Always give plenty of water with it.
- Toddlers: max 1 tsp per day.
Always soak the seeds first to
avoid choking. Start small and watch how your child’s tummy reacts. This is a
simple, affordable, and loving way to give children sustained energy, better
digestion, and nutrition during the school day. It is not a medicine, but a
gentle daily support.
Group 4: Oral Hygiene & Its Whole-Body Impact
22. Oral
Hygiene in Children — Its Powerful Influence on Gut Bacteria, Memory, Anxiety,
Depression, Nutrient Absorption & Overall Health
Oral hygiene is far more than
just having clean teeth and fresh breath. In children, especially school-going
and adolescent ones, it plays a critical role in whole-body health through the
oral-gut axis and systemic inflammation pathways. Poor oral hygiene allows
harmful bacteria to thrive in the mouth, which can travel to the gut and other
parts of the body, affecting digestion, brain function, mood, and nutrient
absorption.
How Poor Oral Hygiene Influences
Gut Bacteria (Oral-Gut Axis)
- The mouth is the gateway to the digestive system.
Bacteria from plaque and gum disease (periodontitis or gingivitis) can be
swallowed daily in large numbers.
- These oral bacteria can colonize the gut, disrupting
the balance of good gut bacteria (microbiome dysbiosis).
- This leads to increased gut inflammation, leaky gut,
poorer digestion, bloating, and reduced ability to break down and absorb
food properly.
- A healthy oral microbiome supports a healthy gut
microbiome. Good oral care helps maintain beneficial bacteria that aid
digestion and immunity.
Link to Memory, Anxiety,
Depression & Brain Health
- Chronic gum inflammation releases inflammatory
chemicals (cytokines) into the bloodstream. These can reach the brain and
contribute to neuroinflammation.
- Studies link poor oral health (especially
periodontitis) with higher risks of anxiety, depression, and cognitive
issues (poorer memory and focus).
- In children, this can affect learning, attention,
mood stability, and school performance.
- The connection is bidirectional: Mental health
challenges (anxiety/depression) often lead to neglect of
brushing/flossing, worsening oral problems.
- Good oral hygiene reduces systemic inflammation,
supporting better brain health, calmer mood, and sharper memory.
Impact on Vitamin & Mineral
Absorption
- Healthy teeth and gums allow proper chewing, which
starts the digestion process and increases surface area for nutrient
breakdown.
- Chronic oral pain or inflammation can reduce appetite
or lead to avoiding certain foods (e.g., crunchy vegetables or nuts),
resulting in lower intake of key nutrients.
- Through the oral-gut axis, better oral health
supports a healthier gut lining and microbiome, improving absorption of
vitamins (like B vitamins, Vitamin C, D) and minerals (iron, calcium,
magnesium, zinc).
- Poor oral health is linked to deficiencies that
further affect growth, immunity, and energy in children.
Why Oral Care Must Be a Prime
Priority in School Children
- Childhood and adolescence are critical windows for
establishing lifelong habits.
- Poor oral health leads to pain, missed school days,
difficulty concentrating, low self-esteem (due to bad breath or visible
issues), and long-term risks (heart disease, diabetes, cognitive decline
in adulthood).
- In India and many countries, dental issues are very
common among school children due to diet (high sugar), inconsistent
hygiene, and limited access to care.
- Investing in oral health now prevents expensive
treatments later and supports better overall development, learning, and
emotional well-being.
- It complements other natural supports (millet-based
meals, plant milks, herbal teas like hibiscus/gongura, black seeds, etc.).
How to Practice Good Oral Hygiene
in Children (Simple & Effective Routine)
Combine standard practices with
gentle natural methods for best results:
- Brushing Twice Daily:
- Morning before breakfast and night after dinner.
- Use a soft toothbrush with a pea-sized amount of
toothpaste (fluoride for cavity protection, or natural alternatives).
- Natural option (as discussed earlier): Coconut oil
+ pinch of turmeric paste — has antimicrobial and anti-inflammatory
benefits.
- Gargling After Every Meal/Snack:
- Rinse thoroughly with plain water or warm salt
water (½ tsp salt in a glass of warm water).
- This removes food particles and reduces bacterial
load immediately.
- Flossing or Interdental Cleaning:
- Once daily (evenings) to clean between teeth where
brushing misses.
- Tongue Cleaning:
- Gently scrape or brush the tongue daily to reduce
bacteria that cause bad breath and affect gut health.
- Diet Support:
- Limit sticky/sugary foods and frequent snacking.
- Eat crunchy fruits/vegetables (natural teeth
cleaners) and nutrient-rich foods (millets, nuts, seeds, leafy greens)
that support oral and gut health.
- Additional Natural Supports (from your protocol):
- Daily clove-infused water (one hour after mid-day
meal) for antimicrobial benefits.
- Gargling with herbal decoctions (e.g., mild tulsi
or hibiscus) occasionally.
- Chewing crunchy nuts/seeds (as previously
recommended) to strengthen jaws and clean teeth naturally.
Age Tips: Supervise young
children. Make it fun with timers, songs, or reward charts. Teach older
children why it matters (link to energy, focus, and feeling good).
Government Recommendations for
Mandatory & Free Oral Care
To protect millions of children:
- Mandatory School Oral Health Checks: Every quarter
(or at least once every six months) in all schools — screening for
cavities, gum issues, and oral hygiene education.
- Free Oral Care 365 Days a Year: Government-supported
programs providing free basic dental check-ups, cleaning, fluoride
applications, and basic treatments for all school children (especially in
government and aided schools).
- Integration with Mid-Day Meals: Include short oral
hygiene education sessions and promote healthy practices alongside meals.
- Awareness Campaigns: Teach parents and children about
the oral-gut-brain connection and simple daily care.
- Infrastructure: Train school health workers, set up
mobile dental units, and ensure supplies (toothbrushes, toothpaste) are
available.
- Policy Goal: Make oral health a core part of school
health programs, similar to vaccination or nutrition schemes. This will
reduce long-term healthcare burden and improve learning outcomes.
These measures are cost-effective
in the long run because preventing problems is far cheaper than treating
advanced dental disease, and healthy mouths support healthier bodies and minds.
Oral hygiene is a foundational
pillar of child health. When children maintain clean mouths, they support
better gut bacteria balance, improved nutrient absorption, calmer minds,
sharper memory, and overall well-being. Making it a daily habit and a government
priority will create healthier generations.
This fits perfectly with your
broader natural health approach (plant-based foods, herbal supports, millet
protocols, etc.).
23. Natural
Oral Hygiene Practices for Children — Clove-Infused Water, Gargling, and
Coconut Oil + Turmeric Brushing
Teaching children simple, natural
oral hygiene habits is one of the best investments in their long-term health.
These practices support oral health, digestion, vagus nerve function, and the
gut-brain connection while being gentle and chemical-free.
Why Give Clove-Infused Water One
Hour After Mid-Day Meal
- Clove Water Preparation: Boil a few cloves in water,
cool it, and give a small sip (1–2 teaspoons) to the child one hour after
the mid-day meal.
- Benefits:
- Clove has strong natural antimicrobial and
antifungal properties that help reduce bad breath, control candida/oral
thrush, and fight harmful oral bacteria.
- It supports digestion by stimulating enzymes and
reducing bloating that can occur after meals.
- Given one hour after eating, it gently cleans the
mouth without interfering with initial digestion.
- Pleasant mild flavour that children can accept as a
“special drink.”
This small step keeps the mouth
fresher and supports better gut health throughout the afternoon.
Teach Children to Gargle
Thoroughly with Plain Water After Every Meal/Snack
- Practice: After finishing any food (mid-day meal,
snacks, or dinner), make it a habit to gargle with plain water for 20–30
seconds, swishing it around the mouth and between teeth.
- Benefits:
- Removes food particles and reduces bacterial
growth.
- Improves oral hygiene without chemicals.
- Strengthens the vagus nerve through the gargling
action (stimulates the throat and parasympathetic system), leading to
better digestion, calmer nervous system, and improved vagal tone.
- Supports the oral-gut connection — a cleaner mouth
means fewer harmful bacteria travelling to the gut, reducing issues like
bloating, bad digestion, or oral thrush.
Make it fun: Turn it into a game
or song so children enjoy the routine.
Natural Oral Hygiene Routine
(Coconut Oil + Turmeric Paste)
- Brushing: Brush teeth twice daily — once before
breakfast and once after dinner.
- Use coconut oil alone or mixed with a pinch of
turmeric powder to make a simple paste.
- Coconut oil has natural antimicrobial and
anti-inflammatory properties; it pulls toxins (oil pulling effect) and
soothes gums.
- Turmeric adds strong anti-inflammatory and
antibacterial benefits, supporting gum health and reducing oral
infections.
- Why Better Than Commercial Toothpaste:
- Avoids artificial flavours, foaming agents,
fluoride concerns (in some cases), and other chemicals.
- Gentler on children’s sensitive mouths and supports
natural oral microbiome balance.
Overall Benefits for Children
- Better Oral Health: Less plaque, stronger teeth/gums,
reduced bad breath, and lower risk of cavities.
- Vagus Nerve & Digestion Improvement: Gargling and
natural routines stimulate the vagus nerve, leading to better gut
motility, enzyme release, and digestion. A healthy mouth supports a
healthy gut (oral-gut axis), reducing bloating, constipation, and related
discomfort.
- Less Oral Thrush & Infections: Natural
antimicrobials from clove, coconut oil, and turmeric keep harmful bacteria
and candida in check.
- Calmer Nervous System: Improved vagal tone helps with
anxiety, focus, emotional regulation, and overall well-being.
- Long-Term Habit: Children learn natural self-care
early, reducing dependence on commercial products and building lifelong
oral and gut health.
Practical Tips for Parents &
Schools
- Start with small, consistent steps — one new habit at
a time.
- Make it routine: Gargle after every meal/snack; clove
water after mid-day meal; brush with coconut oil + turmeric morning and
night.
- For school: Teachers can encourage gargling with
plain water after mid-day meals.
- Storage: Keep coconut oil + turmeric paste in a small
clean jar; clove water can be prepared fresh daily.
These natural oral hygiene
practices (clove water one hour after mid-day meal, regular gargling with plain
water, and brushing with coconut oil + turmeric) are simple, effective, and
child-friendly. They improve oral health, strengthen the vagus nerve, support
better digestion, and contribute to overall calm and well-being.
Group 5: Special Supportive Foods & Herbs for Children
(Especially Girls)
24. Benefits
of Providing Hibiscus (Roselle / Gongura / Red Sorrel) Leaf Decoction or Tea
Daily in School Mid-Day Meals — Especially for Adolescent Girls
Hibiscus sabdariffa (commonly
known as Roselle, Gongura, Red Sorrel, or Kenaf in some regions) is a
traditional plant widely used in India and many tropical countries. Both its
leaves (Gongura) and calyces (used for Hibiscus tea) are nutritious. Providing
a mild decoction or tea made from fresh or dried leaves/calyces daily as part
of the mid-day meal can offer gentle, natural support — particularly for school
children, and more specifically for adolescent girls.
1. Rich Source of Iron +
Excellent Iron Absorption
- Gongura (Roselle) leaves are a good natural source of
iron.
- They are also very high in Vitamin C (ascorbic acid).
- Vitamin C dramatically improves iron absorption in
the body. When iron and Vitamin C are consumed together, the body absorbs
iron much better than when iron is taken alone.
- Adolescent girls often face higher risk of iron
deficiency anemia due to monthly blood loss during menstruation. Regular
intake of this plant can help maintain healthy iron levels and hemoglobin
naturally.
2. Support for Menstrual Cycle
Issues (Especially Helpful for Adolescent Girls)
- Hibiscus/Roselle has anti-inflammatory properties
that may help reduce menstrual cramps and discomfort.
- A small clinical study found that Roselle extract
reduced menstrual pain by approximately 40% after regular use.
- It may help in mild regulation of menstrual cycles
due to its effect on inflammation and hormone balance.
- The combination of iron + Vitamin C +
anti-inflammatory compounds supports overall menstrual health, reduces
fatigue, and helps girls feel more energetic during periods.
3. Additional Health Benefits for
All School Children
- Antioxidants: High in anthocyanins and other
antioxidants that support immunity and protect cells.
- Immunity Support: Vitamin C and other compounds help
the body fight common infections.
- Digestive Health: Acts as a mild digestive aid and
may support gut comfort.
- Overall Nutrition: Provides calcium, magnesium,
folate, and other micronutrients that support growth, bones, and energy
levels.
- Hydration & Refreshing Drink: The tangy, pleasant
taste (similar to a mild sour drink) makes it more acceptable to children
than plain water or milk.
4. Why It Is Suitable for Mid-Day
Meals in Schools
- Easy and low-cost to prepare in school kitchens (boil
leaves or calyces in water, strain, and serve as a mild warm or
room-temperature drink).
- Can be given in small quantities (100–150 ml per
child) as part of the meal.
- Works well alongside other recommendations like
millet java, grated vegetables, and wood-pressed oils.
- Especially valuable in rural areas and government
schools where iron deficiency is common among children, particularly
girls.
Practical Way to Provide It
- Daily or 4–5 days a week in mid-day meals.
- Use fresh Gongura leaves when available, or dried
Hibiscus calyces (widely available and easy to store).
- Prepare a mild decoction/tea (not too strong or
sour).
- Can be served plain or lightly sweetened with a small
amount of palm jaggery if needed.
- For better taste and acceptance: Mix a small amount
into sambar, rasam, or vegetable curry.
Safety and Important Points
- Generally safe for school-age children when given in
moderate amounts as food/tea.
- Start with small quantities and observe tolerance (it
can have a mild laxative effect in some children).
- Not recommended in very large quantities or as a
medicine.
- Always use clean, pesticide-free leaves or
good-quality dried calyces.
- Pregnant girls or those with any medical conditions
should consult a doctor before regular use.
Summary of Benefits
|
Benefit |
How Hibiscus/Roselle Helps |
Especially Useful For |
|
Iron & Anemia |
Provides iron + high Vitamin C
for better absorption |
Adolescent girls |
|
Menstrual Cramps &
Discomfort |
Anti-inflammatory action |
Adolescent girls |
|
Immunity & Energy |
Vitamin C + antioxidants |
All school children |
|
Digestion |
Mild digestive support |
All children |
|
Overall Nutrition |
Multiple vitamins &
minerals |
Growing children |
Providing Hibiscus (Gongura/Red
Sorrel) leaf decoction or Hibiscus tea daily in school mid-day meals is a
simple, affordable, traditional, and evidence-supported way to improve iron
status and support menstrual health in adolescent girls, while offering general
nutritional benefits to all children.
This fits beautifully with other
natural approaches like millet-based meals, plant-based practices, and herbal
support in schools.
25. Benefits
of Fresh Garlic (One Clove Daily) for Adolescent Girls and School Children —
Support for PCOS/PCOD, Ovarian Health, and Vaginal Fungal Issues
Fresh garlic (Allium sativum) is a powerful traditional
remedy used worldwide. When crushed or finely chopped and left for 10–20
minutes, it forms allicin — its main active compound with strong antimicrobial,
antifungal, anti-inflammatory, and antioxidant properties.
Giving one fresh clove of garlic (finely chopped and left
for ~20 minutes, then mixed with chutney or food) daily with lunch or breakfast
can offer supportive benefits, especially for adolescent girls. It is not a
cure or standalone treatment but can be a helpful addition to a healthy
lifestyle.
1. Support for PCOS/PCOD and Ovarian/Metabolic Health
- PCOS
(Polycystic Ovary Syndrome) often involves insulin resistance,
inflammation, hormonal imbalance, and weight issues.
- Studies
(including randomized controlled trials) show that garlic supplementation
can:
- Improve
insulin sensitivity and reduce fasting blood glucose and HOMA-IR (a
marker of insulin resistance).
- Lower
inflammation (e.g., CRP levels).
- Support
modest improvements in weight, BMI, lipids (cholesterol/triglycerides),
and overall quality of life in women with PCOS.
- Mechanisms:
Anti-inflammatory and antioxidant effects help reduce oxidative stress and
support better metabolic function, which is central to managing PCOS.
- For
adolescent girls (where PCOS often begins), early supportive measures like
this, combined with diet and lifestyle, may help manage symptoms.
Note: Results vary. Garlic is a supportive food, not a
replacement for medical treatment, diet changes, exercise, or prescribed
medications.
2. Antifungal Support (Vaginal Candida / Yeast Issues)
- Garlic
has well-documented antifungal properties in lab studies — allicin
inhibits the growth of Candida albicans (common cause of vaginal yeast
infections and oral thrush).
- Traditional
use and some evidence suggest it may help reduce fungal overgrowth when
used regularly.
- One
human study on oral garlic for vaginal Candida did not show strong
reduction in colony counts, but lab and traditional evidence supports its
role as a supportive measure.
- Daily
intake may help maintain a balanced internal environment and reduce
recurrence risk when combined with good hygiene and diet.
Best results come from consistent use + overall gut and
immune support (your millet protocol, plant-based foods, probiotics from
fermented items, etc.).
3. General Benefits for All School Children (Along with
Mid-Day Meals)
- Immunity
& Infection Prevention: Broad antimicrobial action supports the body’s
defense against common bacteria and fungi.
- Gut
Health: Helps maintain microbial balance (supports oral-gut axis discussed
earlier).
- Anti-inflammatory
Effects: Reduces low-grade inflammation that can affect energy, focus, and
overall well-being.
- Easy
to add to mid-day meals without much extra cost or effort.
Practical Way to Give It (As You Suggested)
- Method:
Finely chop or crush one fresh clove of garlic. Leave it for 15–20 minutes
(this maximizes allicin formation). Mix with chutney, curd, or a small
portion of food.
- Timing:
With breakfast or lunch (mid-day meal) — consistent daily use is better
than occasional.
- For
Schools: Can be prepared fresh in the kitchen and mixed into chutney or
served as a small side. Start with very small amounts for younger children
and monitor tolerance.
- Taste
Tip: Mixing with strong chutney (mint, coriander, or tomato) or curd masks
the strong flavor well.
Safety & Important Precautions
- Generally
safe in food amounts (one clove) for healthy adolescent girls and school
children.
- Possible
side effects: Bad breath, heartburn, gas, or mild stomach upset (more
common with raw garlic). Start small.
- Who
should be cautious or avoid:
- Children
with stomach ulcers, acid reflux, or sensitive digestion.
- Those
on blood-thinning medications (garlic has mild blood-thinning effects).
- Before
surgery or dental procedures.
- Always
use fresh garlic — supplements are different.
- Not
a medicine — monitor for any discomfort and stop if issues arise.
Integration with Overall Health Protocol
This works best as part of a complete approach:
- Your
millet-based meals, grated vegetables, wood-pressed oils, roasted seed
powders, plant-based milks, black seeds, and crunchy nuts.
- Good
oral hygiene (coconut oil + turmeric brushing, gargling after meals).
- Regular
physical activity and stress management.
- For
PCOS/vaginal issues: Medical evaluation, balanced diet (low refined
sugar), weight management if needed, and hygiene practices.
Government & School-Level Recommendation
- Include
education on simple kitchen remedies like fresh garlic in school nutrition
programs.
- Schools
can offer it optionally or as part of mid-day meals for those who tolerate
it (with parental consent for younger children).
- Combine
with regular health check-ups, nutrition education, and access to balanced
meals.
One clove of fresh garlic daily (prepared as suggested) can
provide meaningful supportive benefits for metabolic health (helpful in PCOS),
antifungal support, and general immunity — especially valuable for adolescent
girls. It is a simple, affordable, traditional food that fits well into school
mid-day meals when used thoughtfully.
It is supportive and preventive when combined with healthy
eating and lifestyle habits, but it is not a guaranteed cure or complete
solution for PCOS, ovarian issues, or fungal infections. Medical guidance
remains essential for any diagnosed condition.
26. Why
Government Should Identify Anemic Girls & Boys in Schools and Provide
Wheatgrass Juice or Powder (Mixed with Water + Palm Jaggery) Instead of Tablets
or Fortified Rice
Anemia (especially
iron-deficiency anemia) is very common among school children in India,
particularly adolescent girls due to rapid growth and menstrual blood loss.
Identifying affected children through school health check-ups and providing a
natural, daily wheatgrass-based drink is a practical, nutrient-rich, and
child-friendly alternative to iron tablets or fortified rice.
Why Wheatgrass Juice/Powder is a
Good Natural Option
Wheatgrass (Triticum aestivum) is
the young grass of the wheat plant, harvested when it is 7–10 days old. It is
packed with:
- Chlorophyll (structurally similar to hemoglobin in
blood) — helps support blood-building and oxygen transport.
- Iron and other minerals (magnesium, calcium, zinc).
- Vitamins — high in Vitamin C (aids iron absorption),
Vitamin A, E, K, and B vitamins.
- Antioxidants & Enzymes — support detoxification,
reduce inflammation, and improve overall vitality.
How to Prepare & Give:
- Fresh wheatgrass juice (extracted from home-grown or
clean sources) or high-quality powdered wheatgrass.
- Mix 1–2 teaspoons of powder (or 30–50 ml fresh juice)
with water + a small amount of palm jaggery for taste.
- Serve daily as a mid-day meal drink or morning drink.
This is easy to prepare in
schools (grow wheatgrass in trays or use powder) and tastes acceptable when
lightly sweetened.
Benefits for Anemic Children
(Especially Girls)
- Natural Iron Support: Chlorophyll + natural iron +
Vitamin C work together to improve hemoglobin levels and red blood cell
production more gently than isolated iron tablets.
- Better Absorption: Vitamin C in wheatgrass helps the
body absorb iron from food (including the millet, vegetables, and seeds in
your protocol).
- Overall Nutrition: Provides a broad spectrum of
nutrients that support energy, immunity, and growth — not just iron.
- For Adolescent Girls: Helps combat menstrual blood
loss, fatigue, poor concentration, and weakness. Regular use supports
hormonal balance and recovery.
- Gentle on Stomach: Unlike many iron tablets that
cause constipation or stomach upset, wheatgrass is generally
well-tolerated.
- Additional Benefits: Detox support, anti-inflammatory
effects, and better immunity — reducing frequent illnesses that worsen
anemia.
Comparison with Tablets or
Fortified Rice
- Iron Tablets: Often cause side effects (constipation,
nausea, dark stools). Compliance is low because children dislike them.
They provide isolated iron without supporting nutrients.
- Fortified Rice: Adds synthetic iron but may not be
well-absorbed and does not address overall nutrient gaps or taste issues
in meals.
- Wheatgrass Option: Whole-food approach with natural
cofactors (Vitamin C, chlorophyll, enzymes) for better absorption and
fewer side effects. Tasty when prepared with palm jaggery. Can be grown
locally or sourced as powder at low cost.
Government & School-Level
Implementation
- Screening: Regular hemoglobin checks (every 6 months)
in all schools to identify anemic children (especially girls).
- Provision: Free daily wheatgrass drink in mid-day
meals for identified children (and optionally for all as a preventive
measure).
- Growing Program: Encourage schools to grow wheatgrass
in trays — educational, low-cost, and fresh.
- Education: Teach children and parents about its
benefits through simple stories (as in your fairy-tale nutrition
approach).
- Monitoring: Track hemoglobin levels over time to
measure improvement.
This approach is sustainable,
culturally acceptable, and aligns with natural, plant-based health strategies.
Safety & Practical Notes
- Start with small amounts and increase gradually.
- Generally safe for school-age children.
- Use clean, pesticide-free wheatgrass.
- Combine with your broader protocol (millet meals,
plant-based milks, black seeds, hibiscus/gongura tea, iron-rich
vegetables, etc.) for best results.
- Not a replacement for medical treatment in severe
anemia — combine with doctor-prescribed care if needed.
Providing wheatgrass juice or
powder mixed with water and palm jaggery daily to anemic school children
(especially girls) is a gentle, nutrient-dense, and effective natural support.
It helps improve iron status, energy, and overall health while being more
acceptable and holistic than tablets or fortified rice.
This measure, combined with
screening and education, can significantly reduce anemia rates among school
children and support healthier growth and learning.
Group 6: Government Nutrition Programs & School Meal
Policies
27. Government-Led
School Nutrition Program — Categorised Meals for Obese, Normal, and Underweight
Children (Especially Adolescent Girls)
Anemia, obesity, and underweight
conditions are common among school children, with adolescent girls particularly
affected by hormonal changes, menstrual blood loss, lifestyle factors, and
dietary patterns. A one-size-fits-all mid-day meal often fails to address
individual needs. The government should implement a smart, categorised
nutrition program based on regular screening, with special focus on millets,
natural foods, and lifestyle education.
1. Identification of Children
- Conduct regular health screenings (every 6 months) in
all schools — measure BMI, hemoglobin, waist circumference, and note
hormonal/pubertal status (especially for girls after menarche).
- Categorise children into three groups:
- Obese/Overweight (high BMI, excess visceral fat —
common in adolescent girls due to hormonal imbalances).
- Normal weight.
- Underweight/Thin (low BMI, poor weight gain).
This data-driven approach ensures
targeted support instead of uniform meals.
2. Special Diet for Obese
Children (Especially Adolescent Girls)
Core Recommendation: Millet-based
diet replacing or significantly reducing rice.
- Daily Mid-Day Meal Focus:
- Primary grains: Siridhanya millets (foxtail,
little, kodo, barnyard, etc.) — low glycemic index, high fiber,
nutrient-dense.
- Add daily small portion of fermented millet java
(as you recommended earlier) — improves gut health, resistant starch, and
steady energy without blood sugar spikes.
- Plenty of vegetables (grated carrot, beetroot,
tomato, radish in sambar/curry), sprouts, and legumes.
- Use wood-pressed oils in small amounts (no deep
frying or high-heat tampering).
- Light natural seasoning with roasted seed/chana
powders + cumin/chilli.
- Home & Overall Guidance:
- Strictly reduce or avoid sugary foods, deep-fried
items, oily/processed foods, packaged snacks, colas, cakes, biscuits, and
excess sweets at home or outside.
- Eat only fresh, natural, home-cooked foods —
millets, vegetables, fruits, nuts, seeds, and plant-based options.
- No excess sugar or refined oils in daily cooking.
Benefits:
- Millets promote satiety, improve insulin sensitivity,
and help reduce visceral fat over time.
- Fermented millet java supports gut microbiome and
better digestion.
- Combined with reduced processed/sugary foods, this
aids sustainable weight management and hormonal balance in adolescent
girls.
3. Support for Underweight/Thin
Children
- Provide extra healthy carbohydrates to support
gradual, healthy weight gain:
- Add portions of rice, potato, or sweet potato
alongside millets.
- Increase overall calorie density with nuts, seeds,
ghee (in moderation), and nutrient-rich foods.
- Continue millet base + fermented java for gut
health and sustained energy.
- Focus on balanced meals with proteins (sprouts,
legumes) and healthy fats.
Goal: Help them reach normal
weight without promoting unhealthy fat gain.
4. Education Component (For All
Children & Parents)
- Regular sessions teaching:
- How to reduce sugary, deep-fried, oily, and
processed foods.
- Benefits of fresh natural foods, millets, and
seasonal vegetables/fruits.
- Importance of balanced eating for growth, energy,
immunity, and hormonal health (especially for girls).
- Use simple, engaging methods like your fairy-tale
storytelling approach about vegetables, fruits, nuts, and seeds.
5. Daily Exercise Recommendation
- Encourage daily walking and physical activity (30–60
minutes):
- Walking helps burn calories, reduce visceral fat,
improve insulin sensitivity, and support hormonal balance.
- Combine with school playtime, yoga, or simple
exercises.
- Over time, consistent movement + right diet leads to
healthy weight management, better mood, focus, and overall well-being.
6. Three-Category Design for
Mid-Day Meals
Government should design three
meal categories instead of one uniform menu:
- Obese Category: Millet-heavy, vegetable-rich,
low-calorie-density, fermented java, minimal oil/sugar. Focus on satiety
and fat reduction.
- Normal Category: Balanced millets + some rice/potato
+ vegetables + proteins.
- Underweight Category: Millet base + extra healthy
carbs (rice, potato, sweet potato) + nuts/seeds for calorie support +
fermented java.
Implementation:
- Screen children and assign categories.
- Provide portion adjustments and special add-ons
(e.g., extra fermented java or healthy carbs).
- Train cooks and monitor quality.
- Make it flexible — children can shift categories as
their health improves.
This ensures every child benefits
meaningfully from mid-day meals rather than a generic approach that may not
suit obese or underweight students.
Long-Term Benefits
- For Obese Children (esp. Girls): Reduced visceral
fat, better insulin sensitivity, improved hormonal balance, lower risk of
PCOS-related issues, better energy and self-esteem.
- For Underweight Children: Healthy weight gain,
improved growth, immunity, and concentration.
- Overall: Better school attendance, learning outcomes,
and long-term prevention of lifestyle diseases.
- Builds lifelong habits of natural, millet-based
eating and active lifestyle.
- Cost-effective and sustainable when combined with
local millet promotion and school gardens.
Government Action Points
- Mandate regular BMI/hemoglobin screening in all
schools.
- Develop and fund categorised mid-day meal guidelines
with millet focus.
- Provide training, resources (millet supply,
fermentation kits), and monitoring.
- Run awareness campaigns for parents on home diet and
exercise.
- Integrate with existing programs (POSHAN, millet
promotion schemes).
- Track outcomes (weight, hemoglobin, attendance) and
refine the program.
This targeted, natural, and
millet-centric approach aligns perfectly with your broader recommendations
(Siridhanya millets, fermented java, plant-based foods, reduced processed
items, exercise, and natural remedies). It moves beyond “one meal for all” to
truly personalised support that helps every child thrive
.
28. Why
Government Must Ensure Every School (Government & Private) Provides Free
Standardised, Hygienic Mid-Day Meals, Breakfast & Daily Drinking Water — No
Child Needs to Bring Tiffin Box or Water Bottle
Many parents currently struggle
with preparing tiffin boxes and water daily, leading to inconsistent nutrition,
hygiene risks, stale food, and significant stress — especially on mothers. Some
children receive inadequate food, while others get excess or unbalanced meals.
This creates inequality between
government and private schools.
The government should mandate
that no child brings a tiffin box or water bottle. Instead, every school —
government and private — must provide free, standardised, high-quality meals,
breakfast, and drinking water to all children under strict hygienic conditions.
Core Policy Recommendations
- Universal Free Provision of Meals
All schools must
serve standardised mid-day meals and breakfast designed by the government. The
cost will be borne by the government (through existing schemes or new funding).
- Daily Drinking Water Provision
On arrival in
the classroom, every child receives one reusable 250 ml water cup/bottle.
- Made of high-quality food-grade seamless stainless
steel (no sharp edges, no joints) for easy and thorough cleaning.
- Schools steam all cups after school hours to ensure
100% hygiene, dry them properly, and refill them with fresh water the
next morning before distribution.
- Government provides standard bulk RO machines to
all schools (government and private) that deliver mineral-balanced
alkaline water.
- Standardised Menu
Uniform,
nutrient-dense menus focused on millets (Siridhanya), vegetables, sprouts,
fermented items (e.g., small portion of fermented millet java), nuts/seeds, and
natural flavours. Menus should be age-appropriate, gut-friendly, and
immunity-boosting.
- Hygienic Preparation & Delivery
Food prepared
locally in school kitchens or by large, reputed centralised kitchens (e.g.,
ISKCON Akshaya Patra, Naandi Foundation, or government-approved agencies).
Strict standard operating procedures (SOPs) for preparation, storage, serving,
and cleaning must be followed.
- Technology & Monitoring
- Install live AI cameras in all kitchen areas
(storage, preparation, cooking, serving, cleaning). Footage stored on
secure government servers.
- Conduct weekly surprise inspections and food
sampling by education department officials, government representatives,
elected members, and parent volunteers.
- Optional Tax-Free Donations
Private school
parents who wish to contribute can donate tax-free to support the program.
Major Benefits
- Equity for All Children: Every child receives the
same high-quality, nutritious food and safe drinking water.
- Superior Hygiene: Seamless stainless steel cups +
daily steaming + bulk RO mineral water drastically reduce contamination
risks.
- Reduced Stress on Mothers: No daily preparation or
packing of food/water. Mothers gain valuable time.
- Better Nutrition & Health: Standardised menus +
clean mineral-balanced water support gut health, immunity, steady energy,
focus, and growth while reducing processed foods.
- Convenience & Consistency: Fresh, hot, hygienic
meals and safe water every day.
- Long-Term Impact: Improved learning outcomes, reduced
absenteeism, and healthier future generations.
Practical Implementation
- Government designs menus, SOPs, and water system
standards.
- Provide training, funding, RO machines, and stainless
steel cups to all schools.
- Start with pilots and scale nationwide.
- Integrate with existing mid-day meal schemes and
millet promotion.
This policy ensures every child
receives safe, nutritious, gut-friendly, and immunity-boosting food and water
daily — without burdening families. It is a compassionate, practical, and
forward-thinking reform that benefits children, parents (especially mothers),
and society.
29. Why
Healthy Breakfast at Home is Essential — Best Options and Practical Solutions
for Students and Families
Most schools provide mid-day
meals (lunch), but they do not provide breakfast. Children often leave home
with an empty or very light stomach and reach school after a long gap. This is
not good for growing children. A healthy breakfast at home is very important to
give steady energy, improve concentration in class, support growth, and prevent
hunger-related irritability.
Why Common Breakfast Items Are
Unhealthy
Many mothers give:
- Bread with ketchup, jam, or omelette
- Packaged cereals or quick snacks
Problems with these:
- Bread is mostly empty carbohydrates (maida) that
cause quick glucose spikes and crashes.
- Jams and ketchup are high in sugar or HFCS (high
fructose corn syrup) and contain preservatives.
- Omelettes add cholesterol and come from chickens
often given antibiotics.
- These give short-term energy but lead to tiredness,
poor focus, weight gain, and insulin resistance over time.
Best Healthy Breakfast Options at
Home
The ideal breakfast should be
nutrient-dense, with complex carbohydrates, protein, fibre, and good fats. It
should release energy slowly and keep the child full and focused till lunch.
Top Recommended Breakfasts (Easy
& Practical):
- Sattu Power (Most Powerful & Quick Option)
Roasted gram
(chana) powder mixed with a pinch of jeera (cumin) powder + 1–2 dates or a
small piece of palm jaggery + one banana.
- Very easy to prepare.
- Gives sustained energy, protein, fibre, and
minerals.
- Perfect for busy mornings.
- If the government provides regular boiled sprouts,
it can be combined with sattu for even better nutrition.
- Boiled or Soaked Sprouts
Sprouted moong,
chickpeas, or mixed sprouts (boiled lightly).
- High in protein, vitamins, and enzymes.
- Excellent for growth and digestion.
- Can be mixed with a pinch of salt, lemon, and
grated carrot.
- Soaked Nuts with Dates
Overnight soaked
almonds, walnuts, or other nuts + a few dates or one banana.
- Provides healthy fats, protein, and natural
sweetness.
- Very good brain food.
- Millet-Based Idli or Dosa (Best Traditional Option)
Soak Siridhanya
millets for 12 hours, mix with moong dal or black gram, ferment overnight, and
make idli or dosa in the morning.
- Complex carbohydrates with fibre give steady
energy.
- Very filling and gut-friendly.
- Can occasionally mix regular idli/dosa batter with
green jackfruit powder (not regularly) to further stabilise blood sugar
release.
- Millet Roti
Made from
sprouted and dried millet powder. Simple and healthy.
On Special Occasions (Limited
Quantity Only):
Vermicelli payasam or kesari can
be made with palm jaggery instead of cane sugar, but these should be eaten only
occasionally and in small portions.
Why These Breakfasts Are Powerful
- They provide steady energy without sudden spikes and
crashes.
- Support better concentration in school.
- Help prevent hunger, irritability, and weakness.
- Relieve stress on mothers — sattu, soaked nuts, or
sprouts are very quick to prepare.
- Build long-term health (better digestion, immunity,
and stable blood sugar).
Practical Advice for Mothers and
Families
- Prepare sattu or soak nuts the previous night.
- Keep sprouted legumes ready in the fridge.
- Millet batter can be fermented overnight for morning
idli/dosa.
- These options are affordable, nutritious, and save
time in the busy morning.
A good breakfast at home is very
important. Do not leave home with an empty stomach. Choose sattu with dates,
soaked nuts, sprouts, or millet idli/dosa. These give you steady energy and
help you study well. Mothers, these simple options reduce morning stress and
give your children real nutrition. Avoid bread, jam, and sugary items as
regular breakfast. Healthy breakfast habits started from a young age will
protect your child’s health for life.”
This practice perfectly
complements other healthy habits you are learning — millet meals, post-meal
walks, fresh cold-pressed oils, avoiding refined sugar and processed foods, and
good sleep. A strong breakfast builds a strong foundation for the entire day.
30. Government
Providing Standard Lunch Menu in Advance and Mandatory Home Food Routine — For
Balanced Nutrition, Better Planning, and National Agricultural Coordination
It is very important that the
Government provides a standard weekly or fortnightly lunch menu in advance to
every school and parent. Many children suffer from unbalanced nutrition because
parents do not know what is being served in school, leading to repetition of
the same vegetables or grains at home and school. This causes boredom,
nutritional gaps, and unnecessary stress for mothers who prepare meals without
proper planning.
By sharing the lunch menu in
advance (through WhatsApp, school apps, or printed copies), parents can easily
plan complementary breakfast and dinner at home. This ensures complete daily
nutrition, avoids repetition, reduces food waste, and helps detect early health
issues.
The Government should provide a
simple weekly plan for breakfast and dinner options to all parents, in line
with the school’s mid-day meal menu. This will help parents choose suitable
options at home according to their convenience and family preferences.
Such coordinated planning ensures
a holistic and balanced nutritional approach for every child throughout the day
— avoiding repetition of the same vegetables or grains, reducing nutritional
gaps, and making meal preparation easier for mothers
The Government should also
encourage parents to maintain a simple weekly home food diary (breakfast &
dinner) that is reviewed gently by teachers. This system brings better health
for children, less burden on parents, and improved coordination with agriculture
and farmers. It is a practical and powerful step for a healthier,
well-nourished India
This simple step will bring huge
benefits for children’s health, parents’ planning, and the country’s
agriculture.
Why Advance Lunch Menu is Very
Important
- Parents can plan breakfast and dinner at home so that
the same vegetables, fruits, or grains are not repeated in the same day or
week.
- This avoids boredom (children getting tired of eating
the same food twice or thrice a day).
- It prevents excess intake of certain vitamins or
minerals and helps maintain better nutritional balance.
- Parents can prepare complementary, light, and varied
meals at home according to the school lunch menu.
Mandatory Home Food Routine
(Breakfast & Dinner)
The Government should make it
mandatory for parents to maintain and submit a weekly food routine diary
(breakfast and dinner) to the class teacher every week.
- Teachers can review the diary and identify patterns.
- This helps detect early health issues such as:
- Obesity (excess calories/fats/sugar)
- Underweight/leanness (insufficient nutrition)
- Constipation or loose motions (lack of fibre or
imbalance)
- Frequent sickness (poor immunity due to unbalanced
diet)
- Based on the diary and school lunch menu, schools can
suggest suitable home menus for breakfast and dinner.
- This creates a complete daily nutrition plan for the
child.
Bigger Benefits of This System
- For Families: Better planning of vegetables, fruits,
millets, and pulses at home. Reduces waste and saves money.
- For Vendors & Farmers: Schools and governments
can share aggregated data of required food items. This helps vendors and
farmers plan production in advance.
- For the Nation: Better coordination between school
nutrition, home food, and agriculture. It supports demand-driven farming,
reduces overproduction or shortages, and promotes cultivation of healthy
foods like millets, sprouts, and seasonal vegetables.
This is a unique, noble, and
forward-thinking idea that can become a global model for child nutrition and
agricultural planning.
Practical Implementation
- Schools send the next week’s lunch menu every Friday.
- Parents fill the home breakfast & dinner chart in
a simple diary format and submit it weekly.
- Standard Weekly Menu Chart and Home Food Planning
The school
should provide a clear weekly chart that suggests ideal breakfast and dinner
options at home. These suggestions should balance the lunch menu served in
school on that particular day.
The lunch menu
for all schools will be fixed by the Government. It will be dynamic and based
on the local seasonal availability of vegetables, fruits, and leafy greens.
Planning for the next year should be done well in advance, with proper
information shared with local farmers in every district. This will help farmers
grow the required crops and ensure fresh, seasonal, and nutritious food reaches
every child.
Schools digitise
the same, or parents can fill in digital form which they receive every week
- Teachers give gentle guidance and suggestions where
needed.
- Privacy is maintained — the information is used only
for the child’s health benefit.
When the school shares the lunch
menu in advance and Parents plan breakfast and dinner accordingly, your child
gets complete and balanced nutrition every day. Maintaining a simple weekly
food diary helps teachers identify any health issues early. This small habit
brings big benefits — better health for children, less stress for mothers, and
better planning for the entire food system of the country.”
Combining advance lunch menus
with home food diaries is a practical and powerful step towards a healthier,
well-nourished, and agriculturally balanced India.
31. Provision
Debit Card System — Ensuring Balanced Nutrition, Food Security, and Honest
Financial Practices for Every Family
Food is the most basic necessity
of life. A balanced diet with proper quality and quantity is essential for good
health, strong immunity, and better performance in studies and work —
especially for growing children and students. The Government should introduce a
mandatory “Provision Debit Card” system for all employees (both organized and
unorganized sectors). This system, combined with fixed school mid-day meal
menus and suggested home breakfast/dinner options, will ensure that every
family gets nutritious, balanced food within their budget using locally
available items.
How the Provision Debit Card
System Works
For Organized Workforce
(Government & Private Employees):
- Every employee will be issued a Provision Debit Card.
- 25% of the salary (or ₹15,000 per month, whichever is
lower) will be automatically deducted and credited to this card.
- The card can be used only for purchasing food
provisions — cereals, pulses, daily consumables, nutrients, fruits,
vegetables, etc.
- Monthly purchase limits will be fixed category-wise
(cereals, vegetables, fruits, etc.) according to the employee’s income and
family size.
- All grocery, fruit, and vegetable sellers must use
swipe card/online billing machines connected to broadband. Purchases will
be recorded automatically and payment deducted from the card.
Tax Benefit:
The amount deducted from salary
for the Provision Debit Card will be completely tax-exempt. This encourages
honest food expenditure and increases overall tax collection through recorded
transactions.
For Unorganized Sector (Daily
Wage Workers, Small Shopkeepers, etc.):
Provision cards will be linked
with the Public Distribution System (PDS). Online billing machines will
automatically reduce rates for card holders. This will reduce pilferage in PDS,
improve transparency, and give better benefits to the poor.
How This System Ensures Balanced
Nutrition for Families (Especially Children & Students)
- The deducted amount is earmarked only for food, so
families automatically spend on nutrition first.
- The Government will provide a fixed standard menu for
mid-day meals in all schools (government and private).
- Along with the school lunch menu, parents will
receive suggested combinations for breakfast and dinner using locally
available foods.
- This ensures the complete daily meal is balanced —
without excess or deficiency of vitamins and minerals.
- Parents can plan home meals according to the school
menu, avoiding repetition of the same vegetables or grains every day.
- Children and students will get quality food in proper
quantity at home and school — leading to better health, concentration, and
academic performance.
This system removes the excuse of
“we cannot afford good food” and makes nutritious eating the first priority of
salary.
Major Benefits of the Provision
Debit Card System
For Families & Children:
- Guaranteed spending on food and balanced nutrition.
- Better health, immunity, and growth of children.
- Reduced financial stress because food is planned and
secured.
- Teaches children the value of money and priority of
food.
For the Nation:
- Complete record of food sales across the country
(reduces black money and zero billing).
- Increase in tax collection (sales tax, GST, etc.).
- Reduction in PDS pilferage and maintenance costs.
- Better planning for farmers and traders (demand for
local vegetables, fruits, millets, etc.).
- Overall improvement in public health and productivity
of the workforce.
- Supports the goal of “Food for All” with better
infrastructure development from increased revenue.
For Employees:
- No unnecessary multiple deductions if more than one
family member is working (with proper affidavit and cross-verification).
- Transparent and simple system.
Why This System is Necessary and
Unique
Most families spend salary on
many things, but food sometimes gets neglected due to other expenses or bad
financial habits. This system makes food expenditure mandatory and automatic in
a positive way. When combined with:
- Fixed school mid-day meal menus,
- Suggested balanced breakfast & dinner options,
- Tax exemption on food expenditure,
- Online recorded billing, it creates a complete
ecosystem for nutritious food security within every family’s budget using
locally available foods.
The same Provision Debit Card can
function as a Provision Credit Card during genuine emergencies such as loss of
earnings due to sickness, accident, or medical issues affecting the cardholder
or any family member. In such cases, the family can avail groceries and basic
food provisions for the month (extendable up to three months) even with zero
balance. During this period, the government will support the family by
facilitating alternative earning opportunities through schemes like MGNREGA,
Mudra loans, Self-Help Groups (SHGs), or other suitable employment
programmes.
This flexible feature of
converting the Provision Debit Card into a temporary credit card is a major
boon, especially for low-income families facing sudden distress, job loss, or
medical emergencies. It ensures that children and family members continue to
receive basic nutritious food without interruption until the family stabilises
and resumes normal earnings.
Food is the foundation of health
and progress. When parents spend their hard-earned money first on quality and
balanced food for the family — especially for children and students — the
entire family becomes healthier and stronger.
The Provision Debit Card system
ensures that a fixed portion of salary is used only for nutrition. It removes
financial excuses, brings transparency, increases government revenue, and most
importantly, guarantees that every child gets proper food at home and in
school. This is a practical, noble, and far-sighted step towards building a
healthy and prosperous nation.”
Teachers and schools should
explain this system to parents during meetings so that every family understands
its benefits and supports its implementation.
This measure, along with other
reforms like healthy mid-day meals, advance menu planning, and value education,
will create a generation of healthy, confident, and well-nourished students.
32. Government
App or Toll-Free Number for Parents to Report Child’s Illness — For Adjusted
School Food and Faster Recovery
In the light of the universal
mid-day meal programme being implemented in both government and private
schools, it is very important that the Government creates a simple mobile App
or toll-free number for parents to immediately report if their child is unwell.
When schools provide standardised
meals to all students, it becomes even more essential to adjust the food during
illness. Many children suffer unnecessarily during common problems like loose
motions, fever, vomiting, cold, or runny nose because the regular school lunch
may not be suitable and can sometimes worsen the condition. Parents also often
give heavy or inappropriate foods at home without proper guidance.
A quick reporting system allows
the school to modify the child’s meal for that day and the following days,
while the Government can provide clear advice on light, easily digestible foods
for home. This practical step protects children’s health, speeds up recovery,
reduces complications, and strengthens coordination between home and school
How the System Should Work
- Parents send a quick message or update through the
App/toll-free number if the child has:
- Loose motions / diarrhoea
- Fever
- Vomiting
- Runny nose / cold
- Any other sickness
- The school immediately notes the information and
adjusts the lunch menu for that day and the next few days as needed.
- Parents are also advised what light foods to give at
home (breakfast, dinner, and lunch on holidays).
Examples of Adjusted Food During
Illness
- Loose Motions / Diarrhoea:
Give only curd
rice with a banana or pomegranate. Avoid heavy, spicy, or oily foods for 2–3
days till symptoms improve.
- Fever:
Give very light food such as rice kanji (porridge), rasam rice, or boiled moong dal khichdi. Keep meals simple and easy to digest. - Vomiting or Runny Nose:
Give very light,
warm, and soothing foods. Avoid milk, heavy spices, or fried items.
- Constipation:
Increase fibre-rich foods like guava, papaya, soaked sprouts, and plenty of water. - Pus Formation in Open Wounds, Fractures (under cast),
or Post-Surgery:
Give very light,
easily digestible, immunity-boosting foods. Focus on anti-inflammatory options
such as: Curd rice, moong dal khichdi, or vegetable soup.
Fresh fruits
like papaya, pomegranate, or banana (in moderation).
Avoid heavy,
oily, spicy, or non-veg foods that can increase inflammation or pus
formation.
Ensure the child
takes proper rest and follows medical advice.
The Government should prepare and
share standard advisory charts for common illnesses, clearly listing safe
breakfast, lunch (on holidays), and dinner options.
Why This Measure is Absolutely
Necessary
- School lunch is planned for healthy children. During
illness, the same food can worsen the condition (e.g., heavy lunch during
diarrhoea or vomiting can increase discomfort).
- Many parents unknowingly give wrong foods at home,
which further aggravates the problem.
- Early information to the school + clear government
advice helps the child recover faster.
- It ensures the child gets proper rest and suitable
nutrition during sickness.
Additional Benefits
- Teachers and schools become more aware of each
child’s health.
- Reduces unnecessary complications and absenteeism.
- Builds a strong support system between parents,
school, and government for child health.
If your child has loose motions,
fever, vomiting, or any other sickness, immediately inform the school through
the App or toll-free number. The school will adjust the lunch accordingly, and
the Government will guide you on what light foods to give at home. This small
step helps your child recover quickly and comfortably. Always remember — during
illness, simple, light, and easily digestible food + rest is the best medicine.
This system is practical,
low-cost, and child-friendly. It will significantly improve recovery during
common illnesses and create better coordination between home and school for
every child’s health.
33. Strict
Quality Control, Hygiene & Advanced Technologies for All Mid-Day Meal
Kitchens & Large Private Kitchens/Restaurants
It is extremely important that
the Government enforces very strict quality control, hygiene standards, and
advanced technologies in all kitchens — especially those preparing mid-day
meals for children and large private kitchens/restaurants that cook food in
bulk.
Many children and people suffer from
food-borne illnesses, stomach problems, and long-term health issues because of
poor raw materials, adulteration, contaminated water, improper cleaning, and
unhygienic practices. Even small lapses in large-scale cooking can affect
thousands of children daily.
Strict quality control of raw
materials, in-house processing, advanced surface decontamination (using AOP and
Photolysis), safe water standards (fresh and recycled), bio-digesters for
waste, and natural cleaning methods are non-negotiable. These measures will
drastically reduce contamination risks, ensure safe and nutritious food,
protect children’s health, and build a responsible and sustainable food system
across the country
To ensure safe, nutritious, and
high-quality food for children and the public, the government must enforce
stringent standards for all kitchens — especially those preparing mid-day meals
and large private kitchens/restaurants that cook food in bulk.
Mandatory Requirements for All
Kitchens
1. Stringent Quality Control of
Raw Materials
All raw materials (rice, wheat,
lentils, turmeric, spices, chilli powder, oils, vegetables, etc.) must come
from registered and approved suppliers.
Multiple checks and testing at
every stage — from supply to final use.
Strict standardised protocols for
quantities of salt, oil, sugar, and spices in every dish.
Severe punishments (including
criminal liability) for adulteration, low-quality supply, pilferage, or use of
stale/spurious materials. Supplying contaminated or substandard food to
children should be treated as a serious offence.
2. In-House Processing for Better
Control
Prefer in-house processing
(wood-pressed oils, fresh spice grinding) for purity and freshness.
Large kitchens should preferably
process materials in-house where possible:
Wood-pressed oils using slow RPM
machines.
Fresh grinding of turmeric,
chilli, coriander, cumin, and masala powders.
This reduces dependence on
external processed items and ensures freshness and purity.
3. Advanced Surface
Decontamination
Mandate Advanced Oxidation
Process (AOP) and Photolysis for all vegetables, fruits, leafy greens, eggs,
meat, etc., to eliminate bacteria, viruses, fungi, maggots, pesticide residues,
and heavy metals.
Government should promote and
mandate the use of Advanced Oxidation Process (AOP) and Photolysis for cleaning
all raw and pre-cooked foods (vegetables, fruits, leafy greens, in mid day
meal -and (eggs, meat, chicken, fish,
etc. in private large kitchens).
These technologies use plain
water (optionally with ozone) to generate powerful hydroxyl radicals that:
Destroy bacteria, fungi, viruses, maggots, larvae, and eggs on the surface.
Break down and remove pesticide
residues, heavy metals, and chemical contaminants.
Penetrate deep into crevices
where ordinary washing cannot reach.
Benefits: Safer food, longer
shelf life, better nutritional quality, and reduced toxic load on children’s
bodies.
4. Water Conservation, Recycling
& Strict Safety Standards
All large kitchens must install
high-quality water recycling and treatment systems. Waste water from washing
and cleaning should be treated and recycled. Stringent quality checks and
multi-stage filtration are mandatory for both fresh and recycled water.
- Fresh water (used for the first time) must undergo
standard quality testing for underground and overhead storage tanks before
use. It must be 100% free from bacteria, fungus, viruses, heavy metals
(lead, mercury), high chlorine, or other contaminants.
- Some preparations (e.g., drinking water, salads, or
items that are not cooked) must use only fresh, tested potable water.
- Even for cooked food, water must meet fresh potable
standards — high levels of chlorine, mercury, lead, or other toxins can
still cause health issues.
This ensures every drop of water
used in cooking or food preparation is completely safe.
This significantly reduces fresh
water consumption and environmental burden.
5. Bio-Digesters for Waste
Management
All kitchens must install
bio-digesters to convert kitchen waste (peelings, leftover food, vegetable
scraps) into usable biogas for cooking. This reduces waste, generates renewable
energy, and lowers costs.
6. Hygiene & Cleaning
Standards
Strict cleaning protocols,
regular deep cleaning, and natural pest control. All staff must follow rigorous
personal hygiene.
Use safe cleaning agents,
preferably natural products such as coal/wood ash, lemon peel, baking soda, or
vinegar-based solutions for surfaces, utensils, and equipment.
Promote mild, natural detergents
for dish washing.
Safe hand wash protocols for all
staff before and after handling food.
Safe dish-washing system for all
utensils used in preparing, storing, and serving food.
Mandatory steaming of plates,
vessels, and utensils before preparation, storage, or serving — especially in
schools. Steaming ensures they are free from bacteria, fungus, and other
contaminants.
Why This Is Non-Negotiable
Safe water and food are basic
rights of every child. Strict checks on both fresh and recycled water, combined
with advanced decontamination, bio-digesters, and quality control, will
drastically reduce contamination risks and support better health and learning.
These measures protect children
from long-term health issues and create a sustainable, responsible food system.
34. How
Daily Storytelling (Like Fairy Tales) About Vegetables, Fruits, Leafy Greens,
Nuts & Seeds Helps Children Eat Better — With Age-Specific Education on
Their Benefits
Telling children daily stories
about fruits, vegetables, leafy greens, nuts, and seeds — presented like
exciting fairy tales or adventures — is one of the most effective, fun, and
low-pressure ways to improve eating habits. Instead of forcing or pleading “eat
your veggies,” this approach builds curiosity, positive emotions, and
understanding. Over time, children naturally become more willing to try and
enjoy these foods.
Why Storytelling Works So Well
for Children
- Makes Learning Fun & Memorable: Fairy-tale style
stories activate imagination and emotions. Children remember characters
and adventures better than dry facts.
- Reduces Picky Eating: When a child feels emotionally
connected to a food (e.g., “Carrot is a brave knight that gives you super
vision”), resistance drops dramatically.
- Builds Positive Associations: Healthy foods become
exciting heroes instead of “boring” or “yucky” items.
- Develops Curiosity & Ownership: Children ask
questions and feel proud when they recognise foods or choose them
themselves.
- Long-Term Habit Formation: Early positive experiences
with nutritious foods lead to better lifelong eating patterns.
Age-Specific Approach
(Curriculum-Style Education)
Tailor the stories and
information to the child’s age and understanding level:
- Ages 3–6 (Preschool/Early School): Simple fairy tales
with heroes, magic powers, and adventures. Focus on one main benefit per
story. Use pictures, puppets, or drawings. Keep sessions short (5–10
minutes).
- Ages 7–10 (Primary School): Add simple facts — “This
vegetable has Vitamin C that acts like a shield for your body.” Include
small experiments (e.g., “See how strong your arms feel after eating
nuts!”). Stories can be longer with more details.
- Ages 11+ (Pre-teens & Teens): Include real
nutritional science in story form (e.g., “Thymoquinone in black seeds is
like a smart guard that helps your immunity”). Discuss how foods support
brain, sports performance, skin, or exams. Encourage them to create their
own stories.
Daily narration (even 5–10
minutes during meal prep or bedtime) creates a consistent, gentle educational
rhythm.
How to Narrate — Fairy Tale Style
Examples
Turn everyday foods into story
characters:
- Carrot (The Magic Orange Knight): “Once upon a time,
there was a brave orange knight called Carrot. He lived in the ground and
collected golden Vitamin A from the sun. When children eat him, he gives
them super-vision power — they can see far like an eagle and protect their
eyes from the dark!”
- Spinach / Leafy Greens (The Strong Green Giant):
“Deep in the garden lives the Green Giant called Spinach. He is full of
iron and vitamins that make your muscles strong and give you energy to run
and play all day without getting tired.”
- Nuts & Seeds (The Brainy Treasure Chest): “Hidden
inside a hard shell are the wise little treasures — almonds, walnuts,
chia, and pumpkin seeds. They carry healthy fats and Vitamin E that act
like oil for your brain engine. Eating them helps you remember stories
better, focus in class, and think faster!”
- Tomato / Beetroot (The Red Superhero for Blood &
Energy): “The brave red heroes bring lycopene and natural nitrates that
help your blood flow smoothly and give steady energy — like having a magic
fuel tank!”
- Tulsi / Lemon Balm / Lemongrass (The Protective
Herbal Friends): “These green friends live in the garden and fight
invisible enemies (germs and insects) with their special powers. They help
keep your body safe and your mind calm.”
Repeat stories daily or rotate
one food per day/week. Ask questions: “Which power would you like today —
strong muscles or sharp eyes?”
Key Educational Points to Include
(Age-Appropriate)
Teach children how specific foods
help different parts of the body:
- Immunity Boost: Citrus, guava, amla, bell peppers,
turmeric, tulsi, black seeds — Vitamin C, antioxidants, and antimicrobial
compounds act like shields against colds and infections.
- Digestion & Gut Health: Fibre from vegetables,
fruits, millets, and seeds feeds good gut bacteria, reduces bloating, and
supports smooth digestion.
- Brain, Memory & Focus: Nuts, seeds, leafy greens,
fatty fish (or algae sources), and berries — healthy fats, Vitamin E, and
antioxidants support brain function and concentration.
- Vision: Carrots, leafy greens, sweet potatoes —
Vitamin A (beta-carotene) helps eyes see clearly, especially in low light.
- Energy & Strength: Bananas, nuts, seeds,
beetroot, millets — natural sugars + minerals + protein give steady energy
without crashes.
- Skin, Hair & Overall Glow: Healthy fats from
nuts/seeds + antioxidants from colourful fruits/vegetables keep skin clear
and hair strong.
- Breath & Respiratory Health: Tulsi, ginger,
lemon, and certain greens support easy breathing and reduce congestion.
Use simple language for younger
children and slightly scientific terms for older ones. Visual aids (drawings,
charts, or short videos) make it even more engaging.
Overall Impact on Eating Habits
- Children become more adventurous eaters because they
understand why a food is good.
- Daily storytelling creates a positive mealtime
atmosphere instead of battles.
- Over weeks and months, most children show improved
acceptance of vegetables, fruits, nuts, and seeds.
- It supports broader health goals: better immunity,
digestion, focus, growth, and reduced reliance on processed snacks.
- Works beautifully alongside other recommendations
(millet java, wood-pressed oils on vegetables, roasted seed powders,
herbal plants, natural oral hygiene, etc.).
Practical Tips for Parents &
Schools
- Make it a daily ritual (during meal prep, after
school, or bedtime).
- Use props, songs, or role-play for younger kids.
- Let children help “grow” or prepare the food
mentioned in the story.
- Schools can include short “Food Hero Stories” in
class or mid-day meal time.
- Keep it positive — never use stories to shame or
force eating.
Daily fairy-tale-style narration
combined with age-appropriate education about the specific powers of each
fruit, vegetable, leafy green, nut, and seed is a powerful, joyful way to help
children eat better. It transforms “I don’t like vegetables” into “I want the
magic carrot knight today!” Children not only eat more nutritious food but also
develop lifelong curiosity about health and nature.
Group 7: Lifestyle, Sleep, Screen Time & Morning
Routine
35. Educating
Parents & Students on Sleep, Screen Time, Sunlight & Simple Exercises
for Sharp Brain & Healthy Body
Good sleep, limited screen time,
natural sunlight, and simple daily movements are the foundation for children’s
physical growth, brain development, sharp focus, stable mood, and strong
immunity. Unfortunately, many children today suffer from poor sleep, excessive
screen time, lack of natural light, and insufficient physical movement. This
leads to tiredness, poor concentration, weak immunity, behavioural issues, and
long-term health problems.
Schools and parents must actively
educate students on these basic habits using simple explanations, charts, and
practical demonstrations. When children get 9 hours of quality sleep in
darkness, limited screen time, daily sunlight exposure, and short fun exercises
(balance, finger, eye, and calming poses like Balasana and Happy Baby), they
naturally develop sharper minds, stronger bodies, and better emotional health.
These low-cost habits are essential for building a healthy, focused, and
energetic next generation
Schools and parents should teach
these habits clearly using simple explanations, charts, and demonstrations.
1. Why 9 Hours of Sleep in
Complete Darkness is Necessary
Children and adolescents need
about 9 hours of quality sleep every night (roughly 8–10 hours depending on
age) in a completely dark room.
Benefits:
- Growth hormone release for height, muscle, and
repair.
- Memory consolidation and better learning.
- Hormone balance and mood regulation.
- Stronger immunity.
- Improved focus, behaviour, and emotional stability.
Why Complete Darkness?
It supports melatonin production.
Even small lights disrupt sleep quality.
Practical Tip: Blackout curtains,
no glowing devices in the bedroom, consistent bedtime.
2. Why No Screen Time After 9 PM
& Limit to 1–2 Hours Daily
Screens emit blue light that
suppresses melatonin.
Why Avoid After 9 PM: Harder to
fall asleep, poorer sleep quality, tired mornings.
Daily Limit (1–2 Hours Maximum): Reduces eye strain, supports physical
activity, and prevents addiction-related issues.
Practical Tip: Device curfew
after 9 PM. Use night mode earlier if needed. Replace with reading or family
time.
3. Why See Sunrise & Sunset +
Stay in Sun for at Least 20 Minutes Daily
Natural light regulates the body
clock.
Morning Sunrise: Boosts
alertness, mood, and Vitamin D.
Evening Sunset: Helps wind down
for sleep.
20 Minutes Safe Sun Exposure: Vitamin D for bones, immunity, and energy.
Practical Tip:
Step outside morning and evening.
Avoid peak afternoon sun.
4. Basic Daily Exercises for
Sharp Brain & Strong Body
Include these short, fun sessions
(5–10 minutes total) daily.
Balance Exercises: Standing on
one leg, simple yoga poses, or walking on a straight line — improves stability,
core strength, posture, focus, and brain-body coordination.
Finger Exercises: Finger
stretches, squeezing a soft ball, finger taps — improves fine motor skills,
brain-hand connections, dexterity, and concentration.
Eye Exercises: Look near/far, eye
circles, up-down/side-to-side, palming — reduces strain, strengthens eye
muscles, improves focus.
Balasana (Child’s Pose):
Kneel, sit back on heels, fold
forward with forehead to the floor and arms extended or by the sides.
- Calming and restorative.
- Gently stretches the back, hips, and shoulders.
- Releases stress and tension.
- Excellent for relaxation after studies or before
sleep.
- Fun and safe for children.
Ananda Balasana (Happy Baby
Pose):
Lie on the back, bend knees
toward chest, grab the outer edges of the feet (or ankles), and gently pull
knees toward armpits while keeping the back flat. Rock side to side if
comfortable.
- Opens hips and inner thighs.
- Releases lower back tension.
- Calms the nervous system and brings a happy, playful
feeling.
- Helps with flexibility and emotional release.
- Children enjoy the “happy baby” name and gentle
rocking motion.
Japanese Radio Calisthenics
(Taiso): Full-body gentle movements for overall fitness and energy.
Basic Daily Routine for All
StudentsMorning:
- Water + light movement (Taiso or stretches).
- Eye, finger, and balance exercises.
- Balasana or Ananda Balasana for calmness.
- Sunrise exposure (10–20 minutes).
School Day:
- Nutritious millet-based meals.
- Short movement breaks with exercises.
Evening:
- Sunset exposure.
- Limited screens.
- Light dinner + relaxation poses (Balasana/Happy
Baby).
Night:
- 9 hours sleep in darkness.
- No screens after 9 PM.
Weekly Goal: At least 5 days of
recorded exercises + good sleep and sunlight.
Government App for Tracking Good
Health Practices
Create a simple free app where
students log daily activities (sleep, sunlight, exercises including
Balasana & Ananda Balasana,
screen time) with date and time. Records can be shown to teachers or
auto-deleted after review. This builds awareness and accountability in a
friendly way.
These habits, taught through
school programs with fairy-tale stories for younger children and clear facts
for older ones, help students develop strong bodies, sharp minds, and emotional
balance naturally.
Parents and teachers modelling
these practices make the biggest difference.
36. Why
Government Should Implement Default Night-Time Internet & Call Limits for
Better Sleep, Health & Life Balance Across India
Many children, students, and
youth have become “night owls,” staying awake till 2–3 AM chatting on
WhatsApp/Instagram, watching movies, listening to music, or viewing
inappropriate content. This excess screen time, blue light, and constant WiFi
exposure causes poor sleep, high stress, anxiety, depression, drained energy,
and long-term health issues. The government can introduce a simple, default
“digital curfew” to support natural sleep cycles and healthier lifestyles.
Proposed Default Settings
(Nationwide)
- WiFi & Mobile Internet: Automatically turn OFF
from 9 PM to 6 AM for all home users and regular mobile connections across
India.
- Call Limits: Regular calls limited to a maximum of 10
minutes per call. This is especially important for school children and
student mobiles.
- Emergency Access:
- Free default emergency services (100/112) always
available.
- Special access for cabs, hospitals, police, and
essential services.
- Unlimited Activation (Personal Emergency): Users can
temporarily activate unlimited calls/internet, but the system first alerts
the first five registered family members about the emergency request. This
ensures accountability.
- Exceptions (24/7 Access):
- Government officers on official numbers.
- Doctors and medical staff on official numbers.
- Police on official numbers.
- Software employees working night shifts from home
(during official duty hours only).
These settings are applied by
default through telecom operators. Users who need exceptions (e.g., genuine
night-shift workers) can apply for approval with verification.
Why This is Necessary — Impact on
Youth & Students
- Blue Light & Sleep Disruption: Screens suppress
melatonin (sleep hormone).
- Late-night use delays sleep, reduces deep sleep, and
affects growth hormone release in children.
- Addiction & Mental Health: Endless scrolling,
chatting, and content consumption leads to anxiety, depression, poor
focus, and low energy the next day. Students lose valuable morning hours
for studies and activities.
- Physical Health: Reduced sleep weakens immunity,
increases stress hormones, and contributes to obesity, hormonal
imbalances, and eye strain.
- Family & Social Life: Late nights disturb family
routines and reduce real-life interactions.
Default night-time restrictions
gently encourage better habits without banning technology entirely. People can
still use devices during the day for studies, work, and entertainment.
Major Benefits
- Better Sleep for All: 9 hours of quality sleep in
darkness becomes easier, supporting brain development, memory, mood
stability, and physical growth in children and adolescents.
- Reduced Stress & Anxiety: Less late-night
exposure to blue light and addictive content helps lower depression and
improve emotional health.
- More Productive Days: Students wake up refreshed,
attend school better, and have energy for studies and physical activity.
- Healthier Families: Parents and children follow
similar routines, leading to better family time and less digital
addiction.
- Safety Maintained: Emergency services and essential
workers remain fully operational.
Practical Implementation by
Government
- Telecom companies apply default settings on all SIMs
and home broadband.
- Easy opt-in/opt-out or exception process for verified
night-shift workers and essential services.
- Awareness campaigns explaining the “why” (sleep
science, blue light effects, benefits of early sleep).
- Integrate with school education programs (teacher
training, student materials, parent booklets) on sleep, screen limits,
sunlight exposure, and simple exercises.
- Monitor compliance and gather feedback to refine the
system.
This policy works hand-in-hand
with earlier recommendations:
- Standardised school meals and water provision.
- Education on fresh foods, millets, hygiene, and
natural health.
- Daily sunlight (sunrise/sunset), limited screens, and
simple exercises (Taiso, eye/finger movements).
Together, these create a strong
foundation for healthier, more focused, and balanced lives for children and
youth.
Expected Positive Outcomes
- Significant reduction in night-time screen addiction
among students.
- Improved academic performance and emotional
well-being.
- Lower long-term risk of lifestyle diseases linked to
poor sleep and excessive screen time.
- A cultural shift towards healthier daily rhythms —
“early to bed, early to rise.”
This is a thoughtful,
compassionate, and much-needed course correction. It respects modern technology
while protecting the natural needs of growing children and youth. Parents,
teachers, and students can be educated on these benefits through schools and community
programs.
37. Why
the Government Must Regulate or Ban 24/7 News Channels and Late-Night
Broadcasting — For True Journalism, Public Health, and Good Governance
In today’s India, many 24/7 news
channels run round the clock. They repeat the same stories for hours and fill
the remaining time with frivolous, biased, and sometimes vulgar programmes.
This is no longer real journalism. It has become a business that prioritises
TRP ratings, advertisements, and the interests of the rich and powerful. The
same problem exists with 24/7 entertainment channels.
Major Problems with 24/7 News
Channels
- They mostly discuss issues related to upper castes,
upper economic classes, rich people, and celebrities.
- They rarely give platform to ordinary knowledgeable
people, experts from different backgrounds, or genuine solutions to
problems.
- Instead of serious discussion, they run “panel
discussions” where their chosen panelists (often the same few people) give
biased opinions and present them as “national opinion.”
- They waste hours on isolated rape or murder cases
while thousands of such incidents happen across the country every year.
This is done deliberately to create drama and distract people from bigger
issues like government failures, unemployment, inflation, farmers’
problems, or lack of basic facilities.
- They act as advocates for the rich and famous under
the name of “press freedom” and “service to the nation.”
- Even government advertisements and private company
money keep these channels running, making them dependent on pleasing those
in power rather than serving the common people.
Why 24/7 Broadcasting and
Late-Night TV Are Harmful
People need 8–9 hours of quality
sleep every night for good physical and mental health. Lack of sleep causes
obesity, hormonal imbalance, poor concentration, weak immunity, anxiety, and
many other diseases.
The government talks about
Universal Health Insurance and better healthcare. But how can people stay
healthy if they are kept awake till midnight or later by television? Good sleep
is the foundation of health. Without proper sleep, even the best medicines and
hospitals cannot give full benefit.
Government monitor Sleep, link
sleep to increment, promotion, health insurance
Govt must link health insurance
with 8 hours of sleep for every individual; every health insure covered person
must wear watch / device that record the sleep; this will help/ enforce people
to sleep 8 hours especially employees; govt must link increments, promotion to
8 hours, consistent sleep every day every week every month for government and
private employees and students
Ban on Regular Entertainment
Channels After 10 PM
No regular entertainment channels
(serial channels, reality shows, cooking channels, film channels, religious
channels, or any non-emergency programmes) should be allowed to air after 10:00
PM every day in India. This is very necessary because:
- Many women and elderly people stay awake late
watching TV and OTT content, which disturbs their sleep.
- Government cutting WiFi after 9 PM will help reduce
OTT usage, but regular TV channels must also be stopped after 10 PM.
- People will naturally sleep earlier and wake up
fresh, leading to better health, better productivity, and happier
families.
Exceptions
Only in genuine emergencies (floods, earthquakes, cyclones, war, or major
national events), channels may be allowed to broadcast important updates.
What the Government Must Do
- Ban regular news and entertainment broadcasting after
10:00 PM
All TV channels
should stop regular programmes after 10:00 PM and resume only after 6:00 AM.
- Stop giving exclusive interviews to private channels
Government
ministers and officials should hold open press conferences that are
live-streamed. Common people and journalists from all media should be allowed
to ask questions.
- Media must focus on solutions, not just problems
Channels should
discuss real issues with genuine experts and suggest practical solutions.
- Ban irrelevant celebrity coverage
Media should
stop excessive coverage of celebrity temple visits or movie releases. These are
not national issues.
- Strict media regulation
National media
should cover national issues. State media should focus on state issues. There
must be clear jurisdiction and accountability.
Benefits of These Rules
- Millions of people, especially women and elderly,
will get proper sleep and better health.
- Media will be forced to do real journalism instead of
running 24/7 drama.
- It will reduce bias and give voice to ordinary
people.
- People will focus on important national and local
issues instead of being distracted.
- True press freedom comes with responsibility. Media
should serve the nation, not just make money for a few families.
The 24/7 news and entertainment
channels are not giving you real information or healthy entertainment. They
keep people awake late at night and disturb sleep. The government must stop
regular TV broadcasting after 10 PM so that everyone can sleep well.
Good sleep is very important for
studies, health, and a happy life. When media works responsibly and people get
proper rest, our country will become stronger and healthier.”
These regulations are needed for
public health, true journalism, and better governance. Small rules like
stopping TV after 10 PM can bring big positive changes in the life of common
people.
38. Government
Monitoring Sleep and Linking It to Health Insurance, Increments &
Promotions — For Better Health and Productivity
Sleep is one of the most
important pillars of good health. Most people, especially students, working
professionals, and women, sleep less than 8 hours due to TV, mobile phones,
late-night work, stress, and irregular habits. Lack of proper sleep leads to many
diseases, poor concentration, weight gain, hormonal imbalance, weak immunity,
and reduced lifespan.
The Government should take strong
steps to ensure every citizen gets minimum 8 hours of quality sleep every
night. This is as important as food, water, and exercise.
Government Measures Recommended
- Link Sleep to Health Insurance
Every person
covered under government or private health insurance must wear a simple
sleep-tracking watch or device. The insurance company will monitor average
sleep hours.
- People who consistently sleep 8 hours or more will
get better insurance coverage, lower premiums, or additional benefits.
- Those who sleep less will be counselled and given
reminders. Persistent poor sleep may lead to higher premiums or limited
coverage.
This will
encourage people to take sleep seriously.
- Link Sleep to Increments and Promotions
For all
government employees, private company employees, and students (in higher
classes), consistent good sleep (average 8 hours) should be linked to:
- Annual increments
- Promotions
- Scholarships or academic benefits for students
- Govt should put marks for 8 hours sleep in future
even after restricting Wi-Fi after 9pm and mobile calls, resting
operating the social media chatting apps after 9 pm on general days, only
they can use in emergency situations any day in medical emergency or
family emergency etc for limited days after 9 pm, if they do not work in
ensuring students get good sleep every day.
Companies and educational
institutions can use data from sleep-tracking devices (with privacy safeguards)
to reward people who maintain healthy sleep habits.
This will create a culture where
good sleep is valued as much as hard work.
Why These Measures Are Necessary
- Poor sleep is the root cause of many diseases
(obesity, diabetes, hypertension, depression, weak immunity, hormonal
imbalance, and poor memory).
- Students who sleep less perform poorly in studies and
have more health issues.
- Employees who sleep less make more mistakes, have
lower productivity, and take more sick leaves.
- When the government links sleep to insurance and
career benefits, millions of people will be motivated to sleep on time.
This will reduce the overall disease burden and save huge money on
healthcare.
Good sleep improves focus, mood,
learning ability, and physical strength. It is one of the cheapest and most
effective ways to build a healthy nation.
Practical Tips to Get Better
Sleep (Teach These from Young Age)
- Early and Light Dinner: Eat dinner at least 2–3 hours
before sleep. Keep it light with vegetables, good quality complex
carbohydrates (millets, small portion of rice or roti), and a pinch of
salt.
- No non-veg or heavy fatty foods at night. These are
difficult to digest, cause inflammation in the stomach, and disturb
sleep.
- Light vegetable-based meals with complex carbs and
adequate salt help maintain electrolyte balance (sodium) and prevent low
glucose at night. This reduces nighttime awakenings and improves deep
sleep.
- No Screens After 9 PM: Switch off TV, mobile, and
laptop. Avoid blue light completely. Use incandescent lights (not LED) in
bedrooms if needed. Sleep in complete darkness.
- Cut WiFi After 9 PM: This will reduce late-night
phone and OTT use.
- Relaxing Night Routine:
- Light shower or foot soaking in warm water before
dinner.
- Listen to soft sleep music if needed.
- Keep a bucket of water near the fan to maintain
moisture in the room (helps in dry seasons).
- No loud sounds or disturbances while sleeping.
- Consistent Sleep Time: Go to bed by 9–10 PM and wake
up early. Maintain the same schedule every day.
Good sleep is as important as
studying. Your brain grows and your body repairs itself only when you sleep
well. Less sleep makes you tired, weak in studies, and unhealthy. The
government linking sleep to health insurance and promotions is a very good step.
It will force everyone to sleep properly. Follow simple habits — eat light
vegetable dinner early with complex carbs and a pinch of salt, avoid screens
after 9 PM, sleep in darkness, and maintain a fixed sleep time. When you sleep
8 hours daily, you will feel energetic, study better, and stay healthy for
life. Good sleep is the foundation of success
These measures, when implemented
seriously, will create a healthier, more productive, and happier India. Sleep
is not laziness — it is one of the best investments in your future.
39. Why
the First 30 Minutes After Waking Up Shape the Whole Day — Important Morning
Routine for All Students & Parents
The first 30 minutes after you wake up are a powerful window
that programs your brain for the entire day. Neuroscience shows that the brain
is in a highly receptive state (theta and alpha brainwaves) right after waking.
What you do in this short time strongly influences focus, mood, energy, and how
the rest of the day feels.
Many students and people unknowingly start the day in a
reactive way (checking phones, staying in dark rooms), which floods the brain
with stress signals. A good morning routine sets up calmness, better
concentration, stable mood, and sustained energy.
Why Get Up Before Sunrise (Before 6 AM) & Sleep 3–4
Hours After Sunset (Around 9 PM)
- Natural
Body Clock: Getting up early and sleeping early aligns with the sun’s
cycle. Sunrise exposure sets your internal clock (circadian rhythm),
helping you feel alert during the day and sleepy at night.
- Better
Sleep Quality: Sleeping soon after sunset (around 9 PM) allows deeper,
more restorative sleep. Most children and students need 8–10 hours. Early
bedtime supports growth hormone release, memory consolidation, immunity,
and emotional balance.
- Hormonal
& Energy Benefits: Early rising with sunlight boosts serotonin (happy
hormone) and regulates cortisol (stress hormone). This reduces anxiety,
improves focus, and prevents evening tiredness or night-time screen
addiction.
For Students: Early mornings give calm time for studies,
exercises, and breakfast without rush. Late nights lead to poor concentration,
mood swings, and weaker immunity.
Recommended Morning Routine (First 30 Minutes After Waking)
Do these steps gently. They are simple, science-backed, and
especially helpful for students.
- No
Screens First Thing
Avoid phones or any screens immediately after waking. Screens trigger dopamine and stress signals, starting the day reactively. Protect this calm window. - See
Sunrise & Get Natural Light
Within the first 10–20 minutes, go outside (balcony, terrace, garden, or park) and look at the sunrise. Even on cloudy days, natural light helps. - Sets
circadian rhythm.
- Boosts
mood and alertness.
- Supports
Vitamin D and better sleep at night.
- Drink
Water First
After 7–9 hours of sleep, the body is mildly dehydrated. Drink water (from your school-provided stainless steel cup) right away to restore hydration and wake up the brain. - Move
Your Body Gently (2–5 Minutes)
Light stretching, walking, or simple exercises. This increases blood flow and alertness without needing intense workout. - Breathing
or Simple Meditation
Take a few deep breaths or do short calming breathing. It reduces morning anxiety and improves focus. - See
Greenery & Water Plants
Look at green plants or water them. This is soothing, connects you with nature, and gives a small positive start to the day. - Set
One Clear Intention
Think of one positive goal for the day (e.g., “Today I will listen well in class” or “I will stay calm during studies”). This directs your brain toward good actions.
Bonus Gentle Yoga Poses (add 2–3 minutes):
- Balasana
(Child’s Pose): Kneel, fold forward, rest forehead on the floor. Calming,
releases back tension.
- Ananda
Balasana (Happy Baby Pose): Lie on back, hold feet, gently rock. Opens
hips, brings playful calmness.
Why Avoid Screens & Stay Outdoors in the Morning
Sitting indoors with screens first thing is a very bad habit
for most people, especially students. It increases stress, delays natural
wake-up signals, and reduces exposure to morning light that regulates the whole
day. Going outside, seeing greenery, watering plants, and walking in open
spaces (balcony/terrace/garden/park) is far better for brain and body.
Government & School Role
- Teach
these routines in schools through simple charts, stories (fairy-tale style
for younger children), and short morning sessions.
- Include
in parent education materials so families can follow together.
- Track
basic habits (sleep, morning routine) through the suggested health app to
build awareness.
Consistent practice reprograms the brain for better daily
performance, emotional stability, focus, and energy. Early rising with sunlight
and limited evening screens creates a healthy rhythm that supports studies,
growth, and happiness.
Parents and teachers modelling these habits make the biggest
difference. Start small and make it a joyful family routine.
This fits beautifully with other healthy practices (millet
meals, limited processed foods, daily exercises, good sleep hygiene, etc.).
Group 8: Natural First-Aid, Plants & Environmental
Health
40. Why
Government Must Ensure Every School Playground, Apartment Gated Community,
Village Sports Place, and Common Area Has Abundant Tridax procumbens and
Changeri (Oxalis corniculata) Plants — Natural Instant Treatment for Children’s
Bruises & Cuts
Children, especially during play,
sports, or daily activities, frequently get falls, bruises, cuts, scrapes on
knees, elbows, arms, shins, or other body parts. In autism, additional risks
come from bruxism (teeth grinding), sensory-seeking behaviours, or accidental
biting. These minor injuries can cause pain, swelling, infection risk, and
feeding difficulties if on the mouth.
Government and community-level
action to grow Tridax procumbens (coat buttons/ghamra) and Changeri (Oxalis
corniculata / Indian sorrel) abundantly in every school playground, apartment
gated community, village sports areas, and common green spaces can provide
immediate, natural, chemical-free first aid.
These two common, hardy,
easy-to-grow plants are traditional wound-healing heroes widely used in Indian
folk and Ayurvedic medicine.
Why These Two Specific Plants?
1. Tridax procumbens (Coat
Buttons / Ghamra)
A common weed with yellow
flowers. Fresh leaf juice or paste is traditionally used for cuts, bruises,
wounds, and stopping minor bleeding.
How it works: Contains
flavonoids, alkaloids, tannins, and other compounds that promote wound
contraction, collagen synthesis, new skin growth (epithelialization), new blood
vessel formation, and have anti-inflammatory + antimicrobial effects.
It reduces swelling, pain, and
infection risk naturally.
2. Changeri (Oxalis corniculata)
Small plant with clover-like sour
leaves. Fresh leaf paste (alone or mixed with raw turmeric) is used for cuts,
wounds, bruises, and minor burns.
How it works: Flavonoids,
tannins, phenolic compounds, and organic acids provide antimicrobial,
anti-inflammatory, antioxidant, and wound-healing support. Studies show faster
wound closure and better tissue repair.
Mixing with fresh turmeric paste
adds strong anti-inflammatory and antimicrobial power (curcumin) for even
faster natural relief from pain and minor swelling.
These plants are low-cost,
locally available, grow easily in pots or open ground, and require minimal
maintenance.
Immediate Natural First-Aid
Protocol (Simple & Effective)
- Clean immediately: Wash the area gently with fresh
clean water. Wipe with a clean soft cloth.
- Apply paste: Crush fresh clean leaves of Tridax or
Changeri into a fine paste (use mortar-pestle).
- Optional powerful combination: Mix with fresh raw
turmeric root paste (grated and ground).
- Apply a thin layer directly on the clean bruise or
minor cut. Cover loosely with clean cloth if needed.
- Frequency: Reapply 1–2 times a day after gentle
cleaning. Use fresh paste each time.
- For mouth/tongue injuries (common in autism due to
grinding): Use smaller amounts; honey or aloe can be alternatives if
texture/smell is an issue.
For body bruises from falls
(knees, elbows, legs during play on rough surfaces): Tridax or Changeri paste
works excellently to reduce swelling and speed healing. Combine with cold
compress first (first 48 hours), then warm compress later.
Deep or large cuts/wounds: Always
seek immediate medical attention. Natural pastes are supportive only for minor
injuries.
Major Benefits of This Approach
- Instant natural pain relief & faster healing:
Traditional use and supporting studies show quicker wound closure, reduced
swelling, less scarring, and faster recovery compared to leaving injuries
untreated.
- Reduces infections & pus formation: Antimicrobial
properties of both plants help keep wounds clean naturally.
- Reduces need for pharmacy ointments or pills:
Chemical creams can be sticky, strongly scented, or irritating for
children (especially those with sensory sensitivities in autism). These
fresh plant pastes are gentle and chemical-free.
- Supports overall healing: Combines with good
nutrition (vitamin C, zinc, protein from your mitochondrial protocol) for
internal tissue repair.
- Community-level impact: When every playground,
school, apartment complex, and village sports area has these plants in
abundance, children get immediate help on the spot. No delay in waiting
for creams or medicines. This builds a culture of natural, accessible
first aid.
- Long-term health: Reduces repeated chemical exposure,
supports natural immunity, and teaches children respect for nature’s
remedies.
Safety & Important
Precautions
Use only fresh,
clean, pesticide-free leaves from trusted sources.
Always clean the
wound first.
Patch test on a
small area first (especially for children with sensory sensitivities).
Not for deep
wounds, severe burns, heavily bleeding injuries, or infected wounds (increasing
pain, pus, fever, redness — see a doctor immediately).
For young
children: Use very small amounts and supervise.
Combine with
your existing natural protocol (millet java, grated
carrot-beetroot-tomato-radish in sambar, crunchy nuts for chewing, coconut oil
+ turmeric brushing, clove water, etc.) for complete support.
This government-supported measure
(planting and maintaining these two plants widely) ensures that bruises and
minor cuts from children’s play are treated instantly and naturally with Tridax
or Changeri paste (often mixed with fresh turmeric). Most minor wounds heal
quickly with reduced pain, swelling, and infection risk — without needing
pharmacy ointments or pills. It is a low-cost, sustainable, and empowering step
toward healthier, more self-reliant communities while aligning perfectly with
natural, chemical-free approaches for children, including those with autism.
41. Why
Government Should Teach First Aid, Emergency Response & Use Technology for
Quick Help — For All Students & Parents
Emergencies can happen anytime —
cuts, burns, falls, fire, or sudden health issues in elderly family members.
Knowing basic first aid and what to do immediately can save lives and reduce
complications. The government should make practical first aid and emergency
training a regular part of school education and parent awareness programs.
Why This Training is Important
- Students and parents often do not know correct first
aid steps.
- Wrong actions can worsen injuries (e.g., putting
toothpaste on burns or wrong pressure on wounds).
- Elderly people at home are more vulnerable to falls,
breathing issues, or sudden weakness.
- Quick correct action + fast professional help =
better outcomes.
- Training builds confidence and reduces panic during
emergencies.
Basic First Aid Every Student
& Parent Should Know
Cuts & Wounds:
- Wash with clean water.
- Apply gentle pressure with clean cloth.
- Cover with sterile dressing.
- Seek medical help if deep or bleeding does not stop.
Burns:
- Immediately put under running cool (not cold) water
for 10–20 minutes.
- Do not apply toothpaste, oil, or ice.
- Cover loosely with clean cloth and seek medical help
for serious burns.
Falls & Injuries:
- Do not move the person if neck/back injury is
suspected.
- Keep calm and call for help.
- For minor falls — rest, ice, compression, elevation
(RICE method).
Fire Emergency:
- Stop, Drop, and Roll if clothes catch fire.
- Crawl low to avoid smoke.
- Close doors to contain fire.
- Evacuate calmly and call fire services.
Elderly Emergency at Home:
- Check if they are conscious and breathing.
- Keep them comfortable and calm.
- Loosen tight clothing.
- Do not give food or water if they are unconscious or
having difficulty swallowing.
- Call emergency services immediately.
How to Call for Help & What
Information to Give
- Know emergency numbers: 100 / 112 (Police), 108 / 102
(Ambulance), Fire (101).
- Clearly tell: What happened, address, how many people
affected, age of patient, current condition (conscious/unconscious,
breathing or not).
- Stay on the line and follow instructions.
Government Initiative: National
Toll-Free Emergency Video ConsultationThe government should create a national
toll-free emergency video call service (like a helpline app or number)
connected to trained emergency medicine doctors.
Benefits:
- Immediate guidance on first aid while waiting for
ambulance.
- Help check heart rate, guide on checking blood
pressure (using home BP monitor or pulse oximeter if available).
- Give real-time instructions for CPR, wound care,
breathing support, etc.
- Reduce panic and wrong actions.
This service can be especially
useful in rural areas or when ambulance takes time to reach.
Future Vision: Trained First Aid
Teams in Every RWA / Apartment
In the coming years, government
can encourage or make it mandatory that every RWA / apartment complex has:
- Trained volunteers in basic first aid, CPR, and use
of pulse oximeter (to check oxygen level and heart rate).
- Basic diagnostic support (future possibility of
portable devices to check electrolytes before ambulance arrives).
- Quick supportive measures under online doctor
guidance, such as:
- Oral rehydration (salt-sugar water).
- Natural potassium sources like cucumber juice or
coconut water (if advised by doctor).
- Magnesium-rich foods like dates (if advised).
Important: These are only
temporary supportive steps under expert video guidance. Professional medical
treatment is always necessary.
Training for Students (Especially
Older Students)
- All students (especially from Class 8 onwards) should
receive regular first aid and emergency response training.
- Include practical sessions on:
- CPR
- Checking pulse and using pulse oximeter
- Basic wound care
- Helping elderly during emergency
- Fire safety and evacuation
- Make it part of school curriculum with practical
demonstrations and refreshers every year.
- Parents should also be invited for joint training
sessions.
How to Implement
- Government develops simple, standardised training
modules (in local languages + videos).
- Train teachers and appoint first aid instructors in
schools.
- Conduct regular drills (fire, medical emergency) in
schools and RWAs.
- Integrate with existing school health programs and
Swachh Bharat / health missions.
- Create awareness campaigns so every family knows
emergency numbers and basic steps.
Benefits for Students &
Families
- Saves lives through quick correct action.
- Reduces fear and confusion during emergencies.
- Builds responsible citizens who can help others.
- Supports overall healthy living (clean homes, good
food, sleep, exercise).
This training, combined with
clean surroundings, good nutrition, proper sleep, daily movement, and limited
screen time, creates a complete safety net for children and families.
A prepared family is a safer and
healthier family.
42. Why
Every School (Especially Rural), Classroom, Apartment, Gated Community, and
Village Home Should Have Medicinal & Aromatic Plants Like Lemongrass,
Lavender, Lemon Balm, Tulsi, etc.
It is very important that every
school (especially rural schools), classroom, apartment, gated community, and
village home grows simple medicinal and aromatic plants like Lemongrass,
Lavender, Lemon Balm, Tulsi (Holy Basil), Mint, and similar herbs in their
surroundings, courtyards, balconies, terraces, and common areas.
Many places suffer from
mosquitoes, insects, poor air quality, and frequent minor illnesses. These
easy-to-grow plants act as natural protectors — they repel insects, purify the
air, support immunity, reduce stress, and provide simple home remedies. In rural
areas with livestock or poultry, and in schools where children spend long
hours, these plants create a healthier micro-environment without expensive
chemicals.
Planting them widely is necessary
because they offer low-cost, sustainable support for children’s health, better
concentration, fewer infections, and overall well-being. When schools, homes,
and communities grow these plants together, they build stronger natural
immunity and cleaner living spaces for the next generation.
Schools, classrooms, apartments, gated communities, and
village homes — especially those with dairy cows or poultry — should actively
grow medicinal and aromatic plants such as lemongrass, lavender, lemon balm,
Tulsi (Holy Basil), and similar herbs in surroundings, courtyards, balconies,
terraces, and common areas.
These plants provide natural relief from insects, viruses,
parasites, and improve overall air quality and health.
Key Plants & Their Benefits
1. Lemongrass
Strong natural mosquito repellent (citronella-like aroma).
Antimicrobial and anti-inflammatory. Used as tea to support digestion and
immunity. Helps keep classrooms and play areas freer from mosquitoes.
2. Lavender
Calming aroma that reduces stress and anxiety. Natural
insect repellent. Supports better sleep and relaxation — very useful for
children in school settings.
3. Lemon Balm
Mild antiviral and antibacterial properties. Calming effect
on the nervous system. Helps with digestion and mild cold/flu relief. Pleasant
lemon scent that children usually like.
4. Tulsi (Holy Basil)
Powerful immunity booster and adaptogen (helps body handle
stress). Strong antimicrobial, antiviral, and anti-parasitic properties.
Purifies air and reduces airborne bacteria/viruses. Traditional use for
respiratory health, fever, and overall wellness.
5. Leaf of Life (Bryophyllum pinnatum / Kalanchoe pinnata)
Used traditionally for wound healing, minor burns, and skin
issues. Helps in respiratory problems and cough. Has anti-inflammatory
properties. Easy to grow and propagate from leaves.
6. Bhumi Amla (Phyllanthus niruri)
Excellent for liver and kidney health. Traditionally used
for jaundice, urinary stones, and viral infections. Strong antioxidant and
liver-protective properties. Supports natural detoxification.
7. Mint (Pudina)
Excellent for digestion, gas, and stomach discomfort.
Cooling effect, helps in headaches and mild fever. Natural insect repellent.
Freshens breath and improves appetite.
8. Oregano
Strong natural antimicrobial, antiviral, and antioxidant.
Traditionally used for respiratory infections, cough, and digestion. Helps
fight bacteria and supports immunity.
9. Rocket Leaf / Arugula (Eruca sativa)
Rich in vitamins, minerals, and antioxidants. Supports
detoxification and has anti-inflammatory properties. Good for overall nutrition
and gut health.
10. Thyme
Powerful antimicrobial and expectorant. Traditionally used
for cough, cold, and respiratory issues. Supports digestion and has strong
antioxidant properties.
11. Rosemary
Improves memory and concentration. Strong antioxidant and
anti-inflammatory. Traditionally used for circulation, hair health, and mild
pain relief. Pleasant aroma that improves mood.
Why This Is Essential (Especially in Rural & School
Settings)
Natural Pest & Insect Control: These plants release
compounds that repel mosquitoes, flies, and other insects naturally — reducing
bites, malaria/dengue risk, and discomfort in rural or open areas with
livestock/poultry.
Anti-Virus & Anti-Parasite Support: Tulsi, Oregano,
Lemongrass, Bhumi Amla, and Thyme have strong antimicrobial and antiviral
properties. They help create a cleaner micro-environment around children.
Better Air Quality: Plants filter air, release beneficial
compounds, and increase oxygen levels — improving concentration and reducing
respiratory irritation in classrooms.
Medicinal Access: Leaves can be used for simple home
remedies (Tulsi tea, mint for digestion, Leaf of Life for minor wounds, Bhumi
Amla for liver support) — promoting self-reliance and reducing unnecessary
medicine use.
Calming & Sensory Benefits: Lavender, Lemon Balm, and
Rosemary create a soothing atmosphere that supports focus, reduces anxiety, and
benefits children with sensory sensitivities.
Rural & Livestock Areas: Farms with cows/poultry have
higher insect activity. These plants around homes and schools provide natural
protection without chemical sprays.
Long-Term Community Health: Widespread planting builds
collective immunity, reduces disease occurrence, and creates greener, healthier
living spaces.
Practical Implementation Schools: Plant in playgrounds,
around buildings, and in pots inside classrooms (especially rural schools).
Children can learn to care for them as part of environmental education.
Apartments & Gated Communities: Mandate or incentivise
planting in common areas, balconies, and terraces.
Villages & Farmer Homes: Encourage planting around
houses, especially near livestock areas.
Maintenance: These plants are hardy, low-water, and easy to
grow. Community or school groups can maintain them.
Government Role: Promote through schemes, free saplings,
school curricula, awareness campaigns, and guidelines for green spaces.
Integrate with existing plantation drives for maximum impact.
This measure ensures children get natural relief from
insects, viruses, and parasites while breathing cleaner air and learning about
medicinal plants. It is a low-cost, sustainable way to support immunity, reduce
disease risk, and create healthier environments in schools, homes, and
communities.
Combining this with previous recommendations (Tridax &
Changeri for wounds, millet meals, natural oral hygiene, palm jaggery treats,
etc.) creates a complete natural support system for children’s health.
43. Why
Every School, Gated Community, Apartment, Municipal Park, Roadside, and
Religious Place Should Have Abundant Neem, Peepal (Pipal), and Eucalyptus Trees
— Government Promotion for Better Health & Environment
It is unfortunate that many
government and municipal bodies plant a variety of trees along roadsides and in
public spaces, but often fail to prioritise truly beneficial and sacred trees
like Neem, Peepal (Pipal), and Eucalyptus in large numbers. While some planted
species may cause pollen allergies or offer limited health and environmental
value, these three trees stand out for their exceptional oxygen production, air
purification, medicinal properties, and insect-repellent qualities.
The government should immediately
shift the narrative and planting policy. Existing municipal and roadside
planting programmes must focus on Neem, Peepal, and Eucalyptus (in areas where
water is abundant) so that in a few years, parks, colonies, roads, schools, and
communities are filled with these powerful trees. This simple step can
significantly improve public health, provide natural medicine, enhance oxygen
levels, and create greener, cleaner living spaces for everyone.
Trees are living medicines and
natural air purifiers. Government should actively promote and ensure the
planting and maintenance of Neem (Azadirachta indica), Peepal (Ficus religiosa
/ Pipal), and Eucalyptus in adequate numbers in every possible location —
schools, gated communities, apartments (common areas), municipal parks,
roadsides, and religious places. This creates healthier, greener, and more
resilient living spaces for children and communities.
Why These Specific Trees?
1. Neem Tree
- Powerful natural air purifier and antimicrobial.
- Leaves, bark, and seeds have strong medicinal
properties (antibacterial, antiviral, antifungal, anti-inflammatory).
- Used traditionally for skin problems, wounds, oral
health, immunity, and fever.
- Releases beneficial compounds that reduce airborne
bacteria and insects.
- Excellent for children: Supports respiratory health
and overall immunity.
Neem Trees (Azadirachta indica)
Are Excellent in Home Surroundings
The Neem tree, also known as
Indian Lilac or Margosa, is one of the most valuable trees for planting around
homes, apartments, colonies, and gardens. It is called a “miracle tree” or
“nature’s pharmacy” in traditional Indian knowledge because almost every part
(leaves, bark, seeds, flowers, fruit) offers benefits. Planting neem near homes
provides multiple practical, health, and environmental advantages.
1. Air Purification and Oxygen
Production
- Neem trees absorb harmful pollutants (including CO₂,
SO₂, and particulate matter) and release fresh oxygen.
- They improve overall air quality around the home,
making the surroundings fresher and healthier to breathe.
- This is especially useful in urban areas with traffic
and pollution.
2. Natural Insect and Mosquito
Repellent
- Neem leaves and oil have strong natural
insect-repellent properties.
- Planting neem helps reduce mosquitoes, flies, and
other pests around the house without using chemical sprays.
- This lowers the risk of mosquito-borne diseases
(dengue, malaria, chikungunya) and keeps the home environment more
comfortable.
3. Medicinal and Health Benefits
- Neem leaves can be used for skin problems, wounds,
hair care, and minor infections (traditional Ayurvedic uses).
- The tree has antibacterial, antifungal,
anti-inflammatory, and antioxidant properties.
- Having easy access to fresh neem leaves at home is
convenient for simple home remedies (e.g., neem water for skin or hair
rinse).
4. Cooling and Environmental
Benefits
- Neem provides good shade and has a cooling effect on
the surrounding air.
- It improves soil quality by adding nutrients and
preventing erosion.
- The tree is hardy, drought-resistant, and thrives in
various conditions with low maintenance.
5. Practical Home Uses
- Leaves can be placed in cupboards or grain storage to
repel insects naturally.
- Twigs are traditionally used as natural toothbrushes
(datun).
- Dried leaves can be burned as a natural mosquito
repellent (smudge).
Safety and Planting Tips
- Neem is safe and beneficial when planted in open
spaces around homes (balconies, terraces, gardens, or common areas in
apartments).
- It grows relatively fast and needs full sunlight.
- Avoid planting too close to building foundations if
space is limited, as roots can spread.
- Regular pruning helps maintain size and shape in home
gardens.
Neem is Ideal for Home
Surroundings
Neem trees act as natural air
purifiers, pest controllers, and medicine providers right at your doorstep.
They improve air quality, reduce mosquitoes, support traditional health
remedies, and create a cooler, greener environment with minimal care. Planting
neem around homes is one of the simplest and most effective ways to enhance
family health, comfort, and connection with nature
2. Peepal (Pipal) Tree
- Releases oxygen 24 hours a day (unlike most trees
that release CO₂ at night).
- Known for generating negative ions and calming energy — creates a
peaceful, spiritually uplifting atmosphere.
- Traditional medicine uses leaves, bark, and fruit for
respiratory issues, digestion, skin health, and blood purification.
- Cultural and environmental importance — shade
provider and biodiversity supporter.
- Benefits children: Better air quality, calmer
environment, and positive influence on mood and concentration.
Peepal Tree (Pipal Tree / Ficus
religiosa) — Ion Generation and Health Benefits
The Peepal tree (also called
Pipal or sacred fig) is one of the most revered trees in India and holds
special significance in Hinduism, Buddhism, and Jainism. Scientifically, it has
notable environmental and health-related properties, including its ability to
release oxygen and influence air quality through ions.
The Peepal tree is associated
with negative ions (also called “air vitamins”). Negative ions are oxygen
molecules with an extra electron. They are naturally abundant near waterfalls,
forests, oceans, and certain plants.
- Plants like Peepal, through photosynthesis and
transpiration, help generate or increase concentrations of negative ions
in the surrounding air.
- Negative ions attach to dust, pollutants, allergens,
and microbes, making them heavier so they fall to the ground, thus
purifying the air.
- Unlike positive ions (which can make people feel
lethargic or stressed), negative ions are linked to improved mood, better
oxygen utilisation, and overall well-being.
Peepal is also special because it
releases oxygen 24 hours a day (including at night) due to its Crassulacean
Acid Metabolism (CAM) photosynthesis. This makes it one of the best
oxygen-producing trees, contributing to a fresher, more negatively ionised environment
around it.
Health Benefits of Peepal Tree
and Its Environment
- Improved Air Quality and Respiratory Health
The tree absorbs
carbon dioxide and pollutants while releasing oxygen and negative ions.
Spending time near a Peepal tree (or planting one) can reduce airborne
particles, allergens, and harmful gases, benefiting people with asthma,
allergies, or respiratory issues.
- Mood, Stress, and Mental Well-being
Negative ions
are known to increase serotonin levels, reduce anxiety and depression symptoms,
improve focus, and promote calmness. Traditional beliefs that sitting or
circumambulating (Parikrama) under a Peepal tree brings peace align with these
scientific observations.
- Better Sleep and Energy
Negative ions
and higher oxygen levels can support better sleep quality and daytime
alertness. The tree’s cooling effect also helps in hot climates.
- Medicinal Properties (Ayurveda)
Different parts
of the Peepal tree (leaves, bark, fruit, latex) have been used traditionally
for:
- Respiratory issues (asthma, cough).
- Skin problems, wounds, and inflammation.
- Digestive issues and diabetes.
- Antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, and antimicrobial
effects (supported by modern studies showing flavonoids, tannins, etc.).
- Overall Environmental Benefits
- Cools the surrounding air.
- Enriches soil and prevents erosion.
- Supports biodiversity (birds, insects).
Practical Advice
- Planting Peepal trees in schools, apartments, parks,
and public places is highly beneficial for community health.
- Spending 10–20 minutes daily near a healthy Peepal
tree (morning or evening) can be a simple wellness practice.
- Avoid cutting or harming Peepal trees — they are
ecologically valuable and culturally sacred.
The Peepal tree primarily
supports negative ion generation and high oxygen production, both of which are
beneficial for health. Negative ions help purify air, improve mood, reduce
stress, and support respiratory function, while continuous oxygen release makes
the environment around the tree fresher and healthier.
This aligns with traditional
reverence for the tree and modern science on the benefits of negative ions and
clean air. Planting and protecting Peepal trees is one of the simplest ways to
improve local air quality and public health.
3. Eucalyptus Tree
- Strong medicinal value for respiratory health (leaves
used in steam inhalation for colds, cough, congestion).
- Natural decongestant and antimicrobial.
- Improves air quality in the area.
- Caution: Plant in suitable locations; some people may
be sensitive to the strong aroma.
Eucalyptus Trees Are Good (and
Important Considerations) in Home Surroundings in Public parks
Eucalyptus trees (various
species) are fast-growing and offer several practical benefits when planted
thoughtfully around homes, gardens, or colonies. They are widely used in many
parts of the world for their utility, but they also have some drawbacks that
need careful management.
Main Benefits of Eucalyptus Trees
Near Homes
- Air Purification and Oxygen Production
Eucalyptus trees
are excellent at absorbing pollutants and releasing oxygen. They help improve
local air quality, which is useful in urban or polluted areas.
- Natural Insect and Mosquito Repellent
The strong aroma
from leaves and oil acts as a natural repellent for mosquitoes, flies, and
other pests. This can reduce the need for chemical sprays around the home and
lower the risk of mosquito-borne diseases.
- Medicinal and Aromatic Uses
Eucalyptus
leaves and oil are traditionally used for respiratory relief (coughs, colds,
congestion), as an antimicrobial, and for minor pain relief. Having access to
fresh leaves at home is convenient for simple remedies like steam inhalation or
herbal teas (under guidance).
- Fast Growth and Shade
They grow
quickly and can provide shade, windbreaks, or screening in larger home
compounds. Some species are drought-tolerant once established.
- Soil and Environmental Benefits
In suitable
locations, they can help stabilise soil and act as a bio-drainage plant in
waterlogged areas.
Important Considerations and
Potential Drawbacks
- High Water Consumption: Eucalyptus trees use a lot of
water. In water-scarce areas, they can lower groundwater levels if planted
in large numbers.
- Invasive Roots: Some species have aggressive roots
that can damage foundations, pipes, or nearby plants.
- Allelopathic Effects: They release chemicals that can
inhibit growth of other plants nearby.
- Fire Risk: Dry leaves and oil content make them more
flammable in certain climates.
- Not Ideal for Small Gardens: Best suited for larger
spaces or boundary planting rather than very close to buildings.
Best Practices for Planting
Eucalyptus Near Homes
- Choose suitable species (consult local experts).
- Plant at a safe distance from buildings (at least
8–10 metres or more depending on species).
- Use in larger compounds, along boundaries, or in
community green areas.
- Regular pruning helps control size and reduce litter.
- Combine with other beneficial trees (like neem or
peepal) for balanced biodiversity.
Eucalyptus trees are good inhome
surroundings mainly for air purification, natural pest control, medicinal
value, and fast growth. They are particularly useful in areas needing mosquito
reduction or respiratory support. However, they require proper spacing and site
selection due to high water use and root behaviour.
Super Benefits for Children and
People Living in the Area
- Fresh, Cleaner Air: Neem and Peepal purify air;
Eucalyptus supports respiratory comfort. Children spend long hours in
schools and play areas — better air means less respiratory issues,
allergies, and improved concentration.
- Medicinal Access: Easy availability of leaves for
home remedies (e.g., neem for skin/wounds, eucalyptus for steam, peepal
for traditional uses) reduces reliance on chemical medicines for minor
issues.
- Positive Environment: Peepal’s oxygen and positive
ions create a calming space that supports mental well-being, reduces
stress, and improves vagus nerve tone indirectly through better air and
nature connection.
- Immunity & Disease Prevention: Regular exposure
to these trees’ compounds supports stronger natural immunity, reducing
occurrence of common colds, skin infections, and respiratory problems.
- Biodiversity & Cooling: These trees provide
shade, reduce heat in urban areas, and support birds/insects — creating
healthier micro-climates.
- Educational Value: Children learn about nature,
medicinal plants, and environmental care from a young age.
Government & Community Role
- Schools: Plant in playgrounds and compounds —
children get daily benefits during play and classes.
- Gated Communities & Apartments: Mandate or
incentivise planting in common areas, terraces, and balconies.
- Municipal Parks & Roadsides: Prioritise these
trees in large numbers instead of ornamental or less useful plants. They
are low-maintenance, long-living, and highly beneficial.
- Religious Places: Promote planting around temples,
mosques, churches, gurudwaras — cultural and spiritual synergy.
- Policy Actions: Free saplings, awareness campaigns,
maintenance guidelines, and integration into green city plans.
This ensures every child and
resident has easy access to these healing trees, creating greener, healthier,
and more self-reliant communities over time.
Additional Recommended Plants for
Municipal Parks & Common Areas
Municipal parks should also
include other beneficial plants such as:
- Tulsi (Holy Basil) — immunity and stress relief.
- Aloe Vera — first-aid for minor burns/cuts.
- Curry Leaf, Moringa, and Lemon Grass — nutrition and
medicinal use.
- Fruit trees (guava, papaya, drumstick) — fresh,
nutritious produce.
Long-Term Impact: Over years,
every household, apartment, school, and village will have access to these
valuable trees and plants. This builds collective immunity, reduces disease
occurrence, lowers healthcare costs, improves mental well-being, and creates a
culture of natural living and environmental care.
Promoting abundant planting of
Neem, Peepal, and Eucalyptus (plus other medicinal plants) in all possible
public and community spaces is a low-cost, high-impact public health and
environmental measure. It gives children and families natural tools for better
health, fresher air, and a stronger connection with nature.
44. Why
Government Should Ensure Every Municipality Plants Fruit Trees (Guava, Mango,
Lemon, Gooseberry, Palm & Local Seasonal Varieties) on All Government
Lands, Parks, Roads & Highways, Religious places
It is unfortunate that for the
last 79 years of independence of India, successive governments have largely
failed to plant abundant fruit trees on government lands near habitations, in
municipal parks, roadsides, highways, and other open public spaces. While
decorative or timber trees have been planted in some places, the focus on truly
useful fruit trees that directly benefit people has been missing. This missed
opportunity has deprived millions of citizens — especially children and
low-income families — of free, fresh, nutritious fruits and better local food
security
Fruit trees are a simple,
long-term solution for public health, nutrition, employment, and food security.
The government should make it mandatory for every municipal body, city
corporation, panchayat, and relevant department to plant suitable fruit trees
on all government lands, parks, roadsides, highways, and open spaces.
Recommended Trees
- Guava — fast-growing, high yield, rich in Vitamin C
and fibre.
- Mango — popular, nutritious, and culturally
important.
- Lemon — excellent source of Vitamin C and easy to
grow.
- Gooseberry (Amla) — extremely rich in Vitamin C,
antioxidants, and immunity-boosting properties.
- Avocado —
nutrient-dense fruit rich in healthy fats, fibre, Vitamin E, potassium,
and antioxidants that support brain development, steady energy, digestion,
and immunity in children.
- Palm trees (suitable local varieties) — for ice apple
(tender palm fruit) and palm sap (for making healthy palm jaggery).
- Other low-maintenance, pest-resistant,
climate-suitable seasonal fruit trees that grow well in the local area.
Selection Criteria: Prioritise
trees that are:
- Less prone to pests and diseases.
- Require low maintenance and water.
- Suitable for the local climate and soil.
Where to Plant
- Every municipal park and public garden.
- Both sides of roads and highways (with proper spacing
for safety and visibility).
- All government lands, open spaces, and community
areas in cities and villages.
Maintenance & Care
- RWAs and municipal bodies must maintain the trees
using natural Jeevamrutha fertilisers and natural neem-based pest control
whenever required.
- This keeps trees healthy, chemical-free, and
eco-friendly.
Access & Usage Rules
- All fruits are free for limited personal use. Anyone
can pluck and eat fruits for their own consumption or family needs.
- Palm trees can be assigned to selected trained local
people for harvesting ice apples or collecting sap for palm jaggery
(requires skill and training).
- No trading or commercial plucking of fruits from
government-planted trees. Fruits are for public benefit, not profit.
- AI CCTV monitoring on key locations to prevent mass
plucking for trading while ensuring no one is denied reasonable personal
access.
- This ensures every citizen gets some fresh fruit in
every season without market dependence.
Major Benefits
1. Health & Nutrition for
Every Citizen
- Free access to fresh guava, mango, lemon, gooseberry,
ice apple, and other seasonal fruits.
- Guava leaves can also be used (as discussed earlier
for health benefits).
- Daily fruit availability helps meet Vitamin C, fibre,
antioxidants, and other essential nutrients.
- Supports immunity, digestion, and overall health —
especially useful when combined with daily leafy greens, millets, and
balanced school meals.
2. Food Security & Reduced
Hunger
- No one should go without some fruit every day.
- Provides a natural safety net, especially for
lower-income families.
- Reduces dependence on buying expensive fruits from
the market.
3. Economic & Employment
Generation
- Local people can harvest for personal use or limited
community sharing.
- Palm sap collection creates local employment in
processing healthy palm jaggery (a better alternative to cane sugar).
- Reduces the economic burden on families for buying
fruits and sugar.
4. Environmental Benefits
- Improves air quality, provides shade, and supports
biodiversity.
- Low-maintenance trees are sustainable and
eco-friendly.
- Helps in soil conservation and reduces urban heat.
5. Replaces Unhealthy Options
- Promotes use of local palm jaggery instead of refined
cane sugar.
- Encourages natural, chemical-free fruits instead of
market-bought produce that may have pesticides.
Implementation by Government
- Make it mandatory for all municipalities,
corporations, and panchayats to develop annual planting plans.
- Provide quality saplings, technical guidance, and
initial maintenance support using natural methods.
- Involve local communities, RWAs, schools, and
self-help groups in planting and care.
- Protect trees with proper fencing and community
responsibility.
- Regular monitoring and reporting on survival rate and
fruit yield.
- Integrate with existing schemes like MGNREGA (for
employment in planting/maintenance) and green initiatives.
This initiative turns public
spaces into productive food sources. Over time, every citizen — rich or poor —
gets easy access to fresh, nutritious fruits. It reduces market dependence,
creates local employment, improves health, and promotes sustainable living.
A simple policy of planting the
right fruit trees in the right places can deliver multiple benefits: better
nutrition, employment, environmental improvement, and reduced hunger. Make India
true Land of
Annapurna
45. Real
Green Revolution: National Tree Planting Scheme for Fresh Air, Fresh Fruits
& Lasting Legacy
It is time for India to launch a
bold, people-centric “Real Green Revolution” by massively planting beneficial
trees — especially Neem, Peepal (Pipal), and fruit trees such as Guava,
Avocado, Lemon, Mango, Jackfruit, Amla (Gooseberry), and other climate-suitable
local varieties. The core idea is simple yet powerful: Use government funds,
CSR contributions, and citizen participation to plant millions of these
high-value trees every year on government lands, municipal parks, roadsides,
religious places, and habitations. This will reduce the burden on the
government for healthcare and nutrition while delivering real, long-term
benefits to every citizen.Key Objectives of the Scheme
- Provide free access to fresh fruits and medicinal
trees for every citizen.
- Improve air quality and create a greener India.
- Generate local employment through planting and
maintenance.
- Create a lasting legacy for every child and family.
- Reduce long-term government expenditure on health and
nutrition programmes.
1. Government Funding &
Mandatory Planting
- Every year, a fixed percentage of funds from MP/MLA
Local Area Development Funds, municipal budgets, and other government
schemes must be mandatorily used for planting Neem, Peepal, and fruit
trees.
- CSR Funds: Companies contributing to tree planting
and maintenance under this scheme should get full tax benefits. This will
encourage large-scale private participation.
- Government will directly undertake planting on all
its lands, parks, roadsides, and public spaces.
2. Innovative “Tree for Every
Newborn” Scheme (Most Important Component)
On the occasion of every child’s
birth, the family should plant a certain number of trees according to their
income group. This creates a beautiful personal legacy:
|
Income Group |
Number of Trees to Plant |
Approx. Cost (₹100 planting
+ ₹100 maintenance) |
|
Low Income |
100 trees |
₹20,000 |
|
Middle Income |
1,000 trees |
₹2,00,000 |
|
Higher Income |
10,000 trees |
₹20,00,000 |
|
Rich |
1 Lakh trees |
₹2 Crore |
|
Ultra Rich |
1–10 Lakh trees |
₹2–20 Crore |
- These trees will be planted in the child’s village,
ward, or nearby government land.
- By the time the child grows up, they will have their
own “personal forest” contributing to fresh air and fruits in their area.
- Government will create a simple mobile app for easy
payment, location selection, and tracking of planted trees.
3.
Tree Planting on Marriage Occasions
4.
The scheme should also be extended to marriages
with minimum tree planting targets:
- Low income families: Minimum 200 trees
- Middle income: 1,000 trees
- Higher income: 10,000 trees
- Rich & Ultra rich: 1 to 10 Lakh+ trees
Guests can gift trees instead of
(or along with) traditional gifts. This turns every marriage into a green
celebration and creates a lasting legacy for the couple.4. Modifications to
Existing Government Initiatives
- The existing “Maa ke Naam Ek Ped” initiative can be
upgraded and expanded under this larger scheme.
- People should be allowed to donate trees and
maintenance amount in the name of their father, mother, or ancestors.
- Unclaimed pension accounts, dormant bank accounts,
and other unutilised government funds can be utilised for this noble cause
(with proper safeguards).
5. Responsibility of Elected
Representatives
Every elected representative and
election contestant must plant at least as many trees as the population of
their constituency/electorate. This will ensure massive green cover across the
country.
Expected Benefits (Real Magic in
3–5 Years)
- Significant improvement in air quality and oxygen
levels.
- Free availability of fresh fruits (guava, mango,
lemon, avocado, jackfruit, etc.) for common people.
- Better health and immunity, especially for children.
- Local employment in planting, watering, and
maintenance.
- Creation of a true green nation with fresh air and
fresh fruits.
- Strong sense of ownership and legacy among citizens.
Implementation Roadmap
- Launch a dedicated national app for tree adoption,
payment, and tracking.
- Identify suitable government and public lands for
planting.
- Provide quality saplings and training for maintenance
using natural methods.
- Strict monitoring with geo-tagging and periodic
survival audits.
- Combine with existing schemes like MGNREGA for
employment generation.
This scheme is practical,
scalable, and deeply meaningful. It transforms tree planting from a government
programme into a people’s movement where every citizen — from a newborn to a
newly married couple — contributes to and benefits from a greener India.
If implemented sincerely, within
3 to 5 years people will visibly see the difference in air quality, fruit
availability, and overall environmental health. This is not just planting trees
— this is planting the future of India.
46. Why
the Government Should Mandate and Encourage Kitchen Gardening (Terrace &
Pot Gardening) in Every Home, Apartment, Gated Community, and Colony
The Government should make
kitchen gardening mandatory by default in every home, apartment, gated
community, and common areas of colonies. It should also promote it in municipal
parks and office/shopping complex terraces. This is one of the simplest, low-cost,
and highly effective ways to improve nutrition, reduce temperature, create
employment, and build self-reliance.
What Should Be Grown (Easy &
Useful Plants)
Focus on leafy greens and some
easy vegetables that need less maintenance and can be grown in pots or
terraces:
- Leafy Greens: Methi (fenugreek), mint, curry leaves,
coriander, kenaf/red sorrel, amaranth (multiple varieties), spinach, and
many local edible leafy greens.
- Vegetables: Bhindi (okra), brinjal (eggplant),
tomato, and other suitable local vegetables that grow well in pots.
These plants are hardy, grow
quickly, and provide fresh, nutritious food daily.
Major Benefits of Kitchen
Gardening
- Fresh, Nutritious Food Daily
Families get
fresh leafy greens and vegetables every day. Even during financial stress,
children will have some nutritious food available at home.
- Natural Cooling Effect
Terrace and pot
gardening significantly reduce indoor temperature during summers and sunny
days. This lowers electricity bills (less AC/fan usage) and makes homes cooler
and more comfortable.
- Better Health & Immunity
Fresh greens are
rich in vitamins, minerals, iron, and antioxidants. Regular consumption
improves health, immunity, digestion, and blood quality — especially beneficial
for children and students.
- Self-Reliance & Food Security
Even small-scale
gardening ensures some food is always available. It reduces dependence on
market vegetables and builds confidence in families.
- Employment Generation
Every apartment
association or group of small apartments can employ local gardeners for
maintenance. This creates additional jobs in every colony.
- Environmental Benefits
More plants mean
better air quality, more oxygen, and reduced heat in urban areas.
Practical Implementation by
Government
- Provide Starter Kits: Give 10 to 20 big pots with
good soil and saplings of leafy greens to every apartment
association/gated community. Every household should be encouraged to have
at least 10–20 pots.
- Mandatory in New Constructions: Make kitchen/terrace
gardening compulsory in building approvals for apartments and gated
communities.
- Promotion in Offices & Shopping Complexes:
Encourage leafy green terrace gardening in government and private office
buildings and shopping malls. Provide free or subsidized fresh greens to
employees, especially low-income staff.
- Training & Support: Offer free training, simple
guides, and regular sapling supply through local agriculture departments.
- Common Areas: Plant in colony common spaces and
municipal parks for community benefit.
Growing a few pots of leafy
greens and vegetables at home is one of the best gifts you can give your
children. It provides fresh, free nutrition, cools your home, and teaches
children the value of self-reliance and hard work.
Children help your parents in
watering and caring for the plants. Eating fresh greens from your own terrace
garden is healthier and tastier than market vegetables. Small gardening habits
today will make you healthier and more responsible citizens tomorrow.”
This measure is an excellent,
practical, and sustainable step towards better nutrition, cooler homes,
employment generation, and self-reliance for every family in India. When
combined with school mid-day meals, Provision Debit Card system, and healthy eating
habits, it will create a strong and healthy next generation.
Group 9: Celebration, Gifting & Social Culture Changes
47. Why
People Should Change Celebration Habits (Birthdays, Anniversaries, Functions)
to Healthier Foods — Government & Community Advocacy Needed
It is common in many homes across
religions and communities to celebrate birthdays or any function with heavy,
sugar-laden and processed dishes. Typical items include semiya (vermicelli)
payasam, rice payasam, kesari, cakes, samosas, deep fries, colas, burgers,
pizzas, momos, donuts, pastas, chicken fries, and similar items, followed by
rich non-veg meals.
While these bring tradition and
joy, the quantities used in large celebrations often lead to excessive intake
of empty carbohydrates, added sugars, unhealthy fats, and processed foods. This
pattern, repeated multiple times a month, contributes significantly to
lifestyle health issues
Typical Celebration Food Pattern
& Quantities (Verification)
For semiya/vermicelli payasam:
- Standard small recipes use 100–200 g vermicelli with
~1 litre milk and 100–200 g sugar.
- In family or community celebrations, when scaling to
1 kg vermicelli, people often use hundreds of grams of sugar (commonly
400–500 g or more) and several litres of commercial milk (2 litres or more
in many reported practices).
This creates a
very high load of refined carbs and added sugar in one dish.
Similar excess happens in:
- Kesari: Suji with large amounts of sugar and
ghee/oil.
- Lunch/Dinner: Chicken, mutton, fish, eggs, or biryani
with excess oil, masala, and deep-fried accompaniments.
- Evening Snacks: Cakes, chocolates, ice creams, colas,
pizza, burgers, or pastries.
- Youth/Student Parties: Often centre around pizza,
burgers, colas, and ice creams.
Monthly Impact: With 4 birthdays
or functions per family per month, this leads to repeated overload of empty
carbs, excess sugar, unhealthy fats, and processed foods.
Health Consequences of These
Habits
- Insulin Resistance & Blood Sugar Issues: Constant
spikes from sugar + refined carbs.
- Fatty Liver & Gallbladder Problems: Excess fats
and sugars strain these organs.
- Obesity & Weight Gain: Easy calorie surplus.
- Pancreatic & Kidney Stress: From high sugar,
fats, and processed items.
- Inflammation & Low Energy: Especially harmful for
children’s focus, growth, and immunity.
- Overall: Contributes to rising lifestyle diseases
even in younger age groups.
Suggested Healthier Celebration
Alternatives
Celebrations can remain joyful
and tasty while becoming much healthier:
- Morning Sweets/Payasam: Use millet-based payasam
(foxtail, little, or kodo millet) with plant-based milk (sesame seed milk,
almond milk, or coconut milk), dates or palm jaggery instead of excess
cane sugar.
- Kesari: Make with millets or oats + minimal palm
jaggery + wood-pressed oil.
- Main Meals: Vegetable-rich millet dishes, sambar with
plenty of grated carrot-beetroot-tomato-radish, sprouts, or boiled
legumes. Add roasted chana/groundnut/sesame powder for taste.
- Snacks/Evening: Fresh fruit platters, roasted
nut-seed mixes, homemade millet laddoos with palm jaggery, or small
healthy millet snacks.
- For Youth/Students: Millet-based pizzas or vegetable
burgers, fruit smoothies, or nut mixes instead of fried/processed items.
Simple, Tasty Touches: Drizzle
wood-pressed oil on boiled vegetables + sprinkle roasted seed/chana powder
(with cumin and mild chilli) for flavour children and adults love.
Government & Community
Advocacy Needed
- Public Campaigns: Promote “Healthy Celebrations =
Happy & Energetic Families” through schools, media, and health
departments.
- Recipe Sharing: Distribute easy, tasty plant-based
celebration recipes using millets, nuts, seeds, fruits, and natural
sweeteners.
- School & Hostel Guidelines: Encourage healthy
menus for birthdays and events.
- Incentives & Recognition: Celebrate communities
or families adopting healthier practices.
- Education on Risks: Highlight the problems of excess
sugar, refined carbs, and adulterated/processed foods in celebrations.
Changing celebration food habits
does not remove joy — it upgrades the food quality so families can celebrate
with better energy, digestion, immunity, and long-term health. Small shifts
(millet payasam instead of semiya with excess sugar, more vegetables and nuts,
lighter meals) can prevent many lifestyle issues while keeping traditions
alive.
This is a practical,
compassionate message that can benefit millions of children and families.
Healthy celebrations are possible and delicious!
48. Why
Governments and Schools Should Promote Palm Jaggery Sweets with Seeds & Nuts (Non GE/ GM ) & Fresh Fruits (Instead of Cakes, Colas,
Chips & Bakery Items) for Birthday & Celebration Distributions
Frequent celebrations in schools
and homes (birthdays, “other child” events, relatives’ birthdays, weddings,
etc.) often involve cakes, chocolates, colas, ice cremes, biscuits, chips, pizzas
burgers, and other ultra-processed
bakery items. Or some sweets made of
milk, all-purpose flour, deep fries, excess sugar or high fructose corn syrup
etc,
While these create fun and
excitement, they contribute to excess empty calories, sugar, refined carbs,
unhealthy fats, and caffeine — leading to long-term health challenges in
children.
Shifting to palm jaggery-based
sweets with nuts (peanuts, almonds, cashew, pistachio) and fresh fruits, or
millet-based snacks (idli, dosa, upma), any millet based bakery products home made
must be through powders made of spouted dried millets (instead of dry millets
from farm which contain anti nutrients-
phytates, which will cause digestion issues, effect abortion of nutrients from other foods like iron zinc
magnesium etc.) is a healthier,
practical alternative that supports better nutrition, digestion, and habits.
Problems with Current Celebration
Foods
- Cakes & Bakery Items: A typical 1 kg cake often
uses 500g all-purpose (refined) flour, 500g+ sugar, and 10–12+ eggs. This
is mostly empty carbohydrates with minimal fibre, vitamins, or minerals.
Frequent intake adds refined flour, excess sugar, and fats.
- Colas & Packed Juices: A 300 ml cola contains
roughly 30–35g sugar (sometimes higher depending on brand). Many packed
“fruit” juices use high-fructose corn syrup (HFCS) or added sugar. Daily
or frequent consumption quickly exceeds healthy sugar limits.
- Chips & Deep-Fried Items: High in unhealthy fats
and salt; low in nutrients.
- Chocolates & Ice Creams: Often contain added
caffeine, excess sugar, and fats.
- Pizza & Burgers: Made with refined flour bases,
processed meats, excess cheese, unhealthy fats, and additives; very low in
fibre and real nutrients, leading to blood sugar spikes and heavy
digestion.
- Cumulative Effect in Children: School classes may
have multiple birthdays per week/month. Add home celebrations, relatives,
and events — children can consume excess empty carbs, sugars, fats, and
caffeine several times a week. This leads to:
- Blood sugar spikes/crashes → irritability, poor
focus, fatigue.
- Excess calorie intake → weight gain risk.
- Nutrient displacement (less room for vegetables,
millets, fruits).
- High refined carb/sugar load increases demand for
thiamine (Vitamin B1), which is used up in carbohydrate metabolism. Low
thiamine can contribute to reduced vagus nerve function, poorer digestion
(less bile, weaker gut motility), bloating, gut issues, and even effects
on mood/anxiety.
Benefits of Palm Jaggery Sweets
with Nuts & Fresh Fruits (or Millet-Based Items)
Palm jaggery (made from palm sap)
is a traditional, minimally processed sweetener that is far superior to refined
sugar:
- Rich in Minerals: Good source of iron (helps prevent
anaemia), magnesium, potassium, and calcium — supporting energy, bones,
and overall growth.
- Lower Glycemic Impact: Gentler on blood sugar than
white sugar or HFCS.
- Digestive Support: Traditionally used to aid
digestion; pairs well with nuts and fruits for better gut comfort.
- Antioxidants: Contains natural compounds that support
health.
- With Nuts (Peanuts, Almonds, Cashew, Pistachio al non
GE/ GM seeds & nuts only): Adds healthy fats, plant protein, vitamin
E, and more minerals — making it a balanced, satisfying treat instead of
empty calories.
- Fresh Fruits: Provide fibre, vitamins (especially C),
water, and natural sweetness — supporting digestion, immunity, and
hydration.
- Millet-Based Alternatives (idli, dosa, upma, or
millet java): Gluten-free, fibre-rich, nutrient-dense, and supportive of
steady energy and gut health. These align perfectly with Siridhanya millet
promotion.
Combined Effect: These options
deliver nutrition along with sweetness, reduce empty calorie load, support
better digestion, and help maintain thiamine status and vagus nerve function.
They create positive associations with healthier foods during celebrations.
Why Government Intervention &
School Policies Matter
- Habit Formation: Children learn eating patterns
early. Frequent exposure to ultra-processed sweets normalizes them.
Promoting palm jaggery + nuts/fruits/millets in schools builds lifelong
healthier preferences.
- Public Health Impact: Reducing excess sugar, refined
carbs, and processed fats across frequent celebrations can help lower
risks of obesity, dental issues, energy/mood fluctuations, and digestive
problems in the next generation.
- Equity & Accessibility: Palm jaggery, nuts,
fruits, and millets are locally available, affordable in many regions, and
culturally familiar.
- Practical School Implementation:
- Guidelines: Allow or encourage only “celebration
packs” made with palm jaggery + nuts/fruits or millet-based items.
- Distribution: Small portions as treats after main
meals.
- Education: Teach children and parents why these
choices are better.
- Incentives: Support local producers of palm jaggery
and millet snacks.
Suggested Shift:
- Instead of: Cake + cola + chips + chocolate.
- Promote: Palm jaggery laddoos/balls with nuts + fresh
fruit pieces + millet idli/dosa/upma or java.
This does not remove the joy of
celebrations — it upgrades the quality of the treats while supporting better
digestion, stable energy, nutrient intake, and reduced risk of the problems
linked to frequent ultra-processed foods.
Small policy changes in schools
(and awareness at home) can create a big positive shift in children’s health
habits without banning fun entirely.
49. Gifting
Culture (Nuts, Seeds, Palm Jaggery Sweets & Fresh Fruits) Shifting from
Sweets, Cakes & Plastic to Healthier, Meaningful Gifts
The gifting culture around
birthdays, anniversaries, functions, and festivals (Holi, Diwali, Christmas,
Ramadan, Eid, etc.) should evolve to giving small, thoughtful packs of nuts and
seeds according to the giver’s income and spending capacity — whether chickpea,
peanuts, almonds, cashews, walnuts, pumpkin seeds, chia seeds, raisins, or
dates. These can be provided as raw or lightly roasted, neatly packed gifts so
the entire family can use them throughout the year as healthy snacks or
additions to meals. Palm jaggery-made sweets mixed with nuts can also be
included as a balanced sweet treat. Giving fresh fruits (banana, guava, papaya,
or any seasonal fruits) as gifts alongside or instead is equally valuable.
Why the Gifting Culture Must
Change
It is unfortunate that most
celebrations still revolve around giving sweets, cakes, chocolates, colas, or
plastic gifts. These items contribute to excess sugar, unhealthy fats, empty
carbohydrates, and waste. The real motto of gifting during festivals or
birthdays should be wishing health and happiness, not unhealthiness. Giving
excess sweets or processed foods unknowingly harms the receiver’s health,
especially children. Plastic gifts add to environmental waste and have little
long-term value.
A shift to nutrient-dense gifts
(nuts, seeds, dry fruits, palm jaggery sweets in limited quantity, or fresh
fruits) is the real celebration. These provide sustained energy, better
nutrition, and genuine well-being instead of sugar spikes and empty calories.
This does not remove the joy of
celebrations — it upgrades the quality of the treats and gifts while supporting
better digestion, stable energy, nutrient intake, and reduced risk of the
problems linked to frequent ultra-processed foods and plastic waste.
Small policy changes in schools
(guidelines for celebrations, awareness campaigns, or incentives for healthier
gift options) along with community encouragement can make a big positive shift
in children’s health habits without removing the fun of birthdays, festivals,
and events.
This new gifting culture promotes
real celebration — wishing health, happiness, and well-being through
nutrient-dense foods instead of empty calories and waste. It is the order of
the day and a norm worth adopting for a healthier India
The gifting culture around
birthdays and celebrations should evolve to giving small packs of nuts and
seeds according to the giver’s income and spending capacity — whether chickpea,
peanuts, almonds, cashews, walnuts, pumpkin seeds, chia seeds, raisins, or
dates.
These can be provided as raw or
lightly roasted, neatly packed gifts so the entire family can use them
throughout the year as healthy snacks or additions to meals. Palm jaggery-made
sweets mixed with nuts can also be included as a balanced sweet treat.
Giving fresh fruits (banana,
guava, kiwi, or any seasonal fruits) as gifts alongside or instead is equally
valuable — attendees can eat them at the party or take them home.
Youngsters often celebrate
parties in hotels or restaurants with expensive meals and processed foods.
Instead, they can celebrate meaningfully by gifting seeds, nuts, dry fruits,
and dates to their friends. They can have a good celebration at one home, or
even in restaurants/coffee shops, but spend minimally on the venue and food
while spending more on good-quality nuts, seeds, dry fruits, and dates as gifts
among friends on birthdays or any celebration.
If any household receives excess
nuts or fruits, they can donate the surplus to the poor, distribute to
maids/servants, workers, neighbours, or employees — turning celebrations into
acts of sharing and community support.
This new culture will help
millions of young children and families become free from excess sugars, empty
carbohydrates, caffeine, unhealthy fats, and commercial ultra-processed items
like cakes, biscuits, ice creams, and colas that are commonly distributed in
schools and homes. It promotes nutrient-dense, satisfying foods over empty
calories, supports steady energy and better digestion for the whole family,
reduces obesity, anxiety, depression, stress, insulin resistance, prediabetes
risk, and related issues, and instils values of generosity and mindful
consumption from a young age.
Why Government & Schools
Should Encourage This Shift
- Builds healthy habits from a young age.
- Reduces overall sugar, refined carb, and processed
food intake across many celebrations.
- Supports public health goals (millet promotion,
reduced childhood obesity, better nutrition).
- Affordable and culturally suitable in many regions.
- Can be combined with millet java or grated vegetables
in mid-day meals for consistent benefits.
Suggested Shift:
- Instead of: Cake + cola + chips + chocolate + heavy
biryani meals or expensive hotel parties.
- Promote: Palm jaggery laddoos/balls with nuts + fresh
fruit pieces + millet idli/dosa/upma or java, with meaningful nut/seed
gift packs.
This does not remove the joy of
celebrations — it upgrades the quality of the treats and gifts while supporting
better digestion, stable energy, nutrient intake, and reduced risk of the
problems linked to frequent ultra-processed foods.
Small policy changes in schools
(guidelines for celebrations, awareness campaigns, or incentives for healthier
gift options) along with community encouragement can make a big positive shift
in children’s health habits without removing the fun of birthdays and events.
50. Why
Governments Should Promote Gifting Live Herbal Plants (Tulsi, Rosemary,
Oregano, Leaf of Life, etc.) for Birthday Celebrations Instead of Plastic Gifts
Birthday celebrations are joyful
occasions, but many gifts today involve plastic toys, synthetic items, or
packaged goods that add to waste and offer little long-term value.
A simple yet powerful cultural
shift — gifting live herbal plants such as Tulsi (Holy Basil), Rosemary,
Oregano, Leaf of Life (Bryophyllum), or similar easy-to-grow medicinal plants —
can create lasting health, environmental, and educational benefits for children
and families.
Why This Cultural Shift Is Needed
- Plastic gifts contribute to environmental waste and
microplastic pollution.
- They provide short-term entertainment but miss
opportunities for learning, responsibility, and real health support.
- In contrast, a live plant is a gift that keeps giving
— it grows, purifies air, and becomes a source of natural remedies and
fresh herbs for the family.
Government Promotion (through
schools, community programmes, and awareness campaigns) can normalise this
habit, making herbal plant gifting the preferred choice for birthdays, return
gifts, and school events.
Key Herbal Plants to Gift &
Their Benefits
- Tulsi (Holy Basil): Powerful immunity booster,
adaptogen (helps the body handle stress), antimicrobial, and respiratory
support. Leaves can be used in tea for colds, coughs, or daily wellness.
Purifies indoor air.
- Rosemary: Supports memory, concentration, and
digestion. Rich in antioxidants; useful as tea or in cooking for brain
health and immunity.
- Oregano: Strong natural antimicrobial and
anti-inflammatory properties. Helps with respiratory and gut health; can
be used fresh or dried in meals.
- Leaf of Life (Bryophyllum): Known for wound healing,
anti-inflammatory effects, and respiratory support. Easy to grow and
propagate from leaves.
These plants are hardy,
low-maintenance, and suitable for pots on balconies, apartment terraces, small
gardens, or common residential areas.
How This Helps Build Better
Health & Immunity
- Daily Access to Fresh Herbs: Families can use the
leaves for tea, cooking, or simple home remedies, strengthening immunity
and reducing reliance on synthetic medicines for minor issues.
- Educational Value for Children: Kids learn
responsibility by watering and caring for the plant. They can be taught
why these herbs build immunity (antioxidants, antimicrobial compounds,
stress reduction) and how to use them safely (e.g., Tulsi tea for cough,
Rosemary for focus before exams).
- Air Purification & Greenery: Indoor plants
improve air quality and create a calmer environment, beneficial for
concentration and reducing stress.
- Long-Term Community Impact: Over time, every
household, apartment complex, village, and community will have valuable
herbal plants. This builds collective immunity, reduces disease
occurrence, lowers healthcare burden, and promotes self-reliance in health.
Practical Implementation Ideas
- In Schools: Encourage or standardise herbal plant
gifts for birthdays. Include a small card explaining benefits and basic
care instructions.
- At Home: Families can gift or receive plants instead
of plastics. Children can maintain a small “home pharmacy” balcony or
terrace garden.
- Government Role: Awareness campaigns, subsidies for
nurseries, school programmes, and guidelines for celebrations to promote
live plants over plastic/synthetic gifts.
- Gifting Tip: Pair the plant with a small pot, soil,
and a simple usage guide so the recipient can start immediately.
This measure ensures that over a
period of time, all apartments, gated communities, villages, and households
possess valuable herbal plants. It fosters a culture of growing and using
natural remedies, helping build stronger immunity and reducing the occurrence
of common diseases while teaching children respect for nature and self-care.
Additional Advantages
- Environmentally friendly (reduces plastic waste).
- Cost-effective and sustainable.
- Promotes physical activity (caring for plants) and
family bonding.
- Aligns with broader goals of natural living, better
nutrition, and preventive health.
Promoting the culture of gifting
live herbal plants for birthdays and celebrations is a simple, impactful step.
It moves away from short-term plastic gifts toward meaningful, health-building
presents that benefit children, families, and communities for years to come.
Children grow up learning practical immunity-building skills and develop a
deeper connection with nature.
51. Why
All Seeds, Nuts, Fruits, Vegetables & Pulses Should Be Non-GE/GM — And Why
the Government Must Promote Their Cultivation
It is highly recommended that all
food items used in schools, mid-day meals, and homes — especially seeds, nuts,
fruits, vegetables, and pulses — should preferably be non-GE/GM
(non-genetically engineered or non-genetically modified). Traditional and naturally
grown varieties offer safer, more nutritious, and sustainable options for
children’s long-term health. The Government must actively promote and support
the large-scale cultivation of non-GM crops across all categories to make them
easily available and affordable.
What Are GE/GM Crops?
Genetically engineered (GE) or
genetically modified (GM) crops have their DNA altered in laboratories by
inserting genes from other organisms to create traits like pest resistance or
herbicide tolerance.
Major Concerns with GE/GM Foods
- Potential Health Risks — Long-term effects are not
fully studied. Concerns include allergenicity, gut microbiome disruption,
and possible links to chronic issues.
- Impact on Digestion & Immunity — May affect
beneficial gut bacteria, which are vital for children’s developing immune
systems and nutrient absorption.
- Nutritional Quality — Traditional non-GM varieties
often retain higher natural levels of vitamins, minerals, and
antioxidants.
- Environmental Issues — Can lead to superweeds, loss
of biodiversity, and increased dependence on chemical herbicides.
- Unknown Generational Effects — Especially important
for growing children, where safety data over decades is limited.
Health Benefits of Non-GE/GM
(Traditional & Organic Varieties)
- Higher nutrient density and better taste.
- Stronger support for gut health and immunity.
- Lower risk of allergies and sensitivities.
- Better long-term safety profile.
- Supports sustainable farming and seed sovereignty.
Government Must Promote
Cultivation of Non-GE/GM Crops
The Government should take strong
policy steps to promote and incentivise non-GM cultivation of all seeds, nuts,
fruits, vegetables, and pulses:
- Provide subsidies, quality seeds, and training to
farmers growing traditional non-GM varieties.
- Create dedicated markets and procurement policies for
non-GM produce (especially for school mid-day meals and public
distribution).
- Strictly regulate GM crop trials and commercial
cultivation with transparent safety studies.
- Launch awareness campaigns on the benefits of non-GM
foods.
- Integrate non-GM preferences into all government
nutrition programmes, agricultural schemes, and school feeding
initiatives.
- Support research on improving yields of traditional
varieties through natural breeding methods.
This will ensure non-GM foods
become the norm, affordable, and widely available.Practical Recommendation for
Schools & Families
- Prioritise non-GM or traditional varieties in mid-day
meals and home cooking.
- Use native millets (Siridhanya), desi pulses, local
vegetables, and fruits.
- Educate parents and children about choosing non-GM
options.
For the health and future of our children, daily food — especially seeds, nuts,
fruits, vegetables, and pulses — should be non-GE/GM. Traditional varieties are
safer, more nutritious, and sustainable. The Government must actively promote
their cultivation across the country so that every child gets access to clean,
natural food. This is a crucial step toward building stronger immunity, better
digestion, and a healthier generation while protecting India’s agricultural
biodiversity.
This recommendation perfectly
complements the use of millets, palm jaggery, amla candies, and other natural
foods in school meals.
Group 10: Hygiene, Cleanliness & Minimalist Living
52. Why Government Should Educate Students &
Parents on Clutter-Free, Hygienic & Minimalist Homes for Peace of Mind,
Better Health & Simple Happy Living
Many homes, irrespective of
income or education level, become filled with clutter and disorganisation due
to lack of consistent effort or family support. Working mothers, homemakers, or
families where children and other members do not help often end up with plates
left on dining tables, undergarments scattered, wrappers thrown around, books
and papers lying everywhere, and unorganised refrigerators. Unused items,
broken or spoiled items lying for months This creates dust, mould, pests, and a
chaotic environment that affects physical and mental health.
A clean, organised, and
minimalist home is necessary because it supports better immunity, reduces
allergies and infections, improves mental peace and focus, and teaches children
valuable life skills. Clutter and dirt breed bacteria, cockroaches, spiders,
and mould, leading to frequent illnesses, poor sleep, and stress. When families
spend just one dedicated hour weekly on cleaning, organising, and maintaining
simplicity, it brings calmness, better health, and a positive atmosphere for
studies and daily life
A clean, clutter-free, and
minimalist home is one of the best gifts parents can give their children. It
supports physical health, mental peace, better focus, stronger immunity, and a
calmer mind. The government should include practical education on home hygiene
and simple living in school programs, parent meetings, and community sessions
so every family learns these habits.
Why Clutter-Free & Hygienic
Homes Matter
- Physical Health: Dust, mould, and clutter breed
bacteria, cockroaches, spiders, and allergens. This leads to frequent
colds, allergies, asthma, skin issues, and gut problems.
- Mental Peace: Clutter creates visual stress and a
feeling of chaos. A clean, organised space brings calmness, better sleep,
and clearer thinking.
- Immunity & Energy: Clean air and surfaces reduce
the load on the immune system. Children in clean homes fall sick less
often and have more energy for studies and play.
- Long-Term Benefits: Good habits formed in childhood
last a lifetime and prevent many lifestyle diseases.
Daily & Weekly Home Hygiene
Practices to FollowEvery Day:
- Sweep and mop living spaces, bedrooms, and common
areas.
- Keep rooms, especially children’s study areas,
clutter-free.
- Wipe surfaces and ensure good ventilation.
- Clean under kitchen sinks and bathrooms daily to
prevent mould and pests.
Every Week (Spend About 1 Hour):
- Deep clean bathrooms, sinks, wash basins, and
commodes using natural products (vinegar, baking soda, lemon, neem-based
cleaners — avoid harsh chemicals).
- Clean fans, air-conditioner filters, window meshes,
doors, and windows.
- Dry bedsheets, pillows, and sofa cushions in
afternoon sunlight (kills germs and freshens them).
- Make the bed and straighten bedsheets immediately
after waking up — a small win that sets a positive tone for the day.
No Mould, Pests, or Clutter:
- Ensure zero mould at home. Mould spores affect lungs,
cause allergies, and weaken immunity.
- No cockroaches, spider webs, weevils, or other pests.
They spread diseases and contaminate food.
- No clutter: Remove old clothes, stacked bags, unused
items, dead batteries, broken things. Keep only daily-used items. Recycle
or donate the rest.
- Simple rule: “If you haven’t used it in the last few
months, let it go.”
Natural Pest & Mould Control:
- Maintain dryness and cleanliness.
- Use natural repellents (neem leaves, camphor, vinegar
sprays).
- Proper waste disposal and storage in airtight
containers.
Live a Minimalist & Simple
Life
- Clothes: Own only useful, necessary clothes. Change
undergarments every three months. Prefer 100% cotton for men, women, and
children (breathable and skin-friendly).
- Bedding: Use 100% cotton bed linen and sheets. In
winter, you may add a light wool or microfibre layer over cotton — avoid
full synthetic or terylene.
- Cooling & Heating: Rely on natural methods (fans,
cross ventilation, wet curtains) as much as possible. Use AC only in
extreme summer heat and room heaters only in very cold winters.
- When using oil-filled heaters, keep a bucket of
water in the room for humidity.
- Government may consider banning high-radiation
heaters for home use due to health concerns.
- Mindset: Make money for necessities and meaningful
living, not for unnecessary luxury. You cannot take gold, extra clothes,
or gadgets when you leave this world. A simple life with good health and
happy relationships is true wealth.
Why Simple Life is Happy Life:
- Less clutter = less mental load.
- Fewer possessions = more time, money, and peace.
- Natural living reduces stress and health expenses.
Teach These to Every Student
& Parent
- Include in school curriculum, PTMs, and parent
booklets (in local languages).
- Teachers demonstrate simple cleaning habits and
minimalist principles.
- Encourage families to spend one dedicated hour weekly
on home reset.
- Link with other healthy practices: fresh food,
millets, good sleep, limited screens, daily movement, and sunlight
exposure.
A clean, organised, minimalist
home creates a peaceful environment where children can study better, sleep
well, stay healthy, and grow with calm minds. It reduces doctor visits and
brings joy to daily life.
Parents who model these habits
raise responsible, health-conscious children. Schools and the government can
play a big role by teaching and reinforcing these values consistently.
This education, combined with
clean school environments, standardised nutritious meals, safe water, and daily
exercises, builds stronger, happier, and healthier generations.
53. Teaching
Personal Hygiene, Cleanliness & Discipline to Every Student & Parent —
Daily Practices for Healthy Life
Personal hygiene and disciplined
daily habits are essential for good health, self-respect, and success in life.
The government should make comprehensive personal hygiene education mandatory
in every school (with displays in classrooms) and encourage the same at home
through parent meetings and calendars. These habits should be taught and
practised by every student and parent.
Core Daily Hygiene Practices
Mouth & Hand Hygiene:
- Gargle with plain water immediately after eating or
drinking anything other than water. This keeps the mouth clean and
prevents bad breath and dental issues.
- Wash hands thoroughly with lemon, homemade natural
alternatives, or mild soap:
- Before eating any food.
- After eating any food.
- After using the toilet (urination or defecation).
- Use soap after defecation.
- Wipe hands with a fresh, hygienically washed cloth
(not on clothes).
Toilet Habits:
- Pass urine carefully to avoid spilling on thighs,
legs, pants, or gown.
- Ensure no urine spills on the commode.
- Flush the toilet immediately after urination (at
home, school, or public places).
- Wash hands thoroughly before touching the toilet door
or coming out. This prevents spreading bacteria/viruses to the next user.
- Use exhaust fan while defecating to remove smell for
the next person.
Footwear & Posture:
- Wear proper, well-maintained footwear. Stitch/repair
immediately if torn.
- Polish or wash footwear daily (before bath if
washable) to keep it shining and clean.
- Maintain good posture while sitting, standing, and
walking.
- Clean feet thoroughly before entering living room or
bedroom after coming from outside.
- Take bath soon after playing, returning from school,
or coming from outside — before meals or dinner.
Clothing & Home Habits:
- Keep Footwear Outside the Home — A Simple Habit for
Better Home Hygiene
Always keep
outdoor footwear outside the home in an organised shoe rack or designated
storage area. If there is no proper rack, store the footwear just outside the
main door.
Remove outdoor
shoes at the entrance, wear clean home slippers immediately after entering, and
place the outdoor footwear in a closed rack or designated corner away from the
living room, bedroom, or any main living space.
Ensure that
outdoor footwear does not carry mud, dust, or sticky substances inside. This
simple practice greatly reduces the entry of bacteria, fungus, and viruses into
the home.
Most people walk
barefoot inside the house. When outdoor shoes — which carry trillions of
bacteria, fungus, and viruses from roads and public places — are brought
inside, these germs spread to floors, sofas, beds, and other surfaces. Children
and family members then sit or lie on the same contaminated areas. By keeping
outdoor footwear outside and changing into home slippers, we prevent this
unnecessary spread of germs and maintain a much cleaner and healthier living
environment.
This small
habit, when followed by every family member, significantly improves home
hygiene and reduces the risk of infections.
- Change outside clothes immediately upon returning
home and wear comfortable 100% cotton home clothes or bed clothes.
- Never go out in bed clothes or skin-tight gym
clothes/leggings/shorts (especially revealing ones). Government should
discourage or ban moving in public places with gym wear or
undergarment-like clothing and restrict such videos on social media.
- Sit while drinking water or any beverage.
- Preferably sit in Sukhasana (cross-legged) while
taking food.
- Take a short walk after meals and after dinner for
better digestion.
- Straighten the bed and make it neat immediately after
getting up.
- Never dry wet clothes (towels, undergarments, washed
clothes) inside bedrooms or living rooms — dry them only in balcony or
terrace.
- Reduce plastic usage in daily life as much as
possible.
- Iron clothes daily (by self) to maintain neat
appearance.
Personal Grooming:
- Cut nails every two weeks (or at least every month).
- Maintain standard, neat haircut every month. No
fancy/gipsy/fashion hairstyles during school/college working period
(allowed during vacations or after school hours).
- No religious or special dresses during school/college
time — follow uniform or simple dress code.
Additional Important Habits
- Use proper exhaust or ventilation in toilets.
- Ensure safe and hygienic passing of urine and stools.
- Always maintain cleanliness and order in personal
spaces.
Implementation & Display
- Display these habits clearly on calendars and charts
in every school classroom and encourage the same in every home.
- Teachers should demonstrate and monitor these
practices.
- Parents should practise and teach the same at home.
- Regular awareness sessions in schools and
parent-teacher meetings.
These simple daily habits build
strong immunity, prevent diseases, improve digestion, maintain self-respect,
and create disciplined, confident individuals. They reduce doctor visits,
support better studies, and promote equality and cleanliness in society.
When combined with other
initiatives (school bus/bicycle policy, daily leafy greens & guava, millet
meals, community cleanliness, fruit tree planting, limited screens, good sleep,
etc.), they create a complete framework for healthy, responsible, and successful
students.
Government should make personal
hygiene education compulsory and monitor its practice in schools and through
community programs.
54. Disciplined
Footwear & Bag Practices — Keeping Outdoor Dirt, Bacteria, Viruses &
Fungi Out of the Home A disciplined life includes simple daily habits that
protect the entire family’s health.
One of the most important yet
often ignored habits is proper management of footwear and bags brought from
outside. Roads, schools, markets, and public places are full of dust, bacteria,
viruses, fungi, and pollutants. When people walk into the home wearing the same
outdoor shoes or carrying bags inside without care, they bring trillions of
microbes straight into living spaces, sofas, beds, and even kitchens. This
spreads infections, triggers allergies, weakens immunity, and creates
unnecessary illness in the family — especially for children.
Students must be taught this as
part of personal and home hygiene from a young age so it becomes a lifelong
habit.
Correct Footwear Practice (The
Ideal Flow)
- Outside the Home Entrance
- Have a designated shoe rack or closed storage area
right at the main door or compound gate (in apartments, at the lift/stair
entrance).
- Remove outdoor footwear (school shoes, sandals,
etc.) here.
- Ideally, wash the soles of outdoor shoes with water
(a small tap, mug, or bucket at the entrance makes this easy).
- Switch to Home Footwear
- Wear clean, washable home slippers or go barefoot
inside the house.
- Home slippers should be lightweight, washable, and
used only indoors.
- Wash Feet
- Wash feet thoroughly in the bathroom before moving
further inside. This removes road dust, bacteria, and any remaining
germs.
- In independent houses, a small water facility at
the entrance is ideal. In apartments, encourage washing at the bathroom
immediately after entering.
- Storage
- Store outdoor footwear in a closed box or rack away
from living areas.
- Clean and dry them regularly (sun-dry once a week).
Discard torn, worn-out, or fungus-affected footwear immediately.
Never bring outdoor footwear into
the living room, bedroom, sofa, or bed. This is a common mistake that spreads
germs everywhere.
School Bags & Outdoor Bags
- Designate a specific place near the entrance (a
shelf, hook, or rack) for school bags, office bags, grocery bags, etc.
- Do not place them on sofas, beds, dining tables, or
study tables.
- Wash hands thoroughly after handling outside bags.
- Clean/sanitise bags regularly (especially school bags
every day or every few days).
- Use a dedicated study table and chair. Never study or
work on the bed.
Why This Practice Is Essential
- Outdoor shoes carry dust, animal waste, spit, road
pollutants, bacteria, viruses, and fungi from public places.
- These germs then spread to floors where children
crawl/play, family members sit, or food is prepared.
- It reduces respiratory allergies, skin infections,
stomach issues, and overall family illness.
- It supports better immunity, especially for children
with developing bodies.
- Culturally and as per Vaastu principles, keeping
footwear away from the main living space brings positive energy and
cleanliness to the home.
Government & Societal Role
- Educate people through schools, media, and campaigns
on this basic hygiene flow.
- Mandate design standards for new apartments and
homes: shoe racks at entrances, small washing facilities, and storage
spaces.
- Encourage existing apartment complexes to create
common shoe storage areas at building entrances.
- Promote washable, simple home slippers and
good-quality outdoor footwear that is easy to clean.
- Integrate this into school discipline: Children
should learn to remove shoes at the school gate (where possible) and
follow home entry rules.
Your home is your safe and clean
space. Outdoor shoes and bags bring the dirt and germs of the world inside.
Always remove your outside footwear at the door, wear home slippers, wash your
feet, and keep your school bag in its proper place. Wash your hands after
touching outside things. These small habits keep your family healthy, prevent
sickness, and show respect for your home. A clean home brings a calm mind and
strong body.”
This practice beautifully
connects with other disciplines you are learning:
- Loose cotton clothes
- Minimalism and clutter-free homes
- Daily cleanliness drives
- Dignity of labour (keeping your own things organised)
- Food as medicine and strong immunity
When every student follows this,
entire families and society become healthier and more hygienic. Small
consistent actions create big protection against diseases.
55. Educating
Students on the Dignity of Labour, Self-Cleaning & Hygienic Living — From
Young Age for a Responsible & Equal Society
Every student must be taught from
a young age that cleaning and maintaining one’s own space is a basic life skill
and a matter of self-respect, not something only for labourers, maids, ayahs,
or workers. Doing one’s own work builds discipline, humility, responsibility,
and respect for all forms of labour. This education is an essential part of
Swachh Bharat and should be implemented in all government and private schools,
colleges, and universities.
Core Message for Students
Cleaning your own bed, room,
bathroom, or classroom is not “below your dignity.” It is a sign of maturity
and respect for yourself, your family, your school, and society. Mahatma Gandhi
himself cleaned toilets and gave a call for everyone to do the same. By
learning these habits, students develop equality, reduce ego, and understand
the hard work of mothers, grandparents, municipal workers, and sweepers who
keep our surroundings clean.
Age-Appropriate Practices (Start
Early, Build Gradually)
From a young age (Primary level):
- Straighten your bed immediately after waking up.
- Put your dirty clothes in the laundry basket.
- Help in small tasks like watering plants and removing
dead leaves (with gloves and safety rules).
- Throw wrappers and empty bottles properly into the
dustbin.
- Flush the toilet every time after use.
From Class 5 onwards (light to
moderate work):
- Clean and dust your own room or hostel room daily.
- Help in the kitchen with washing vegetables,
segregating waste, and simple cleaning.
- Clean your own bathroom after bathing so the next
person gets a clean space.
- Wash and dry your own clothes or bicycle (with
safety).
- Participate in weekly or monthly community cleaning
of classroom, school premises, apartment, RWA, colony, or street.
Safety Rules (Mandatory):
- Always wear gloves when cleaning toilets or using any
cleaning agents.
- Use mild/natural products (lemon peel, wood ash,
baking soda, vinegar) instead of harsh chemicals.
- Never use strong floor cleaners or acid-based
products without supervision.
- Follow proper safety protocols for all activities.
Mandatory Practices in
Educational Institutions
- Students (from Class 5 onwards): Clean and dust their
own classroom once a month with broom and cloth.
- Teachers: Clean corridors and the entire school
compound/playground once a month.
- Students (from Class 7 onwards till post-graduation):
Assist in cleaning one toilet twice a year (under supervision and with
safety gear).
- This should be recorded (e.g., under CCTV or with
proof) to ensure participation.
- All educational institutions must maintain 100%
hygienic premises (classrooms, toilets, drinking water areas, compound)
within a 500-metre radius.
- Grow mosquito-repellent plants (Tulsi, marigold,
citronella, lemon balm) and snake-repellent plants where needed. Regular
pest control, wood/bed-bug treatment, and organic soil treatment
(diatomaceous earth) must be done.
Benefits:
- Students understand the hardship faced by mothers,
grandparents, and municipal workers.
- Reduces ego and high-headedness.
- Builds respect for all professions and the dignity of
labour.
- Creates equality and social sensitivity (especially
towards downtrodden sections who often do cleaning work).
Home & Hostel Cleanliness
(Daily Responsibility)
- Students (from Class 7 onwards) must take
responsibility, along with parents, to keep their home clutter-free,
dust-free, neat, and organised.
- Clear dustbins daily and put all waste properly in
bins.
- Clean own bathroom after use and clean toilet seat
weekly.
- Monthly random checks by parent committee members +
local elected representative to verify cleanliness, proper ventilation,
lighting, and absence of pests or foul smell. They can also guide families
on better organisation.
- Marks/credits should be given for home cleanliness
throughout the year.
- In hostels: Random monthly checks of
rooms/dormitories for cleanliness, ventilation, lighting, and prohibited
items (tobacco, drugs, alcohol, inappropriate material).
- Common industrial washing machines should be provided
for clothes and bed linen (free or nominal cost).
Students as Brand Ambassadors of
Positive Change
From Class 7 onwards, every
student must act as a brand ambassador for Swachh Bharat and responsible
living. They should spread messages on:
- Judicious use of water and electricity
- Nutritious food and avoiding tobacco/alcohol
- Clean surroundings and waste segregation
- Respect for all sections of society
Each student should complete 150
hours of such awareness work (in groups) during holidays and weekends within a
5 km radius of their institution. Marks should be awarded for this.
Girl-Friendly Facilities
All girls’ toilets in educational
institutions must have an attached changing room for sanitary napkins, with
free napkins and vending machines. This reduces absenteeism and health issues
during menstruation.
Outsourcing & Daily
Accountability
For better hygiene, maintenance
of toilets and kitchens in schools/colleges/hostels can be outsourced to
professional agencies with strict monitoring, penalties, and employment
generation for downtrodden sections. Schools must upload daily photos/videos of
cleanliness measures on their websites for transparency and accountability.
Parents’ Role & Training
Parents must attend regular
training sessions on child upbringing, nutrition, discipline without harsh
methods, psychological counselling, and instilling values like compassion,
equality, respect for all professions, and service to the elderly/sick. Uniform
school items (bags, bottles, tiffin boxes, etc.) help reduce inequality and
behavioural issues like jealousy.
Expected Outcomes
- Students develop self-reliance and stop depending on
others for basic cleaning tasks.
- Strong sense of dignity of labour and respect for all
workers.
- Cleaner homes, schools, hostels, and colonies.
- Reduced ego, better social equality, and sensitivity
towards the elderly and downtrodden.
- Real and sustained Swachh Bharat — not just photo
opportunities, but lifelong habits.
These practices, when started
early and made mandatory with proper safety and supervision, will create
responsible, humble, and capable citizens who take pride in keeping their
surroundings clean and respect every form of honest work.
This education perfectly
complements other initiatives like personal hygiene, kitchen quality control,
community cleaning drives, and overall discipline for a healthy and progressive
nation.
56. Why
Government Should Ensure Community-Led Weekly Cleanliness Drives in Every RWA,
Gated Community, Apartment, Road & Village for Healthier Living
A clean surrounding is as
important as clean homes and good food. Garbage, plastic, dried leaves, bad
smells, cow dung on roads, and stray animals create breeding grounds for
diseases, mosquitoes, flies, and infections. This affects children’s health, immunity,
respiratory system, digestion, and overall well-being. The government should
make community cleanliness a shared responsibility and a regular practice.
Proposed Weekly Cleanliness
Practice
- Every RWA / gated community / apartment complex
organises 3 hours of collective cleaning of apartments, common areas, and
adjacent roads every weekend or at least every second Sunday.
- Municipal staff will assist with tools, vehicles, and
guidance.
- Local elected representatives and political party
heads should actively participate to motivate residents.
- Business associations in every ward or village take
responsibility for keeping their commercial areas, roads, and drains
clean.
Key Focus Areas:
- No garbage, plastic, polythene, or dried leaves on
roads, footpaths, or school approach roads.
- Clean drains to prevent bad smells and mosquito
breeding.
- No cow dung or waste on roads or roadsides.
- Proper waste segregation and collection.
- Stray animals (especially dogs) handed over to
municipality or responsibly managed/vaccinated by the colony.
This is not just municipal duty —
it is collective responsibility of RWAs, residents, elected representatives,
and local associations.
Why This is Essential for
Students, Parents & Families
- Health Protection: Clean surroundings reduce
mosquitoes, flies, dust, and infections. Children suffer less from colds,
cough, diarrhoea, skin issues, allergies, and respiratory problems.
- Better Immunity & Energy: Less exposure to germs
means stronger immunity, fewer sick days, and more energy for studies and
play.
- Mental Peace: Clean roads and colonies create a
pleasant environment that reduces stress and improves mood.
- Safety for Children: Garbage-free paths to school and
play areas reduce accidents and disease risk.
- Long-Term Benefits: Prevents breeding of diseases
like dengue, malaria, and other infections. Promotes a culture of
cleanliness that benefits the whole community.
Clean environments directly
support the other healthy practices (good food, sleep, exercises, hygiene at
home) you have been emphasising.
How to Make It Successful
- RWAs announce the weekly cleaning time in advance.
- Families participate together — children can also
join age-appropriate tasks (this teaches responsibility).
- Municipal staff provide gloves, brooms, waste
collection vehicles, and guidance on proper disposal.
- Reward cleanest RWAs or wards every month to
encourage participation.
- Strict rules against throwing garbage on roads —
awareness + fines if needed.
- Stray dog management through ABC (Animal Birth
Control) programmes and vaccination drives.
- Integrate with school education: Teachers discuss
community cleanliness and involve students in awareness activities.
Government Role
- Mandate RWAs and local bodies to organise weekly
drives.
- Provide support (staff, equipment, awareness
material).
- Monitor through surprise checks and citizen feedback.
- Link with Swachh Bharat and other cleanliness
missions.
- Include community cleanliness education in school
curriculum and parent meetings.
When every apartment, road, and
village stays clean, students and families enjoy better health, peace of mind,
and a higher quality of life. Clean surroundings + clean homes + good food +
proper sleep + daily movement create truly healthy and happy children.
This measure is practical,
low-cost, and highly effective. It turns weekends into positive community
activity and builds civic responsibility from a young age.
57. Pet
Hygiene at Home — Protecting Family Health While Enjoying the Love of Pets
Many families keep pets (dogs,
cats, etc.) for companionship, especially for children. Pets give unconditional
love, reduce stress, and teach responsibility. However, most people do not
realise that pets can bring germs, bacteria, fungi, parasites, and dirt from
outside into the living spaces if proper hygiene is not maintained. This is
particularly important in apartments and homes where pets sleep in living
rooms, bedrooms, or even on beds.
Why Pet Hygiene is Essential
- Pets go out on streets, parks, or common areas where
they come in contact with urine, faeces, dirt, and other animals. They may
carry bacteria (E. coli, Salmonella), fungi, parasites, or viruses on
their paws, fur, or mouth.
- When pets sleep on beds, sofas, or in family areas,
or when family members cuddle, kiss, or eat without washing hands, germs
can transfer to humans.
- Children, elderly people, and those with weak
immunity are at higher risk of infections, allergies, skin issues, or
stomach problems.
- Neglecting hygiene can turn the joy of having a pet
into health problems for the entire family.
Practical Pet Hygiene Rules Every
Family Should Follow
- Designated Space for Pets
Keep pets in a
separate area or room as much as possible, especially in apartments. Do not
allow pets to sleep on family beds or sofas regularly. Provide them with their
own clean bedding that is washed frequently.
- Hand Washing is Non-Negotiable
Always wash
hands thoroughly with soap and water after touching the pet, cleaning its area,
or before eating. Never eat with the same hand used to feed the pet or after
kissing the pet.
- Daily Foot Washing for Pets (Especially Dogs)
Wash the pet’s
paws every time it comes back from outside. Use mild soap or plain water. This
removes dirt, urine residue, and germs from streets.
- Regular Bathing and Grooming
Bathe dogs every
3–7 days and cats as needed (use pet-safe shampoos). Groom fur regularly to
remove loose hair and dirt. This reduces shedding and allergens inside the
home.
- Vaccination and Health Checks
Register all
pets with the government, get RFID tagging, and ensure periodic vaccination.
Keep a complete health record (vaccinations, bite history, etc.). Regular
veterinary check-ups are essential.
- Before and After Cuddling
Wash hands and
change clothes after close contact with pets. It is best to cuddle in the
morning after bathing or before sleep after your own bath. This prevents
transfer of germs to your body or bed.
- Clean the Pet’s Living Area Daily
Clean the pet’s
bedding, bowls, and area every day. Use natural cleaners. Dispose of pet waste
properly and wash hands immediately.
- Special Care for Cats
If cats go
outside, do not allow them on beds or dining areas. Indoor cats are easier to
manage hygienically.
- No Kissing on Mouth or Sharing Food
Avoid
mouth-to-mouth kissing or letting pets lick your face. Do not share your food
or eat from the pet’s bowl.
- For Families with Young Children or Elderly
Extra caution is
needed. Supervise all interactions. Keep pets away from infants’ faces and
sleeping areas.
Additional Important Practices
Street Dogs and Community Pets:
Children playing in streets or colonies should wash hands thoroughly after
petting any dog or cat. Even playful street dogs can carry germs.
School Education: Pet hygiene
should be taught in schools as part of general hygiene and health education.
Children should learn responsible pet care and the importance of hand washing
after any animal contact
Government and Community Role
- Mandatory registration, RFID tagging, and vaccination
records for all pets.
- Awareness campaigns on pet hygiene through schools,
RWAs, and media.
- Designated pet walking times in apartments to avoid
conflicts and maintain cleanliness.
- Penalties for owners whose pets create hygiene or
safety issues (e.g., not cleaning waste, unvaccinated pets biting).
Pets bring joy and unconditional
love, but love for pets should not become a health hazard for the family. With
simple hygiene rules — separate space, regular bathing, paw washing, hand
washing, and vaccination — you can enjoy the benefits of pets while keeping
everyone safe and healthy.
A clean home with disciplined pet
care creates a happier, healthier environment for children to grow up strong
and responsible.
Group 11
Personality
58. Why
Government Should Educate Teachers, Students & Parents on Identifying &
Preventing Depression & Addiction in Children — With Safe Reporting,
Natural Support & Strict Laws
Depression and addiction to
cigarettes, tobacco, alcohol, drugs, and gutkha are growing problems among
students. Many children suffer silently because of stress, peer pressure,
family issues, or easy availability of harmful substances. Early identification,
awareness, safe reporting, and supportive help can prevent long-term damage to
their studies, mental health, and future life.
The Government should launch a
comprehensive education and support program for teachers, students, and
parents. Teaching everyone how to recognise signs of depression and addiction,
how to report safely, and how to support the child naturally is necessary so
that no child feels isolated or helpless.
When schools, parents, and
classmates work together with understanding and timely help, many children can
be brought back to a normal, happy, and focused life. Strict laws against
selling harmful substances to minors will also reduce easy availability. This
combined approach will protect the mental and physical health of millions of
students and create a caring, responsible society
1. Teacher Training for
Identification
Government should provide
mandatory training to all teachers (government and private schools) on:
- Identifying signs of depression in children
(withdrawal, sudden drop in performance, irritability, changes in
eating/sleeping, loss of interest).
- Recognising signs of addiction (smell of smoke, red
eyes, sudden mood changes, hiding behaviour, declining health and
studies).
- Early detection helps in timely support before
problems become severe.
2. Awareness Materials in Every
Classroom & Home
- Display big, clear charts and calendars in every
classroom and encourage similar displays at home.
- Materials should show:
- Ill effects of cigarettes, tobacco, alcohol, drugs,
and gutkha (on lungs, brain, heart, liver, studies, behaviour, and future
life).
- Simple facts and visuals suitable for different age
groups.
- Regular sessions in class and parent-teacher meetings
to discuss these topics.
3. Education on Ill Effects &
Prevention
- Teach students the real harm caused by these
substances:
- Damage to brain development, memory, and
concentration.
- Increased risk of depression, anxiety, and other
mental health issues.
- Long-term health problems and reduced life
opportunities.
- Focus on prevention: Why saying “No” is strong, and
how healthy habits (good sleep, exercise, fresh food, sunlight, limited
screens) protect against addiction.
4. Safe Reporting by Friends
& Classmates
- Create a culture where friends and classmates can
safely report concerns about depression or addiction without fear.
- Train students that reporting is an act of care, not
betrayal.
- Teachers and parents should handle such information
sensitively and supportively.
5. Natural De-Addiction Support
Methods
Government should promote and
teach natural, supportive methods (along with professional help):
- Healthy daily routine (early sleep, morning sunlight,
exercise like Taiso, balance & breathing exercises).
- Nutritious food (millets, fresh vegetables, fruits,
nuts) to support brain and body recovery.
- Physical activity and sports to release stress
naturally.
- Breathing exercises, meditation, and yoga (including
calming poses like Balasana).
- Strong family support and open conversations.
- Counselling and group support without judgment.
These methods help bring the
person back to normal life gradually.6. Supportive Role of Classmates, Teachers
& Parents
- The goal is never to isolate or humiliate a depressed
or addicted child.
- Instead, create a supportive environment with
understanding and help.
- Teachers and parents should:
- Listen without judgment.
- Encourage healthy habits.
- Connect the child with counselling or medical help
when needed.
- Classmates can offer friendship and positive peer
support.
- Focus on bringing the child back to normal studies,
activities, and happiness.
7. Government App for Safe &
Quick Reporting
- Create a free government app where students (or
anyone) can anonymously or safely report concerns about addiction,
depression, or risky behaviour.
- The app should send alerts directly to teachers,
parents, or police with location (GPS) details when needed.
- This ensures fast help while protecting the
reporter’s identity.
- The app can also provide basic guidance on first aid
and emergency steps.
8. Strict Laws Against Selling to
Minors
- Make life imprisonment (or very strict punishment)
for anyone who sells cigarettes, tobacco, alcohol, drugs, or gutkha to
minors or students.
- Strong enforcement and awareness so that shopkeepers
and sellers fear the consequences.
- This will greatly reduce easy availability to
children.
Overall Benefits
- Early identification and support can save many
children from long-term damage.
- Reduces future addiction and depression cases.
- Builds a caring school and community culture.
- Protects the mental and physical health of students.
- Creates responsible citizens who look out for each
other.
This program should be combined
with other healthy practices already discussed:
- Good sleep (9 hours in darkness, no screens after 9
PM).
- Morning sunlight and routines.
- Daily exercise (including balance, finger, eye
exercises, Balasana, Happy Baby pose).
- Clean homes and surroundings.
- Nutritious millet-based food.
- Limited screen time and social media responsibility.
When children grow up with
awareness, healthy habits, supportive environments, and strong laws against
harmful substances, they have a much better chance of leading healthy, focused,
and happy lives.
Government leadership in
education, technology (app), and strict enforcement can make a real difference.
59. Mental
& Emotional Health for Students — Stop Comparing, Forgive, Smile, Control
Anger, and Stay Happy
Your mind is your biggest
strength. A happy and peaceful mind helps you study better, stay healthy, and
enjoy life. The Government is trying hard to give equality through same
uniforms, school bags, transport, and mid-day meals. But some things (like clothes
at home or marks) can still make children feel jealous or sad. Today we will
learn how to keep our mind strong, peaceful, and happy.
Teaching students how to stop
comparing, forgive quickly, smile often, control anger, and stay happy with
what they have is necessary because these simple habits build strong mental and
emotional health from a young age. When children learn these values, they
become confident, resilient, and peaceful individuals who focus on
self-improvement instead of wasting energy on negative feelings.
This education, supported by
moral stories and daily practice, will create a generation that is mentally
strong, emotionally balanced, and truly happy
1. Why You Should Never Compare
Yourself with Others
Comparing yourself with others is
like eating poison every day.
- Someone may get higher marks, wear better clothes, or
have more things.
- But everyone’s life and situation is different.
- When you compare, you feel sad, angry, or jealous.
This stops you from improving yourself.
Instead: Focus on your own
improvement. Ask yourself — “Am I better than yesterday?” This is the real
secret of success.
2. Why You Should Always Forgive
Forgiving others is not weakness
— it is strength.
- When you keep anger or hurt inside, it harms you more
than the other person.
- Forgiving gives you peace of mind and frees your
heart.
- People who forgive live longer, stay healthier, and
have better relationships.
3. Why Smiling is Always Better
A smile is the most powerful and
free medicine.
- Smiling reduces stress and makes you feel happy
instantly.
- It makes others feel good too.
- People who smile more are liked by everyone and face
fewer problems in life.
- Even when you are sad, try to smile — it will slowly
make you feel better.
4. How to Control Anger
(Practical Methods)
Anger is normal, but controlling
it is important. Here are easy ways:
- Finger Counting Method: When angry, slowly count from
1 to 10 on your fingers. This gives your mind time to calm down.
- Deep Breathing: Breathe in slowly through nose for 4
seconds, hold for 4 seconds, breathe out slowly for 6 seconds. Do this
5–10 times.
- Walk Away: If possible, leave the place for a few
minutes.
- Drink Water: Drink a glass of water slowly.
- Think Before Speaking: Ask yourself — “Will this hurt
someone?”
Practice these daily. Soon you
will become calm and wise.5. Why You Should Never Feel Jealous
Jealousy is a useless feeling
that harms only you.
- If your friend gets better marks or wears nice
clothes, be happy for them.
- Jealousy creates anger and sadness in your heart.
- Instead, say to yourself: “If they can do it, I can
also improve with hard work.”
6. Be Happy with What You Have +
Keep Improving
- Always be thankful for what you already have (family,
food, school, friends).
- People who are happy with what they have are the
richest in the world.
- At the same time, keep trying to improve your marks,
health, and behaviour.
- This combination (contentment + self-improvement) is
the best way to live.
Moral Stories for Students (Short
& Easy to Understand)
Story of Jealousy (The Two
Farmers)
Two farmers had fields next to
each other. One farmer’s crops were always better. The other farmer felt
jealous and prayed that his neighbour’s crops should fail. God heard his prayer
and made both fields fail. The jealous farmer understood that jealousy harms
everyone.
Story of Anger (The Boy and the
Nails)
A boy had a bad habit of getting
angry quickly. His father gave him a bag of nails and asked him to hammer one
nail into the wall every time he got angry. After some days, the boy controlled
his anger. His father then asked him to remove one nail every time he forgave
someone. Finally, all nails were removed, but holes remained on the wall. The
father said — “Anger leaves permanent marks like these holes. So control your
anger.”
Story of Happiness & Smiling
(The Happy King)
A king was always worried even
though he had everything. One day he saw a poor man who was always smiling and
happy. The king asked him the secret. The poor man replied, “I am happy with
whatever I have and I smile every day.” The king understood that happiness
comes from inside, not from things.
Story of Forgiveness
A boy was hurt by his friend. He
kept feeling angry for many days. One day his grandmother told him, “Holding
anger is like holding a burning coal in your hand. It hurts you more.”
The boy forgave his friend and
felt light and happy again.
Life becomes beautiful when you
stop comparing, forgive quickly, smile often, control anger, and stay happy
with what you have. Always try to improve yourself instead of feeling jealous
of others. These habits will make you strong, peaceful, and successful in
studies and life. Remember:
- A smiling face is always more powerful than an angry
face.
- Forgiveness gives you freedom.
- Being happy with what you have is true richness.”
Teachers and parents should
regularly tell these stories and discuss these points in class so that every
student understands, adopts, and practices them daily.
60. Why
Avoid Quarrelling and Fights — How to Be Friends, Win Hearts, and Live
Peacefully
Life becomes happy and successful
when we live in peace with others. Quarrelling, fighting, yelling, and bullying
destroy relationships and create sadness. On the other hand, friendship, love,
and togetherness bring happiness, support, and success in life. Today we will
learn why we should avoid fights and how we can win hearts with love and good
behaviour.
1. Disadvantages of Quarrelling,
Fighting, Yelling & Bullying
- Creates anger and hatred in the heart.
- Destroys friendships and relationships.
- Makes you sad, lonely, and stressed.
- Affects studies and health (anger increases blood
pressure and tension).
- People start disliking you and avoid you.
- In school, it can lead to punishment, bad name, and
loss of respect.
- Bullying hurts others deeply and can cause lifelong
pain.
Fighting never solves problems —
it only creates more problems.2. How to Avoid Quarrelling and Fights (Simple
Ways)
- Stay calm: Take deep breaths or count from 1 to 10
when you feel angry.
- Walk away: If someone is arguing, simply walk away
for some time instead of fighting.
- Use soft words: Instead of shouting, speak politely.
- Listen first: Try to understand the other person’s
point of view.
- Say sorry quickly: If you made a mistake, say sorry
immediately. It stops fights.
- Simple gestures: Smile, offer water, or shake hands —
these small actions can stop arguments.
- Ignore small things: Not every mistake needs a fight.
Many things can be ignored.
3. How to Be Friends and Win
Hearts
- Speak politely and respectfully with everyone.
- Help others when they need help (in studies, carrying
bags, etc.).
- Share things (food, books, stationery) with friends.
- Listen to others when they speak.
- Appreciate good qualities in others (“You did well in
the test”).
- Be honest and trustworthy.
- Stand with friends in good times and bad times.
- Forgive small mistakes of others.
When you do these things, people
naturally like you and become your friends.4. Advantages of Friendship, Love
& Togetherness
- You feel happy and supported.
- Friends help you in studies and difficult times.
- You learn new things from each other.
- Life becomes enjoyable and less stressful.
- You develop good character and leadership qualities.
- People respect you and trust you.
- It creates a peaceful environment in school, home,
and society.
A person who has good friends and
good relationships is truly rich.
Moral Stories for Students
Story 1: Two Friends and the Bear
Two friends were walking in a
forest. Suddenly a bear came. One friend quickly climbed a tree and left the
other alone. The second friend lay down on the ground and acted dead. The bear
came, smelled him, and went away (bears do not touch dead bodies). After the
bear left, the friend on the tree came down and asked, “What did the bear say
to you?” The second friend replied, “The bear told me — Never trust a friend
who leaves you in danger.”
Moral: True friendship means
staying together in difficult times.
Story 2: The Quarrelling Brothers
Two brothers always fought over
small things. One day their father gave them a bundle of sticks and asked them
to break it. Neither could break it. Then the father separated the sticks and
asked them to break one by one. They broke all sticks easily. The father said,
“When you stay united, no one can harm you. When you fight and separate, you
become weak.”
Moral: Unity and friendship make
us strong. Quarrelling makes us weak.
Story 3: The Boy Who Always
Fought
A boy in school always fought
with classmates over small matters. Slowly, all students stopped talking to
him. He felt very lonely and sad. One day he helped a classmate who was in
trouble. Slowly, students started becoming his friends again. He understood
that fighting brings loneliness, while helping and forgiving brings friends
Fighting and quarrelling never
give happiness. They only bring sadness and loneliness. Learn to control your
anger, speak politely, forgive quickly, and help others. These small habits
will help you win hearts and make many good friends. Remember:
- A smile and soft words can stop a fight.
- Helping others is the best way to win hearts.
- True friends are those who stay with you in good and
bad times.
- Peaceful people are respected by everyone.”
Practice these values daily in
school and at home. When you avoid fights and spread love and friendship, your
life will become happy, peaceful, and successful.
Teachers and parents should
regularly discuss these points and tell moral stories so that every student
understands and follows them.
61. Advantages
of Being Truthful and Honest — Why You Should Never Tell Lies or Conceal
Information
Truthfulness and honesty are two
of the greatest qualities a person can have. Being truthful means always
speaking the truth, never telling lies, and never hiding important information
from parents, teachers, or true friends. Honesty builds a strong character and
a peaceful mind. Lies and dishonesty may give short-term benefits, but they
always bring long-term problems
Many children start telling small
lies or concealing things from a very young age (hiding that they ate sugar or
biscuits, not telling about mistakes, or covering for friends). They learn this
by seeing parents or others doing the same. Over time, small lies become a
habit and can lead to bigger dishonesty, corruption, or even religious
fundamentalism.
Teaching students the advantages
of being truthful and the disadvantages of lying is necessary so that they
develop strong character, peace of mind, trust from others, and a bright
future. When children learn to be honest from Class 3 onwards, they become
responsible, respected, and successful individuals who live without fear or
guilt
Advantages of Being Truthful and
Honest
- You get peace of mind — no fear of being caught or
forgetting what you said.
- People trust you and respect you more.
- Parents and teachers give you more freedom and
support.
- You develop strong character and self-confidence.
- Truthful people make better friends and leaders.
- In the long run, honesty brings success in studies,
career, and life.
- God and good people always bless honest persons.
When you are truthful, you feel
light and happy inside.
Why You Should Never Tell Lies or
Conceal Information
- Lies may save you for a few minutes, but they create
fear and tension.
- One lie usually needs many more lies to cover it —
this becomes a bad habit.
- If parents or teachers find out later, they lose
trust in you.
- Concealing important information (like health
problems, bullying, mistakes, or bad habits) can make small problems
become big.
- Always share openly with parents and teachers — they
want to help you, not punish you.
Simple Rule: Speak the truth even
if it is difficult. It is always the best policy.
Disadvantages of Dishonesty and
Telling Lies
- You live in constant fear of being caught.
- People stop believing you — even when you speak the
truth later.
- It damages relationships with parents, teachers, and
friends.
- Dishonest people lose respect and opportunities in
life.
- Lies create guilt and mental stress.
- In exams, hiding mistakes or copying leads to poor
learning and future failure.
- Long-term dishonesty can lead to bigger problems like
cheating in career or life.
Moral Stories for Students
Story 1: The Boy Who Lied About
Studies
A boy always told his parents, “I
studied well” even when he had not. One day there was a big test. Because he
had not studied properly, he failed badly. His parents were very sad and lost
trust in him. The boy understood that one lie had spoiled his studies and his
parents’ trust.
Story 2: Honest Woodcutter
A woodcutter’s axe fell into a
river. The river god showed him a golden axe. The woodcutter said honestly,
“This is not mine.” The god was pleased and gave him both the golden and his
own axe as a reward. His neighbour, who was dishonest, lost everything by
lying.
Moral: Honesty always brings
rewards. Dishonesty brings loss.
Story 3: The Shepherd Boy Who
Lied
A shepherd boy shouted “Wolf!
Wolf!” many times as a joke. When a real wolf came, no one believed him. The
wolf killed all his sheep.
Moral: If you lie often, even
when you speak the truth, no one will believe you.
How to Practise Truthfulness
Every Day
- Always tell the truth to your parents and teachers,
even if you made a mistake.
- If you don’t know something, say “I don’t know”
instead of guessing or lying.
- Share your problems openly — they will help you solve
them.
- Be honest in studies — never copy or hide your
weaknesses.
- Praise others truthfully and admit your own mistakes.
Truth is like a bright lamp that
shows the right path. Lies are like darkness that confuses you. Always be
truthful and honest. Never hide information from your parents and teachers —
they are there to guide and protect you. When you live with honesty, you will
have peace, respect, trust, and success in life. Remember:
- Truth may be difficult in the beginning, but it
always wins in the end.
- An honest person sleeps peacefully. A liar lives in
fear.
Choose honesty every day — it is
the best friend of a successful and happy life.”
Teachers and parents should
discuss these points and stories regularly so that every student understands
and follows the path of truth and honesty.
Many students think that high
marks mean success and low marks mean failure. This is not true. Marks are only
one small measure of your performance in exams. Real success in life is
measured by the knowledge you gain, the skills you develop, the character you
build, and the lessons you learn from failures.
Why Marks Are Not the Only
Measure of Success
- Exams test only a small part of what you have studied
in a short time.
- They do not measure your creativity, hard work,
honesty, kindness, or practical intelligence.
- Many great scientists, inventors, entrepreneurs, and
leaders were not top rankers in school. They succeeded because they kept
learning and never gave up.
Real Success = Knowledge Gained +
Right Attitude + Hard Work
Even If You Fail in Exams, You
Can Still Win in Life
Failure in one exam is not the
end of your life. It is only a small stumbling block. Many successful people
failed many times before they succeeded.
Important Lessons from Failure:
- Failure teaches you what you need to improve.
- It builds your inner strength and willpower.
- It shows you new paths you would not have seen
otherwise.
- Every failure is a stepping stone to success if you
learn from it.
Examples of Great People Who
Faced Failure:
- Thomas Edison failed thousands of times before
inventing the electric bulb. He said, “I have not failed. I have just
found 10,000 ways that won’t work.”
- Many famous scientists and business leaders were
average or below-average students, but they succeeded through continuous
learning and hard work.
How to Measure Real Success
- How much knowledge and understanding you have gained.
- How well you apply what you have learned in real
life.
- How you behave with others (honesty, kindness,
helpfulness).
- How you handle failures and keep trying.
- How much you improve yourself every day.
Marks are temporary. Knowledge
and character are permanent.
What You Should Do (Practical
Advice)
- Study to gain knowledge and understanding — not just
to get marks.
- If you get low marks, do not feel sad or give up.
Analyse your mistakes and work harder next time.
- Develop other skills — reading, thinking, speaking,
sports, arts, etc.
- Be honest with yourself and your teachers about your
weaknesses.
- Focus on daily improvement instead of comparing with
others.
- Remember: Even if you fail in some exams, consistent
effort and right learning will make you successful in life.
Success and failure are not
decided by marks on your report card. They are decided by how much you learn,
how you face challenges, and how you keep improving. Even if you fail in some
subjects or get low marks, do not lose hope. Learn from your mistakes, work
with full effort, and stay honest. True winners are those who never stop
learning and never give up. Marks may give you a certificate, but knowledge,
character, and perseverance will give you a successful and happy life. Always
remember:
Failure is not the opposite of success — it is a part of success.”
Teachers and parents should
repeat this message regularly so that every student understands that real
education is much bigger than just marks.
63. Mandatory
Martial Arts and Self-Defence Training for All Students — Building Physical
& Mental Strength from Class 3/5 Onwards
In today’s world, children —
especially girls — face increasing risks of harassment, attacks, kidnapping
attempts, and other dangerous situations. Self-defence is no longer optional;
it is a basic life skill. The Government should make martial arts and self-defence
training mandatory for all students (both boys and girls) in schools and
colleges.
This training will make students
physically strong, mentally confident, and capable of handling any challenge or
crisis without fear. It will also help shy students and girls become bold and
self-reliant.
Proposed System: Progressive
Martial Arts Training
- Start from Class 3 or Class 5 onwards (basic level).
- Training should increase in difficulty as students
move to higher classes.
- In higher classes (Class 9 onwards and college),
there should be mandatory weekly martial arts drills to keep the skills
sharp.
- Training must include both physical techniques and
mental strength (how to stay calm, think clearly, and act decisively).
- Audio-video lessons, demonstrations, and regular
practice sessions should be used for better understanding.
This system will ensure that by
the time students finish school or college, they are well-trained in
self-defence and crisis management.
Major Benefits of Mandatory
Martial Arts & Self-Defence
- Builds self-confidence and courage in every student.
- Especially helpful for shy students and girls — they
become bold and fearless.
- Teaches students how to safeguard themselves in
dangerous situations.
- Improves physical fitness, discipline, focus, and
mental strength.
- Helps students take up any challenge in life without
fear.
- Reduces the risk of becoming victims of attacks,
bullying, or kidnapping.
Key Topics That Must Be Taught
- Basic Self-Defence Techniques
- How to escape from back holds, neck holds, and
grabs.
- How to defend against attacks with sharp weapons.
- Simple and effective moves to escape from someone
trying to kidnap or attack.
- Handling Animal Attacks
- What to do if stray dogs or other animals attack.
- How to protect yourself and others.
- Snake Bites and Emergency First Aid
- How to stay calm and what immediate steps to take
after a snake bite.
- Crisis Management & Staying Calm
- How not to panic in dangerous situations (water
drowning, fire, attack, etc.).
- How to stay strong with determination and think
clearly to come out safely.
- How to call emergency numbers: Police – 100,
Ambulance – 108 (or local emergency numbers).
- Mental Strength Training
- How to control fear and stay mentally strong.
- Decision-making in critical situations.
- Building courage to speak up and take action.
Why This Training Should Be
Mandatory
Atrocities against children,
especially girls, are increasing. Self-defence is the first and best solution.
Martial arts training gives students the confidence to protect themselves and
others. It also teaches them that they are not helpless — they have the power
to defend themselves.
Regular practice keeps the skills
alive and ready to use when needed. Audio-video lessons make learning easy and
interesting for all age groups.
Learning martial arts and
self-defence is not just about fighting — it is about becoming confident,
strong, and fearless. Whether you are a boy or a girl, this training will help
you face any challenge in life with courage. Remember:
- Stay calm in every situation.
- Know how to protect yourself and call for help (100
for police, 108 for ambulance).
- Your safety is in your hands — be prepared, be
confident, and be strong.”
Parents and teachers should
support this training fully. Schools should conduct regular classes and drills
so that every student becomes physically and mentally strong from a young age.
This single measure — mandatory
martial arts and self-defence training from Class 3/5 onwards with progressive
levels and weekly drills — will create a generation of confident, courageous,
and self-reliant students who can safeguard themselves and face life’s
challenges boldly.
64. Why
Parents Should Not Put Pressure on Students for Marks, Ranks, or Comparisons —
Focus on Knowledge, Interest, Freedom, and Contentment
It is really unfortunate that
most parents, irrespective of their education or income group, treat their
child like a machine whose only job is to get high marks or ranks. They put
heavy pressure by constantly comparing the child with others, forcing extra
coaching, and making marks the only measure of prestige or success. This
disturbs the child’s natural development, creates stress, anxiety, fear, and
even leads to depression or extreme steps in some cases.
Pressuring children for marks
kills their joy of learning, creativity, and natural talents. Many students
lose interest in studies because they study only for marks, not for
understanding. Constant comparison makes them feel they are not good enough,
and some parents even tell their children “We are poor, so we cannot compete,”
which further damages self-confidence.
The Government and schools must
regularly educate parents that putting pressure for marks, ranks, or
comparisons is harmful. Instead, parents should focus on helping children gain
real knowledge, follow their own interests, choose careers freely, and be content
with what they have. When children study with love, freedom, and positive
encouragement, they become confident, happy, and truly successful in life
Every child is unique and has
different interests and abilities. The Government and schools must regularly
educate parents that putting pressure on students for high marks, ranks, or
comparing them with neighbours, relatives, or other students is harmful.
Instead, parents should focus on helping children gain real knowledge, follow
their own interests, and choose their career freely.
Why Pressure for Marks, Ranks,
and Comparisons is Harmful
- It creates fear, stress, anxiety, and loss of
self-confidence in students.
- Many students lose interest in studies because they
study only for marks, not for understanding.
- Constant comparison with others makes children feel
they are not good enough.
- It can lead to depression, sleep problems, and even
extreme steps in some cases.
- Students start hiding their weaknesses instead of
improving them.
- Pressure from parents often forces children into
careers they do not like.
This kind of pressure kills
creativity, joy of learning, and the natural talent of the child.
Never Tell Children They Are Poor
or Cannot Compete
Parents should never tell their children: “We are poor/low income, so we cannot
compete with rich students or neighbours.” Instead, tell them with love and
positivity:
“God has given us this situation. We will be happy with what we have. Even with
this, you can achieve better than others through hard work, honesty, and smart
effort.”
The Government is already making
efforts for equality — same uniform, same school bag, same transport
facilities, same nutritious mid-day meals, and equal treatment for all students
irrespective of income. This reduces differences in school. Parents should
support this equality mindset at home and encourage their children to focus on
self-improvement instead of feeling inferior.
Focus on Gaining Knowledge, Not
Just Marks
Marks are only a number on a
report card. Real education is about understanding concepts, developing
thinking ability, and gaining useful knowledge. Parents and teachers should
always tell students:
“Study to gain knowledge and become a good human being. Marks will
automatically come if you understand properly.”
When students study with interest
and understanding, they remember things for a long time and can apply them in
real life.
Encourage Student’s Own Interest
and Freedom to Choose Career
Every child has different dreams.
Some want to become engineers, doctors, or lawyers. Others may want to become
artists, teachers, farmers, entrepreneurs, scientists, mechanics, nurses, or
work in many other fields. Parents should never force their own wishes on
children. Instead, they should:
- Observe what the child is interested in.
- Encourage and support the child’s interest.
- Give freedom to choose the career they like.
- Guide them with love and information, not pressure.
When students are allowed to
follow their interest, they study with full energy, work hard happily, and
become more successful and satisfied in life.
Importance of Every Profession —
All Parents Must Understand This
Parents must be taught that every
honest profession is important and respectable. No profession is small or low.
- A farmer grows food for the nation.
- A teacher shapes the future of children.
- A mechanic keeps vehicles and machines running.
- An artist brings beauty and happiness.
- A scientist discovers new things for human progress.
- A nurse cares for sick people with love.
Every profession contributes to
society and helps people live respectfully. When parents understand and respect
all professions, they stop forcing only a few “popular” careers on their
children.
Benefits of Giving Freedom,
Motivation, Contentment, and Support to Students
- Students become more confident and courageous.
- They develop self-reliance and decision-making
ability.
- They study with interest and perform better in the
long run.
- They feel loved and supported by parents instead of
pressured.
- They are more likely to succeed in the career they
choose because they are passionate about it.
- It reduces stress, anxiety, and mental health
problems in children.
Freedom with proper guidance +
contentment with what we have creates responsible and happy individuals.
What Parents Should Do (Practical
Advice)
- Never compare your child with others. Every child is
different.
- Never tell your child “We are poor, so we cannot
compete.” Instead, inspire them with positivity.
- Appreciate effort and improvement, not only marks.
- Talk to your child about their interests and dreams.
- Support them even if they choose a career different
from your wish.
- Teach them the value of knowledge, good character,
and contentment.
- Be a friend and guide, not just a strict parent who
demands only marks.
Child is not a machine to get
only high marks. Your child is a unique person with dreams and talents. Give
them love, guidance, freedom, and the confidence that they can achieve great
things even with limited resources. Focus on helping them gain knowledge and
become good human beings.
Students study with interest and
understanding.
Do not study only for marks or to
please others.
Be happy with what you have and
keep improving yourself. With knowledge, hard work, honesty, and positive
thinking, you can succeed in any field you choose.
Pressure creates fear. Love,
freedom, and contentment create confidence and real success.
This approach — educating
parents, reducing pressure and negative comparisons, encouraging knowledge and
interest, respecting every profession, and promoting contentment — will create
a happier, healthier, and more successful generation of students.
Teachers and schools should
regularly conduct parent meetings and awareness sessions on these important
points.
Government Should Reduce Pressure
Through Simple Evaluation System
To further reduce unnecessary
stress on children, the Government should remove the system of ranks and limit
grading to only 2 or 3 broad grades (for example: Excellent / Good /
Satisfactory) at least till 10th standard. This will shift the focus from competition
and comparison to actual learning and understanding.
For entry into intermediate (11th
standard), the Government can introduce a fair system such as a simple entrance
test or lottery (where seats are limited) instead of heavy reliance on board
exam marks. These changes will greatly reduce pressure on young students and
allow them to enjoy learning without the fear of ranks or cut-throat
competition
A child’s mind is like soft clay
that takes the shape of everything it sees and experiences at home. Parents are
the first and most powerful teachers in a child’s life. Their daily habits,
behaviour, relationships, and the atmosphere at home directly shape the child’s
values, confidence, mental health, emotional stability, and future
character.
Unfortunately, many parents are
unaware that their quarrelling, bad habits (smoking, alcohol, watching porn,
adultery), unstable relationships, or stressful living deeply affect their
children. Teachers must regularly educate parents (at least once every month in
Parent-Teacher Meetings) about how their personal life influences the child —
positively or negatively.
When parents live a peaceful,
honest, simple, and disciplined life, children naturally learn good values,
feel secure, and grow into confident and responsible individuals. On the other
hand, fighting, bad habits, or broken family situations create fear, anxiety,
and long-term emotional damage in children.
Educating parents on these
important points is necessary so that they can create a loving, stable, and
positive home environment that supports the child’s healthy development in
every way
Teachers must regularly (at least
once every month in Parent-Teacher Meetings) explain to parents how their
personal life affects their children — positively or negatively.
1. Negative Effects of Bad Habits
and Quarrelling at Home
When parents quarrel, fight, use
abusive language, or live with tension at home, children suffer silently:
- They feel insecure, scared, and anxious.
- They may lose interest in studies and become
withdrawn or aggressive.
- Constant fighting teaches children that anger and
violence are normal ways to solve problems.
- Watching parents quarrel with neighbours or live in
sadness/depression creates a negative mindset in the child.
Smoking, Alcohol, and Drugs
- Smoking or drinking in front of children normalises
these bad habits.
- Children may start copying these habits later in
life.
- Coming home drunk or in an inebriated condition
frightens children and damages their respect for parents.
- Drug use at home creates fear, instability, and
long-term emotional damage in children.
Watching Porn, Adultery, and
Infidelity
- These habits destroy family peace and trust.
- Children may get exposed to wrong ideas about
relationships.
- It creates confusion, shame, and emotional insecurity
in the child’s mind.
2. Effects of Separation,
Quarrelling, and Divorce on Children
- Constant quarrelling between husband and wife creates
fear and emotional instability in children.
- Divorce or separation often leads to feelings of
guilt, rejection, and loneliness in the child.
- Children from broken families may face problems in
studies, behaviour, and relationships later in life.
- Old parents fighting or separating also disturbs the
child’s sense of security.
Children need a stable, loving,
and peaceful home to grow into confident and balanced individuals.3. Why
Parents Must Live a Decent, Straightforward, and Simple Life
- A simple, honest, and disciplined life at home
subconsciously motivates the child to follow the same path.
- When parents live without bad habits (smoking,
drinking, fighting, extra-marital affairs), children learn good values
naturally.
- Cleanliness, helping others in society, and
maintaining good relations with neighbours teach children respect,
kindness, and social responsibility.
- A peaceful and harmonious family environment builds
strong character and emotional strength in children.
Parents should remember: Children
copy what they see at home more than what they are told.
4. Special Guidance for Single
Parents
Single parents (mother or father)
play a very important role. They must maintain balance in upbringing:
- Show plenty of love and affection.
- Give proper monitoring and guidance.
- Avoid too much pampering (this can make the child
weak and dependent).
- Avoid too much freedom (this can lead to wrong
habits).
- Avoid too much strict control (this can create fear
and rebellion).
Balanced approach: Love +
Discipline + Freedom + Guidance = Strong and confident child.
Single parents should also take
care of their own mental and physical health so they can give positive energy
to the child.
5. Positive Role of Parents That
Motivates Children
When father and mother:
- Live harmoniously without court cases or police
cases,
- Help others in society,
- Maintain cleanliness at home and surroundings,
- Speak politely and behave decently, children
automatically learn good values, become responsible, and develop a
positive outlook towards life.
Your daily life is the biggest
classroom for your child. Quarrelling, bad habits, fighting, or unstable
relationships at home create fear and confusion in your child’s mind. On the
other hand, a simple, peaceful, loving, and disciplined life at home builds
confidence, good character, and motivation in your child.
Always remember:
- Never smoke or drink in front of your child.
- Never fight or use bad language at home.
- Live a straightforward and honest life.
- Show love, give balanced guidance, and be a good
example.
Your good behaviour today will
shape your child’s bright and successful future tomorrow.”
Teachers should conduct regular
awareness sessions in Parent-Teacher Meetings and share simple examples and
stories so that every parent understands and follows these important points.
This education will help create a
generation of emotionally strong, confident, and well-behaved children.
66. Why
Parents Must Be 100% Straightforward and Honest in Life — Especially in
Finances
Honesty in money matters is one
of the most important values a parent can pass on to their children. When
parents are 100% straightforward and honest in finances — earning only through
hard work, avoiding corruption, bribes, or illegal money, managing loans
responsibly, paying taxes, and doing all transactions through proper banking
channels — they create a peaceful and secure home environment.
On the other hand, dishonest financial
practices (hiding from loan agents, lying to children, earning black money, or
living beyond means) create fear, tension, guilt, and wrong values in children.
The child learns that lying and hiding are acceptable, which damages their
character and respect for parents.
Teaching and practising financial
honesty is necessary because legal and honest money brings real peace, respect,
and long-term security for the family. It teaches children the value of hard
work, responsibility, and integrity, and helps them build a strong, fearless
future without hidden tensions
Why Parents Should Earn Only
Honest, Hard-Earned Money
- No corruption, bribes, speed money, or illegal
income: Money earned through wrong means (bribes, corruption, drugs, or
any illegal activity) brings fear and mental tension. Such money never
gives real peace.
- Only hard-earned and legal money: Money earned
through honest hard work brings satisfaction and respect. It teaches
children that success comes through effort, not shortcuts.
- No blood money or easy money: Money earned by harming
others or through illegal means destroys family peace and creates
long-term problems.
Honest earning gives real peace
and respect — both to the person and to the family.
Why Proper Loan Management and
Simple Living Are Important
- Take only those loans which you can repay
comfortably.
- Always repay loans on time. This builds trust and
good credit in society.
- Avoid excess loans that create financial pressure and
tension at home.
- Do not spend excessively on luxury or bad habits
(vices). This creates unnecessary financial burden.
- Live a simple life according to your income. This
teaches children the value of money and the importance of saving.
When parents live within their
means, children learn to respect money and avoid unnecessary spending.
Why Pay Taxes and Take Bills for
Every Purchase
- Paying taxes to the government is our duty. Taxes are
used for roads, schools, hospitals, police, and development of the
country. Honest tax payment makes the nation strong.
- Taking bills for every purchase is very important.
Bills are proof of honest transactions.
- Every purchase should be done through bank
transactions (UPI, bank transfer, card, etc.). This creates a clean
financial record and prevents black money.
- Legal (white) money has real power. It can be used
openly for education, business, property, and future security without
fear. Illegal money always carries the risk of being caught and creates
lifelong tension.
Negative Effects of Dishonest
Financial Practices on Children
When parents:
- Ask children to hide from loan recovery agents,
- Tell children to lie (“Papa is not at home”),
- Hide their wrong financial activities,
It negatively affects the child’s
mind. The child learns that lying and hiding are acceptable. This destroys the
child’s respect for parents and creates confusion about right and wrong.
Children who see their father or
mother earning more money through wrong means may start thinking that honest
earning is not important. This can change their thinking in a negative way.
Positive Things Parents Should Do
and Teach Children
- Always tell children about honest earning and hard
work.
- Teach children budgeting of their own money (how to
save, spend wisely, and plan).
- Live a transparent and straightforward financial
life.
- Never involve children in hiding lies or wrong
financial activities.
- Show children that legal and honest money brings
peace, respect, and security for the family and the country.
Financial honesty is one of the
biggest lessons you can give to your child. Never earn money through wrong
means. Never put your child in a situation where they have to lie or hide. Live
a simple, straightforward, and honest life. Pay taxes, take bills, and do all
transactions through proper banking channels.
Always respect honest hard work
and legal money. Learn to manage your money properly from a young age. When
your parents live with financial honesty, it gives you peace of mind and
teaches you the right values for life.
Honest money brings peace and
respect. Dishonest money brings fear and problems.
Legal money has power for you, your family, and your country.”
Teachers should regularly discuss
these points in Parent-Teacher Meetings so that every parent understands the
importance of financial honesty and its positive effect on children’s character
and future.
This habit of honest and
straightforward living will create a generation that values integrity, hard
work, and responsible citizenship.
67. Inducing
Financial Discipline in Parents and Citizens Through Default Settings and
Government Policies
Financial discipline is one of
the most important life skills that directly affects family peace, children’s
future, and overall well-being. Many families suffer from debt traps, stress,
hiding from loan agents, and unnecessary financial tension because of poor
money management. This creates fear, lies, and wrong values in children.
The Government should introduce
smart default settings in the banking system so that financial discipline
becomes automatic for every citizen. This includes connecting all accounts to a
Central Banking Hub, automatic deductions for children’s future and family
food, strict limits on loans and rent, and controlled cash withdrawals.
These default rules are necessary
because they ensure basic needs (food and children’s education) are secured
first, prevent people from taking loans beyond their capacity, reduce
corruption and black money, and teach children the value of honest and responsible
money management. When parents live without financial stress and dishonesty,
children grow up in a peaceful home and learn good values naturally
1. Central Banking System for All
Loans and Transactions
- All bank accounts of every individual should be
connected to a Central Banking Hub.
- Every loan (personal, home, vehicle, education, etc.)
must be processed only through this central system.
- All loan repayments (EMIs) must be made only through
bank transactions (no cash payments allowed).
- This prevents unauthorized loans, fake documents, and
cash-based illegal lending.
2. Automatic Deductions for
Children’s Future and Family Food
To protect children and ensure
basic needs are met first, the following deductions should happen automatically
from salary or daily wages:
- 5% of earnings should be automatically deposited into
the child’s bank account (5% each if there are two children). This money
can be used for the child’s education and future.
- 25% of earnings should go into the Provision Debit
Card (for food, cereals, vegetables, fruits, pulses, etc.). This ensures
every family gets quality and balanced food.
- These deductions are mandatory by default so that
food and children’s future are secured first.
3. Strict Limits on Loans, Rent,
and Other Expenses (Default Caps)
To prevent people from falling
into debt traps, the Government should fix the following maximum limits:
- Total EMI / Loan repayment → Maximum 30% of monthly
earnings.
- House Rent → Maximum 25% of earnings.
- Electricity, Water, Gas, and Basic Utilities → Should
be managed within 5%.
- Cash Withdrawal Limit → Maximum 10% of monthly
earnings.
Overall Effect:
After these fixed deductions
(children’s account + food + EMI + rent + utilities), people will still have
enough money left for other needs. If they save on rent or EMI, they can use
the extra money for investments, travel, or emergencies.4. Why These Default
Rules Are Very Important
- Reduces financial stress: People will not take loans
beyond their capacity.
- Prevents hiding from recovery agents: Since
everything is through banks and central system, there is no need to hide
or tell lies to children.
- Protects children: Children will not see parents
struggling with debt or asking them to lie.
- Ensures basic needs: Food and children’s future are
secured automatically.
- Teaches value of money: Children will learn that
money should be used wisely and honestly.
- Reduces corruption and black money: All transactions
are recorded through banks.
- Improves national economy: Better tax collection and
financial discipline across the country.
5. Benefits for Families and
Children
- Every family will have money for quality food and
children’s education.
- Parents will not need to take excessive loans or live
under pressure.
- Children will grow up seeing honest and disciplined
financial habits at home.
- Families will have peace of mind and can focus on
education, health, and happiness instead of worrying about money every
month.
Final Message for Parents and
Students
Managing money with discipline is
one of the greatest gifts you can give to your children. When the Government
sets default rules — automatic savings for children, fixed spending on food,
and limits on loans and rent — it becomes easy for everyone to live peacefully
without falling into debt traps.
Children Learn from your parents’
financial habits. Understand the value of money, save regularly, and avoid
unnecessary loans. When your family follows financial discipline, it creates a
strong foundation for your bright future.
Financial discipline brings
peace. Uncontrolled spending brings stress and problems.
When money is managed wisely,
families become happy and children grow up confident and responsible.
This system of default financial
discipline (Central Banking Hub + Automatic deductions + Spending limits + Cash
withdrawal caps) will create a generation of financially responsible citizens
and ensure that every child gets proper food, education, and a stress-free
childhood.
Teachers should explain these
important rules to parents during meetings so that every family understands and
supports this system.
Alcohol consumption, especially
in excess or through cheap/illegal liquor, destroys families, health, and peace
in society. Many parents (irrespective of income) spend a large part of their
earnings on alcohol, leading to financial stress, debt, domestic violence, poor
health, and children growing up in unstable, fearful environments. Children
often see their parents drinking, fighting, or coming home drunk, which deeply
affects their emotional security, studies, and future values.
The Government should implement
strict regulation on alcohol sale and consumption to protect families,
especially children and students. This includes banning loose bottle sales,
closing regular wine shops, and allowing liquor only in exclusive, well-regulated
bars with biometric entry, pre-booking, limited quantity, and family
awareness.
These measures are necessary
because they will save money for food and children’s future, reduce domestic
violence, prevent addiction from a young age, improve health of earning
members, and create a more peaceful and responsible society. When parents control
alcohol, children grow up in a stable, loving home with better focus on studies
and a brighter future
Key Measures Proposed for Alcohol
Regulation
- Ban on Sale in Bottles & Closure of Liquor Shops:
Liquor should be sold only in licensed bars in limited quantity. No home
delivery or bottle sales in shops.
- Controlled Bar System:
- Only bars (separate for men and women, with minimum
distance between them).
- Entry only through biometric identification and a
government app.
- Pre-booking of seats and pre-payment through
bank/online transaction.
- Maximum 90 ml liquor per person per day and stay
limited to 45 minutes.
- Bright white lighting inside and around bars (no
dim lights).
- Breath analyser at entry and exit.
- No sharing of drinks; AI cameras to monitor
violations with automatic fines.
- Safe Travel After Drinking:
- Ban on driving personal vehicles or two-wheelers
after drinking.
- Use only pre-booked taxis/autos for drop.
- Bar must arrange safe drop if no one comes to pick
up (cost deducted automatically).
- Ban on using public transport (bus/metro)
immediately after drinking.
- Family Awareness:
- The app automatically shares entry details with 5
registered family members/friends.
- Family can know if a member has visited a bar.
- Strict Rules for Special Cases:
- No serving liquor in hotel rooms.
- Ban on liquor in trains, flights, buses, and
cruises.
- Special limited permissions for foreign embassies
and clubs with strict monitoring.
- Election Period: Bars to be closed 72 hours before
elections to reduce distribution of liquor for votes.
- Severe Punishment: Life imprisonment for bootlegging,
illegal supply of cheap liquor, and drunk driving by commercial drivers
(truck/taxi/auto).
How This Helps Families
(Especially Children & Students)
- Saves Money for the Family: Money that was earlier
wasted on alcohol or cheap liquor will now be saved or used for food,
education, and children’s needs.
- Protects Children: Children will not see their
parents drinking or fighting in front of them. This reduces fear, anxiety,
and emotional damage in children.
- Reduces Domestic Violence: Limited and controlled
consumption + family awareness through the app will greatly reduce
quarrels and violence at home.
- Prevents Children from Becoming Addicts: No child or
student below legal age can easily get alcohol. Strict biometric entry and
monitoring make it very difficult for underage or addicted persons to
drink excessively.
- Improves Health of Earning Members: Men and women who
previously spent money on alcohol will have better health, more energy,
and can focus on work and family.
Other Major Benefits
- Reduces Road Accidents: Strict rules on driving after
drinking will save lakhs of lives every year (especially on highways).
- Reduces Adultery, Illegitimate Relations & Crimes
Against Women: Open availability of liquor often leads to such problems.
Controlled access will reduce these issues.
- Financial Discipline: Families will have more money
for essential needs. Combined with the Provision Debit Card system, basic
food and children’s future will be secured first.
- National Benefits: Increase in recorded transactions,
better tax collection, reduction in black money, and overall improvement
in public health and productivity.
Alcohol in excess destroys not
only the person drinking but the entire family — especially children. Strict
regulation through licensed bars with limited quantity, biometric entry, family
awareness, and strong punishment for violations will protect millions of
families.
When Parents control alcohol
consumption and spend money wisely on food, education, and family needs, your
children will grow up healthy, confident, and happy.
Children Understand that a
peaceful and disciplined home is the greatest gift. Support your family in
following good habits.”
This well-designed alcohol
regulation system, when implemented sincerely along with financial discipline
measures (like Provision Debit Card, spending limits, and honest earning), will
create a healthier, more peaceful, and economically stronger India. It will
protect children, reduce violence, save money for families, and build a
responsible society.
Group 13 Media
& Social Media
69. Why
Government Should Restrict or Ban Social Media Reels & Inappropriate
Posting by Students, Teachers, Government Employees, Doctors, Medical Staff,
Police & Armed Forces Personnel
Social media reels and posts,
especially those involving skimpy or inappropriate clothing, dancing, or
personal content, have become very common. When done by students, teachers,
doctors, government employees, police, or armed forces personnel, it raises
serious concerns about professionalism, safety, focus, and the example being
set for society.
This is necessary because such
content distracts students from studies, wastes valuable time, harms mental
health, and creates unrealistic comparisons. For teachers and professionals, it
damages their authority, public trust, and the dignity of their roles. Many
reels normalise inappropriate behaviour and can lead to addiction, poor sleep,
stress, and reduced productivity. Young students often copy these trends,
affecting their values and future.
The government should implement
clear restrictions or a ban on making and posting such reels for these groups
to protect focus on education and professional duty, maintain public respect,
and promote a culture of discipline and responsibility. Positive and
educational use of social media can still be encouraged with proper guidelines.
Why Restrictions or Ban Are
Needed
- Students
- Social media reels distract from studies and waste
valuable time.
- Inappropriate content harms focus, mental health,
and academic performance.
- Young students may copy harmful trends, affecting
their values and future.
- Schools should be places of learning and
discipline, not platforms for online fame.
- Teachers
- Teachers are role models. Inappropriate reels
damage their authority and the respect students have for them.
- It sends the wrong message to children about
professionalism and boundaries.
- Doctors & Medical Staff
- Medical professionals represent trust and
seriousness. Skimpy or casual reels can reduce patient confidence and
damage the dignity of the profession.
- During duty hours or in uniform, such activity is
highly inappropriate.
- Police & Armed Forces Officials
- These are disciplined forces. Posting personal or
revealing content harms the image of authority, discipline, and national
service.
- Security risks: Personal information or locations
can be misused.
- Government Employees
- They represent the system. Public servants should
maintain dignity and focus on public service rather than personal online
popularity.
Common Problems:
- Excess time on reels leads to addiction, poor sleep,
stress, and reduced productivity.
- Inappropriate clothing or behaviour sets wrong
examples, especially for young students.
- Privacy and safety risks (cyber bullying, stalking,
misuse of images).
- Blurs the line between personal and professional
life.
Proposed Government Action
- Ban or strictly restrict making and posting reels or
inappropriate personal content on social media for students (in
school/college), teachers, government employees, doctors, medical staff,
police, and armed forces personnel.
- Clear guidelines: No reels in skimpy clothes, no
dance reels during working/school hours, no content that harms
professional image.
- Existing official accounts can be used only for
official information.
- Awareness campaigns on responsible social media use.
- Schools can have strict rules and monitoring for
students.
- Violations can lead to disciplinary action (warning,
suspension, or other suitable measures).
Exceptions:
- Genuine educational or official content (with
approval).
- Personal accounts with strict privacy settings and
responsible use.
- Complete ban may not be practical; clear guidelines
with strong enforcement for government-related persons is more feasible.
Benefits of This Step
- Students focus more on studies, sports, and real-life
skills.
- Teachers and professionals maintain dignity and
public trust.
- Reduces distractions, stress, anxiety, and sleep
problems caused by excessive social media.
- Creates a culture of discipline and responsibility.
- Protects young minds from harmful trends and online
risks.
- Supports overall healthy lifestyle (better sleep,
physical activity, family time, community cleanliness, etc.).
This policy aligns with earlier
recommendations on limited screen time, early sleep, morning routines,
community cleanliness, minimalist living, and focus on natural health.
Implementation Suggestions
- Issue clear guidelines through education, health, and
home departments.
- Include digital responsibility in school curriculum.
- Train teachers and parents on guiding children.
- Use awareness campaigns showing positive examples of
disciplined public servants and successful students.
- Encourage positive use of social media for education
and awareness instead of entertainment reels.
A disciplined approach to social
media will help build a more focused, responsible, and healthier generation.
Students and professionals should shine through their work, character, and
service — not through viral reels.
70. No
Shortcuts in Life to Earn Money — Preserving Self-Respect, Dignity, and Decency
Life is a long journey. The money
or success you earn through hard work, honesty, and self-respect brings real
happiness and peace. Shortcuts that compromise your dignity, self-respect, or
decency may give quick money but always bring problems later — guilt, loss of
respect, health issues, and regret.
Many young people today,
influenced by social media, think showing their body in reels or videos is an
easy way, or doing risks to get views to earn money or fame. This is harmful
because your body is precious and not a product to be displayed for likes or
income. Such actions may give temporary attention but lead to loss of
self-respect, public judgment, mental stress, addiction, and long-term
regret.
Teaching students that there are
no real shortcuts in life is necessary so that they value hard work, education,
skills, and dignity. When children understand that true success comes from
sincere effort, good character, and self-respect, they build a strong
foundation for a meaningful, peaceful, and respected life. Preserve your
self-respect always — it is your greatest wealth
There Are No Real Shortcuts to
Earn Money
- True success comes from consistent effort, learning
skills, studying well, working honestly, and improving yourself day by
day.
- Easy money through wrong means (cheating, lying, or
showing your body) may look attractive for some time, but it destroys your
inner peace and future.
- Many people who take shortcuts later face legal
problems, loss of reputation, or unhappiness.
Important Lesson: Hard work,
patience, and honesty are the only reliable paths to a good life. There is no
substitute for sincere effort.
Self-Respect and Dignity Must
Always Be Preserved
Your body is precious. It is a
gift given to you.
- Right over your body means you can take care of it,
keep it healthy, dress comfortably, and protect it — not show it publicly
to earn money.
- Showing your body (nudity, semi-nudity, or
provocative content) in reels, videos, social media, or any platform for
money or attention is indecent. It harms your own dignity and
self-respect.
- Such actions may bring temporary attention or money,
but they lead to:
- Loss of self-respect
- Public judgment and loss of future opportunities
- Mental stress and comparison
- Negative influence on younger children who watch
such content
Prostitution or any profession
that involves selling the body is harmful to physical and mental health. It
should never be seen as a normal career option. True empowerment comes from
education, skills, and self-reliance — not from compromising dignity.
Government Should Take Strong
Action
- Strictly ban “thirst trap” videos, explicit reels,
and content that shows the body provocatively for views or money.
- Enforce rules on social media platforms so that
Indian citizens (especially young people) do not create or share such
content.
- Promote positive and dignified content instead.
- Educate young people through schools about the
importance of self-respect and long-term consequences of such choices.
Schools should clearly teach:
“Your body is not a product to be shown for likes or money. Respect it, protect
it, and use your talent and knowledge to earn respect and a good life.”
Positive Alternatives for
Students
- Focus on studies, sports, arts, skills, and hobbies.
- Learn useful professions (farming, weaving,
mechanics, teaching, nursing, engineering, etc.) that give dignity and
stable income.
- Develop self-confidence through knowledge, good
character, and hard work.
- Understand that real beauty and attraction come from
personality, kindness, intelligence, and confidence — not from showing the
body.
There are no shortcuts in life to
earn real success and happiness. Preserve your self-respect and dignity always.
Your body is precious — do not use it to earn money by showing it in public or
through inappropriate content. Showing body in reels or videos may give quick
attention, but it harms your future and inner peace. Choose the path of
honesty, hard work, and self-respect. Study well, learn skills, stay
disciplined, and build a life you can be proud of. Real success comes to those
who value their dignity and work sincerely.”
This teaching is part of building
strong character, moral values, and disciplined living. When combined with good
food habits, physical exercises, respect for all professions, and religious
harmony, it helps you become a confident, respected, and successful person.
Group 14 General
Health Genital Health Sex
71. Teaching
Students General Hygiene & Genital Health from a Young Age (Class 3
Onwards) — For Safety, Cleanliness & Healthy Life
It is very important to teach
children from Class 3 onwards how to take proper care of their own body,
especially during bath and toilet use. Unfortunately, many families (including
mothers, teachers, and even young girls) treat genital hygiene as a taboo
subject or something related only to sex. Because of this silence, proper care
is often ignored. Girls may use harsh soaps, hot water, or frequent douching
(washing inside), which disturbs the natural pH balance of the vagina and leads
to infections, itching, bad smell, and white discharge. Boys may not clean
properly, leading to fungal growth or infections. Some children completely
neglect cleaning after urination or defecation.
This education is necessary so
that children learn safe, natural ways to keep the genital area clean, prevent
infections, and report any problems early (swelling, redness, pus, pain,
unusual discharge, or accidental injury). When taught in a simple, respectful,
and age-appropriate way, it builds lifelong healthy habits, reduces stress and
anxiety (especially for girls), and protects sensitive areas from harm. Good
genital hygiene is not a taboo — it is basic self-care that keeps the body
healthy, comfortable, and confident
It is very important to teach
children from Class 3 onwards how to take proper care of their own body,
especially during bath and toilet use. This education helps them stay clean,
prevent infections, and develop healthy lifelong habits.
All lessons must be taught in a
simple, age-appropriate, and respectful way by teachers and parents.
1. Basic Self-Care Habits (From
Class 3)
- Learn to take care of your own bath and toilet
independently.
- After bathing, always clean the bathroom so the next
person gets a clean space.
- Flush the toilet every time after use.
- Wash hands properly with soap after using the toilet.
2. Proper Cleaning of Genitals
(Daily During Bath)
For Boys:
- Clean the penis gently every day during bath with
plain water.
- Pull back the foreskin (if not circumcised) and clean
underneath carefully.
- Never use soap, shampoo, or strong chemicals inside
or on sensitive areas.
For Girls:
- Clean the outer genital area (vulva) gently with
plain water only.
- Never use soap, shampoo, or any chemical inside the
vagina.
Reason: The
vagina has its own natural good bacteria (healthy flora). Soap or shampoo
disturbs this balance and allows bad bacteria to grow, leading to infections,
itching, bad smell, and urinary tract infections (UTIs).
- Always wash from front to back after defecation
(pooping). This prevents germs from the anus entering the vagina or
urinary opening, which can cause UTIs and infections.
3. Safe Application of Natural
Products (If Needed)
- Once or twice a week, or if there is mild irritation,
gently apply a few drops of pure coconut oil or a very mild lavender oil
(diluted) only on the outer surface of the genitals.
- These natural oils help keep the skin soft and may
reduce mild irritation.
- Never apply anything inside the vagina or anus
without advice from a doctor.
4. Understanding Natural Dark
Colour in the Groin/Genital Area (For Boys & Girls)
Dark colour in the groin and
genital area is completely normal and biological for both males and females.
Even if your overall skin is fair or light brown, the skin around the penis,
vulva (vaginal lips), anus, and inner thighs is naturally darker in almost
everyone. This is one of the most common skin tone differences and is not a
problem, disease, or something “wrong”.
Why This Happens (Simple
Explanation)
More melanin-producing cells: The
skin in genital and groin areas naturally has more melanocytes (cells that
produce pigment). This is similar to how nipples are darker than the rest of
the breast skin.
Hormones: During puberty (and
sometimes pregnancy or with hormonal changes), hormones like estrogen increase
melanin production in these areas.
Friction: Constant rubbing
against clothes, thighs, and underwear stimulates the skin to produce more
pigment as protection.
Skin folds and thinner skin: In
folded areas, skin is thinner, more sensitive, and has higher blood flow,
making the colour appear darker.
Age and genetics: It becomes more
noticeable after puberty and is stronger in people with naturally more melanin
(medium to brown skin tones), but it happens in fair-skinned people too.
This darkening usually starts or
increases during teenage years and is a standard human feature — not a flaw.
How to Keep It Healthy &
Comfortable
Wear loose 100% cotton
undergarments (especially for girls). Tight panties, synthetic
(polyester/nylon) materials, and tight pencil skirts or pants increase friction
and sweating, which can make the area darker and more prone to irritation.
Choose loose or “passing type”
cotton bottoms for girls.
Avoid very tight clothing in the
genital area as much as possible.
When to Worry (Rare Cases)
Only seek medical advice if there
is: Sudden darkening + itching, redness,
or burning (could be fungal infection).
Very uneven patches with raised
borders.
Pain, unusual discharge, or bad
odour.
Otherwise, it is 100% normal and
does not require any treatment.
Important Warning:
Do Not Use Whitening Products or
Social Media Tips
Never use any creams, lotions, or
“whitening” remedies (including those promoted by social media influencers) on
the genital area. These products can cause severe irritation, chemical burns,
infections, or long-term skin damage in this sensitive region. Self-medication
or following unverified online tips is dangerous and unnecessary.
5. Safe
Application of Natural Products (If Needed)
Once or twice a week, or if there
is mild irritation, gently apply a few drops of pure coconut oil or a very mild
lavender oil (diluted) only on the outer surface of the genitals. These natural
oils help keep the skin soft and may reduce mild irritation.
Never apply anything inside the
vagina or anus without advice from a doctor.
1.
What Not to Do (Very Important Safety Rules)
- Never scratch any wound, pimple, or itch in the
genital area (penis or vagina). Scratching can cause infection and make
the problem worse.
- Never insert any object inside the vagina or anus —
this includes plastic, vegetables, fruits, or any other item (even with a
condom). This can cause serious injuries, infections, and long-term health
problems.
- Avoid chemical hair removal creams, waxing, or harsh
ointments for pubic hair removal.
2.
Pubic Hair Care
- Keep pubic hair intact as much as possible. It has
natural advantages:
- Acts as a protective barrier.
- Reduces friction and irritation.
- Helps maintain natural temperature and moisture
balance.
- Trimming (not shaving) every 15 days is the safest
method.
- Use clean scissors or a trimmer carefully.
- Never shave completely as it can cause cuts,
ingrown hairs, and infections.
- If any small cut or scratch happens while trimming:
- Immediately apply fresh turmeric paste (made from
fresh turmeric root, not market powder).
- Apply a little fresh coconut oil (not scented) on
the area.
- Keep the area clean and dry.
3.
Oral Sex Safety (For Older Students)
As students grow older, they must
understand that oral sex is not completely safe, especially at a young age
while still studying. It can spread infections.
Precautions (if at all):
- Always use protection like dental dams or condoms.
- Maintain excellent oral and genital hygiene.
- The safest approach is to focus on studies and delay
such activities until one is mature and responsible.
4.
How to Report Any Problem
Students should be taught to
immediately report any discomfort, itching, pain, unusual discharge, bad smell,
or injury in the genital area to:
- Parents (especially mother for girls), or
- Female teacher / school counsellor.
Early reporting helps get proper
care quickly — first through food and lifestyle corrections, and if needed,
through a qualified doctor. Never feel shy or scared to speak up. Health is
more important than anything else.
Menstrual Hygiene (Especially for
Girls – To Be Taught from Class 5–6 Onwards)
Menstrual Hygiene – Simple and
Important Rules for Girls
When girls start getting their
periods (usually around 10–15 years of age), they must learn proper menstrual
care to stay clean, comfortable, and healthy.
Daily Cleaning: During periods,
wash the outer genital area (vulva) gently with plain water 2–3 times a day.
Never use soap, shampoo, or any chemical inside the vagina.
Changing Pads/Cloths: Change
sanitary pads or clean cloths every 4–6 hours (or sooner if heavy flow). Do not
keep the same pad for too long — this prevents bad smell, itching, and
infections.
Proper Disposal: Wrap used pads
properly and throw them in the dustbin (never flush them in the toilet). Wash
reusable cloths thoroughly with soap and dry them in sunlight.
Extra Care: Wear loose cotton
undergarments. Avoid very tight clothes during periods. Drink plenty of water
and eat iron-rich foods (leafy greens, guava, dates, sprouts) to prevent
weakness.
What to Do if There is Pain or
Discomfort: Tell your mother or female teacher immediately.
Rest well, use a warm water bag
on the lower stomach if needed, and avoid cold foods/drinks. Mild pain is
common, but severe pain should be checked by a doctor.
Never Feel Shy: Periods are a
natural process. Speak openly with your mother or teacher if you have any doubt
or problem. Early care prevents infections and keeps you strong for studies and
play.
Simple Message for Girls:
“Take care of your body during
periods with cleanliness and rest. Good menstrual hygiene keeps you healthy,
confident, and free from infections.”
5.
Overall Benefits of This Education
- Prevents urinary tract infections (UTIs), rashes, and
other genital infections.
- Builds self-confidence and good hygiene habits from a
young age.
- Reduces stress and anxiety in children, especially
girls.
- Teaches respect for one’s own body and the importance
of cleanliness.
- Creates awareness about safety and consent.
Your body is precious. Taking
care of it properly during bath and toilet use keeps you healthy, comfortable,
and confident. Always use plain water for cleaning sensitive areas, keep pubic
hair trimmed (not shaved), never insert anything inside, and immediately tell
your parents or teacher if you feel any problem. Good hygiene = good health =
better studies and happy life.
These lessons should be taught
regularly in schools through simple talks, charts, and stories, and reinforced
at home by parents. When children learn these habits early, they grow up as
responsible and healthy individuals.
72. Menstrual
Hygiene and Care for Young Girls – Including Early Puberty, Common Issues,
Natural Management, Rest, and Safety
Menstruation is a natural and
healthy part of growing up for girls. However, many girls feel shy, scared, or
confused when they start their periods, especially if there is no proper
guidance. Teaching menstrual hygiene and care from a young age (awareness from
Class 4–5 and detailed education from Class 5–6) is necessary so that girls
stay clean, comfortable, confident, and safe.
Mothers, female teachers, and
schools play the most important role in this education. When girls learn
simple, practical rules — changing pads regularly, washing with plain water,
wearing loose cotton clothes, eating iron-rich foods, and reporting any problems
early — they can manage periods without fear, infections, or unnecessary
discomfort. This education also helps girls with early puberty (as young as 7–8
years) and teaches them safety from predators and the importance of rest during
periods.
Proper menstrual care prevents many health
issues, reduces stress and anxiety, and builds lifelong self-respect and
confidence in girls
Teaching girls about menstrual
hygiene from a young age (ideally starting awareness from Class 4–5 and
detailed education from Class 5–6) helps them stay healthy, confident, and
safe. This education should be simple, respectful, and age-appropriate. Mothers,
female teachers, and schools play the most important role.
1. Basic Menstrual Hygiene for
All Girls
- Change sanitary pads or clean cloths every 4–6 hours
(or more frequently if the flow is heavy).
- Wash the outer genital area gently with plain water
2–3 times a day during periods. Never put soap, shampoo, or any chemical
inside the vagina.
- Always wipe from front to back after using the
toilet.
- Wear loose, clean, 100% cotton undergarments. Avoid
very tight clothes.
- Dispose of used pads properly (wrap and throw in
dustbin). Wash reusable cloths thoroughly and dry them in sunlight.
- Drink plenty of water and eat iron-rich foods (leafy
greens, guava, sprouts, dates, jaggery) to maintain strength.
2. Common Menstrual Issues – What
to Report and How
Girls should be taught to observe
their body and report these issues to their mother or female teacher without
feeling shy:
- Excess bleeding (soaking more than one pad every 1–2
hours)
- Very long periods (more than 7–8 days)
- Irregular cycles (periods coming too early, too late,
or skipping months)
- Spotting (light bleeding between periods)
- Colour changes in blood (very dark, blackish, or
unusual colour for many days)
- Severe pain in the lower abdomen, back, or ovaries
(normal mild cramps are common, but strong pain that stops daily
activities needs attention)
- Unusual smell, itching, or discharge along with
periods
How to Report:
Tell your mother or a trusted female teacher immediately. Early reporting helps
in quick and natural management. Do not hide problems out of shyness.
3. Natural Ways to Manage
Menstrual Challenges
- Eat iron-rich and nourishing foods (greens, sprouts,
guava, banana, dates, palm jaggery).
- Drink warm water or herbal teas (like ginger or tulsi
water in moderation).
- Apply a warm water bag or cloth on the lower stomach
for cramps.
- Gentle walking or light stretching can help, but
avoid heavy exercise.
- Rest properly (explained below).
- Maintain cleanliness and wear loose cotton clothes.
- For mild discomfort, some girls find relief with
gentle abdominal massage using warm coconut oil (only on the outer stomach
area).
Important: If pain or bleeding is
very severe, or if there are other symptoms, consult a qualified doctor after
trying natural methods. Food and lifestyle corrections should always come
first.
Foods and Natural Methods to
Reduce Period Pain (Dysmenorrhea)
Mild to moderate period cramps
are common. Many girls get good relief through food, rest, and simple home
remedies. These should be tried first before any medicine.
Helpful Foods During Periods
Iron-rich foods — Leafy greens
(spinach, amaranth, methi), sprouts, guava, pomegranate, dates, raisins, palm
jaggery, and jaggery with lemon.
These help replace blood loss and
reduce weakness.
Magnesium-rich foods — Bananas,
almonds (soaked), pumpkin seeds, and sesame seeds. Magnesium helps relax
muscles and reduce cramps.
Anti-inflammatory foods — Ginger
(in warm water or tea), turmeric (in warm milk or food), garlic (one small
clove), and fresh fruits.
Hydrating foods — Cucumber,
watermelon, coconut water, and plenty of plain water. Dehydration can increase
cramps.
Warm foods — Warm soups, khichdi,
or porridge feel comforting and help ease pain.
Foods to Limit / avoid During
Periods
Cold drinks and ice creams (can
increase cramps for some girls).
Excess salty or fried foods (can
cause bloating).
Very heavy, oily, or processed
foods.
Simple Natural Methods to Reduce
Pain
Rest — Lie down or take light
rest on heavy flow days. Avoid heavy exercise or lifting weights. Good sleep
helps a lot.
Gentle Movement — Light walking
or gentle stretching can reduce cramps for many girls. Avoid intense workouts.
Warm Compress — Apply a warm
water bag or warm cloth on the lower abdomen for 15–20 minutes. This relaxes
muscles and reduces pain.
Castor Oil Pack (External Use
Only)
Warm a small amount of pure
castor oil slightly (test on your wrist first — it should be comfortably warm,
not hot).
Apply it gently on the lower
tummy (below the belly button) or lower back.
Cover with a clean cloth and
place a warm water bag on top for 15–20 minutes.
Do this once or twice a day
during painful days.
Important: Use only externally.
Never drink castor oil or put it inside the body. Do a patch test first. Stop
if you feel any irritation.
Other Safe Remedies
Drink warm ginger water or
tulsi-ginger water (1–2 times a day).
Gentle circular massage on the
lower abdomen with warm coconut oil (only on the outer skin).
Stay warm — wear warm clothes and
avoid sitting in cold or AC for long.
When to See a Doctor
If pain is very severe (you
cannot go to school or do daily activities), lasts many days, or comes with
heavy bleeding, vomiting, or dizziness — inform your mother or teacher and
consult a qualified doctor.
4. Why Rest is Needed During
Menstruation Days
During periods, the body is
working hard — the uterus is shedding its lining and the body is losing some
blood and energy. Rest helps in:
- Recovering strength and reducing weakness.
- Reducing cramps and back pain.
- Keeping emotions balanced (many girls feel tired or
irritable due to hormonal changes).
- Preventing heavier bleeding or exhaustion.
Girls should be allowed light
rest, avoid heavy physical work or sports on heavy flow days, and get enough
sleep. This is not laziness — it is taking care of the body
5. Special Guidance for Girls
with Early Puberty (as Young as 7–8 Years)
Some girls start their periods
very early (7–8 years or even younger).
These girls need extra care and
understanding because they may not fully understand what is happening.
For the Child:
- Teach basic hygiene in very simple words (changing
pad/cloth, washing with water, keeping clean).
- Use simple stories or pictures so she understands
periods are normal and not something to fear.
- Explain that she must tell her mother or teacher
immediately if she sees blood.
- Teach her to stay safe — never go alone with
strangers, always inform family where she is going, and understand “good
touch and bad touch.”
For Mothers:
- Stay calm and supportive. Do not scold or show shock.
- Help the child with hygiene and provide proper
pads/cloths.
- Monitor her closely for safety — early puberty can
sometimes attract unwanted attention.
- Talk to her regularly in a loving way so she feels
comfortable sharing any problem.
For Teachers and Schools:
- Female teachers should be trained to handle such
cases sensitively.
- Keep extra pads available in school.
- Maintain privacy and never discuss a child’s period
in front of others.
- Inform the mother immediately if any issue arises in
school.
- Teach all students (boys and girls) to be respectful
and understanding.
6. Safety from Predators and
General Protection
Girls with early periods need
extra protection:
- Never go alone to isolated places.
- Always inform parents or teachers about where they
are going.
- Learn to say “No” firmly and run to a safe place if
they feel uncomfortable.
- Understand good touch and bad touch clearly.
- Mothers and teachers must keep open communication so
the girl feels safe to report anything unusual.
Periods are a natural and healthy
part of growing up. Taking care of hygiene, resting when needed, eating good
food, and speaking openly about any problem keeps you strong and healthy. Early
puberty needs extra love, care, and protection — mothers and teachers play the
most important role here.
Your body is precious. Learn to
take care of it with love and respect. Good menstrual hygiene and awareness
will help you stay confident, healthy, and safe throughout your school years
and life.”
These lessons should be taught
through simple talks, charts, mother-daughter sessions, and regular school
programmes in a respectful and age-appropriate manner. When girls receive
proper guidance from a young age, they grow up as confident, healthy, and empowered
individuals.
73. Why
Government Should Educate Students on Premarital Sex, Consent, Health Risks
& Safe Reporting Mechanisms — For Healthy Future of Students
Early or premarital sexual
activity among school and college students is a growing concern. Many students
engage in it without full understanding of risks, leading to health problems,
emotional trauma, unwanted pregnancies, illegal abortions, and negative impact
on studies and future life. The government should implement comprehensive,
age-appropriate education along with safe support and reporting systems.
Why Education on Premarital Sex
& Sexual Health is Necessary
Students need clear, factual
information (not fear or shame) about:
- Health Risks: Sexually transmitted infections (STIs)
like HIV, syphilis, gonorrhoea, chlamydia, HPV, etc. Multiple partners
greatly increase risk.
- Unintended Pregnancy: Can lead to stress, disruption
in studies, and in some cases illegal or unsafe abortions (which are
dangerous and illegal in many situations).
- Emotional & Psychological Impact: Regret,
anxiety, depression, trauma, loss of self-respect, and relationship
difficulties. This can affect mental health and concentration in studies.
- Impact on Studies & Future: Distraction, reduced
focus, absenteeism, and long-term consequences on career and personal
life.
- Consent & Respect: Sexual activity must always be
consensual, respectful, and between adults. Underage sex has legal and
developmental risks.
Education should focus on making
informed, healthy choices and understanding that waiting or being in a
committed, responsible relationship later in life is often better for physical
and emotional health.
Safe Sex Practices (General
Education)
When students are older and in
adult relationships, they should know:
- Importance of consent (clear, enthusiastic, ongoing
“yes”).
- Consistent and correct use of condoms (for STI
prevention and pregnancy).
- Other contraceptive methods (only under medical
guidance — birth control pills should never be taken irrationally or
without doctor advice).
- Regular health check-ups and open communication with
partners.
- Avoiding pressure or multiple partners without
protection and responsibility.
The goal is prevention of
problems and promotion of responsible behaviour, not encouragement of early
sexual activity.
Important Guidance on
Masturbation and Self-Sexual Activity
Many students (especially teenage
boys and some girls) start indulging in regular masturbation after watching
porn or raunchy videos on social media. This can become addictive and lead to
loss of health, depletion of vital nutrients and minerals, tiredness, poor
concentration in studies, depression, and over-focus on sex-related
thoughts.
Girls sometimes try masturbation
by inserting fingers or objects (such as long brinjal, carrot, radish, banana,
or other items) into the vagina or anus. This is very dangerous and unhealthy.
It can cause serious injuries, infections, tears, and long-term problems.
Students must understand that
self-sexual activity is not a healthy or necessary habit during school and
college years. The best approach is to wait until you complete your education,
become independent, and are in a mature, legal, and responsible relationship
(after marriage or in a committed adult relationship). Focus your energy on
studies, sports, skills, and building a strong future.
Avoid porn completely. It
distorts your understanding of relationships and can lead to unrealistic
expectations and addiction. If you are already struggling with these habits,
speak to a trusted parent or counsellor for support. Strong self-control during
student years brings better health, sharper mind, and greater success in life.
Identification, Safe Reporting
& Support (Not Punishment)
- Teachers should be trained to identify signs of
distress, possible harassment, or risky situations (without invading
privacy).
- Create safe, confidential reporting mechanisms for
sexual harassment or concerns (including reporting consensual private
activity ).
- Government App: Develop a free, confidential app
where students can safely report sexual harassment, coercion, or serious
concerns. Reports should go directly to trusted teachers, counsellors, or
authorities with location/GPS protection where needed. The system must
protect the reporter from backlash.
- Fellow students/ friends can report / record sexual
activity in govt designated App , to ascertain and take punitive action of
dismissal from educational institution and bn from readmission in any
other educational institution.
Loose education forever.
- Focus should be on support and protection.
- Provide counselling and medical support for students
who may be facing pressure, trauma, or health issues.
Role of Teachers, Classmates,
Parents & Schools
- Teachers: Educate factually, create safe space for
questions, and support students without judgment.
- Classmates & Roommates: Be encouraged to support
friends and report harassment or serious distress safely.
- Parents: Be involved through awareness sessions so
they can guide children with love and correct information.
- Schools: Conduct regular age-appropriate sessions on
consent, body respect, emotional health, and risks of early sexual
activity.
- Goal: Help students make healthy choices and ensure
no one feels pressured or isolated. Support already struggling students to
recover and focus on studies and future.
Government Initiatives Needed
- Develop standard, scientifically accurate educational
material (books, videos, posters, calendars) for classrooms and homes.
- Train teachers on sensitive handling of these topics
and identification of distress.
- Create and promote the confidential reporting app
with proper privacy safeguards.
- Run awareness campaigns on consent, healthy
relationships, and risks of early/multiple-partner unprotected sex.
- Strengthen laws and enforcement against sexual
harassment and exploitation of minors.
- Provide access to counselling and youth-friendly
health services.
- Combine this education with overall healthy lifestyle
programs (good sleep, exercise, limited screens, nutritious food,
cleanliness, etc.) because strong mental and physical health reduces
vulnerability to risky behaviours.
Long-Term Benefits for Students
- Better focus on studies and future goals.
- Reduced health risks (STIs, unwanted pregnancies,
trauma).
- Healthier emotional development and self-respect.
- Stronger ability to make responsible decisions in
adulthood.
- Safer school and college environment with proper
support systems.
Education should be empowering
and factual, not fear-based or shaming. The aim is to help students understand
consequences, value their health and future, and have access to help when
needed — so they can lead healthy, focused, and successful lives.
This program should work together
with other initiatives like limited screen time, good sleep routines, daily
exercise, community cleanliness, nutritious meals, and mental health awareness.
Group 15 Gut
Health, Digestion & Constipation Relief
74. Why
Guava Should Be Included Every Day or Every Alternate Day in School Mid-Day
Meals (as Fruit) — Benefits & Ideal Timing
Guava is one of the best,
affordable fruits for children. Including one guava every day or every
alternate day after mid-day meals (or as the fruit portion) is a simple and
powerful way to support immunity, digestion, and overall health. It pairs well
with your millet-based meals and leafy greens.
Key Benefits of Guava for
Children
- High Vitamin C: One guava often has more Vitamin C
than an orange. This boosts immunity, helps fight infections, and improves
iron absorption from leafy greens, millets, and other foods.
- Rich in Fibre: Excellent soluble and insoluble fibre
that supports easy digestion, prevents constipation, and promotes healthy
gut bacteria.
- Antioxidants & Other Nutrients: Contains
lycopene, potassium, and other compounds that protect cells, support heart
health, and reduce inflammation.
- Easy Digestion & Constipation Relief: The fibre
helps regular bowel movements and gentle cleansing of the digestive
system.
- Blood Sugar & Energy: Low glycemic impact when
eaten with meals, providing steady energy without sharp spikes.
- Overall Growth: Supports skin health, vision, bone
development, and strong immunity — very useful for growing children and
adolescents.
Regular guava intake helps fill
common nutritional gaps and works synergistically with daily leafy greens,
millets, sprouts, and fermented foods
Ideal Timing for Fruits in
Mid-Day Meals
- Best Practice: Give fruits (like guava) 2–3 hours
after the main meal, ideally before children leave school.
- Why Not Immediately After Meals?
Fruits digest
very quickly. Eating them right after a full meal (rice/millets + vegetables +
dals) can cause mixing of fast-digesting fruit sugars with slower-digesting
foods. This may lead to fermentation in the stomach, gas, bloating, or
discomfort in some children.
- Why 2–3 Hours Later is Ideal: By this time the main
meal has moved further in digestion. Giving guava as a light snack
provides nutrients without overloading the stomach. Children get the
benefits (Vitamin C, fibre) with minimal discomfort and can absorb
nutrients better.
Practical School Suggestion:
- Main mid-day meal (millet + vegetables + greens +
small fermented java).
- After 2–3 hours (before leaving school): One guava
(or other seasonal fruit) as a closing snack.
- This timing keeps energy steady till they reach home.
How to Include Guava Easily
- Serve whole or cut into pieces (wash thoroughly).
- Children can eat it with skin (extra fibre) or
slightly peeled if preferred.
- Alternate with other fruits (papaya, banana, etc.)
for variety, but keep guava frequent due to its high Vitamin C and fibre.
Overall Help for Children
- Stronger immunity and fewer illnesses.
- Better digestion and regular bowel movements (less
constipation).
- Improved iron absorption when combined with leafy
greens and millets.
- Steady energy and focus throughout the day.
- Natural support for growth, skin health, and overall
vitality.
This fits perfectly with your
broader protocol — daily leafy greens (amaranth, kenaf, spinach, methi), sweet
potato/potato rotation, millet focus, clean surroundings, and fresh food
emphasis. Fruits like guava at the right time complete the meal without causing
discomfort.
Government and schools should
ensure regular supply of seasonal fruits like guava in mid-day meals with
proper timing and hygiene. This small change brings big health benefits at very
low cost.
75. Educating
Students from a Young Age About Gut Health & Relieving Constipation — For a
Healthy Life
The gut (digestive system) is
like the engine of our body. It digests food, absorbs nutrients, removes waste,
and even affects our energy, focus, mood, and immunity. When the gut is
healthy, we feel light, energetic, and happy. When it is unhealthy, we often
suffer from bloating, gas, constipation, acidity, low energy, and poor
concentration.
Teachers and parents should teach
these concepts from a young age using simple language, stories, charts, and
daily practice. This note focuses on both maintaining good gut health and
naturally relieving constipation.
1. What Causes Bad Gut and
Constipation?
Foods that harm the gut when
taken regularly or in excess:
- Too many empty carbohydrates (white rice, white
bread, maida items, sweets, biscuits, cakes, colas, packed juices, pizzas,
burgers, bakery products).
- Very low fibre intake (refined foods instead of whole
grains, millets, vegetables, and fruits with skin).
Lifestyle habits that harm the
gut:
- Irregular eating times.
- Eating too fast without chewing properly.
- Drinking water just before, during, or immediately
after meals.
- Poor food combinations (eating fruits or sweets right
after a heavy meal).
- Lack of physical activity and poor sleep.
These habits lead to poor
digestion, excess gas, fermentation in the stomach, low bile flow, and hard
stools — resulting in bloating, gas, and constipation.
2. The Beetroot Transit Time Test
— A Simple Way to Check Gut Motility
The Beetroot Transit Time Test is
an easy, safe, at-home test that helps you understand how fast or slow food
moves through your digestive system (called gut motility).
Why this test is useful:
- It shows whether your gut is working efficiently.
- Slow transit (more than 48 hours) often means
constipation, which can cause toxin reabsorption, bloating, and
discomfort.
- Regular testing helps you track improvement when you
follow good habits.
How to Do the Beetroot Transit
Time Test (Step by Step):
- Preparation: In the evening, eat a good amount of
cooked beetroot (½ to 1 cup — roasted, steamed, or boiled) with your
dinner. Avoid other red or purple foods (like berries or red cabbage) on
that day so you don’t get confused.
- Note the time: Write down the exact time you ate the
beetroot.
- Observe your stools: Check your bowel movements daily
and note when you first see red, pink, or purple colour in your stool.
Also note when the colour completely disappears.
- Interpretation:
- 12–24 hours: Excellent gut motility — your
digestion is working well.
- 24–48 hours: Slightly slow — common with mild
constipation or low-fibre diet.
- More than 48 hours: Slow transit — indicates
constipation. You need to improve your diet and habits.
- Less than 12 hours: Too fast — may indicate loose
motions or poor absorption.
Important Tips:
- Do this test once a month on the same day for easy
comparison.
- After seeing the red colour, avoid eating beetroot
again until the colour completely clears from your stool (usually 1–3
days).
- Red urine (called beeturia) is harmless and happens
in some people.
- Retest after 3–4 weeks of following good habits
(millets, guava, sprouts, proper water timing, etc.) to see improvement.
This simple test gives you clear
visual proof of your gut health and helps you stay motivated to follow healthy
practices.
3. How to Relieve and Prevent
Constipation Naturally
Best Foods for Good Digestion and
Regular Bowel Movements:
- Daily Guava (1 whole fruit with skin) — rich in fibre
that adds bulk and softens stools.
- Alternate-day Papaya (moderately ripe, ½ small fruit)
— contains papain enzyme that helps digestion and softens stools.
- Fibre-rich whole foods: Millets (pearl, barnyard,
kodo, little), vegetables, sprouts, and fruits eaten with skin.
- Balanced meals with all types of fibre (soluble +
insoluble).
Powerful Daily Practices:
- Morning Water Ritual: Within 30 minutes of waking up,
drink 1 litre of room-temperature or lukewarm water on an empty stomach.
This loosens stools and supports easy morning bowel movement.
- Chew Properly: Chew every bite at least 20 times.
This mixes food well with saliva and starts digestion in the mouth.
- Water Timing: Avoid drinking a lot of water just
before, during, or immediately after meals. Wait at least 1 hour after
eating before drinking water or liquids.
- Eat on Time & in Moderation: Eat meals at regular
fixed times. Stop when you feel 80% full — do not overeat.
- Malasana (Squatting Pose): Practise this daily. It
strengthens pelvic floor muscles and helps complete bowel emptying.
- Castor Oil in the Navel: At night, put 2–4 drops of
warm castor oil in your navel and gently massage clockwise for 1–2
minutes. Leave it overnight. This traditional method improves blood
circulation, relaxes abdominal muscles, and gently supports bowel movement.
It is especially helpful for girls during menstruation.
Why Castor Oil in the Navel Works
Well: It stimulates local blood flow and mild intestinal movement without the
strong effect of drinking castor oil. Many people notice softer stools and
easier bowel movements within a few days of regular use.
4. Complete Daily Gut-Friendly
Routine
- Morning: Drink 1 litre room-temperature/lukewarm
water within 30 minutes of waking.
- Meals: Eat at regular times. Chew well. Include
millets, sprouts, vegetables, and one guava daily.
- After Meals: Wait at least 1 hour before drinking
water.
- Evening: Light walk/play + Malasana.
- Night: Castor oil in navel (if needed) + early sleep
in darkness.
- Do the Beetroot Transit Time Test once a month to
track progress.
Why These Habits Are Important
from a Young Age
Constipation is very common today
due to fast food, excess empty carbohydrates, low fibre, and irregular eating.
Teaching students early helps them:
- Prevent lifelong digestive problems.
- Stay energetic and focused in studies.
- Develop healthy habits that last forever.
- Understand that a healthy gut = healthy body and calm
mind.
Your gut health depends on what you eat, how you eat, and your daily habits.
Start these practices today — chew well, eat on time, drink water at the right
time, do Malasana, use castor oil in the navel, and track with the beetroot
test. A healthy gut means a healthy and energetic life!
These simple steps can help most
students achieve regular, comfortable bowel movements and better overall health
within a few weeks of consistent practice.
76. Teaching
Students About Better Digestion & Healthy Eating Habits
Every student should be taught
how the digestive system works and simple daily habits that improve digestion,
energy, focus, and overall health. These practices should be followed at home,
school, or anywhere — for breakfast, lunch, dinner, or any meal.
1. Understanding the Digestive
System (Gut Health)
The digestive system starts in
the mouth and continues through the stomach and intestines (gut). Good
digestion helps the body absorb nutrients properly, prevents bloating, gas,
acidity, and supports better immunity and energy levels.
Key Rule: Digestion Begins in the
Mouth
Food should be chewed at least 20
times for every bite placed in the mouth.
- This grinds the food well and mixes it thoroughly
with saliva.
- Saliva contains enzymes that start breaking down
food.
- Proper chewing makes swallowing easier and helps the
stomach and intestines digest food better.
Problems with Fast Eating
(Without Proper Chewing)
- Food is not broken down properly → stomach has to
work harder.
- Leads to bloating, gas, acidity, indigestion, and
poor nutrient absorption.
- Increases the risk of overeating because the brain
doesn’t get the “full” signal in time.
2. Correct Water Drinking Habits
Do not drink water 30 minutes
before eating food (except a very small sip if hiccups occur).
Do not drink water during meals
(except small sips if needed).
Do not drink water immediately
after eating — wait at least 1 hour before drinking water or any liquids.
Why These Rules Matter
- Drinking water just before or during meals dilutes
digestive juices (acids and enzymes) in the stomach.
- This weakens digestion and can cause bloating,
heaviness, and acidity.
- Drinking water soon after meals disturbs the natural
digestion process that needs concentrated digestive juices.
- Waiting at least 1 hour allows proper digestion to
take place.
Benefits of Following These Rules
- Better digestion
- Less bloating and acidity
- Improved nutrient absorption
- More energy after meals
3. Why Hiccups Happen & How
to Manage Them
Hiccups usually occur when the
diaphragm (muscle below the lungs) gets irritated, often due to fast eating,
swallowing air, or stomach distension.
Simple Management Techniques
- Drink a small sip of water slowly.
- Hold your breath for a few seconds and breathe out
slowly.
- Sip water while bending forward slightly.
- These techniques usually stop hiccups within minutes.
4. Eat at Regular Times & Eat
in Moderation
- Eat meals at standard, regular timings every day
(breakfast, lunch, dinner).
- This trains the body and digestive system to work
efficiently.
- Avoid eating at random times or very late at night.
Eat Only 80% of Your Full Stomach
Capacity
- Stop eating when you feel 80% full — do not eat until
the stomach feels completely full or overstretched.
- Overeating puts extra pressure on the digestive
system and leads to sluggishness, weight gain, and poor digestion.
- Eating moderately keeps you light, energetic, and
focused after meals.
Summary of Good Practices (To Be
Followed Daily)
- Chew every bite at least 20 times.
- Do not drink water 30 minutes before or during meals
(small sip only for hiccups).
- Wait at least 1 hour after eating before drinking
water or liquids.
- Eat at regular fixed timings.
- Eat only up to 80% stomach capacity — avoid
overeating.
- Manage hiccups with slow sips of water and proper
breathing.
These simple habits improve
digestion, reduce acidity and bloating, increase energy and focus in studies,
and support long-term gut health. When students follow these rules consistently
at home and school, they feel lighter, more active, and perform better in
studies and daily life.
Group 16 Insulin Resistance
Hormonal imbalance Obesity
77. Hormonal
Imbalance in Adolescence — What It Is, Why It Happens, How It Shows Up, and How
to Keep Hormones Balanced Naturally
Hormones are special chemical
messengers in your body that control growth, energy, mood, appetite, sleep, and
many other important functions. During adolescence (teenage years), hormones
like estrogen, progesterone, testosterone, insulin, and others are very active
because your body is going through big changes. Even small disturbances from
food or lifestyle can easily push these hormones out of balance.
Hormonal imbalance is becoming very common in
teenagers because of today’s eating habits (excess sugar, processed foods,
refined flour, deep-fried items) and lifestyle (less movement, poor sleep, too
much screen time). This leads to problems such as weight gain, acne, irregular
or painful periods in girls, mood swings, tiredness, hair fall, and long-term
issues like PCOD/PCOS.
Teaching students about hormonal
imbalance — what it is, why it happens, how it shows up, and how to keep
hormones balanced naturally through food and lifestyle — is necessary so that
they can prevent these problems from a young age. When teenagers understand how
to support their hormones with millets, vegetables, sprouts, good sleep,
morning sunlight, and daily movement, they can enjoy steady energy, clear skin,
better mood, regular periods (for girls), and overall good health during these
important growing years
Your body has special chemical
messengers called hormones. They act like text messages that travel through
your blood and tell different parts of your body what to do — grow, change,
sleep, feel hungry, manage energy, control mood, and manage the monthly cycle
in girls.
When these hormones are in the
right amount and working properly, your body feels balanced. When there is too
much or too little of certain hormones (or they are not working well together),
it is called hormonal imbalance.
Why Adolescence (Teenage Years)
Is a Very Sensitive Time
During adolescence (roughly 10–19
years), your body goes through big changes — growth spurt, voice change, body
shape changes, and in girls, the start of periods. At this time, hormones like
estrogen, progesterone, testosterone, insulin, thyroid hormones, and cortisol
are very active. Even small disturbances from food or lifestyle can push these
hormones out of balance. This is why many teenagers face issues like weight
gain, acne, mood swings, tiredness, or problems with periods.
Common Signs of Hormonal
Imbalance You Can Notice
- Weight gain or difficulty losing weight (especially
fat around the belly) — often linked to high insulin.
- In girls:
- Irregular periods, very heavy bleeding, bleeding
for many days, or spotting between periods.
- PCOD / PCOS (Polycystic Ovary Syndrome) — irregular
or missed periods, weight gain, acne, and extra hair growth on face
(moustache-like hair), chin, or body.
- Mood swings, tiredness, and low energy.
- Acne and oily skin (especially on face, back, chest).
- Hair fall or thinning hair.
- Feeling very tired even after sleeping.
- Mood changes, anxiety, or difficulty concentrating.
- In some cases, early or delayed puberty signs.
These problems are becoming very
common in teenagers because of today’s food and lifestyle habits.
Foods That Help Keep Hormones
Balanced
Your hormones love real, whole,
natural foods. They get disturbed by processed and sugary foods.
Eat These Regularly (Best
Choices):
- Siridhanya Millets (ragi, jowar, bajra, foxtail
millet, little millet, etc.) — These are complex carbohydrates with lots
of fibre. They release sugar slowly, so insulin stays balanced.
- Sprouted lentils, chickpeas, moong, and other legumes
(boiled sprouts are excellent).
- Plenty of vegetables and leafy greens (spinach,
amaranth, methi, carrot, beetroot, tomato, cucumber, bottle gourd).
- Whole fruits with skin (guava, apple, pear, papaya) —
1–2 fruits per day.
- Soaked nuts and seeds (almonds, walnuts, pumpkin
seeds, chia seeds, flax seeds) — small handful daily. These provide
healthy fats that support hormone production.
- Homemade curd or plant-based options.
- Spices like turmeric, ginger, cinnamon, and
fenugreek.
Foods to Strictly Reduce or
Avoid:
- Cane sugar, sweets, chocolates, colas, packaged
juices, biscuits, cakes — These cause sudden spikes in blood sugar and
insulin. High insulin disturbs other hormones (especially in girls, it can
worsen PCOD and acne).
- Refined flour (maida) items like white bread,
noodles, pastries, and deep-fried foods (samosa, chips, pakora) — These
are low in fibre and cause inflammation and hormone imbalance.
- Packaged and processed foods — they contain hidden
sugars, unhealthy fats, and chemicals that confuse your hormones.
- Excess fried foods and reheated oils — these increase
inflammation in the body.
Why Complex Carbs + Fibre +
Balanced Plant-Based Proteins & Healthy Fats Are Important
Complex carbohydrates with fibre
(like millets + vegetables) release energy slowly. This keeps insulin steady.
Steady insulin helps other hormones (estrogen, progesterone, testosterone) stay
balanced. Plant-based proteins (sprouts, dal, nuts) and healthy fats (from
seeds and nuts) give your body the building blocks to make hormones properly.
Balanced meals prevent sudden ups and downs in energy and mood.
Powerful Lifestyle Habits That
Balance Hormones Naturally
These habits are very effective,
especially when started in teenage years:
- Morning Sunlight (20 minutes)
Stand or sit in
morning sunlight (before 10 AM). This helps regulate your body clock (circadian
rhythm) and supports healthy hormone production, including vitamin D and
melatonin (sleep hormone).
- Daily Movement
- 20-minute post-meal walk after lunch or dinner —
this helps insulin work better and improves digestion.
- 20 minutes of basic exercises daily (jumping,
running, yoga poses, or simple home exercises with water bottles).
Movement reduces stress hormone (cortisol) and improves insulin
sensitivity.
- Good Sleep (8–9 hours in complete darkness)
Sleep by 9–9:30
PM and wake up early. Sleep in a dark room (no phone or lights). Good sleep
balances all hormones, especially growth hormone, cortisol, and reproductive
hormones. Lack of sleep increases hunger hormones and insulin resistance.
- No WiFi / Screen Time After 9 PM
Switch off WiFi
and avoid phones/TV after 9 PM till morning. Blue light from screens disturbs
melatonin and sleep quality, which directly affects hormone balance.
- Morning Water Ritual
Drink 1 litre of
water in the morning on an empty stomach (room temperature or slightly warm).
This helps flush toxins, supports digestion, and keeps the body hydrated for
proper hormone function.
- Daily Bowel Movement (No Constipation)
You should pass
stool comfortably every morning. Constipation means waste stays in the body and
can disturb hormone balance (especially estrogen). Eat fibre-rich foods
(millets + vegetables + fruits) and drink enough water to stay regular.
Your teenage years are the best
time to build strong health habits. Hormonal imbalance is mostly caused by what
we eat and how we live — not by bad luck. When you eat millets, sprouts,
vegetables, and nuts, move your body daily, sleep early in darkness, and spend
time in morning sunlight, your hormones stay happy and balanced. You will have
steady energy, clear skin, regular periods (for girls), good mood, and healthy
weight. Small daily choices create big results. Start today — your body will
thank you for many years.
These habits work together with
other healthy practices you are learning (insulin resistance control, proper
footwear, cotton clothes, home exercises, and food as medicine). When hormones
are balanced, you feel energetic, focused in studies, and confident.
78. Insulin
Resistance — What It Is, How It Happens, How It Affects Health, and How
Students Can Prevent or Improve It from a Young Age
Insulin resistance is a condition
in which the body’s cells stop responding properly to insulin, the hormone that
helps move sugar from the blood into cells for energy. This is becoming very
common even among school children and teenagers because of today’s eating
habits (excess sugar, processed foods, refined carbohydrates, deep-fried items)
and lifestyle (less physical activity, poor sleep, irregular meals). When
insulin resistance develops early, it can lead to tiredness, poor
concentration, weight gain, mood swings, fatty liver, PCOS in girls,
prediabetes, and many long-term health problems.
Teaching students from a young
age what insulin resistance is, how it happens, how it affects health, and how
to prevent or reverse it through simple food and lifestyle changes is
necessary. When children learn to eat millets, sprouts, vegetables, and fibre-rich
foods, move their bodies daily, sleep well, and eat on time, their cells stay
sensitive to insulin. This helps them stay energetic, focused in studies,
maintain healthy weight, and protect themselves from many future diseases.
Starting these healthy habits in childhood is one of the most powerful ways to
build lifelong strong health
Your body is like a smart machine
that needs fuel (energy) to run, play, study, and grow strong. The main fuel
comes from the food you eat, especially carbohydrates, which turn into sugar
(glucose) in your blood. To use this sugar for energy, your body needs a
special helper called insulin. Think of insulin as a key and your body cells as
locked doors. Insulin opens the doors so sugar can enter the cells and give you
energy. Insulin resistance happens when the “doors” (your cells) stop listening
to the “key” (insulin). The key is there, but the doors don’t open properly. So
sugar stays in the blood instead of going into the cells. Your pancreas then
makes even more insulin to try harder. Over time, this creates many problems.
How Does Insulin Resistance
Happen?
It usually develops slowly
because of daily habits, especially from a young age:
- Eating too much sugar (sweets, chocolates, colas,
packaged juices, biscuits, cakes).
- Eating lots of refined foods like white rice, maida
(all-purpose flour), white bread, noodles, and fried items.
- Drinking sugary drinks and eating processed/packaged
foods regularly.
- Not moving the body enough (less play, exercise, or
walking).
- Not getting enough good sleep.
- Carrying extra body weight (especially around the
tummy).
- Eating at irregular times or very late at night.
When you eat too many simple and
refined carbohydrates every day, blood sugar rises very fast. The body releases
lots of insulin again and again. After some time, the cells get “tired” of so
much insulin and stop responding properly.
How Does It Affect Health?
When cells don’t get sugar
properly, you may feel:
- Tired and low on energy even after eating.
- Hungry again very soon after meals.
- Difficulty concentrating in class (brain fog).
- Mood swings or irritability.
If it continues for years, it can
lead to:
- Weight gain, especially around the belly.
- Prediabetes and later Type 2 diabetes.
- High blood pressure.
- Fatty liver.
- In girls — PCOS (polycystic ovary syndrome),
irregular periods, acne, and hair problems.
- Higher risk of heart problems later in life.
- Constant low-grade inflammation in the body.
The good news is: Insulin
resistance can be prevented and even improved if you start healthy habits from
a young age!
Foods That Help Prevent and
Improve Insulin Resistance
Eat foods that release sugar
slowly into the blood and keep insulin levels steady:
Best Foods (Eat Daily):
- Siridhanya Millets (ragi, jowar, bajra, foxtail,
little millet, barnyard, kodo, proso) — soak, cook, and rest overnight if
possible. These are excellent because they have lots of fibre and release
energy slowly.
- Sprouted lentils, chickpeas, and beans (boiled
sprouts).
- Lots of vegetables — especially leafy greens, carrot,
beetroot, tomato, radish, cucumber, bottle gourd.
- Whole fruits with skin (guava, apple, pear, papaya,
berries) — in moderation, not as juice.
- Nuts and seeds (soaked almonds, walnuts, pumpkin
seeds, chia seeds, flax seeds) — small handful.
- Curd/yogurt (homemade from plant-based or good
quality).
- Spices like turmeric, ginger, cinnamon, fenugreek
(methi).
Foods to Strictly Reduce or
Avoid:
- Sugar, jaggery (except small palm jaggery
occasionally), honey in excess.
- White rice, maida, white bread, biscuits, cakes,
pastries.
- Packaged snacks, chips, noodles, instant foods.
- Sugary drinks, cola, packaged fruit juices, energy
drinks.
- Fried foods and deep-fried items.
- Excess animal milk and paneer (better to use
plant-based options sometimes).
Simple Meal Tips:
- Start lunch or dinner with vegetables or salad.
- Eat millets or sprouted dal instead of white rice
daily.
- Finish meals with a small piece of guava or a few
nuts instead of sweets.
- Drink plenty of water and herbal drinks
(ginger-turmeric water).
Lifestyle Changes That Help a Lot
- Move Your Body Every Day: Play outdoor games, walk,
run, do simple home exercises (water bottle lifting, yoga poses like Happy
Baby, Balasana, or jumping rope). Even 30–45 minutes of movement helps
cells become sensitive to insulin again.
- Sleep Well: Go to bed early (by 9–10 PM) and sleep
8–9 hours in a dark room. Poor sleep makes insulin resistance worse.
- Manage Stress: Practice deep breathing, spend time in
nature, or do short meditation. Stress increases blood sugar.
- Eat on Time: Have regular meal timings. Avoid eating
late at night.
- Maintain Healthy Weight: Even small healthy changes
in weight (if needed) improve insulin sensitivity quickly.
Your body listens to what you do
every day. When you eat whole, natural foods like millets, sprouts, and
vegetables, and move your body happily every day, your cells stay strong and
listen to insulin properly. You will feel energetic, focused in studies, and healthy
for life. Start small today — choose one millet meal and one playtime daily.
Your future self will thank you!”
Insulin resistance is mostly a
lifestyle disease. By choosing good food and active habits from childhood, you
can protect yourself and your family from many future health problems. This is
one of the most powerful ways to take care of your body — just like brushing
teeth or washing hands.
79. Why
a 5–10 Minute Post-Meal Walk Is Necessary — A Simple Habit That Brings Big
Health Benefits
After eating a meal, many people
immediately sit down, watch TV, use phones, or lie down. But there is a very
simple and powerful habit that can bring big health benefits: walking for just
5 to 10 minutes after every meal. This small habit, started from a young age,
becomes automatic and can protect you and your entire family from many health
problems.
When you eat food (especially
carbohydrates like rice, millets, or roti), it turns into sugar in your blood.
If you sit or lie down right after eating, the sugar stays in the blood longer
than needed. A short post-meal walk helps your leg muscles use this sugar for
energy, keeps blood sugar and insulin steady, improves digestion, reduces gas
and bloating, supports hormone balance, and prevents unnecessary fat storage.
Over time, it reduces the risk of weight gain, insulin resistance, tiredness,
mood swings, and many lifestyle diseases.
Teaching children to take a
gentle 5–10 minute walk after meals is necessary because it is one of the
easiest and most effective ways to stay energetic, focused, and healthy for
life. When the whole family joins this habit, it becomes a beautiful bonding
time and improves everyone’s health naturally
Why Is a Post-Meal Walk So
Important?
When you eat food, especially
meals with carbohydrates (rice, millets, roti, etc.), your body breaks it down
into sugar (glucose) and sends it into your blood. This is normal. But if you
sit or lie down right after eating, the sugar stays in the blood longer than
needed. This forces your body to release more insulin and puts extra load on
your digestive system.
A short walk after meals does
several wonderful things:
- Helps Control Blood Sugar and Insulin
Walking moves
your leg muscles, which act like pumps. They take up sugar from the blood and
use it for energy. This keeps blood sugar steady and reduces the need for too
much insulin. Over time, this prevents or improves insulin resistance — a root
cause of weight gain, tiredness, and many diseases.
- Improves Digestion
Gentle walking
helps food move smoothly through your stomach and intestines. It reduces gas,
bloating, heaviness, and constipation. Good digestion means better absorption
of nutrients (vitamins and minerals) from the same food you eat.
- Supports Hormone Balance
Short walks
after meals help balance many hormones, including insulin, cortisol (stress
hormone), and reproductive hormones in girls. This is especially useful during
teenage years when hormones are changing rapidly.
- Burns a Few Extra Calories Naturally
It helps prevent
unnecessary fat storage, especially around the belly, without any strict
dieting.
- Boosts Energy and Mood
Instead of
feeling sleepy or heavy after meals, you feel light and energetic. It also
improves blood circulation and oxygen supply to the brain, helping you study
better.
- Long-Term Protection
Regular
post-meal walking reduces the risk of weight gain, fatty liver, high blood
pressure, PCOD/PCOS (in girls), and Type 2 diabetes later in life. It is one of
the easiest ways to stay healthy.
Even 5–10 minutes is enough. You
don’t need to walk fast — a gentle, comfortable pace is perfect.
How to Make It a Strong Habit
from Young Age
- After breakfast, lunch, and dinner — stand up within
5 minutes and take a short walk (in the house, balcony, terrace, or nearby
park).
- Make it a family habit — invite your parents,
grandparents, and siblings to join you. When you follow it happily, your
family will also start doing it.
- Use this time to talk with family members — it
becomes a beautiful bonding moment.
- If you are at school, after the mid-day meal, take a
few rounds in the school ground or corridor.
- On holidays or at home, a short walk after dinner is
especially useful because it helps you sleep better.
Simple Tips for Best Results
- Walk after every main meal (not necessary after very
light snacks).
- Do not eat heavy meals late at night — finish dinner
early and walk.
- Combine with other good habits: eating complex
carbohydrates with fibre (millets + vegetables), drinking enough water,
sleeping early in darkness, and morning sunlight.
- If you forget sometimes, it is okay — just restart
the next meal. Consistency matters more than perfection.
A small 5–10 minute walk after
meals is like a magic key for your body. It helps you digest food properly,
keeps energy steady, controls weight naturally, and protects you from many
future health problems. When you make this a daily habit from a young age, you
not only stay healthy yourself but also help your parents, grandparents, and
siblings become healthier. Small consistent actions like this build a strong,
energetic, and long life. Start today after your next meal — your body will
feel lighter and happier!”
This habit perfectly supports
everything you are learning — insulin resistance control, hormonal balance, gut
health, millet-based eating, good sleep, and disciplined living. It is free,
easy, and extremely powerful.
Group 17 Transport,
Bicycle Multi-mode
80. Why
Government Should Ban Personal Vehicle Usage for School Drop/Pick-up by
Teachers, Staff & Students — Mandatory School Buses & Bicycle Use
Personal vehicles for school drop
and pick-up create major problems at school gates and on roads. The government
should ban personal vehicle usage for students and school staff (teachers and
other employees) and make school buses or bicycles the only options.
This is a practical step for
cleaner air, less traffic, reduced stress, and greater equality among students.
How Vehicular Pollution Affects
Children’s Health (Respiratory & Cognitive)
Vehicular exhaust contains
harmful pollutants like particulate matter (PM2.5), nitrogen dioxide, carbon
monoxide, and volatile organic compounds. Children are especially vulnerable
because they breathe faster and their developing organs are more sensitive.
Respiratory Health: Pollution
irritates lungs and airways, increasing risk of asthma, bronchitis, frequent
coughs, colds, and reduced lung function. Long-term exposure can cause
permanent damage to respiratory system and higher chance of allergies.
Cognitive & Brain Health:
Pollutants can reach the brain, causing inflammation and affecting development.
This leads to poorer concentration, memory issues, lower academic performance,
and increased risk of behavioural problems.
Other Effects: Weakened immunity,
eye irritation, headaches, and higher long-term risk of heart and lung
diseases.
School gates filled with idling
vehicles create a high-pollution zone exactly when children are most exposed at
the start and end of the day. Banning personal vehicles dramatically reduces
this daily pollution exposure, protecting children’s lungs, brains, and overall
development.
Why This Ban & Mandatory
System is Necessary
- Pollution at School Gates: Imagine a school with 300
students. If many come in personal cars or two-wheelers at the same time,
the gate area fills with vehicle exhaust. Children breathe this polluted
air right at the start of the day, harming their lungs and health.
- Traffic Congestion: Personal vehicles increase
traffic volume on school routes during peak hours, causing delays for
everyone, including emergency vehicles.
- Cost & Fuel Waste: Unnecessary fuel consumption
and high transport costs for families.
- Stress on Parents: Many parents (especially working
ones) face daily stress of dropping and picking up children in personal
vehicles.
- Inequality Among Students: Rich students come in
expensive cars, while poorer or middle-class students come on
two-wheelers, old cars, or autos. This creates visible social differences
and stress for children from lower-income families.
- Accident Risk: Overloaded autos and three-wheelers
carrying many students are unsafe and prone to accidents.
- Time Loss: Parents and other road users waste time in
school-time traffic.
Banning personal vehicles for
school and making buses or bicycles mandatory solves most of these problems.
Proposed Rules
- No personal vehicle drop or pick-up by parents,
teachers, or staff at school gates.
- School Buses Mandatory:
- For all students below Class 8: Only school bus.
- Parents can drop children at a nearby colony/RWA
pick-up point (not at school gate).
- Bicycle Option (from Class 8 onwards):
- Students can use personal bicycles if the school
provides safe parking space.
- Teachers & Staff: Must use school bus, staff bus,
or public transport/bicycle. No personal vehicles for commuting to school.
Major Benefits
For Students:
- Cleaner air at school — better lung health and
concentration.
- Reduced inequality — all students arrive similarly
(by bus or bicycle), promoting equality and reducing social stress.
- More physical activity for bicycle users — better
fitness and energy.
- Safer travel with organised school buses.
For Parents:
- Huge relief from daily drop/pick-up stress and fuel
costs.
- More time for rest, work, or family.
- Lower anxiety about traffic and safety.
For Environment & Society:
- Significant reduction in pollution and fuel use
around schools.
- Less traffic congestion during school hours.
- Fewer accidents from overloaded private
vehicles/autos.
For Equality & Discipline:
- All students follow the same system, reducing visible
rich-poor divide.
- Builds discipline, responsibility, and community
feeling.
Practical Implementation
- Schools must arrange sufficient buses with proper
safety standards.
- Provide safe bicycle parking with sheds in every
school.
- Government can subsidise bus operations where needed.
- Strict enforcement with penalties for violations.
- Awareness campaigns for parents explaining the
health, equality, and convenience benefits.
Govt make it mandatory that all
students must get admission within 5 km radius or 3 km radius from home in all
cities towns to reduce the traffic from school buses and reducing milage of
school buses. And enable adult students from class 7th onwards to ride
bicycles if they wish instead of school bus.
This policy works well with other
healthy initiatives (clean surroundings, nutritious millet meals, daily
exercise, limited screens, early sleep, community cleanliness drives, etc.).
Cleaner air around schools and less stress directly support better learning and
growth.
Banning personal vehicles for
school drop/pick-up is a bold but much-needed step.
It reduces pollution, traffic,
inequality, and parental stress while promoting healthier and more equal school
life for all children.
81. Mandatory
Bicycle Riding Training for All Students (Class 6 Onwards)
Learning to ride a bicycle is an
important life skill that builds physical fitness, confidence, independence,
and environmental awareness. The government should make bicycle riding training
mandatory for all students from Class 6 onwards in every school (government and
private). Many children today depend completely on motor vehicles even for
short distances, leading to poor physical stamina, increased pollution, and
lack of practical skills. Teaching bicycle riding from a young age is necessary
to develop strong bodies, reduce air pollution, improve road safety awareness,
and instil a lifelong habit of active and sustainable mobility.
Along with training, schools must
educate students on multi-modal transport — using bicycles for short distances
and public transport for longer ones instead of always relying on personal
vehicles. This helps reduce traffic congestion, fuel consumption, and
respiratory problems caused by vehicular pollution, especially benefiting
infants, elderly people, and the entire community. When every student learns
and regularly uses a bicycle, it promotes fitness, equality, discipline, and a
cleaner environment
Every school (government and
private) must make it mandatory for all students above Class 6 to learn and
become proficient in bicycle riding as part of the regular curriculum (physical
education or life skills).
- Schools should provide basic bicycles for practice
where needed.
- Training must include road safety, bicycle
maintenance, and responsible riding.
- Equal training must be given to both boys and girls.
Education on Multi-Modal
Transport
Students must be taught to prefer
multi-modal transport instead of depending only on personal vehicles:
For distances more than 10 km,
use public transport (bus, train, metro) or a smart combination of bicycle +
public transport.
Avoid asking parents to use
personal cars or bikes for every short or medium distance.
Use personal vehicles only when
truly necessary (long journeys, emergency, bad weather, or heavy luggage).
Why Students Must Learn and Use
Bicycles (Education Component)
Along with training, schools must
actively educate students on the following important reasons:
- Reducing Pollution: Using bicycles instead of
vehicles for short distances significantly reduces air pollution in
cities, colonies, and neighbourhoods. Less vehicle use means cleaner air
for everyone.
- Improving Physical Stamina and Health: Cycling
regularly builds physical strength, stamina, and overall fitness. It is
one of the best forms of exercise for growing children.
- Protecting Respiratory Health: Reduced pollution
helps prevent and improve breathing problems (respiratory issues) in
infants, elderly people, and everyone in the community. Cleaner air means
fewer asthma attacks, coughs, and lung-related illnesses.
- Avoiding Unnecessary Vehicle Use: Students must
understand that taking a vehicle (car, auto, or bike) for every nearby
activity — going to school, tuition, market, or a friend’s house — is not
necessary. Short distances can easily be covered by bicycle or even
walking.
- Long-term Benefits: Using bicycles daily helps reduce
traffic congestion, saves fuel, lowers noise pollution, and creates a
healthier environment for the entire society.
Government Should Ensure Every
Student (From Class 5 Onwards) Owns and Regularly Uses a Bicycle
The Government must make it
mandatory for every student from Class 5 onwards to possess and regularly use
their own bicycle. This will promote physical fitness, reduce air pollution,
develop discipline, and instil a sense of independence.
Government Schools: All students
should be provided a free standard bicycle with a unique ID and GPS tracking
facility.
Private Schools: Parents should
purchase the standard-design bicycle through the school (along with fees).
Schools can arrange bulk purchase to get the bicycles at a discounted rate,
ensuring uniformity and affordability.
This measure will encourage
students to cycle to school (where distance permits), reduce dependence on
personal vehicles, improve physical health, and create a culture of sustainable
and active mobility from a young age.
Goal: Inculcating Lifelong Habit
The training and education must
focus on motivating students to make bicycle riding (and barefoot walking where
suitable) an integral part of their daily life. Students should feel proud and
motivated to choose bicycles for everyday activities instead of depending on
motor vehicles.
This habit will help them stay
fit, save money, protect the environment, and contribute to a cleaner,
healthier future for themselves and the next generation.
Expected Outcomes
- Healthier and fitter students.
- Reduced air pollution in cities and colonies.
- Lower respiratory problems among children, elderly,
and the general public.
- Development of responsible, eco-friendly habits from
a young age.
- Less traffic and a calmer environment around schools
and residential areas.
This measure, when combined with
standard school buses for younger children and proper cycle tracks, will create
a strong foundation for a pollution-free and active lifestyle.
Group 18 Community
– Social Responsibility
82. Community
Student Study Centres (CSSC) — How They Help All Students, Especially from
Downtrodden Sections, and Similar Study Rooms in Every Gated Community,
Apartment, RWA & Colony
Every student deserves a
peaceful, well-lit, ventilated, and distraction-free environment to study and
concentrate. Unfortunately, many students — especially from BPL (Below Poverty
Line), low-income, slum, and downtrodden families — live in tiny single or
two-room houses that serve as hall, bedroom, kitchen, and dining area all at
once. These homes often lack proper light, ventilation, toilets, and face
issues like leakages during rain, flooding in low-lying areas, noise pollution,
and suffocated air. Such conditions make focused study extremely difficult,
leading to poor concentration, weak understanding of subjects, poor memory, and
lower exam performance.
Community Student Study Centres
(CSSC) are a powerful solution. The government should create free Community
Student Study Centres in every ward, village, and slum (in numbers based on
student population). These centres act like dedicated student libraries or
study clubs — open to all students studying in any school, college, or
university in that area.
How These Centres Help Students
- Provide a standard study environment with proper ergonomic
seating, lighting, ventilation, and silence — similar to good
school/college facilities.
- Help students from downtrodden sections overcome home
limitations and study peacefully.
- Improve concentration, understanding, memory, and
exam performance.
- Reduce stress caused by poor living conditions and
create a more level playing field.
- Build confidence and help students reach greater
heights in education and life.
- Serve as a place to share knowledge and support each
other.
Even students from better-off
families benefit from these quiet, focused spaces.
Design & Features of
Community Student Study Centres
- Large library-style hall with comfortable study
chairs (with writing arm pads).
- Solar power or alternative energy for reliable
lighting (especially 3 hours in the evening).
- Timings (adjustable as per local sunrise/sunset and
school timings):
- Holidays & festive days: 8:00 AM to 8:00 PM
- Working days: 4:00 PM to 8:00 PM
- Soundproof glass walls — outsiders can see inside for
transparency, but inside remains quiet.
- Biometric or smart card entry for security.
- Full CCTV surveillance to prevent misuse.
- Separate enclosures/sections for girls and boys to
avoid distractions.
- Permanent fixed seating (cemented/concrete with
plastic/wood backrest and numbered writing pads) — cannot be stolen or
misused.
- Computers with pre-loaded educational content
(offline digital library) — mainly for research during vacations/summer
holidays.
- Clean, well-maintained toilets and drinking water
facilities.
Strict Rules & Safeguards
- Ban on sale of alcohol, cigarettes, or similar items
within 500 metres radius.
- Non-bailable criminal offence to misuse the centre
for anti-social activities or any illegitimate purpose.
- Non-bailable criminal offence to steal, sell, or buy
any public property/material from these centres.
- Only students can use the facility — no other
activities allowed.
Management & Funding
- Managed and monitored by Gram Sabha, ward members,
and parent committees with daily cleaning.
- Funding through MP/MLA Local Area Development funds
(at least 50% allocation until all centres are built).
- Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) and individual
donations encouraged for building and maintenance.
- Centres should be located within 1 km radius in every
slum/ward/village.
Similar Study Rooms in Every
Gated Community, Apartment, RWA & Colony
In addition to community centres
for downtrodden areas, the government should encourage or mandate similar
dedicated study rooms in every gated community, apartment complex, RWA, and
colony. These can be smaller but well-equipped spaces with:
- Good lighting and ventilation
- Comfortable seating
- Quiet environment
- Basic rules for usage and maintenance
This ensures every student,
regardless of where they live, gets access to a standard study environment. It
promotes equality in education and helps all children perform better.
Expected Outcomes
- Better concentration and deeper learning for all
students.
- Improved exam results and academic performance,
especially among downtrodden students.
- Reduced stress and better mental well-being.
- More students reaching higher education and better
career heights in life.
- Creation of a more level playing field in education
while economic disparities are gradually addressed.
These Community Student Study
Centres and similar rooms in residential areas are practical, low-cost,
high-impact measures. When combined with nutritious mid-day meals, daily leafy
greens & guava, school buses/bicycles, personal hygiene education, community
cleanliness, fruit tree planting, and other healthy initiatives, they create a
complete support system for every student to succeed.
Government leadership in building
and maintaining these centres will directly help thousands of students overcome
home limitations and achieve their full potential.
83. Teaching
Every Student Social Responsibility & Public Duties — Building Better
Citizens
Social responsibility and public
duties are essential life skills that every student must learn from a young
age. In today’s world, many children grow up without understanding their role
in keeping homes, schools, communities, and public places clean and safe. This
leads to widespread littering, water and electricity wastage, damage to public
property, and lack of care for others. Teaching social responsibility is
necessary to build cleaner, safer, and more respectful communities while
developing disciplined, caring, and responsible individuals.
When students are taught
practical duties — such as keeping their home and surroundings clean, saving
water and electricity, respecting public property, helping the elderly, and
reporting hazards — they develop a strong sense of belonging, equality, and civic
pride. These habits not only improve daily life but also create lifelong values
of service, humility, and environmental care. Combined with other healthy
practices like good nutrition, hygiene, and discipline, this education helps
raise better citizens who contribute positively to society and the nation
Social responsibility means
caring for our home, community, environment, and fellow citizens. Every student
must be taught these values in school through practical lessons, displays, and
daily practice. Parents should reinforce them at home. These habits create
cleaner, safer, and more respectful communities while developing disciplined
and caring individuals.
Core Responsibilities at Home
& Apartment
- Keep your apartment, room, and common areas clean and
clutter-free.
- Close taps immediately after use and use water
sparingly — no wastage.
- Switch off lights, fans, and air conditioners when
not needed. Turn lights on only in the evening and off in the morning.
- Report and stop water leakages or overflows from
underground/overhead tanks. Switch off motors or inlet valves when not
required.
- Help with periodic dusting and cleaning of the home.
- Reduce plastic usage and discard unused items
(cardboards, boxes) for recycling to avoid clutter and dust.
Responsibilities in Public Places
& Community
- Do not throw wrappers, plastic bottles, banana peels,
orange peels, peanut shells, or any waste on roads, parks, or public
spaces. Clean the place if you see mess.
- No spitting, public urination, or defecation. Use
designated toilets only.
- Pick up and safely dispose of pet (dog) waste in
public places.
- Help elderly people whenever possible.
- Treat public parks, roads, and spaces neatly.
- Report open manholes, drain overflows, or other
hazards to school, parents, or authorities immediately.
- Carry raincoat or umbrella during rainy season (even
if it is not raining at that moment).
Respect for Public Property &
Others
- Do not damage public property (buses, trains, parks,
buildings).
- Maintain public decency and respect others with
dignity.
- In buses, trains, or auditoriums: Sit properly — do
not put legs on other seats.
- Eat only in designated eating places — never throw
food waste in public.
- Use public transport (buses/trains) responsibly and
help keep them clean and hygienic.
Energy & Resource
Conservation
- Switch off vehicle engines when idling (tell parents
too).
- Encourage parents and neighbours to follow all these
practices.
How Schools Should Teach These
- Display clear charts and calendars in every classroom
showing these duties.
- Conduct regular awareness sessions and practical
activities.
- Include in moral education and civic responsibility
curriculum.
- Encourage students to lead by example and gently
remind others.
Benefits of These Habits
- Cleaner homes, apartments, colonies, and cities.
- Reduced water and electricity wastage → lower bills
and conservation of resources.
- Safer and healthier public spaces with fewer
diseases.
- Stronger sense of equality, respect, and community
feeling.
- Better discipline and responsibility that helps in
studies and future life.
- Reduced stress on parents and society through
collective care.
When every student learns and
practises these duties, they become responsible citizens who contribute
positively to society. This education perfectly complements other healthy
practices such as personal hygiene, school bus/bicycle policy, daily leafy greens
& guava, community study centres, fruit tree planting, and clean
surroundings.
Government should make social
responsibility education compulsory in all schools with regular monitoring and
parent involvement. Small daily actions by students can create big positive
changes in the nation.
Group 19 School
Infrastructure, Safety & Equality Measures
84. Measures
to Reduce the Weight of School Bags — For the Health & Comfort of Students
Heavy school bags are a major
cause of back pain, shoulder strain, poor posture, and long-term skeletal
problems in children. Many students carry 8–12 kg or more every day for
over one kilometre on average for over
20 minutes, leading to physical fatigue, reduced concentration, and chronic
health issues. Due to the lack of practical solutions, children suffer
unnecessarily even though simple, effective measures can drastically reduce bag
weight without affecting education quality.
The government should implement
these practical reforms in all schools (government and private) to ensure
students go to school comfortably and return home stress-free. This includes
chapter-wise laminated loose sheets instead of full textbooks, loose sheets for
notebooks, school-provided mid-day meals (ban on home tiffin), and lightweight
standard bags with GPS tracking. These steps will protect children’s physical
health, improve focus on studies, and promote equality across all income groups1.
Chapter-wise Laminated Loose Sheets Instead of Full Textbooks
- Divide every textbook chapter into single or
double-sided A4 size laminated sheets (standard font size for easy
reading).
- Students carry only the required chapter(s) for that
day’s timetable.
- Parents keep the full set of laminated sheets at home
in organised file folders (one folder per subject with timetable and
chapter index).
- Students take only the day’s required sheets (10–16
sheets total) in lightweight file folders to school and return them home
in the evening for refiling.
- Laminated sheets are durable and can be reused by the
next batch of students for 3–5 years.
- This drastically reduces the weight of bags,
especially for young children up to Class 10.
2. Loose Sheets for Notebooks
- Instead of thick bound notebooks, provide loose A4
sheets for each subject.
- Students file these sheets in lightweight
subject-wise folders/notebooks.
- This further reduces bag weight while allowing easy
organisation and replacement of damaged sheets.
3. Why Printed Loose Sheets Are
Better Than Full Digital Textbooks
- Full digital textbooks on tablets or screens for 6–7
hours daily expose young minds to excessive blue light, leading to stress,
anxiety, eye strain, and sleep disturbances.
- Printed laminated loose sheets are ideal — they
reduce screen time while allowing easy daily carrying of only required
material.
- This approach is more child-friendly and supports
better focus and eye health.
4. Ban Home Tiffin & Provide
Mid-Day Meal in School
- All students (government and private schools) should
eat the standard nutritious mid-day meal provided in school.
- This eliminates the need to carry heavy tiffin boxes
and water bottles, further reducing bag weight.
- Students can go to school stress-free and return home
stress-free.
5. Light-Weight Standard School
Bags with Non-Tamperable GPS
All schools must use
light-weight, standard-design school bags.
Teachers should inspect bags
daily for damage and ensure timely replacement.
Additional Security Feature:
All school bags must be fitted
with non-tamperable GPS-enabled tracking devices.
This allows real-time location
tracking of students by parents and teachers.
Provides extra safety and peace
of mind, especially during travel to and from school.
The device should be securely
embedded, tamper-proof, and linked to a simple mobile app for authorised users
(parents/teachers).
Expected Benefits
Significant reduction in physical
strain, back pain, and posture problems.
Students travel to school
comfortably and return home stress-free.
Enhanced safety through GPS
tracking — quick location in case of any emergency.
Lower long-term printing costs
due to reuse of laminated sheets.
Better focus in studies as
students are not physically tired.
Long-Term Vision
Within the next 10 years,
gradually move towards e-learning where appropriate, but always keep printed
options available to minimise excessive screen time for young children.
This practical system —
chapter-wise laminated sheets, loose notebook sheets, school-provided mid-day
meals, and light bags — ensures students go to school comfortably and return
home without physical burden. It is a much-needed reform for the physical and
mental well-being of future generations.
85. Mandatory
Morning Sunlight Exposure for All Students in Every School — For Freshness,
Calmness & Brain Activation
To align the body with nature and
build strong natural health, the government should make it mandatory for every
school (government and private) to provide 20 minutes of morning sunlight
exposure to all students immediately after they arrive at school. This simple
daily practice is essential because most children today, due to busy modern
life and indoor routines, do not get enough natural sunlight. Lack of morning
sun exposure affects immunity, vision, bone strength, sleep quality, gut
health, mood, and overall well-being.
Morning sunlight (even on cloudy
days) helps the body produce Vitamin D naturally, which is vital for strong
bones, robust immunity, and good mood. It also synchronises the body’s internal
clock (circadian rhythm), which improves melatonin production at night for
deep, restful sleep. Regular exposure activates the brain, increases serotonin
(the happy hormone), reduces stress and anxiety, and brings freshness and
calmness for the entire day.
Children who get morning sunlight
every day feel fresher, calmer, more attentive, and healthier. This low-cost
habit is a powerful way to reconnect with nature and support lifelong physical
and mental well-being
The government should make it
mandatory for every school (government and private) to provide 20 minutes of
morning sunlight exposure to all students immediately after they arrive at
school. This simple daily practice brings powerful benefits for physical
health, mental calmness, and brain function.
Why Morning Sunlight is Essential
- Morning sunlight (even on cloudy days) helps set the
body’s internal clock (circadian rhythm).
- It boosts Vitamin D production naturally, which is
important for strong bones, immunity, and mood.
- Sunlight increases serotonin (the “happy hormone”)
and reduces stress and anxiety.
- It activates the brain, improves focus, memory, and
alertness for the entire day.
- Regular exposure supports better sleep at night and
overall energy levels.
Children who get morning sunlight
every day feel fresher, calmer, and more attentive in classes.
How Schools Should Implement It
- After students reach school and complete basic
attendance, take them to an open ground, terrace, or courtyard.
- Students should stand or sit calmly in open air for
20 minutes.
- Maintain silence or very minimal talk to allow the
mind to feel peaceful.
- During this time, students can gently do:
- Finger exercises (simple stretches, taps, or
movements).
- Mudras (easy hand gestures like Jnana Mudra — thumb
and index finger touching).
- No phones, no running, no loud activities — just calm
exposure to natural light.
This can be done class-wise or
section-wise for smooth management.
Additional Guidelines
- Even on cloudy days, indirect natural light is
beneficial — do not cancel the session.
- Teachers can guide students to breathe slowly and
deeply during this time for extra calmness.
- Make it a joyful, positive routine rather than a
strict drill.
- Display simple charts explaining the benefits of
morning sunlight in every classroom.
Expected Benefits for Students
- Better mood and reduced anxiety.
- Improved concentration and learning capacity
throughout the day.
- Stronger immunity and fewer illnesses.
- Better sleep at night.
- Overall physical and mental freshness.
This 20-minute morning sunlight
session perfectly complements other healthy school practices such as:
- School bus or bicycle policy (less pollution)
- Nutritious mid-day meals with leafy greens and guava
- Daily exercise and personal hygiene
- Gut health and digestion education
- Dignity of labour and social responsibility
When every school starts the day
with calm sunlight exposure, students begin their learning journey in a fresh,
focused, and positive state of mind.
Government should issue clear
guidelines and monitor implementation in all schools. This is a low-cost,
high-impact step that can significantly improve the health and academic
performance of millions of students.
86. Mandatory
Provision of Ergonomic, Height-Adjustable Study Furniture for Students at Home
& in Schools
It is unfortunate that most
parents, irrespective of income group, are ignorant about the importance of
proper study furniture. Due to the lack of government standardisation, children
in most schools (especially government schools) and homes are forced to study
on ill-fitting, non-ergonomic tables, chairs, or hard benches. One fixed-size
table or bench is used for all children, causing poor posture, back pain, neck
strain, shoulder problems, and long-term skeletal issues.
Poor posture creates constant
low-grade inflammation in the body. This depletes zinc (which has over 300
functions in the body), slows metabolism, weakens immunity, and reduces overall
health. When children sit in uncomfortable positions for long hours, it affects
concentration, handwriting, breathing, and even future bone and joint
health.
The government should make it
mandatory to provide standard, ergonomic, height-adjustable study furniture
(good-quality wooden tables and stools) for every student — both at school and
at home.
This ensures correct posture,
reduces pain and inflammation, supports better concentration, and promotes
equality across all schools and income groups. Furniture should be changed or
adjusted every 1–2 years as the child grows
Good posture while studying is
essential for preventing back pain, neck strain, shoulder problems, and
improving concentration and long-term health. The government should make it
mandatory to provide standard, ergonomic, height-adjustable study furniture for
every student — both at home and in school.
1. Standard Height-Adjustable
Wooden Tables & Stools for Home Study
- Every student should be provided with a
height-adjustable wooden table and stool suitable for home study.
- The furniture should be made of good-quality wood
(durable, non-toxic, and eco-friendly).
- Height should be adjustable so that the child can sit
with feet flat on the floor, knees at 90 degrees, and elbows comfortably
resting on the table.
- When the child grows beyond the current height
setting, the furniture should be replaced with a larger size (parents can
return the old set).
- This ensures students always maintain correct posture
while studying at home.
2. Same Ergonomic Standards in
Every School (Government & Private)
- All schools must use standard, height-adjustable,
ergonomically designed tables and chairs/benches.
- Furniture should be according to the average height
and age group of each class.
- Material: Good-quality wood or sturdy, non-breakable,
child-safe plastic/polyethylene.
- Design: Comfortable back support, proper height for
writing, and enough leg space.
- Furniture must be changed or adjusted every 1–2 years
as students grow, with old sets returned for reuse or recycling.
Why This Is Important
- Prevents back pain, neck pain, shoulder strain, and
posture-related problems that are common due to improper study furniture.
- Improves concentration, handwriting, and overall
learning efficiency.
- Promotes equality — all students (rich or poor,
government or private school) get the same standard ergonomic setup.
- Develops lifelong good posture habits.
- Reduces long-term health issues in adulthood.
Implementation Suggestions
- Government should design and approve standard models
for tables and stools/chairs.
- Provide these free or at subsidised rates for
government school students and low-income families.
- Private schools must follow the same
government-approved standards.
- Schools can maintain a stock of adjustable furniture
and change them class-wise as needed.
- Include basic posture education in the curriculum so
students understand how to sit correctly.
This small but important step
will create a big positive impact on students’ physical health and academic
performance. When combined with other initiatives like reduced school bag
weight, morning sunlight exposure, nutritious meals, and daily exercise, it
helps build healthier, more focused future generations.
87. Mandatory
Use of Incandescent Lights with Sunlight-Like Lux Levels in Schools &
Student Homes — To Protect Eyes, Reduce Stress & Support Overall Health
Many children study in poor, dim
light or under harsh, bright blue-light LEDs and CFLs both in schools and at
home. Due to lack of government standardisation of lighting and lux levels,
their developing eyes and brains are constantly exposed to unnatural light
instead of gentle, natural sunlight-like conditions. This causes eye strain,
headaches, fatigue, poor memory, reduced concentration, mood changes, dullness,
and even depression. Blue light also disrupts circadian rhythm, reduces
melatonin production (leading to poor sleep), weakens immunity, increases
insulin resistance, and affects overall hormone balance.
The government should make it
mandatory for all schools and homes with students to use incandescent
(filament) lights or equivalent warm lights with sunlight-like lux levels.
These lights are gentle on the eyes, support natural melatonin production for better
sleep at night, reduce stress and anxiety, and improve focus and learning
during the day. Proper lighting is essential for protecting young eyes, brain
function, memory, immunity, and long-term health
Blue light from LEDs and CFLs is
harmful for growing children. The government should make it mandatory for all
schools and homes with students to use incandescent (filament) lights that
produce warm, gentle light similar to mild sunlight. This is essential for eye
health, better sleep, reduced stress, and improved learning.
Why Incandescent Lights Are
Better
- They emit warm, natural light with very little or no
blue light.
- They closely resemble mild sunlight in colour and
feel.
- They reduce eye strain, headaches, and fatigue during
long study hours.
- They support natural melatonin production (sleep
hormone) when used in the evening.
- They help lower stress and anxiety in students.
- Better sleep from reduced blue light also improves
mineral absorption (calcium, magnesium), bone strength, and reduces
insulin resistance.
Excess blue light from modern
LEDs/CFLs disrupts sleep, increases stress, affects hormone balance, and
contributes to eye problems in children.
Mandatory Requirements
In All Schools (Government &
Private):
- All classrooms, study areas, libraries, and corridors
must use incandescent or equivalent warm lights.
- Lighting must maintain comfortable lux levels similar
to mild sunlight (not too dim or too harsh).
- Avoid cool/white/blue-toned LED or CFL lights
completely in student areas.
In All Homes with Students:
- At least the room where the student sleeps and
studies must have incandescent lights with sunlight-like lux levels.
- This ensures the child gets gentle lighting during
study hours and in the evening.
Additional Guidelines
- Lights should be properly placed to avoid glare on
books or screens.
- Use dimmers where possible so brightness can be
adjusted according to time of day.
- Schools and parents can gradually replace existing
lights with approved warm incandescent or high-quality warm LED
alternatives that have almost zero blue light emission.
- Government should approve standard models and ensure
affordable supply.
Expected Benefits for Students
- Reduced eye strain and headaches during studies.
- Better concentration and learning ability.
- Improved sleep quality due to higher melatonin
production at night.
- Lower stress and anxiety levels.
- Better overall hormone balance and reduced risk of
insulin resistance.
- Stronger bones and better mineral absorption through
improved sleep and reduced stress.
This measure is simple, low-cost
in the long run, and highly effective. When combined with morning sunlight
exposure, reduced school bag weight, ergonomic furniture, and good nutrition,
it creates an ideal environment for students to grow healthy and study
effectively
Government should issue clear
guidelines, provide subsidies for incandescent bulbs in low-income homes, and
monitor implementation in schools. Protecting young eyes and minds from harmful
blue light is a basic responsibility towards the future generation.
Group 20 Footwear
& Jewellery
88. Standard
Footwear, Ban on Jewellery & Gadgets, and Equal Treatment for All Students
— Towards True Equality and Ram Rajya in Education
Education is not just about books
— it is about building equality, discipline, simplicity, and dignity. The
government should make it mandatory that every student in government and
private schools across India follows the same simple, uniform standards. This
will bring back the spirit of the ancient Gurukul system, where the son of a
king, zamindar, businessman, farmer, or labourer received equal treatment,
equal facilities, and equal respect. This is the real way to establish Ram
Rajya in modern education.
The Government must ensure
complete equality prevails in all schools for students, teachers, and staff. To
achieve this, every person in the school must wear the same standard type,
design, and material of footwear approved by the government. No expensive or
fancy variations should be allowed.
The Government must also
completely ban the wearing of any jewellery by students and staff. Even if
teachers or staff wear real gold or artificial jewellery, it creates
distraction and inequality. Many parents cannot afford it. When one girl wears
a particular earring, nose ring, or chain, other girls discuss it in class,
leading to jealousy, comparison, and waste of precious study time. Artificial
jewellery can also cause skin allergies and health issues.
Similarly, gadgets should not be
used to show what one owns or what parents can afford. School is a place for
education, not for display. Students should not bring any gadgets inside the
school. Only one basic mobile phone may be allowed from Class 5 or 7 onwards
for emergency calls, and it must be deposited at the school entrance and
collected when leaving. All other gadgets should be kept at home.
These rules are necessary because
fancy footwear may look good from outside but is often uncomfortable for long
hours, while jewellery and gadgets create distraction, peer pressure, and
unnecessary comparison. When all students, teachers, and staff follow the same
simple standards, it removes feelings of superiority or inferiority, saves
valuable class time, ensures comfort, and helps every child focus fully on
studies and character building. This brings true equality and the spirit of
Gurukul/Ram Rajya into modern education
This policy should apply equally
to all government and private schools across India. When every child studies in
the same uniform, eats the same food, wears the same simple footwear, and
follows the same rules, we will truly move towards Ram Rajya in education. This
is the real meaning of inclusive and value-based education.
1. Standard Footwear for All
Students
- All students must wear standard, simple footwear
approved by the school/government.
- No expensive branded shoes, fancy designs, or
different colours to show wealth.
- This ensures equality and prevents discrimination
based on economic background.
2. Complete Ban on Jewellery,
Watches & Electronic Gadgets
- Students are not allowed to wear any jewellery
(earrings, chains, rings, bangles, etc.).
- Watches (even simple ones) are banned inside the
school campus.
- No electronic gadgets of any kind are permitted
inside the school (smartwatches, tablets, earphones, power banks, etc.).
- Only one basic standard mobile phone is allowed.
- Students must deposit the phone in a safe locker
provided at the school entrance when entering.
- The phone will be returned only when the student
leaves the school.
- Strict no-phone rule during school hours — including
class time, intervals, lunch break, sports breaks, or any other time.
- This prevents distraction, cyberbullying, addiction,
and unnecessary comparisons.
3. Equal All-Weather Protection
& Standard Items for Everyone
- Every student must receive standard raincoats,
sweaters, and other weather protection of the same design and quality.
- No student should be allowed to bring different or
expensive versions to show superiority.
- All children — whether from rich or poor families —
must get the same food, same clothes, same accessories, and same
facilities in school.
- This removes the feeling of inferiority or
superiority based on wealth.
4. Spirit of the Ancient Gurukul
& Ram Rajya
In the old Gurukul system:
- The son of a king sat and studied with the son of a
farmer or labourer.
- Everyone received equal respect, equal food, equal
clothes, and equal education.
- There was no discrimination based on caste, wealth,
or background.
- Everyone learned dignity of labour and lived with
simplicity.
Bringing back this system in
modern schools means:
- Rich and poor students study together with equal
dignity.
- No one feels superior or inferior because of money or
status.
- Focus remains on learning, character building, and
values instead of showing off wealth.
- Students develop humility, equality, and respect for
all sections of society.
Expected Benefits
- True equality among students (rich and poor).
- Reduced distraction and better concentration in
studies.
- Lower stress, anxiety, and peer pressure related to
gadgets and fashion.
- Development of discipline, simplicity, and good
values.
- Restoration of the noble spirit of Gurukul and Ram
Rajya in education.
- Stronger foundation for a just and equal society.
This policy should apply equally
to all government and private schools across India. Schools that violate these
rules should face strict action. Parents must also be educated and encouraged
to support these simple, value-based rules at home.
When every child — whether the
son/daughter of a rich businessman or a poor labourer — studies in the same
uniform, eats the same food, wears the same sweater, and follows the same
simple rules, we will truly move towards Ram Rajya in education.
This is the real meaning of
inclusive and value-based education.
89. The
Importance of Correct Footwear — Why Plastic & Synthetic Footwear Should Be
Discarded and How to Choose Healthy Options
Footwear is not just about
protecting the feet — it directly affects overall body posture, balance, blood
circulation, nervous system, brain function, and long-term health. Due to the
lack of government standardisation of footwear material and design, the market
is flooded with hundreds of varieties that look attractive but are not
foot-friendly or body-friendly. Children and parents often buy shoes just
because they fit the foot, without knowing how they will affect walking
posture, cause inflammation in the foot and body, generate heat, trap sweat,
release plastic chemicals into the body, or create long-term posture
problems.
Size standardisation alone is not
sufficient. The Government must strictly standardise the material and design of
footwear, ban harmful plastic and synthetic options (including cheap plastic
chappals and shoes), conduct mandatory quality testing of materials, and make
the test reports public. The Government should also educate people through
schools, media, and campaigns that only standard, breathable, and body-friendly
footwear should be used.
Wearing the wrong footwear
(especially plastic or synthetic) for long hours can cause foot pain,
imbalance, back and neck problems, increased cortisol (stress hormone),
hormonal imbalance, fertility issues, and many chronic problems. Schools must
teach children from a young age about correct footwear so they develop lifelong
healthy habits.
Footwear is not just about
protecting the feet — it directly affects overall body posture, balance, blood
circulation, nervous system, brain function, and long-term health. Wearing the
wrong footwear (especially plastic or synthetic) for long hours can cause
inflammation, pain, hormonal imbalance, fertility issues, and many chronic
problems. Schools must teach children from a young age about correct footwear
so they develop lifelong healthy habits.
Why Plastic and Synthetic
(Rexine) Footwear Should Be Avoided
Plastic and synthetic leather
(rexine) footwear trap heat and moisture because they do not breathe. This
leads to:
- Excessive sweating inside the shoes
- Growth of bacteria and fungus
- Skin irritation, rashes, and infections (especially
between toes and on soles)
- Higher body temperature and inflammation
- Poor air circulation, which affects the entire body
(including groin area when combined with tight clothes)
Long-term use can contribute to:
- Foot pain and imbalance (one side wears out faster)
- Posture problems, back pain, neck pain, and nervous
system strain
- Increased cortisol (stress hormone) due to constant
discomfort
- Reduced fertility in both men and women (heat buildup
affects reproductive organs)
Government should ban the
manufacture, sale, and use of plastic footwear and promote only safe,
breathable alternatives.
What Is the Ideal Footwear?
For Outdoor Use (Roads, School,
Work)
- 100% leather or high-quality natural material
footwear that is well-ventilated.
- Correct size and proper fit — neither too tight nor
too loose.
- Use 100% cotton socks for long hours (school, office,
journeys, driving). Cotton absorbs sweat and allows air flow.
- Change socks and air out shoes during the day when
possible (e.g., at desk jobs).
At Home
- Walk barefoot inside the house as much as possible.
This strengthens foot muscles, improves balance, and allows natural
grounding.
- Use simple slippers only for bathroom use.
- Avoid wearing shoes or tight footwear for long
periods at home.
Special Advice for Women
- Completely avoid or minimise high heels. They cause
imbalance, foot pain, back problems, and long-term inflammation. True
confidence comes from personality and health, not height.
Problems with Old or Worn-Out
Footwear
- Torn or unevenly worn soles cause the body to lean to
one side → uneven pressure on joints, spine, and brain.
- This leads to inflammation, pain, and compensatory
strain on the other side of the body.
- Old leather footwear can develop fungus due to
moisture. Once fungus appears, simple cleaning does not remove it
completely. Such shoes should be discarded.
- People often keep expensive or “favourite” footwear
for years even when it causes discomfort — this must be discouraged.
Government & Societal
Recommendations
- Educate people through schools, media, and campaigns
to discard any footwear that causes even slight discomfort, is torn, or
leans to one side.
- Provide standard, comfortable footwear for all
students and employees (government and private sectors) — ideally simple
walking shoes or leather-based with cotton socks.
- Special sturdy, safe footwear must be supplied for
workers in construction, factories, chemical industries, kitchens, etc.
- Promote local production of high-quality, breathable,
human-safe rubber or leather footwear (avoid recycled rubber that may
contain harmful chemicals).
- Make it mandatory for educational institutions and
workplaces to follow correct footwear guidelines.
Your feet carry you everywhere.
Take care of them with the right footwear. Wear good leather or safe rubber
shoes with cotton socks when going out. Walk barefoot at home whenever
possible. Never wear tight or plastic shoes that hurt or make your feet hot and
sweaty. Change out of wet or old shoes immediately. Strong, healthy feet help
you run, play, study, and live happily. Choose comfort and health over fashion
or cost.”
This education, combined with
proper uniforms (loose cotton), home-based exercises, and food-based
healthcare, will protect children from pain, infections, posture problems, and
long-term health issues. It will also improve overall fertility and well-being
in society.
Note: This is general educational
information based on health principles. Individual needs may vary — consult a
doctor for persistent foot problems. Government policy on standard footwear and
bans on harmful plastic options can bring large-scale positive change.
90. Why
High Heels Must Not Be Worn — Health, Biomechanical & Safety Issues for
Women (and Men)
Many girls and young women,
especially those who are shorter in height due to genetics or lack of good
nutrition during childhood and growing years, feel the pressure to look
attractive and often choose high-heeled shoes for daily use, school, college, or
occasional events. They forget that high heels create permanent health issues.
While they may give a temporary feeling of height and attractiveness, the
long-term damage to the body is far more serious than any short-term benefit.
High-heeled shoes (HHS) have been popular for centuries, but scientific
evidence clearly shows they cause significant harm to the body. A systematic
review and meta-analysis confirms that wearing high heels alters normal walking
patterns, stresses joints, reduces balance, and increases the risk of
short-term and long-term injuries. Schools and the government must educate
everyone — especially girls and young women — that shortness of height is not
an impediment in life. True confidence and beauty come from good health,
personality, and inner strength — not from uncomfortable shoes that damage the
body. Health is always more important than temporary looks to attract others
How High Heels Affect the Body
(Biomechanical Changes)
Wearing high heels changes the
entire posture and movement chain from feet to spine:
- Feet & Ankles: The heel is elevated, forcing the
ankle into greater plantarflexion (pointed downward). This shortens the
calf muscles (gastrocnemius and soleus), reduces ankle range of motion,
and shifts body weight forward onto the forefoot. Result: Increased
pressure on the ball of the foot, metatarsalgia (pain in the ball of the
foot), plantar fasciitis, and higher risk of Achilles tendon issues.
- Knees: Increased knee flexion at foot strike and
higher knee flexion/extension moments. The knee works harder to absorb
shock and maintain stability. Over time, this can lead to knee pain, joint
wear, and osteoarthritis.
- Hips & Spine: The body compensates with changes
in pelvic tilt and spinal curvature. This creates abnormal loading higher
up the chain, contributing to lower back pain and postural problems.
- Gait Changes: Shorter step length, reduced stride
length, slower walking speed, and more time spent with feet on the ground.
The gait becomes less efficient and more tiring.
- Balance & Stability: High heels reduce the base
of support and impair proprioception (body’s sense of position). This
leads to poorer static and dynamic balance, increased anterior-posterior
sway, and significantly higher risk of falls and ankle sprains.
- Plantar Pressure: Much higher pressure on the
forefoot and reduced cushioning. This can cause calluses, corns, bunions
(hallux valgus), and deformed toes.
- Muscle Effects: Altered muscle activation patterns,
faster fatigue, and increased energy expenditure. Long-term wear weakens
certain muscles while overworking others.
Additional Health Issues
- Foot Deformities: Higher incidence of hallux valgus,
hammer toes, and flattened arches.
- Joint & Muscle Pain: Chronic pain in feet, knees,
hips, and back.
- Injuries: Almost double the risk of foot injuries and
falls.
- Circulation & Swelling: Tight, narrow toe boxes
restrict blood flow.
- For Men: Though less common, elevated or unstable
heels (in boots or fashion shoes) can cause similar gait changes, balance
issues, and knee/ankle strain.
Women who wear high heels daily
for work or long hours suffer cumulative damage. Even occasional wear requires
caution.
Government & Societal
Recommendations
- Education: Schools must teach girls and boys the
science behind healthy footwear. Include it in hygiene and physical
education classes.
- Public Awareness: Campaigns highlighting risks and
promoting flat, comfortable, breathable shoes (leather or safe rubber with
proper soles).
- Restrictions: Ban or discourage high heels in public
places such as roads, markets, stadiums, religious places, cinema halls,
restaurants, and mass gatherings where walking and safety are important.
Allow them only in limited private functions.
- Workplace & Schools: Promote standard comfortable
footwear. No high heels for students or in jobs requiring long
standing/walking.
- Design Standards: Encourage footwear with proper arch
support, cushioning, and flat or very low heels for daily use.
Practical Advice for Daily Life
- Choose flat or low-heeled (maximum 2–3 cm) shoes with
good cushioning and wide toe boxes.
- Prefer 100% leather or breathable materials with
cotton socks.
- Alternate footwear daily and give feet rest.
- Strengthen feet with barefoot walking at home, toe
exercises, and simple yoga.
- If you must wear heels occasionally, limit time,
stretch calves afterward, and remove them as soon as possible.
Your feet are the foundation of
your body. High heels may look attractive, but they change how you walk, put
extra stress on your knees and back, and increase the chance of pain and falls.
True confidence and beauty come from comfort, good posture, and health — not
from uncomfortable shoes. Choose simple, flat, supportive footwear for school,
play, and daily life. Your body will thank you with strength, balance, and
lifelong comfort.
This habit aligns perfectly with
other healthy practices you are learning — loose cotton clothes, correct
outdoor footwear rules, home-based exercises, and minimalist disciplined
living. Strong, pain-free feet support better concentration, sports, and overall
well-being.
91. Why
All Socks Should Be 100% Cotton — Health Benefits and Disadvantages of
Synthetic Socks
It is highly recommended that all
socks, especially those worn by children in schools, should be made of 100%
cotton. Cotton is a natural fibre that is breathable, soft, and skin-friendly.
In contrast, synthetic socks made from polyester (terylene), nylon, acrylic, or
blends can cause multiple health problems when worn regularly.
Health Benefits of 100% Cotton
Socks
- Excellent Breathability
Cotton allows
air to circulate freely around the feet. This keeps feet cool and dry,
preventing excessive sweating.
- Superior Moisture Absorption
Cotton can
absorb up to 27% of its weight in moisture (sweat) without feeling wet. It
wicks moisture away from the skin, keeping feet dry and comfortable.
- Reduces Risk of Infections
By keeping feet
dry, cotton socks significantly reduce the chances of fungal infections
(athlete’s foot), bacterial growth, and bad odour.
- Soft and Skin-Friendly
Pure cotton is
gentle on the skin, hypoallergenic, and less likely to cause irritation,
rashes, or allergic reactions — especially important for children with
sensitive skin.
- Better Temperature Regulation
Cotton helps
maintain natural foot temperature — cool in summer and reasonably warm in
winter when worn with proper shoes.
- Reduces Blisters and Discomfort
Dry feet mean
less friction inside shoes, which reduces the formation of painful blisters.
- Environmentally Friendly & Sustainable
Cotton is
biodegradable and does not release microplastics into the environment (unlike
synthetic fibres).
Disadvantages of Synthetic Socks
(Polyester/Terylene, Nylon, Acrylic, etc.)
|
Problem |
Synthetic Socks (Polyester,
Nylon, etc.) |
Effect on Health |
|
Poor Breathability |
Traps heat and moisture |
Sweaty, smelly feet |
|
Low Moisture Absorption |
Does not absorb sweat well |
Wet feet for long hours |
|
High Risk of Fungal Infections |
Creates warm, moist environment |
Athlete’s foot, ringworm |
|
Skin Irritation |
Can cause rashes, itching, and
allergic reactions |
Especially in children |
|
Bad Odour Retention |
Bacteria thrive and odour stays
even after washing |
Social discomfort |
|
Blisters |
Increased friction due to
moisture |
Pain and discomfort |
|
Microplastic Pollution |
Releases microplastics during
washing |
Environmental & indirect
health harm |
|
Less Comfortable |
Feels sticky when sweaty |
Reduced focus and comfort in
school |
Why This Matters Especially for
Children & Schools
- Children wear socks for 6–8 hours daily in school.
- Their feet sweat more and are more prone to
infections.
- Synthetic socks can lead to constant discomfort,
itching, and repeated infections, affecting concentration and attendance.
- Using 100% cotton socks is a simple, low-cost way to
protect children’s foot health and overall well-being.
Recommendation
- Schools should make it mandatory or strongly
encourage 100% cotton socks as part of the uniform.
- Parents should be educated to buy only pure cotton
socks for daily use.
- Avoid socks labelled as “cotton blend” if the cotton
percentage is low (below 80–90%).
- For sports or heavy activity, cotton socks with good
cushioning are still better than pure synthetics.
100% cotton socks are far superior for health, comfort, and hygiene compared to
synthetic socks. They keep feet dry, reduce infections, prevent odour, and are
gentle on children’s skin. Synthetic socks (polyester/terylene, nylon, etc.)
trap moisture and heat, leading to sweaty feet, fungal infections, irritation,
and discomfort. Switching to 100% cotton socks is one of the simplest yet most
effective steps to protect children’s foot health and improve their daily
comfort in school.
92. Why
People Should Not Wear Artificial Imitation Jewellery Daily — Health Risks and
the Need for Simple, Safe Practices
Many families, especially women,
mothers, teachers, and young girls (including school-going children), are fond
of jewellery. Because real gold is expensive, they often buy cheap artificial
imitation jewellery (ranging from ₹5 to a few hundred rupees) in a wide variety
of attractive designs.
In the desire to look good and
attractive, they wear these imitation pieces daily without realising the
serious harm they cause to health.
Artificial imitation jewellery often contains toxic heavy metals such as
lead, cadmium, nickel, and sometimes other harmful substances.
When worn daily (especially on
neck, wrists, and ears), sweat, body salts, lotions, shampoos, and oils react
with these metals, causing skin rashes, itching, darkening of skin (especially
back of neck and wrists), allergies, and long-term toxin absorption into the
body. Children and young girls are especially vulnerable because their skin is
more sensitive and their bodies are still developing.
Jewellery is often worn as a
symbol of beauty, tradition, or status. However, artificial imitation jewellery
(cheap metal alloys, plated items, or low-cost fashion pieces) can cause
significant harm when worn daily. Children must be taught from a young age that
jewellery should be minimal, occasional, and made from safe materials.
Daily wear of imitation jewellery
is unnecessary and risky — it should be limited to rare occasions (once in a
blue moon), after which it is best discarded.
Even if used occasionally on
special occasions, it should be limited and of better quality. This will at
least reduce the duration of exposure to harmful metals and help create
awareness that true beauty and confidence come from health, simplicity, and inner
character — not from cheap metals on the skin.
Health Effects of Daily Imitation
Jewellery Wear
Imitation jewellery often
contains toxic heavy metals such as lead, cadmium, nickel, and sometimes
mercury or arsenic. These metals come in direct, prolonged contact with the
skin, especially on the neck (chains), wrists (bracelets), and ears (earrings).
Sweat, body salts, lotions, shampoos, oils, and creams react with these metals,
causing:
- Skin Problems: Rashes, itching, irritation, darkening
of skin (especially back of neck and wrists), allergic contact dermatitis,
and eczema. Nickel is a common culprit for allergies.
- Leaching of Toxins: Sweat and friction cause metals
to leach into the skin and bloodstream. Long-term exposure can lead to
accumulation in the body.
- Systemic Effects:
- Lead: Developmental delays in children, abdominal
pain, constipation, muscle weakness, and in severe cases, serious
poisoning.
- Cadmium: Kidney damage, lung issues, abdominal
pain, diarrhea, and increased cancer risk with chronic exposure.
- Nickel: Persistent skin reactions that can last
weeks.
- Other Issues: Constant contact (24/7, including
during sleep and bathing) increases absorption. Abrasive chemicals in
cosmetics and shampoos worsen corrosion, weakening chains and releasing
more particles.
Children and young girls are
especially vulnerable because their skin is more sensitive and their bodies are
still developing.
Wearing imitation jewellery daily
can interfere with natural growth and increase lifelong health risks.
Why Occasional Use Only — and
Then Discard
- Imitation jewellery is not designed for daily wear.
It tarnishes quickly, releases more toxins over time, and cannot be
properly cleaned (fungus or residue builds up).
- Use only pure, non-toxic materials for traditional or
occasional pieces: 100% gold, 100% silver, surgical-implant grade
stainless steel, or vermeil.
- Remove jewellery before bathing, applying
oils/creams/lotions, sleeping, or exercising. Clean skin and jewellery
separately.
- After any special occasion, clean and store safely or
discard low-quality pieces. Do not keep old, tarnished imitation
jewellery.
At Home: Minimise jewellery.
Traditional items like mangalsutra (for married women) should be light, pure
gold/silver on cotton/silk thread, removed and washed daily.
In Schools and Offices:
Government should ban jewellery (except simple, traditional mangalsutra for
married women) in educational institutions and workplaces to reduce
distractions, health risks, and inequality.
Government’s Role
- Ban or Strictly Regulate manufacture, import, and
sale of imitation jewellery containing harmful metals. Set strict limits
on lead, cadmium, nickel, etc.
- Mandate clear labelling and unique IDs for
manufacturers/retailers so toxic items can be traced and penalised.
- Promote and subsidise safe, pure-metal jewellery for
traditional use.
- Educate through schools: Teach children to choose
health over fashion. Discourage infants and young children from wearing
jewellery (choking hazard + toxin exposure).
- Require declaration of jewellery (type, weight,
metal) for health insurance to encourage awareness.
Additional Points
- Jewellery should never be a daily fashion statement.
True beauty and confidence come from health, character, and simplicity —
not from metals on the skin.
- Constant wear blocks natural skin breathing and can
cause localised inflammation that affects the nervous system and overall
energy.
- For children: Occasional wear only on festivals or
functions, under supervision. Remove immediately after and wash the area.
Jewellery is not needed every
day. Wearing cheap imitation pieces can harm your skin and body because of
dangerous metals like lead, cadmium, and nickel. These can cause rashes,
allergies, and even more serious problems over time. Use only pure gold or silver
occasionally for special occasions, and then put them away or discard cheap
pieces. Keep your skin clean and free. Real beauty shines from inside through
good health and simple living — not from heavy or fake jewellery.”
This education aligns perfectly
with teaching loose cotton clothes, home-based fitness, food as medicine, and
minimalist living. Reducing unnecessary metals on the body supports better
health, lower toxin load, and a culture of simplicity and self-respect.
Group 21 Clothing
93. Mandatory
100% Cotton School Uniforms & Hygienic Undergarments for All Students —
Ensuring Comfort, Health & Dignity
School uniforms and undergarments
directly affect children’s physical comfort, skin health, concentration, and
overall well-being for long hours every day. Most children stay in the same
clothes for 8–10 hours or more — from home to school and back. Many schools
currently use terylene, polyester, or synthetic blends that do not absorb
sweat, generate heat, cause static electricity, and increase the risk of
infections in armpits and genital areas. Especially for girls, this can worsen
discomfort during the menstrual cycle.
Making 100% cotton uniforms and
regular supply of 100% cotton undergarments mandatory is necessary to ensure
breathability, sweat absorption, natural temperature regulation, and reduced
risk of rashes, fungal infections, and allergies. Uniform standards across all
schools (government and private) will also promote true equality — no child
feels inferior due to poor-quality fabric. When children wear comfortable,
hygienic clothes, they can focus better on studies without distraction or
discomfort.
School uniforms and undergarments
directly affect children’s physical comfort, skin health, concentration, and
overall well-being. The government should make it mandatory for all schools —
government, private, and international — to follow uniform standards that
prioritise children’s health.
1. Mandatory 100% Cotton School
Uniforms
- All school uniforms must be made of 100% cotton only.
No polyester, terylene, nylon, or synthetic blends.
- Cotton is breathable, absorbs sweat, has good natural
vibration frequencies, and does not generate static electricity. It
prevents excessive sweating in armpits and genital areas, reducing the
risk of bacterial, fungal, and viral infections.
- The same cotton material should be used across all
schools (government and private). Only approved standard colours and
designs (in a fixed format) may vary according to the school.
Government Role in Supply &
Quality
- The government should approve standard suppliers who
meet quality norms.
- In government schools, two pairs of uniforms should
be provided free of cost every year.
- In private schools (including international schools),
parents must purchase uniforms at a standard rate fixed by the government.
- This ensures quality, affordability, and equality.
2. Mandatory Supply of 100%
Cotton Undergarments (Especially for Girls)
- The government should supply two pairs of 100% cotton
undergarments to every student every three months (more frequently for
adolescent girls).
- Special focus on girls: Correct size bras and panties
must be provided to prevent discomfort and health issues.
- Exchange System:
- First supply: Three pairs.
- Every 2–3 months: Take back two used pairs and give
two fresh new pairs.
- This default system ensures children always wear
clean, hygienic undergarments.
Why This Is Essential Many
families continue using the same undergarments for years (sometimes 300+
washes). This leads to:
- Holes and loss of elasticity.
- Allergic reactions, rashes, wounds, and infections in
the sensitive genital area.
- Children scratching due to discomfort, worsening
infections.
- Excessive sweating in polyester/nylon blends,
creating a breeding ground for bacteria, fungus, and viruses — especially
in adolescent girls.
Cotton undergarments solve these
problems by remaining breathable and comfortable.
3. Education on Safe Washing
& Genital Hygiene
Parents and students must be
educated on proper care:
- Wash undergarments and uniforms separately,
especially during menstruation or any accidental soiling.
- Use mild detergents. For thorough cleaning, wash with
boiling water where possible and dry in sunlight or open air (even on
rainy or winter days, dry indoors near ventilation or with a fan).
- Never wear damp undergarments.
- Change undergarments regularly (ideally after every
25–30 washes).
Genital Health Education
- Teach students (age-appropriately) about genital
hygiene.
- Girls should be encouraged to report any discomfort,
itching, or unusual symptoms to their mother or female teacher.
- Promote food-based corrections (fibre-rich diet,
hydration, balanced nutrition) first.
- If issues persist, consult a qualified doctor for
proper medical care.
- This reduces stress, anxiety, and long-term health
problems in millions of girl children.
4. Overall Benefits of These
Measures
- Physical Health: Reduced sweating, infections,
allergies, and skin problems.
- Mental & Emotional Health: Less discomfort and
stress, especially for adolescent girls.
- Equality & Dignity: All students wear the same
quality cotton material regardless of school type or family income.
- Hygiene by Default: The exchange system ensures fresh
undergarments without extra burden on parents.
- Long-term Savings: Durable cotton uniforms and
regular undergarment supply reduce frequent replacements.
- Better Focus in Studies: Comfortable children
concentrate better.
5. Implementation Suggestions
- Make 100% cotton uniforms and regular undergarment
supply mandatory through government orders.
- Create a simple system for distribution and exchange
(especially in government schools and welfare hostels).
- Include hygiene education in the school curriculum
and parent training sessions.
- Display simple charts in classrooms about washing
methods and when to report discomfort.
- Monitor quality through approved suppliers and
periodic checks.
These steps are simple,
practical, and highly impactful. By ensuring every child wears comfortable 100%
cotton uniforms and fresh hygienic undergarments, the government can protect
children’s health, reduce infections, improve comfort, and support better
learning outcomes — especially for girls.
This is a basic necessity for the
well-being of the future generation.
94. Why
School Children (and Everyone) Should Wear Only Loose, Comfortable 100% Cotton
Clothes for Exercise or Home — Complete Ban on Skin-Tight Synthetic Gym Wear/
Leggings
Many families are not aware of
the serious problems caused by synthetic clothes like polyester, terylene, or
nylon. Although they are cheap and dry quickly, they do not allow proper air
flow and trap heat against the skin. Children and adults often wear these
clothes at home for 12–14 hours or more, including while sleeping. This
disturbs the body’s natural temperature regulation, especially at night when
deep sleep is most needed. The skin breathes through the fabric, so synthetic
materials increase internal heat, sweating, and discomfort in sensitive areas.
Girls, especially during menstruation, suffer more because excess heat builds
up in the genital region, leading to darkening of skin, infections, and
discomfort. Tight synthetic leggings and nighties are particularly harmful as
they restrict air flow and sexualise the body.
Physical fitness is very
important for building a strong body, good posture, concentration, and overall
health. However, the clothes we wear — both during exercise and at home — play
a big role in comfort, safety, hormonal balance, and maintaining decency. All
school children (and everyone) must be clearly taught from a young age to wear
only loose, airy, 100% cotton clothes for yoga, strength training, running,
hanging exercises, or any physical activity, as well as for daily home wear and
sleep.
Why Loose Cotton Clothes Are the
Best Choice
- Cotton is highly breathable and absorbs sweat
quickly, preventing overheating, skin rashes, fungal infections, and
discomfort in sensitive areas.
- Loose-fitting designs allow free movement without
restriction, reduce chafing, and support proper form during exercises.
- They are gentle on children’s skin and do not contain
synthetic chemicals that can act as xenoestrogens and disturb natural
hormone balance.
- Cotton clothes promote equality — everyone can wear
simple, affordable, modest activewear without showing off wealth or body.
Why Skin-Tight Synthetic
(Polyester/Nylon) Gym Clothes Must Be Strictly Avoided and Banned
Tight, body-revealing gym outfits
made of synthetic materials trap sweat and heat, leading to infections,
irritation, and hormonal issues. More seriously, these clothes often highlight
and expose the pelvic and vaginal slit area in an inappropriate way.
Some celebrities and influencers
with a perverted mindset wear such skin-tight outfits while roaming in streets,
malls, parks, and public places, and post them on social media to attract
attention.
This is heavily influencing
common women and young girls, normalising the public display of the body. If
this trend continues unchecked, future designs may include semi-transparent
mesh panels specifically in the pelvic and vaginal slit area, making the vagina
visible in a semi-transparent manner. Such clothing distracts from true
fitness, sexualises public spaces, harms the innocence and focus of children,
and goes against the values of modesty, dignity, and respect that Indian
society and schools must protect.
Government Must Take Strong
Action
The Government of India should
completely ban the manufacture, import, and sale of body-tight, revealing gym
and outdoor activewear for men, women, and children. Only comfortable, modest,
and functional 100% cotton activewear should be allowed and promoted. Schools
must strictly enforce loose cotton clothes during all physical activities.
Violations in public or on social media should attract strong penalties,
including blocking of accounts, to stop this harmful trend and protect children
from negative influences.
Fitness is about making your body
strong and healthy from inside — not about showing your body or following wrong
fashion trends. Always wear loose, comfortable cotton clothes so you can move
freely, stay cool, and respect yourself and others. True champions focus on
strength, not on tight clothes or social media likes.
This rule perfectly supports
home-based fitness (water bottle weights, hanging bars, yoga poses, lymphatic
tapping, etc.) and helps create a culture of modesty, equality, health, and
discipline among all students.
95. Why
Tight Leggings (Especially Synthetic/Polyester) Should Not Be Worn — Especially
by Girls and Adult Women — And Why the Government Should Ban Their Manufacture,
Sale, and Use
Tight-fitting leggings,
particularly those made of synthetic materials like polyester, nylon, or
elastic blends, are widely used for gym wear, daily work outfits, casual wear,
and even home clothes (such as body-hugging kurtis or pyjamas). While they may
feel comfortable or fashionable, they pose significant health risks, especially
for girls and women. These risks affect skin health, genital hygiene, hormonal
balance, fertility, and overall well-being. Educating children from a young age
and implementing strong government policies can protect public health and
improve fertility rates.
Why Tight Synthetic Leggings Are
Harmful
Synthetic fabrics like polyester
and nylon trap heat and moisture because they do not breathe well. When worn
tightly around the groin, thighs, and genital area, they create a warm, damp
environment with poor air circulation. This leads to:
- Excess sweating and sweat retention
- Increased growth of bacteria and fungus
- Skin irritation, rashes, itching, and inflammation
- Higher risk of infections such as yeast infections
(candidiasis), urinary tract infections (UTIs), and bacterial vaginosis
- Discolouration of skin at Vaginal area to dark colour
-black due o excess heat/ friction
For girls and women, these issues
are more pronounced due to the anatomy of the vaginal area. Tight clothing can
cause:
- Bruising or pressure on the urethra, increasing UTI
risk (including cystitis)
- Disruption of the natural vaginal environment and pH
balance
- Potential retrograde menstruation (where menstrual
blood flows backward), which medical studies link to endometriosis — a
major cause of infertility in women
The sustained pressure from very
tight garments can push endometrial cells outside the uterus, where they may
settle in the ovaries or other areas, impairing reproductive health over time.
Impact on Fertility (Women and
Men)
Tight clothing poses a direct
threat to reproductive health:
For Women
- Increased risk of endometriosis and related
infertility
- Vaginal environment disorders that make it harder for
sperm to reach the cervix
- Chronic inflammation and infections that can affect
overall pelvic health
For Men
- Testicles are held too close to the body, raising
their temperature
- Higher temperatures damage sperm-producing cells and
lower sperm count and quality
- Studies show that switching from tight to loose
clothing can help improve sperm concentration in men on the lower end of
normal ranges
- Tight clothes can also pressure the bladder and
promote bacterial growth, leading to urinary tract issues
Sperm production is highly
sensitive to temperature. Even a small, sustained rise can interrupt
maturation, and it may take months for counts to recover once normal
temperature is restored.
Synthetic vs. Natural Fabrics
- Synthetic leggings (polyester, nylon, spandex
blends): Trap heat and moisture, reduce air flow, promote bacterial/fungal
growth, and may contain chemicals that act as xenoestrogens, potentially
disturbing hormonal balance.
- 100% cotton or bamboo fabrics: Highly breathable,
absorb moisture, allow air circulation, reduce heat buildup, and are
gentler on skin. They help maintain natural body temperature and moisture
balance.
The ideal approach is to wear
loose-fitting cotton clothes at all times — especially innerwear
(briefs/panties) and lowers. Even for yoga or fitness, prefer cotton or bamboo
leggings and change out of them immediately after the activity. Do not stay in
tight leggings for several hours or overnight.
Recommendations for Daily Life
- Gym / Exercise: Use loose cotton activewear. Change
immediately after workouts and wash clothes promptly.
- Daily/Work Wear: Choose loose cotton lowers or
trousers over tight leggings. Avoid body-hugging synthetic outfits.
- Home Wear: Prefer correct-fit cotton kurta-pyjamas
for both men and women. Women should avoid tight synthetic nighties. At
home, remove innerwear when possible to allow free air flow to genital
areas while wearing modest cotton home clothes (e.g., knee-length dresses
or loose lowers) that cover without exposure.
- Socks & Footwear: Use cotton socks in all
seasons. Prefer well-fitting leather footwear over synthetic or plastic
ones. Remove shoes when possible at desks or in offices/schools.
- Bedding: Use cotton bed sheets and covers. Avoid
waterproof or non-breathable materials that trap heat.
Government’s Role in Protection
The Government of India should
take strong measures to protect health, especially of girl children and women,
and support fertility:
- Ban the manufacture, import, sale, and promotion of
tight-fitting synthetic leggings and body-hugging synthetic
activewear/outfits.
- Make 100% cotton loose-fitting clothes the standard
for school uniforms, workplace dress codes (organized and unorganized
sectors), and promote them for general use.
- Launch nationwide awareness campaigns in schools and
through media on the health risks of tight synthetic clothing and the
benefits of cotton.
- Enforce strict dress codes in educational
institutions and government offices that prioritize comfort,
breathability, and modesty.
- Support local production of affordable, high-quality
cotton clothing.
These steps will reduce
infections, inflammation, and fertility issues while creating a healthier
population.
Your body needs fresh air and
comfort to stay healthy — especially in sensitive areas. Tight synthetic
leggings may look stylish, but they trap heat and moisture, leading to
infections and long-term problems with fertility for both girls and boys when
they grow up. Always choose loose, breathable 100% cotton clothes for gym,
school, work, and home. Change out of tight clothes quickly after activity and
let your body breathe freely at home. True health and strength come from taking
care of your body with simple, natural choices every day.”
This education, started early,
combined with government policy on banning harmful tight synthetic clothing and
promoting cotton alternatives, will protect the health of girl children,
improve fertility outcomes, and build a stronger, healthier society.
Group 22 Appearance,
Simplicity & Discipline Rules
96. Ban
on Makeup, Scents, Deodorants & Related Items in Schools + Natural Hygiene
Practices
To protect the health, focus, and
comfort of all students and teachers, the government should strictly ban the
use of makeup, perfumes, body sprays, chemical deodorants, talcum powder, room
fresheners, and all artificial fragrances or cosmetics in every school
(government and private). Many teachers, staff, students, and parents regularly
use talcum powder in armpits, genital areas, or face, or apply makeup and
scented products to hide sweat smell, excess oil, pimples, or unpleasant odour
(including white discharge and candida-related issues in the genital area).
These temporary chemical solutions only mask the symptoms and often make the
underlying problems worse over time.
Most of these issues — excess
sweating, body odour, oily or dry cracked skin, pimples, and vaginal discomfort
— are signs of internal imbalances caused by diet, hormones, gut health, or
lifestyle. Applying talcum powder, strong scents, or makeup daily (even local
or high-branded ones) releases harmful chemicals and xenoestrogens into the air
and skin. This can trigger allergies, headaches, breathing difficulties,
hormonal disturbances (especially important for growing girls), and reduced
concentration in the classroom.
Banning these products and
teaching natural ways to address root causes (through food, sleep, zinc-rich
items, reduced sugar, and proper hygiene) is necessary so that students learn
to correct health issues from inside rather than covering them with chemicals
every day. This creates a cleaner, safer, and more focused learning environment
while building lifelong healthy habits.
The government should strictly
ban the use of any artificial fragrances, cosmetics, or chemical products by
students and teachers in all schools (government and private). This protects
the health of everyone in the classroom, especially students with allergies or
respiratory sensitivities.
Complete Ban List (No Exceptions)
- No makeup of any kind: No lipstick, no face powder,
no kajal, no foundation, no blush, no nail polish, etc.
- No perfumes, body sprays, room sprays, or scented
products.
- No chemical deodorants or antiperspirants.
- No room fresheners or sprays in classrooms,
corridors, or any school area.
Reason: These products release
chemicals (including xenoestrogens) into the air. They can cause headaches, eye
irritation, breathing difficulties, allergies, and hormonal imbalance for users
as well as others who inhale them. Many students suffer silently due to strong
fragrances from classmates or teachers.
Uniform Appearance &
Simplicity
- Uniform haircut for boys and girls as per simple,
standard school guidelines (neat, clean, and modest). This prevents
distraction and promotes equality.
- Uniform scarf for girls where cultural or religious
head covering is practised. The scarf must be of standard approved design
and colour so that no student stands out due to expensive or fancy
variations.
These rules ensure that all
students focus on studies and character rather than appearance or fashion.
Natural Ways to Manage Sweating
& Body Odour
If sweating or mild body odour
occurs, correct it through healthy habits instead of hiding it with chemicals:
- Eat Vitamin A-rich foods (carrot, beetroot, leafy
greens, papaya) and zinc-rich foods (pumpkin seeds, soaked nuts, sprouts,
millets).
- Ensure good sleep and regular physical activity.
- Apply a few drops of castor oil in the armpits and
belly button at night.
- Soak feet in warm salt water or plain warm water for
15 minutes before sleep.
- Avoid colas, excess sugar, and processed foods.
- Drink plenty of water and eat fibre-rich foods for
natural detoxification.
Key Principle: Do not hide body
issues with deodorants or scents. Correct them through food, sleep, and natural
care.
Natural Fragrance in Schools
- Plant natural fragrance-giving plants such as
lavender, lemongrass, lemon balm, mint, and tulsi in school grounds and
near classrooms.
- This provides gentle, chemical-free fragrance and
helps repel insects.
Daily Body Tapping for Lymphatic
Drainage
- Practise simple palm tapping (face, armpits, neck,
stomach, groin area) for 5–10 minutes in the first period every day.
- This improves lymphatic flow, reduces swelling,
boosts immunity, and helps students with allergy or respiratory issues.
Strict School Cleanliness
Standards
- Schools must remain completely clean, dust-free,
mould-free, with no water leakage or damp walls.
- Use natural cleaning agents only.
Benefits of These Rules
- Cleaner, fresher air in classrooms.
- Fewer allergies, headaches, and breathing problems.
- Reduced hormonal imbalance (especially important for
girls).
- Better focus and comfort during studies.
- Development of natural hygiene habits and simplicity.
- True equality — no one stands out due to artificial
products or fashion.
These measures, along with 100%
cotton uniforms, proper genital hygiene education, ergonomic furniture, reduced
school bag weight, and morning sunlight exposure, create a healthy and focused
learning environment.
Government should issue clear
guidelines, conduct awareness sessions, and enforce these rules strictly. A
natural, chemical-free, and simple school atmosphere is essential for the
physical, mental, and emotional well-being of every child.
97. Uniform
Haircut & Natural Hair Colour — Mandatory for Equality & Simplicity in
Schools
To promote true equality,
simplicity, focus on studies, and a strong sense of belonging, every school
(government and private) must enforce a uniform haircut and natural hair colour
for all students and teachers. Fancy hair colours, highlights, dyeing, bleaching,
or elaborate hairstyles often create jealousy, distraction, and a feeling of
inequality among children. especially girl children. Many parents cannot afford
expensive salon treatments, and some families do not allow them due to
cultural, religious, or financial reasons. When some students come with
colourful or styled hair while others cannot, it leads to unnecessary
comparison, peer pressure, and loss of focus in the classroom.
A simple, neat, and uniform
haircut with only natural hair colour removes these differences completely. It
creates a strong sense of belonging among all students and helps every child —
rich or poor — feel equal, comfortable, and confident without competing on
looks. This uniformity improves concentration on studies and character building
instead of external appearance. When teachers and staff also follow the same
standard, they set a strong example of simplicity and humility.
This small but powerful rule
supports a value-based education system where learning and inner growth matter
more than external show.
Uniform Haircut & Natural
Hair Colour (Mandatory for All Students and Teachers)
- All students (boys and girls) must follow a simple,
standard, and uniform haircut as per school guidelines. The style should
be neat, clean, modest, and age-appropriate.
- Only natural hair colour is allowed. No hair
colouring, dyeing, highlighting, bleaching, or any chemical treatments (no
red, purple, white, blonde, highlights, or artificial shades).
- Complete ban on fancy hairstyles: No public
ponytails, spikes, caps, heavy curls, non-standard bob cuts, long loose
hair with styling products, braids with accessories, or any elaborate
looks.
- Teachers and all school staff must also strictly
follow the same uniform haircut and natural hair colour standards.
Standard Haircut System
- Every school must have access to approved standard
local haircut salons.
- Parents must take their children for a haircut in the
first week of every month.
- The school may collect nominal fees (if required) and
ensure uniformity across all students.
- In government schools, the government will bear the
cost of haircuts.
- The haircut must strictly follow the approved uniform
style for each class/age group.
Why This Is Mandatory
Due to the lack of strict uniform
haircut rules, many students — especially in government schools — do not bother
to cut or maintain their hair properly. Boys often let their hair grow unkempt,
while many girls do not even comb their hair neatly or suffer from excess
oiliness and unclean appearance. In private schools, some girls go for
different fancy styles such as curling, bob cuts, three-fourth cuts, rings, or
other elaborate looks. While students may have freedom to do such styles at
home, they should not exhibit them in school.
This creates distraction,
jealousy, and unnecessary comparison — for example, conservative parents may
not allow bob or boy-cut hair for their daughters, while others do it freely.
As a result, valuable class time gets wasted when students discuss or comment
on each other’s haircuts and styles instead of focusing on studies. To maintain
uniformity, cleanliness, and equality, every student must get a standard
uniform haircut every month (or at least every two months).
Fancy hair colours and elaborate
styles often create jealousy, distraction, and a sense of inequality among
students. Many parents cannot afford expensive salon treatments, and some
families do not permit them due to cultural, religious, or personal reasons.
Uniform, natural haircuts remove these differences completely.
When every child — rich or poor —
has the same simple, neat haircut and natural hair colour, it promotes true
equality, humility, and focus on studies instead of appearance. It also reduces
peer pressure and helps every student feel comfortable and equal in the
classroom.
This simple rule will save time,
reduce peer pressure, and help every child focus on learning rather than
appearance
This rule applies equally to
teachers and staff so that they also set an example of simplicity and
uniformity.
Education is about learning and
character, not about showing off through hair styles or colours. A uniform,
natural look helps every child feel equal and confident without unnecessary
comparisons.
This measure is a small but
powerful step towards creating a truly equal and value-based education system.
98. Complete
Ban on Tattoos, Ear Piercing, Nose Piercing & Belly Button Piercing in
Schools & Educational Institutions
To protect the health, safety,
equality, and focus of students during their formative years, there must be a
complete ban on tattoos, ear piercing, nose piercing, belly button piercing,
and all other body piercings in schools, colleges, and universities. Tattoos
and piercings involve injecting chemicals and foreign materials into the skin,
which can cause long-term health risks such as infections, heavy metal leakage
(nickel, lead), scarring, and allergic reactions. Many students get these done
secretly (especially in hostels) without parental knowledge, using unregulated
inks or poor hygiene practices.
Fancy piercings and tattoos also
create unnecessary comparison, peer pressure, and distraction from studies.
Visible tattoos or expensive jewellery can lead to labelling, jealousy, or
social issues. Some students even get piercings in private areas, which carry
high risk of serious infections.
During student life, the body
should remain natural so that the focus stays on studies, health, character
building, and equality rather than appearance or fashion. Personal choices like
tattoos or piercings can be made only after completing education, when the
person is mature and responsible. Teachers may have simple ear or nose piercing
with standard gold jewellery of approved design, but they must also follow
simplicity and set a good example.
Ban on Tattoos, Piercings &
Related Practices (Mandatory)
- Tattoos are completely banned for both students and
teachers (on arms, chest, back, breasts, private areas, or any part of the
body).
- Ear piercing and nose piercing are not allowed for
students.
However,
teachers who have completed their education may have simple ear or nose
piercing.
- Belly button piercing and any other body piercing
(including private areas) are banned for everyone (students and teachers).
This ban applies to all
educational institutions — schools, colleges, and universities.
Ban on Tattoos (Mandatory for
Students and Teachers)
Tattoos are completely banned for
all students and teachers in schools, colleges, and universities (on arms,
chest, back, breasts, private areas, or any part of the body).
Regulation of Tattoo Services
(Mandatory for All)
To control illegal and unsafe
tattoo practices, the government must implement the following rules:
All tattoo service providers,
beauty parlours, and tattoo studios must register with the government.
They must disclose the inks used,
their source, chemical composition, and provide lab analysis reports to ensure
only standard, safe inks are used.
Any person (including adults) who
wishes to get a tattoo must do mandatory pre-registration through a
government-created app before getting it done from any registered provider.
Registration is also mandatory
for those who already have tattoos. They must register with the government in
the official app.
Government will monitor all
registered tattooed individuals.
Getting tattoos done outside
India is banned. Students must immediately inform authorities if they have any
tattoos done abroad.
Why Strict Monitoring is
Necessary
Most people who get tattoos have
underlying psychological issues such as depression, addiction to drugs or
alcohol, involvement in high-risk behaviours, or other mental health
challenges. Government monitoring and psychological counselling will help identify
and support such individuals at an early stage.
Ban on Piercings (With Limited
Exception for Teachers)
Ear piercing and nose piercing
are banned for students.
Belly button piercing and all
other body piercings (including private areas) are banned for everyone.
Teachers who have completed their
education may have simple ear or nose piercing, but they can wear only
standard, simple gold jewellery of approved design and size. No expensive,
artificial, fancy, diamond, or non-gold jewellery is allowed.
Reasons for These Rules
Tattoos and piercings involve
chemicals and foreign materials that can cause long-term health issues.
Many students get tattoos or
piercings secretly (especially in hostels) without parental knowledge.
Unregulated inks and poor hygiene
practices lead to infections and other complications.
These rules protect students from
illegal practices, health risks, and unnecessary distractions or social
pressure.
Key Principle
During student life, the focus
must remain on studies, health, equality, and character building. Students are
free to make personal choices about tattoos or piercings only after completing
their education.
Benefits
Prevents illegal and under-age
tattoos.
Ensures only safe inks and
hygienic practices are used.
Helps in monitoring and providing
psychological support to those who need it.
Maintains equality and focus in
educational institutions.
Reduces health risks and social
issues.
Schools should conduct regular
awareness sessions so that students, parents, and teachers clearly understand
these rules and their importance.
Allowed for Teachers (With Strict
Conditions)
Teachers with ear or nose
piercing may wear only standard, simple gold jewellery of approved design and
size. No artificial, fancy, expensive,
diamond, or any non-gold jewellery is allowed.
This ensures teachers maintain
simplicity, avoid showing off wealth, and set a good example for students while
keeping the jewellery safe and non-reactive. Reasons for the Rules
Reasons for the Ban
- Health Risks from Piercings: Ear, nose, or belly
button piercing often leads to wearing jewellery. Some students use cheap
artificial jewellery, while others wear expensive diamond or gold pieces.
Cheap jewellery can release harmful heavy metals like nickel and lead into
the body through the skin, causing long-term health problems.
- Infections: Most piercings are fixed and can only be
removed by the person who did the piercing (jewellery shop or tattoo
artist). This makes regular deep cleaning very difficult. Sweat, dust,
soap, and dirt get trapped, leading to bacterial and fungal infections,
swelling, wounds, and scarring.
- Private Area Piercings: Some girl students get
piercings on the belly button or even in the vaginal area with fancy
designs. These are highly risky and can cause serious infections and
complications.
- Tattoo Risks: Many students (especially those in
hostels or living away from parents) get tattoos without their parents’
knowledge. Tattoos on arms, chest, back, breasts, or private areas involve
injecting chemicals and ink into the skin. These chemicals can leach into
the body over time and cause harm.
- Social & Psychological Impact: Tattoos are often
associated with drug addiction, depression, or negative lifestyles.
Students with visible tattoos may face stigma, labelling, or unnecessary
attention, affecting their confidence and studies.
- Allowing limited, simple piercings only for qualified
teachers maintains discipline while respecting adult choices after
education.
Students must focus on studies,
health, equality, and character building during their education years. Personal
choices like tattoos or piercings can be made after completing education.
Teachers must set an example of
simplicity and professionalism.
Benefits
- Protects young students from health risks and peer
pressure.
- Maintains equality and focus in the classroom.
- Encourages natural beauty and simplicity.
- Reduces infections and unnecessary medical issues.
Schools should conduct awareness
sessions so that students, parents, and teachers clearly understand these rules
and their importance for health and equality.
Students should be free to get
tattoos, piercings, or wear any jewellery after completing their education
(after school, college, or university) if they wish.
This rule applies equally to all
students and teachers. Schools should conduct awareness sessions so that
students and parents understand the health and equality reasons behind this
ban.
Your body is precious. During
your student years, keep it natural and healthy. You can make choices about
tattoos or piercings after you complete your education. Right now, focus on
studies, good health, and building a bright future.
99. Tattoos
and Lifelong Immune System Interaction: Key Scientific Insights
Tattooing involves injecting
complex mixtures of pigments, carriers, preservatives, and impurities directly
into the dermis (the deeper layer of skin). Unlike surface-applied substances,
these inks trigger ongoing biological activity because the immune system treats
the particles as foreign material.
Ink Composition and Why It
Matters
Tattoo pigments often originate
from industrial applications (such as paints, plastics, or printing) rather
than medical or cosmetic uses designed for long-term human tissue contact.
Common components include:
- Trace heavy metals (nickel, chromium, cobalt, and
sometimes lead).
- Organic compounds such as azo dyes and polycyclic
aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs).
These substances are not inert.
Azo dyes can degrade into aromatic amines (linked in lab studies to potential
genetic damage and carcinogenicity). PAHs in some black inks are classified as
carcinogenic. Colored inks—particularly red, yellow, and orange—are more
frequently associated with adverse reactions due to metal salts and pigments
that break down under sunlight or during laser removal.
Immediate and Local Immune
Response
Once injected, the immune system
recognizes the pigment particles as invaders. Specialized cells (such as
macrophages) attempt to engulf and clear them. Because the particles are too
large or persistent to be fully eliminated, many become trapped inside these
cells. This trapping process contributes to the tattoo’s permanence but also
creates a chronic, low-level interaction.
Most clearly documented effects
include allergic and inflammatory reactions. These can appear as persistent
itching, swelling, or granulomas (small inflammatory nodules) and may develop
months or even years after the tattoo is applied. Red and certain colored inks
are disproportionately linked to these issues, sometimes triggered or worsened
by sun exposure or changes in immune status.
Systemic Effects: Migration to
Lymph Nodes
Pigment particles do not remain
confined to the skin. They can migrate through the lymphatic system and
accumulate in nearby lymph nodes—key organs that filter immune cells and
coordinate responses throughout the body. This creates potential for prolonged
exposure to metals and organic compounds in immune tissues. The long-term
consequences of this accumulation are still under investigation but raise
questions about chronic immune stimulation.
Emerging Research on Immune
Signaling and Vaccination
Recent laboratory studies
(including work published in PNAS in late 2025 using mouse models and
supporting human cell and tissue analyses) show that tattoo pigments are taken
up by immune cells. When these cells undergo death (apoptosis or necrosis), they
release signals that sustain inflammation in the draining lymph nodes. This
inflammatory state can persist for weeks to up to two months.
Importantly, the presence of ink
at or near a vaccination site can interfere with immune cell communication and
signaling. In the referenced research:
- Responses to certain mRNA-based vaccines (such as
COVID-19 vaccines) were reduced.
- Responses to some inactivated vaccines (such as
UV-inactivated influenza) were enhanced.
These effects appear
vaccine-specific and reflect how the ongoing low-level inflammation and altered
macrophage function modulate different immune pathways. The study does not
conclude that tattoos render vaccines unsafe overall; rather, it demonstrates that
tattoo inks are biologically active and can subtly reshape local and regional
immune dynamics under certain conditions.
Additional Considerations
- Breakdown products: Exposure to sunlight or laser
tattoo removal can cause pigments to degrade into potentially more toxic
or carcinogenic compounds.
- Infection risks: The skin puncture itself carries
standard infection risks (bacterial, viral such as hepatitis, or atypical
mycobacteria), especially if hygiene standards are not strict.
- Individual variability: People with larger, more
numerous, or highly colored tattoos experience greater cumulative chemical
exposure. Those with pre-existing immune conditions or weakened immunity
may face amplified concerns.
- Regulation: Tattoo ink oversight varies widely by
region and is generally less stringent than for cosmetics or
pharmaceuticals. Ingredient disclosure is not always mandatory. The
European Union has introduced stricter limits on hazardous substances, but
global standards remain inconsistent.
Current evidence indicates that
tattoos are not risk-free, even though serious problems are not common for most
people. They represent a form of lifelong chemical exposure that actively
engages the immune system rather than remaining passive. Allergic/inflammatory
reactions are the best-documented issue; questions about long-term effects on
lymph nodes, chronic inflammation, and subtle immune modulation (including
vaccine responses) are active areas of research with no definitive large-scale
human epidemiological conclusions yet on cancer or other systemic diseases.
Practical takeaway: Individuals
considering tattoos—especially extensive or colorful designs—should weigh these
biological realities. Consulting a healthcare provider is advisable for those
with immune-related health conditions. Better transparency in ink composition
and stronger regulatory standards would help address remaining uncertainties as
tattooing continues to grow in popularity worldwide.
Group 23 Exercises
100.
Educating School Children on the
Importance of Home-Based Exercises, Simple Yoga, and Strength Training
Children’s bodies and brains are
still developing rapidly. Teaching them simple, safe, and effective exercises
from a young age is very necessary to strengthen their nervous system, improve
brain function, support digestion, enhance vision, boost immunity, and build
overall physical and mental strength.
Simple daily practices like tongue exercises, yoga poses, lymphatic
tapping, water-bottle strength training, rope pulling, and hanging exercises
activate the vagus nerve (which controls digestion, heart rate, mood, and
relaxation), improve blood flow to the brain, strengthen eye muscles, increase
focus and memory, reduce stress, and help prevent posture-related problems.
Physical fitness is essential for
growing children to build strong bodies, sharp minds, good posture, better
concentration, emotional balance, and long-term health. However, commercial
gyms are not practical or accessible for most school children due to high
costs, limited space, time constraints, lack of trainers for large numbers of
students, and equipment shortages.
Instead of depending on gyms,
children must be taught simple, effective, and completely accessible home-based
fitness methods. These use everyday items like water bottles of different
sizes, ropes, and bodyweight exercises.
Government support (such as
installing hanging bars in parks and playgrounds) can further make fitness free
and universal. This approach ensures every child — rich or poor — can build
strength, flexibility, and resilience without extra burden on families.
Why Home-Based Training is Ideal
for Students
- Accessibility: No need for expensive equipment or gym
memberships. Every home has water bottles.
- Flexibility: Can be done anytime at home, in any
weather, with family members.
- Equality: All students get equal opportunity
regardless of income or location.
- Sustainability: Builds lifelong habits of
self-reliance instead of depending on external facilities.
- Cost-Effective: Zero or very low cost.
- Time-Saving: Short sessions fit easily into daily
routines (10–20 minutes).
Even if some students have access
to apartment gyms or commercial facilities, home training remains the
foundation because it is always available and scalable for everyone.
Simple Home Exercises and
Strength Training Methods
Teach children these progressive,
safe methods starting from basic bodyweight work:
- 1. Simple Tongue Exercises (Daily 2–3 minutes)
Tongue exercises
are very easy, safe, and highly effective. They can be done while sitting,
standing, or lying down.
Tongue Push:
Press the tip of your tongue firmly against the roof of the mouth (just behind
the upper front teeth) and hold for 5–10 seconds. Repeat 8–10 times.
Tongue Stretch:
Stick your tongue out as far as possible (try to touch your nose or chin) and
hold for 5 seconds. Repeat 8–10 times.
Tongue Circles:
Move your tongue slowly in circles inside your mouth (10 clockwise + 10
anti-clockwise).
Lion Pose
Tongue: Open your mouth wide, stick your tongue out fully, and make a loud
“haaa” sound. Hold for 5–10 seconds. Repeat 5 times.
How Tongue
Exercises Help Activate the vagus nerve
→ better digestion, calmer mind, stronger immunity, and reduced stress.
Increase blood
flow to the brain → sharper memory, better focus, and improved learning
ability.
Strengthen eye
and facial muscles → support better vision and clearer speech.
Release tension
in the throat and jaw → help with speech clarity and overall relaxation.
Do these
exercises every morning and before bedtime. They take only 2–3 minutes but give
powerful benefits when practised daily
- Simple Yoga Poses for Flexibility, Calm, and Core
Strength
- Balasana (Child’s Pose): Kneel, sit back on heels,
fold forward with arms extended or by sides. Calms the mind and stretches
the back.
- Happy Baby Pose (Ananda Balasana): Lie on back,
hold feet or ankles, gently rock side to side. Opens hips, relieves lower
back tension, and brings joy.
- Lymphatic Drainage Tapping / Patting
- Gentle tapping or patting on arms, legs, abdomen,
and neck area (following simple patterns). Improves circulation, reduces
swelling, boosts immunity, and supports detoxification. Do it daily for
5–10 minutes.
- Radio Taiso / Simple Japanese-Style Exercises
- Gentle full-body movements with music or counting —
arm circles, side bends, knee lifts, marching in place. Excellent for
warm-up, coordination, and daily energy.
- Strength Training with Water Bottles (Homemade
Dumbbells)
- Use empty or water-filled plastic bottles of
different capacities: 500 ml, 1 litre, 2 litres, 5 litres, 10 litres, and
even 20-litre cans.
- How to Use: Fill bottles with water to desired
weight. Grip firmly and perform:
- Bicep curls
- Shoulder presses
- Overhead lifts
- Squats holding bottles
- Deadlifts (bending and lifting safely)
- Start light and progress gradually. This builds
arm, shoulder, core, and leg strength effectively.
- Pulling Rope and Hanging Exercises
- Rope Training: Use a strong standard rope for
pulling (tug-of-war style with family or fixed to a sturdy point) or
climbing (if safe).
- Hanging: Hang from a strong bar or tree branch for
grip strength, shoulder stability, and spinal decompression. Start with
short holds and build up.
- Government should install hanging bars / pull-up
bars in every park, school playground, and residential colony for free
public use.
These methods develop core
strength, overall muscle tone, bone density, and functional fitness safely.
Precautions While Doing Exercises
- Start Slow: Begin with bodyweight and light water
bottles. Increase gradually.
- Proper Form: Learn correct technique to avoid injury
(teachers/parents can demonstrate via simple videos or in-person).
- Warm-Up and Cool-Down: Always include gentle
movements before and after.
- Listen to Your Body: Stop if there is pain
(discomfort from effort is normal; sharp pain is not).
- Timing: Prefer morning or daytime sessions. Avoid
very intense workouts in the late evening as they may increase cortisol
(stress hormone) and disturb sleep.
- Hydration and Nutrition: Drink water and eat balanced
meals (as per the food-based healthcare guidelines).
- Supervision: Younger children should be supervised by
parents or older siblings.
- Rest and Recovery: Include rest days. Overtraining
can lead to injury or fatigue.
Dress Code for Physical Activity
and Exercise
For health, comfort, equality,
and focus on fitness rather than appearance:
- Wear loose, airy, 100% cotton clothes during
exercise. Cotton is breathable, absorbs sweat, reduces skin irritation,
infections, and overheating.
- Avoid skin-tight, body-fitting, or synthetic
(polyester) gym wear. Tight synthetics trap heat and sweat, increase risk
of infections, and may contain chemicals that act as xenoestrogens,
potentially contributing to hormonal imbalances.
- Government should ban the manufacture, import, and
sale of body-tight, revealing gym and outdoor activewear for men, women,
and children, and instead promote only comfortable, modest, and functional
cotton activewear.
Skin-tight,
pelvic and vaginal-slit revealing gym outfits — heavily promoted by some
celebrities and influencers with a perverted mindset — are increasingly being
adopted by common women roaming in streets, parks, malls, and public places,
and are being widely posted on social media. This trend is negatively
influencing young girls and impressionable youth, normalising the display of
the body in a highly inappropriate manner.
If left
unchecked, this can escalate further, with future designs potentially
incorporating semi-transparent mesh panels in the pelvic and vaginal slit area
to show the vagina in a semi-transparent way. Such trends distract from the
true purpose of fitness, create unnecessary sexualisation in public spaces,
affect the focus and comfort of children and families, and go against the
values of modesty, equality, and healthy body image that schools must instil.
A strict ban,
combined with strong education in schools, will prevent the streets and public
spaces of India from being filled with such filthy and revealing outfits,
protect children from harmful influences, and ensure that fitness remains about
building strength, health, and discipline rather than attracting attention or
following perverted trends.
- This ensures children focus on health and strength
rather than trends or appearance. It also prevents unnecessary
distractions and promotes a culture of modesty and self-respect in public
spaces and on social media.
- Schools should educate students that fitness is about
feeling strong and energetic — not about showing off the body.
Government’s Role in Supporting
Home Fitness
- Install hanging bars and simple exercise equipment in
all public parks, school grounds, and residential areas.
- Promote and distribute educational materials on
water-bottle training and simple yoga.
- Include these methods in school physical education
curriculum with practical demonstrations.
- Run awareness campaigns on the benefits of home
fitness and healthy activewear.
- Support local production of affordable cotton
activewear.
Benefits of This Approach
- Builds strong, resilient bodies from childhood.
- Improves mental health, focus, sleep, and emotional
regulation.
- Reduces future risk of obesity, back pain, weak
bones, and lifestyle diseases.
- Teaches self-discipline, consistency, and
resourcefulness.
- Creates equality — every child has access to fitness.
- Saves money and time for families.
- Develops lifelong healthy habits.
Integration into School Education
- Short daily or weekly sessions during school hours or
as homework.
- Storytelling and demonstrations showing how water
bottles or hanging build strength.
- Tracking progress through simple journals (e.g.,
“Today I lifted 2-litre bottles 10 times”).
- Combine with morning sunlight exposure and lymphatic
tapping for complete daily wellness routine.
You don’t need an expensive gym
to become strong and fit. Your home is your best gym! Use water bottles as
weights, hang from bars in the park, pull a rope, do simple yoga poses like
Happy Baby, and tap your body gently every day. Move your body with joy and
consistency. Wear comfortable cotton clothes so you can exercise freely without
discomfort. Fitness is about building a strong, healthy body and mind — not
about expensive equipment or showing off. Start today with whatever you have at
home. You have the power to become strong, confident, and healthy for life!”
This education will create a
generation of fit, disciplined, self-reliant, and healthy individuals who
understand that true strength comes from consistent, accessible effort — not
from commercial facilities or trends.
101.
Government Regulation of Existing Gyms —
Mandatory Gender Segregation for Safety, Decency and Comfort
To protect the modesty, safety,
comfort, and dignity of women and girls, and to create a truly respectful
fitness environment, the Government must strictly regulate all existing
commercial gyms across India. Many girls and young women (married or unmarried)
go to gyms genuinely for physical fitness and stress relief, but in
mixed-gender settings they often face unwanted attention and deliberate
touching. Some gym trainers and male members intentionally touch sensitive
areas — such as the breasts, thighs, private region, or hips — under the
pretext of “helping with form” or “correcting posture.” This is especially
uncomfortable and risky during menstruation when the body is more
sensitive.
These actions are often done to
arouse, impress, or slowly attract women, leading to unnecessary physical
contact, emotional manipulation, and sometimes further unwanted relationships
or public exposure. Many women feel self-conscious or unsafe, and what begins
as a health activity turns into a source of stress or exploitation.
To prevent such misuse, gyms must
operate as either “Only Gents” or “Only Ladies” facilities, or implement strict
gender-segregated timings with a proper time gap. During ladies’ hours or in
ladies-only gyms, there must be only lady trainers and supporting staff. This
ensures privacy, dignity, and a comfortable atmosphere where women can focus
purely on fitness without any unwanted attention or pressure
Mandatory Rules for Gyms
- All gyms must operate as either “Only Gents” or “Only
Ladies” gyms, or implement strict only-gents / only-ladies timings with
clear separation.
- During ladies’ gym hours or in ladies-only gyms,
there must be mandatory only lady trainers and only lady supporting staff
(reception, cleaning, security, etc.). No male staff should be present in
the gym premises during ladies’ hours.
- Clear signage, separate entrances where possible, and
strict monitoring (CCTV with privacy safeguards) must be enforced.
- Schools and educational institutions must not have
mixed-gender gym facilities; separate or time-slotted arrangements should
be followed.
Why This Is Necessary
Mixed-gender gyms, especially
with tight clothing and physical exercises, can create discomfort, distraction,
and safety concerns for women and young girls. Many women feel self-conscious
or unsafe in such environments. Strict gender segregation with female staff
during ladies’ hours ensures privacy, dignity, and a comfortable atmosphere
where women can focus purely on fitness without any unwanted attention. This
measure also supports the larger goal of promoting modest and functional
activewear.
Implementation
- Existing gyms must convert or adjust operations
within a reasonable time frame set by the Government.
- New gyms must follow these rules from the beginning.
- Heavy penalties for violations, including suspension
of licences.
- Government can encourage and give incentives for
women-only gyms with all-female staff.
“Fitness should always happen in
a safe, respectful, and comfortable environment. Gender-segregated gyms with
proper staff arrangements protect everyone’s dignity and allow both boys and
girls to exercise with full focus and confidence.”
This policy, combined with the
promotion of home-based fitness (water bottle training, hanging bars, yoga,
etc.) and the ban on skin-tight synthetic gym wear, will create a healthy,
dignified, and accessible fitness culture for all.
Group 24 Value of
Time and Money
102.
The Value of Time — Why Students Must
Invest in Knowledge, Not Gossip or Glorification, and Why Government Must
Regulate Social Media & Media Use
Time is the most precious
resource students have. Unlike money or material things, time once lost can
never be recovered. Teaching students the value of time and why they must
invest it in knowledge, skills, health, and character development — rather than
gossip, celebrity following, or unnecessary entertainment — is extremely
necessary.
In today’s digital world, many
children waste hours daily on social media gossip, liking celebrity posts,
watching movie promotions, or following inappropriate content. This distracts
the mind, reduces concentration, disturbs sleep, creates unrealistic comparisons,
and harms mental health. When young minds are constantly exposed to
glorification of others’ lives, they lose focus on their own growth and
future.
Government, schools, and parents
must together protect students’ time during their formative years. By teaching
them to value time, limiting non-educational social media use, and banning
unnecessary participation in entertainment or commercial events, we can create
a generation of focused, knowledgeable, and self-reliant citizens who use their
precious time wisely for real success and national progress
Understanding the Value of Time; Students
must be clearly taught:
- Time is limited — childhood and student years are the
best period for rapid learning and brain development.
- Wasting time on gossip, liking celebrity posts,
watching entertainment, or glorifying others’ personal lives brings no
real benefit.
- Following celebrities or subscribing to
semi-nude/inappropriate channels distracts the mind, reduces
concentration, disturbs sleep, and creates unrealistic comparisons that
harm mental health.
- Every hour invested in science, technology,
mathematics, arts, literature, history, health, or skill-building
compounds into lifelong success and national progress.
- “Earn knowledge daily — do not spend time enriching
already rich celebrities or feeding gossip.”
Simple daily rule to teach: “If
an activity does not improve your knowledge, health, character, or skills, it
is wasting your precious time.”
Government Control Over Students’
Social Media Accounts
To prevent time wastage and
exposure to harmful content, the Government should implement:
- Mandatory linking of student social media accounts
(under 18) to school or parental verification.
- Strict limits on accounts students can follow — only
verified educational pages related to science, technology, mathematics,
arts, literature, environment, health, and subject-related learning.
- Ban or restrict celebrity entertainment pages, movie
promotions, gossip channels, fashion influencers, and any semi-nude or
inappropriate content.
- Time restrictions (e.g., maximum 30–45 minutes per
day for educational use only).
- Schools to run regular digital literacy classes
teaching responsible use, critical thinking, and the difference between
useful information and distraction.
This is not about removing
freedom but about protecting students during their formative years so they can
focus on building a strong foundation.
Ban on Using Students in
Entertainment & Non-Essential Public Activities
Students are often invited for
TRP ratings or as props. This must stop:
- Complete ban on inviting school students to
entertainment TV shows, reality programs, celebrity interviews, movie/song
promotions, or any commercial entertainment events.
- Only news channels permitted for serious
public-interest debates or discussions. These should preferably happen via
video conference to avoid travel and time loss. Limited in-person group
discussions on important topics allowed only with prior school permission.
- No use of students as audience, backdrop, or
participants in political visits, bureaucratic functions,
inauguration/closing ceremonies, or any non-educational public events.
- Exceptions only for national days of importance:
Independence Day, Republic Day, and Children’s Day. These build patriotism
and civic values in a meaningful way.
Millions of student-hours are
wasted every year on such activities.
Redirecting this time to studies,
sports, reading, and home exercises will create a far stronger generation.
Benefits of These Disciplined
Practices
- Sharper focus and better academic performance.
- Reduced mental health issues (anxiety, low
self-esteem, addiction).
- More time for physical activity, family, and
real-world skills.
- Protection from exploitation and commercialisation of
childhood.
- Development of a value system where knowledge and
self-improvement are prioritised over fame and superficial trends.
Your time is your greatest
wealth. Do not waste even a single minute on gossip, celebrity posts, movies,
or unnecessary events. Follow only accounts that teach you science, technology,
arts, and useful knowledge. Say ‘No’ to distractions that steal your future.
Invest your time in learning, exercising, helping others, and building good
character. The knowledge you gain today will decide the quality of your entire
life and the strength of our nation. Value your time — it is the foundation of
your success.”
This important lesson forms a
core part of disciplined student life, along with hygiene, proper footwear
practices, cotton clothes, home fitness, food as medicine, minimalism, and
social responsibility. When every student learns to value time, India will
naturally become a stronger, wiser, and more progressive nation.
Government must enforce these
rules with care, guidance, and support from schools and parents. The goal is
protection and empowerment, not restriction.
103.
The Value of Time and Discipline — A Must
for Every Student’s Success and Happy Life
Time is the most valuable thing
in life. Once lost, it can never be recovered. Every successful person —
whether a scientist, doctor, athlete, or leader — values time and follows
discipline. The Government and schools must teach every student the true value
of time and help them follow a strict daily schedule. This builds strong
character, improves health, boosts studies, and prepares students for a
meaningful future.
Ideal Daily Routine for Students
(From Class 5 Onwards)
Morning (Wake up by 6 AM –
Sunrise Time)
- Wake up early with the sunrise.
- Do basic exercises, Surya Namaskar, finger exercises,
and tongue exercises.
- Freshen up and defecate (empty bowels) — very
important for health.
- Eat a healthy breakfast (sattu, sprouts, soaked nuts
with dates, millet idli/dosa, etc.).
- Check the timetable, arrange books, polish shoes,
iron uniform neatly, and get ready for school.
- Do morning prayer while standing in sunlight for a
few minutes. This gives energy and positivity.
School Time
- Reach school on time.
- Study with full focus.
- Participate actively in class and sports.
- Eat healthy mid-day meal and take a short post-meal
walk.
After School (Evening Routine)
- Come home, change clothes immediately.
- Eat healthy snacks given by mother (fruits, sprouts,
nuts, etc.).
- Play outdoor games for physical fitness.
- Complete homework neatly and on time.
- Have dinner early (light, vegetable-based with
complex carbs).
- Go to bed on time (by 9–10 PM) for 8–9 hours of good
sleep.
During Holidays and Free Time —
Use Time Wisely
- Do Not Waste Time on Gossip, Celebrity News, or
Unnecessary Discussions About Cricket/Football Players
- Students must completely avoid wasting precious time
on gossip, celebrity news, film industry discussions, or endless talks
about cricket and football players.
- Examples of useless discussions to avoid:
“This heroine
wore this dress”, “That hero did this stunt”, “This heroine danced so well in
that song”, “This song is good or bad”.
“This player
played like this, he should have played like that”, “If he had done this, the
team would have won”, etc.
Why You Should
Not Waste Time on These Topics
- These matters are completely beyond your control. You
cannot influence what a celebrity wears, how an actor performs, or how a
player plays in a match.
- Celebrities, actors, and players work for their own
earnings and fame. They are private individuals running their personal
careers. They will never give you money, food, a job, or help you grow in
your studies or future career.
- Discussing them does not improve your knowledge,
skills, health, or future in any way. It only fills your mind with
unnecessary thoughts and takes away time from studies, sports, skills, and
real-life learning.
The Right
Approach
- Watch a movie, match, or show if you enjoy it — but
watch, enjoy, and forget. Do not carry the discussion into the next day.
Start every morning fresh, with a clear mind focused on your own goals.
- Life should be lived this way — enjoy good
entertainment in limited time, but never let it become the centre of your
conversations or thoughts.
- Your time is too valuable to be spent analysing the
private lives or performances of people who have no role in your growth.
- Better Use of Time
- Instead of gossip, use that time for:
- Reading books or newspapers
- Learning new skills (music, art, languages)
- Physical exercise or sports
- Discussing studies, science, current affairs, or
future goals with friends
- Helping at home or doing creative work
- Celebrities and players live in their own world for
their own success. You live in your world for your success. Do not waste
even a single minute discussing their lives. Watch if you like, enjoy, and
move on. Focus your energy on becoming strong, knowledgeable, and
successful yourself. The time you save today will shape your bright future
tomorrow.”
- This habit of avoiding unnecessary gossip will bring
clarity of mind, better focus, and more time for things that truly matter
in your life.
Government should create
structured peer group discussion sessions in schools and colonies on useful
topics so students learn to use time productively.
Why Value of Time and Discipline
Are Very Important
- Time wasted on useless things (gossip, mobile
scrolling, late-night TV) can never be recovered.
- Discipline trains the mind to focus and achieve big
goals.
- Students who follow time discipline develop strong
willpower, better health, sharper mind, and higher confidence.
- It reduces bad habits like smoking, drugs, bunking
classes, or wasting time on things beyond our control.
- Early rising, fixed routine, and productive use of
time prepare students to become responsible citizens and successful
leaders in life.
Time is your most precious
wealth. Respect every minute of the day. Wake up early, follow a disciplined
routine, study with focus, play actively, and use holidays for learning new
skills.
Do not waste time on gossip or
things you cannot control. When you value time and live with discipline, you
will achieve success, good health, and a happy life.
Remember — today’s disciplined
student becomes tomorrow’s successful leader.”
Parents and teachers should
support students in following this routine. Schools should display daily
timetables and conduct regular sessions on the “Value of Time” so that every
child develops this habit from a young age.
This habit, when combined with
healthy food, good sleep, exercise, and moral values, will create a strong,
bright, and successful generation.
104.
Why Every School (Government or Private)
Must Create Active Group Discussion Clubs for Students
In today’s world, students need
more than just book knowledge. They must develop clear thinking, confident
communication, research skills, and the ability to express their ideas
respectfully. Creating active Group Discussion Clubs in every school (government
or private) is necessary because many children feel shy to speak in public,
lack confidence, or waste their free time on gossip, celebrity news, or
unproductive discussions.
When students regularly
participate in group discussions on meaningful topics such as science, art,
literature, current affairs, environment, innovation, health, and moral values,
they learn to think logically, listen to others, do small research, and speak
fearlessly. This builds overall personality, improves teamwork, and prepares
them for future success in studies, careers, and life. Starting from Class 5
onwards, with sessions on working days and simple online discussions on
weekends/holidays, these clubs give every child — rich or poor — an equal
platform to grow
The Government should make it
mandatory for every school — government or private — to create and run active
Group Discussion Clubs. These clubs should function on working days as well as
on weekends and holidays (through simple mobile apps or basic phones for online
sessions).
This is one of the most powerful
ways to develop students’ thinking, communication, confidence, and research
skills from a young age.
How the Group Discussion Clubs
Should Work
- Topics: Science, art, literature, current affairs,
developments in science & technology, environment, history,
innovation, entrepreneurship, moral values, health, etc.
- Participation: Every student from Class 5 onwards
must be a member of at least one club. Students can change clubs if their
interest changes, but they must remain active in discussions.
- Frequency: Short discussions during school hours on
working days + online sessions on weekends/holidays.
- Moderation: Teachers or senior students should
moderate the sessions to ensure discipline and equal opportunity.
- Equal Opportunity: Every student gets equal time to
speak and express their opinion. Shy students should be gently encouraged.
- Preparation: Students should do small research or
reading before the discussion for better quality.
Benefits of Group Discussion
Clubs
- Improves Speech and Fearlessness: Regular speaking in
a group removes stage fear and builds confidence.
- Develops Thinking and Research Skills: Students learn
to read, think, analyse, and present ideas logically.
- Productive Use of Time: Instead of wasting time on
gossip, celebrity news, or useless discussions, students use their energy
on meaningful topics.
- Better Future Outcomes: Early practice in discussion
and research helps students become better learners, thinkers,
entrepreneurs, leaders, and professionals in future.
- Inclusiveness: Every student — rich or poor, from any
background — gets an equal platform to express themselves.
- Overall Personality Development: Improves listening
skills, respect for others’ opinions, teamwork, and clarity of thought.
Government and School Role
- Schools must form multiple clubs based on different
interests.
- Provide simple digital tools or apps for online
discussions during holidays.
- Teachers should guide and moderate without dominating
the conversation.
- Track participation and give small recognition or
certificates to active students.
- Integrate this with the existing curriculum so that
students see it as a regular and important activity.
Your voice matters. Group
discussion clubs give you a platform to speak, share ideas, and learn from
others. Do not waste time on gossip or useless talks. Join a club, prepare
well, listen carefully, and express your thoughts confidently. The more you discuss
meaningful topics today, the better thinker and leader you will become
tomorrow. Use your time wisely — it is the foundation of your success.
This initiative, when combined
with value of time, discipline, healthy food, good sleep, and leadership
opportunities through class committees, will create a generation of confident,
thoughtful, and capable young Indians
105.
Financial Discipline for Every Student —
Saving, Investing & Valuing Hard-Earned Money
Financial discipline is one of
the most important life skills every student must learn from a young age. It
teaches the real value of money, the hard work behind every rupee earned by
parents, responsible spending, saving habits, and long-term planning. This
education is necessary because many children today grow up without
understanding the effort behind money. They often develop wasteful spending
habits, demand luxury items, or fall into debt traps later in life. Some even
take shortcuts or illegal paths because they never learned the dignity of
honest earning and wise money management.
When students are taught
financial discipline early — through government-initiated bank accounts,
parental contributions for education, school lessons on saving and investing,
and austerity measures — they learn to respect their parents’ hard work, avoid
unnecessary expenses, and build a secure future. This creates responsible,
self-reliant adults who focus on legitimate success instead of show-off or
shortcuts.
Combined with healthy food, good
habits, and value education, financial discipline helps students lead a
stress-free, meaningful, and prosperous life while contributing positively to
the nation
Government-Initiated Bank
Accounts for Students
- Every child should have a bank account opened by the
government at the time of birth, with a small initial deposit by the
government.
- For existing students, the government should ensure
every student has a dedicated bank account (linked to Aadhaar or school
records).
- These accounts will be jointly operated by parents
(or guardians) and the student, with clear withdrawal and spending limits
set by parents.
Parental Contribution for
Education
- Parents should contribute 5% of their earnings into
the student’s bank account.
- This money is meant primarily for educational
purposes (books, tuition, courses, higher studies, skill development,
etc.).
- The money can be invested in mutual funds by default
by bank to get more earnings, with Govt protection for 100% basic money
saved, with basic interest under any circumstance
- The bank should call or message parents to set
spending limits and review usage.
- If parents are uneducated or face difficulty,
messages and updates should go to the child’s teacher or school for
guidance and monitoring.
Teaching Financial Discipline to
Students
Schools should teach every
student the following through regular classes, charts, and practical examples:
1. Value of Money & Hard Work
- Understand that money is earned through hard work by
parents.
- Avoid overspending or luxury on parents’ hard-earned
money.
- Learn to save regularly and spend wisely.
Many children, irrespective of
income group, do not understand the real value of money. They simply demand
things from their parents, thinking money grows on trees or appears magically.
When their friends have something new, they immediately want the same and feel
stress, jealousy, or grudge if parents cannot buy it. At the same time, when
parents say “we don’t have money” or “we cannot afford it,” it sometimes sends
wrong signals or creates unnecessary tension.
Parents should explain in simple,
age-appropriate language: “Money is important to buy everything we need. It
comes from hard work and takes time to earn. We must spend it wisely and
carefully.” Instead of saying “we cannot afford,” parents can give children a
small fixed budget or pocket money according to age and let them make their own
choices within that limit. This gives children real experience of
decision-making, teaches them the joy of saving for something they really want,
and reduces unnecessary demands and jealousy.
When children learn from a very
young age to make choices within a given budget, they develop financial
awareness, contentment, and respect for their parents’ hard work
2. Smart Spending Habits
- Spend only on healthy and necessary items (nutritious
food, education, basic needs).
- Avoid unnecessary expenses such as cinema, liquor,
cigarettes, drugs, or expensive gifts to friends/girlfriends/boyfriends.
- Never waste money on harmful or addictive habits.
3. Saving & Investing for the
Future
- Save money regularly for future goals.
- Learn about safe and smart investments:
- Stock market (through mutual funds or index funds
when older).
- Small businesses or skill-based ventures.
- Research and skill development.
- Understand that disciplined saving and investing can
create wealth over time.
4. Long-Term Mindset
- Focus on earning money legitimately through
education, skills, and hard work.
- Develop self-discipline to avoid shortcuts or harmful
paths (such as making inappropriate reels, skin shows, or illegal
activities) in the future.
Austerity Measures & Wise
Spending for a Minimalistic, Cost-Effective Life
Students and parents must be
taught the importance of austerity and minimalistic living. This means choosing
simple, need-based spending instead of luxury or show-off. Parents should model
cost-effective habits such as buying only necessary items, repairing instead of
replacing, using public transport or bicycles for short distances, cooking
fresh home meals instead of eating out, and avoiding wasteful expenses.
Students should learn to live happily with less — wearing simple clothes, using
basic gadgets, and finding joy in free or low-cost activities like reading,
playing outdoors, and spending time with family. This austere and wise approach
reduces financial stress, teaches contentment, prevents debt, and builds strong
character for a meaningful life.
Authority & Self-Discipline
Measures in Life from 5th Standard Onwards
From 5th standard onwards, every
student must be trained to take increasing responsibility and authority over
their own life. This includes managing their daily routine, studies, personal
hygiene, pocket money, time, and small decisions. Schools and parents should
gradually give them controlled freedom and accountability so they learn to make
wise choices, face consequences, and become self-reliant. This builds inner
strength, maturity, and the ability to lead their own life responsibly as they
grow into teenagers and adults.
Learning to Invest Pocket Money
from a Young Age
From 5th standard onwards,
students should be taught (with proper guidance from parents and teachers) to
invest a portion of their pocket money in safe options such as stocks (through
mutual funds or index funds suitable for minors), small business ventures, or
productive assets. Elders should initially guide them completely, gradually
giving more responsibility as the child grows.
This practical experience helps
children taste real earnings from a very tender age, understand the power of
compounding, learn risk and reward, and develop a healthy relationship with
money. It builds financial confidence, patience, and entrepreneurial thinking
while keeping everything under adult supervision until they become adults
Expected Benefits
• Students learn the true value
of money and respect their parents’ efforts.
• Better financial habits from a
young age reduce future debt and stress.
• Encourages focus on education
and skill development instead of wasteful spending.
• Helps students become
financially independent and responsible adults.
• Reduces chances of falling into
bad habits or illegal ways of earning money.
• Creates a generation that
values hard work, discipline, and legitimate success.
Implementation Suggestions
• Government to launch Student
Savings & Investment Accounts with initial seed money.
• Schools to include Financial
Literacy as a regular subject with practical lessons.
• Display simple rules and charts
in every classroom.
• Regular parent-teacher meetings
to discuss savings and spending habits.
• Banks to provide simple mobile
apps and SMS alerts for parents and students.
• Special guidance for students
whose parents are less educated.
This financial discipline
programme works beautifully with other initiatives such as:
- Personal hygiene and social responsibility education
- Community study centres
- School bus/bicycle policy
- Daily healthy meals (millets, greens, guava)
- Overall discipline and healthy lifestyle
When students learn to respect
money, save wisely, and invest for the future, they grow into confident,
responsible, and successful individuals who can support themselves and their
families legitimately.
Government leadership in opening
student bank accounts and teaching financial discipline from school level can
create a strong foundation for the nation’s future.
Group 25 Food Based
Health Care
106.
Teaching Students the Sacredness of Food,
Water & Nature — From Farm to Table, Conservation, and Sustainable Living
Food, water, and nature are the
foundation of our life. Yet many children today do not understand where their
food comes from, how much effort and resources go into producing it, or why we
should not waste it. Teaching students the sacredness of food, water, and
nature from a young age is very necessary because it develops respect for
farmers, gratitude for nature’s gifts, and a sense of responsibility towards
the environment.
When children learn the journey
of food — from the farmer’s hard work in sun and rain, the role of soil, water,
and sun, to how it reaches our plate — they stop wasting food and start eating
mindfully. Understanding the importance of saving water and electricity,
choosing natural farming over chemical methods, and preferring millets (which
need less water) helps them become environmentally conscious citizens. This
education also connects them with traditional wisdom and sustainable living,
which is essential for the future of our country and the planet.
When combined with good eating
habits, hygiene, exercises, and value education, this knowledge creates a
generation that is healthy, grateful, and responsible towards nature and
society.
Food is not just something we eat
— it is a blessing that comes from the hard work of farmers, the gifts of
nature (soil, water, sun), and the efforts of many people. When children
understand this from a young age, they develop respect for food, stop wasting
it, eat mindfully, and become responsible citizens who protect the environment.
The Government should provide
age-appropriate literature, audio, video visuals, animated stories, quizzes,
games, and competitions in all schools (starting from Class 3) so that these
values become lifelong habits. Teaching through visuals and fun activities
helps children remember and follow these practices every day.
1. How Food is Produced — The
Farmer’s Hard Work & Sacrifices
- Farmers wake up very early, work in sun and rain,
plough the land, sow seeds, water the crops, protect them from pests and
animals, and harvest them.
- Producing one kilogram of rice or wheat requires
thousands of litres of water, many hours of labour, and careful care over
months.
- Fruits and vegetables also need soil preparation,
watering, protection, and timely harvesting.
- Many farmers face hardships — unpredictable weather,
rising input costs, and low prices for their produce.
Why Food Should Be Considered
Sacred
Food carries the energy of the sun, soil, water, and the farmer’s hard work.
Wasting food is like disrespecting nature and the farmer’s labour. Every grain
is precious.
2. The Journey of Food — From
Farm to Our Plate
Food travels a long path:
- Farm → Harvested by farmers
- Transport → Trucks, trains, or carts carry it to
markets
- Retail/Mandi → Sold in wholesale markets and then to
shops
- Home → We buy and bring it home
Understanding this journey makes
children value every item on their plate.3. Storing Food Correctly & Eating
Fresh
- Perishable foods (milk, curd, vegetables, fruits,
leafy greens, cooked food) spoil quickly. Store them in clean containers
in the fridge or cool, dry places. Eat them within 1–2 days.
- Non-perishable foods (millets, pulses, rice, spices,
dry fruits) last longer if stored in airtight containers in cool, dry
places away from moisture and insects.
- Why eat food fresh? Fresh food has more nutrients,
better taste, and is easier to digest. Stale or reheated food loses
nutrition and can cause stomach problems.
4. Safe Food Practices Before
Eating
- Wash hands thoroughly with clean water and soap (or
ash/lemon) before eating. This removes germs and prevents diseases.
- Wash fruits, vegetables, and leafy greens properly
before eating or cooking. This removes dust, soil, pesticides, and germs.
- Eat in a sitting position at a clean table or mat.
This improves digestion and shows respect for food.
- Never eat while walking, standing, or lying down.
5. Water is Precious — How to
Save and Use It Wisely
Water is life. We need it for
drinking, cooking, bathing, farming, and everything.
Simple Ways to Save Water:
- Turn off taps while brushing teeth or soaping.
- Use a mug instead of running tap for washing.
- Fix leaking taps immediately.
- Collect and use rainwater (rainwater harvesting).
- Reuse clean water from washing vegetables for
gardening.
- Take shorter baths and use buckets instead of showers
when possible.
Why Save Water?
Wasting water today means less
water for future generations and for farmers who grow our food.
6. Electricity Conservation
(Similar Principle)
Electricity is also produced
using resources (coal, water, wind, sun). Wasting electricity (leaving
lights/fans on when not needed, using devices unnecessarily) harms the
environment and increases costs. Switch off when not in use — this is also a
form of respect for nature’s resources.
7. Natural Farming is Better Than
Chemical Farming
- Natural fertilizers like cow dung and Jeevamrut (a
traditional mixture made from cow dung, urine, jaggery, etc.) improve soil
health, increase beneficial microbes, and produce healthier crops without
harming the environment.
- Chemical fertilizers are made in factories using
harmful processes. They damage soil over time, reduce natural fertility,
pollute water, and can leave residues in food that affect human health.
- Chemical pesticides kill pests but also harm
beneficial insects, birds, soil life, and can remain in food.
- Natural pesticides (neem-based, cow urine mixtures,
etc.) are safer for humans, soil, and the environment.
Why Demand Organic or
Jeevamrut-grown Food?
Such food is healthier, tastier, and supports farmers who practice sustainable
methods. It protects our soil and future food security
8. Why Millets Are Excellent (C4
Plants)
Millets are C4 plants — they use
water and sunlight very efficiently. They require much less water than rice or
wheat to grow. They are drought-resistant, improve soil health, and are highly
nutritious. Choosing millets helps reduce pressure on water resources and
supports a healthier planet.
How to Teach These Topics
Effectively (Government & School Role)
- Provide age-appropriate books, colourful charts,
short animated videos, and documentaries showing real farmers, fields,
water cycles, and food journeys.
- Conduct quizzes, drawing competitions, role plays,
and games on these topics every month.
- Organise farm visits (where possible) or virtual
tours.
- Make it part of regular classes from Class 3 onwards,
repeated every year with increasing detail.
- Use simple language, stories, and examples that
children can relate to.
Every grain of food, every drop
of water, and every unit of electricity is a gift from nature and the hard work
of many people. When you respect food by not wasting it, wash your hands and
vegetables before eating, eat fresh food in a proper sitting position, save
water and electricity, and choose millets and naturally grown food, you are not
only taking care of yourself but also respecting farmers and protecting the
Earth. These small habits, learned from a young age, will make you a
responsible and healthy human being for life. Food is sacred — treat it with
love and gratitude.”
These teachings, when combined
with good eating habits (millets, sprouts, vegetables), post-meal walks,
hygiene, exercises, and values of honesty and kindness, will create a
generation that is healthy, environmentally conscious, and spiritually
grounded.
107.
Portion Control — A Very Important Habit
to Teach Children from a Young Age
Many parents cook extra food
during normal days or festivals and keep serving the same dish (payasam,
vermicelli, kesari, biryani, sweets, etc.) again and again because it tastes
good and children ask for more. This leads to overeating, excess fat, excess
sugar, excess sodium, and imbalance of certain minerals in the body. Overeating
also causes stomach discomfort, vomiting, chest congestion, indigestion, and
long-term health problems like obesity and diabetes.
Teaching portion control from
childhood is very necessary so that children learn to eat the right amount of
food according to their age and activity level. It helps them develop healthy
eating habits for life, maintain proper weight, improve digestion, and stay
energetic without feeling heavy or uncomfortable. When parents cook limited
quantities and serve limited portions, and when children learn to leave some
space in their stomach (70–80% full), they naturally develop self-control and
respect for food. This simple habit, when started early, protects children from
many lifestyle diseases and teaches them the value of moderation and mindful
eating.
Portion control means eating the
right amount of food according to your age, activity, and body’s needs.
Teaching this habit from childhood helps children grow healthy, maintain proper
weight, and avoid many health problems later in life.
Why Portion Control is Necessary
When children overeat (even tasty
food), their stomach becomes too full. This can cause:
- Vomiting or feeling very heavy
- Chest congestion and breathing difficulty
- Indigestion and stomach pain
- Excess fat, sugar, and sodium in the body
- Hormonal imbalance and tiredness
Many parents cook extra food
(like payasam, vermicelli, kesari, biryani, pulihora, or sweets) during
festivals or functions and keep feeding the same dish to children morning,
afternoon, evening, and night. Children eat more because it tastes good, but
this leads to excess calories, weight gain, and health issues. Therefore, it is
important to cook in limited quantity and serve limited portions.
Simple Rules of Portion Control
- Leave Some Space in the Stomach
Never eat until
the stomach is 100% full. Always stop when you feel 70–80% full. This is a very
healthy habit. It prevents vomiting, chest congestion, and keeps digestion
smooth.
- Eat at Fixed Times Every Day
Children should
eat breakfast, lunch, snacks, and dinner at almost the same time daily. Regular
timing helps the body digest food properly and maintains good energy levels
throughout the day.
- Eat Slowly and Mindfully
Teach children
to chew food well and eat slowly. Eating fast makes them eat more than needed.
- Control Sweets and Tasty Foods
Even if food is
very tasty (especially sweets), do not overeat. Excess sweets can disturb
potassium balance in the body and may cause muscle cramps. Sweets and fried
items should be taken in small quantities only.
Age-wise Simple Portion
Guidelines (Approximate)
- 3–6 years: Small bowl of rice/dal/vegetables + one
small fruit + one glass of milk.
- 7–10 years: One medium plate of balanced meal + one
fruit + limited sweets.
- 11–14 years: Slightly bigger portions according to
height and activity, but never overeating.
- 15 years and above: Adult portions, but always leave
some space in the stomach.
Note: These are general
guidelines. Active children (who play sports) may need slightly more food.
Practical Advice for Parents
- Cook food in limited quantity according to the number
of family members.
- Serve food on smaller plates for children.
- Do not force children to finish everything on the
plate if they are already full.
- During festivals or functions, serve small portions
of sweets and special dishes instead of unlimited serving.
- Teach children from young age: “Eat to live healthy,
do not live to eat more.”
Cook limited food and serve
limited portions to your children. Even if the food is very tasty, do not keep
feeding again and again. Teach your child from a very young age to eat slowly,
leave some space in the stomach, and eat at proper times. This single habit of
portion control will protect your child from obesity, digestion problems, and
many future health issues.
Always remember — eat enough to
feel energetic, but never eat so much that you feel heavy or uncomfortable. A
healthy stomach leads to a healthy body and sharp mind.”
This simple education on portion
control, when started early, will help children develop healthy eating habits
for life and reduce the risk of lifestyle diseases in the future
108.
Religion, Health, and the Need for
Thoughtful Review of Festival food verity Practices in Religious Texts- verity
and portion control
Religion exists to guide humanity
toward a meaningful, peaceful, and fulfilling life. Its core purpose includes
promoting well-being, discipline, compassion, and harmony — not causing
widespread physical or mental harm. When religious practices, however rooted in
tradition, contribute significantly to health deterioration on a national
scale, they warrant compassionate review and adaptation. This is not about
rejecting faith but about ensuring faith supports life rather than undermining
it.
In India, festivals are deeply
woven into the social and spiritual fabric. However, certain aspects of
festival food preparation and consumption — as described in many religious
texts and followed as custom — have become a major public health concern in the
modern era.
The Core Problem: Festival Foods
and Health Impact
India faces a severe health
crisis, with high rates of diabetes, cardiovascular diseases, obesity, and
related complications. A notable contributing factor, often overlooked in
policy discussions, stems from the pattern of festival eating rooted in religious
traditions:
- Many festivals encourage or prescribe preparation of
5, 7, 9, 11, or even 21 varieties of dishes as part of rituals. These are
frequently high in sugar, ghee, oil, refined flour (maida), and fried
items.
- Women (and often elderly family members or domestic
workers) face intense pressure to source ingredients, prepare multiple
dishes before a fixed muhurta (often before noon), while fasting. This
creates physical exhaustion, mental stress, and disruption of regular meal
timings.
- Consequences include sudden blood sugar spikes,
excess fat accumulation, worsening of diabetes and heart conditions,
skipped regular meals followed by overeating at odd hours, and consumption
of leftovers that may become stale.
- Broader effects: Reduced physical activity during
festivals, financial strain from medical expenses, loss of productivity,
and negative impact on family well-being (especially when a member has
chronic illness affecting children’s upbringing).
These practices originated in
eras of joint families, physical labour, cleaner environments, and natural
foods. Modern India — with nuclear families, pollution, sedentary lifestyles,
processed ingredients, and longer lifespans with chronic diseases — makes the
same patterns counterproductive.
When health deteriorates
systematically in the name of religion, it raises a fundamental question: If a
practice makes people sick on a large scale, what is the purpose of continuing
it unchanged? Religion should uplift and sustain life, not contribute to
poverty through medical costs or reduced quality of life.
Need for Review of Religious
Texts (Especially on Food Aspects at home Religious Rituals/ Poojas)
Religious texts provide spiritual
guidance, stories, and ritual frameworks. Many aspects (core beliefs, prayers,
ethical teachings) remain timeless. However, the application of certain ritual
details — particularly food offerings and variety during festivals — was shaped
by historical contexts.
So need to review existing food s
of religious festivals and make sure people adopt follow only limited
food verities or extended festival every weekend or every fortnight like on
full moon day etc to reduce excess strain preparing such number of Veritate of
food, reduce stress, reduce excess empty carbohydrates reduce excess fats safe
guard health of religious followers.
Updating explanatory notes or
interpretations regarding food quantity, variety, and timing does not require
altering core rituals, beliefs, or spiritual essence.
Similar thoughtful adaptations
have occurred across religions and cultures worldwide when practices conflict
with health, safety, or changing realities (e.g., hygiene adaptations or safety
in rituals)
Key Principles for Any Review:
- Respect religious freedom and avoid state overreach
into theology.
- Focus narrowly on public health dimensions (food,
timing, moderation especially at home ).
- Emphasise that self-care, moderation, and well-being
can be presented as aligned with
- dharma/righteous living.
- Involve religious scholars, health experts,
nutritionists, and community leaders in dialogue.
Practical Recommendations for
Healthier Festival Practices
- Limit Variety per Festival Day
Restrict special
ritual foods to a maximum of 1–3 varieties per festival. This reduces stress,
excess calorie/fat/sugar intake, and logistical burden while preserving the
spirit of offering and celebration.
- Spread Celebrations Throughout the Year
Encourage one
special dish or ritual food per week (ideally weekends) instead of overloading
a single day. This turns every week into a manageable mini-celebration,
distributes health impact, and makes preparation routine rather than
overwhelming.
- Time Discipline for Rituals
Encourage
completion of major rituals before 8 AM or after 8 PM where feasible. This
protects regular meal timings, allows timely medication for those with chronic
conditions, and maintains daily discipline.
- Nutrition Assessment and Healthier Alternatives
The Government
(in collaboration with religious organisations and experts) can scientifically
assess festival foods region-wise and festival-wise for nutritional value,
sugar, and fat content.
Develop and promote healthier adaptations (natural sweeteners, reduced-oil
methods, alternatives suitable for diabetes/heart patients).
Create
widespread awareness through religious bodies, ASHA workers, RWAs, and
campaigns — focusing on informed choice rather than coercion.
- Emphasise Moderation and Self-Care
Religious
guidance can highlight quality of devotion and moderation over sheer quantity.
Self-care and health protection can be framed as part of righteous living.
These changes preserve rituals
and cultural richness while aligning practices with contemporary realities.
- Health is foundational. Widespread practices
contributing to national health burdens (diabetes, cardiac issues) justify
evidence-based dialogue. Ancient texts were not written for today’s
pollution, nuclear families, or chronic disease patterns.
- Religious traditions hold deep emotional and cultural
significance. Any changes must come through internal scholarly and
community consensus to avoid perceptions of external interference. Core
faith should remain untouched.
The ideal path is facilitation —
government supporting health data, nutrition expertise, and platforms for
dialogue — rather than direct rewriting mandates. Religious organisations and
scholars are best positioned to lead interpretive updates
If religious practices
systematically harm health, they lose alignment with religion’s higher purpose
of fostering happiness, peace, and well-being. Thoughtful review of the
food-related aspects of festival rituals — limiting variety, spreading
celebrations, ensuring timely completion, and promoting healthier adaptations —
can protect millions while honouring faith.
Health and self-care are not
opposed to religion; they can be integral to it. When people are healthier,
devotion becomes more joyful and sustainable across generations.
A nation that protects the
well-being of its people through compassionate evolution of practices
strengthens both its health and its cultural-spiritual foundations.
This is not about diminishing
religion but about ensuring it continues to serve humanity effectively in the
present and future.
109.
Comprehensive Government-Led School &
Community Food-Based Healthcare Education & Nutrition Program
To build a truly healthy
generation, the government must go beyond just providing meals and water in
schools. It is essential to implement a comprehensive, government-led
food-based healthcare education programme for teachers, students, and parents.
This is necessary because most common and chronic health problems in children
(obesity, underweight, pimples, PCOS symptoms, candida/fungal issues,
deficiencies, weak immunity, poor digestion, etc.) can be prevented or greatly
reduced through proper food and lifestyle choices.
When teachers, students, and
parents are educated on the power of nutrition, how specific foods support
immunity, strength, digestion, and hormonal balance, how to identify early
symptoms of health issues, and why fresh food, moderate salt/oil, and natural
practices are better than medicines or creams, they become empowered to take
care of health naturally. This education, delivered through teacher training,
age-appropriate student materials (fairy-tale style for younger children and
practical science for older ones), parent booklets, and regular Parent-Teacher
Meetings, creates lifelong healthy habits from childhood.
When combined with standardised
nutritious mid-day meals, safe drinking water, kitchen gardening, and other
reforms, this programme reduces the long-term healthcare burden, prevents
lifestyle diseases, and builds a generation that is physically strong, mentally
sharp, and self-reliant in health matters.
To build a healthy generation,
the government must go beyond providing meals and water. It should implement a
complete food-based healthcare education system for teachers, students, and
parents. This will empower everyone with knowledge about nutrition, disease
prevention, symptom identification, and healthy lifestyle choices — using
simple, engaging, and culturally appropriate methods.
1. Teacher Training in Food-Based
Healthcare
- Government provides mandatory training for all
teachers (government and private schools) on food-based healthcare.
- Supply standard training material and modules
covering:
- Benefits of millets, fresh vegetables, sprouts,
fermented foods, and natural ingredients.
- How specific foods support immunity, strength,
digestion, growth, and hormonal balance.
- Identification of common issues (obesity,
underweight, pimples, PCOS symptoms, candida/fungal issues,
deficiencies).
- Why fresh food is best, how much salt/oil to use,
dangers of deep-fried/processed/reheated foods, etc.
- Display large-size standard charts in every classroom
showing key messages (e.g., benefits of millets, food groups, healthy vs
unhealthy choices) in simple language with visuals.
2. Age-Specific &
Class-Specific Study Material for Students
- Provide free study material to every student
(age-appropriate and class-specific).
- For younger children: Use fairy-tale style stories
and simple language explaining how foods (millets, vegetables, fruits,
nuts, seeds) help build immunity, strength, energy, and keep them healthy
and happy.
- For older children/adolescents: Use PPTs, posters,
and easy-to-understand language covering:
- Basic nutrition science.
- Why pimples occur and how diet/lifestyle changes
help (instead of relying only on creams/pills).
- Genital hygiene and common issues.
- Identification of PCOS symptoms (irregular periods,
excess hair on face/body, acne, weight gain).
- Candida/fungal issues — why they occur (sugar,
processed foods, poor gut health) and foods/lifestyle to manage them.
- Materials should be available in local languages +
English/Hindi.
3. Parent Education Materials
- Distribute free booklets/handouts to every parent in
local language + English/Hindi covering:
- How everyday foods prevent diseases and support
immunity/growth.
- How to identify common deficiencies through
symptoms.
- Recommended lifestyle: daily fresh food, limited
salt/oil, regular activity.
- Why always prefer fresh food made just before
eating (better nutrition, taste, and safety).
- Why reheated or long-stored refrigerated food
should be avoided or minimized (loss of nutrients, risk of bacterial
growth and toxins).
- Recommended salt and oil quantities; why no
deep-frying (use only pouring oil on freshly cooked vegetables).
- Why traditional rich foods (biryani, masala
curries, deep-fried items) should be occasional (once a week or on
special occasions) and in limited quantities.
- Reasons for obesity and how to prevent/manage it.
- PCOS identification and natural management
approaches.
- Candida/fungal issues — causes and supportive
foods/lifestyle.
4. Regular Parent-Teacher
Meetings (PTMs)
- Dedicate time in every monthly or quarterly PTM for
food-based healthcare sessions.
- Teachers and experts teach the above topics using
standard materials.
- Interactive sessions with demonstrations (e.g.,
simple millet recipes, healthy snacks).
5. Identification & Targeted
Support
- Teachers regularly observe and identify children who
are obese/overweight or underweight.
- Call parents for a dedicated meeting.
- Provide them with the standard booklet explaining the
reasons and recommended foods/lifestyle changes (millet-focused diet for
obese children, extra healthy carbs + balanced nutrition for underweight
children, as per earlier categorised meal approach).
- Link with school meal program for corrective support.
Key Messages to Teach (Core
Content)
- Fresh is Best: Always prepare food fresh just before
eating for maximum nutrition and safety. Minimize reheated or long-stored
refrigerated food.
- Oil & Salt: Use moderate amounts. Prefer pouring
small quantities of wood-pressed oil on freshly cooked vegetables rather
than deep-frying.
- Occasional Traditional Foods: Rich items like biryani
or heavy masala curries — once a week or on special occasions only, in
limited quantity.
- Obesity Reasons: Excess sugar, processed foods,
deep-fried items, lack of activity, and hormonal factors.
- PCOS Awareness (especially for adolescent girls):
Symptoms like irregular periods, excess facial/body hair, acne, weight
gain. Supportive diet and lifestyle changes.
- Candida/Fungal Issues: Often linked to high
sugar/processed foods and gut imbalance. Supportive foods and hygiene
practices help.
- General: Balanced natural diet + activity prevents
most lifestyle diseases and supports overall health.
Overall Benefits
- Empowers teachers, students, and parents with
practical knowledge.
- Creates awareness that prevents problems rather than
just treating symptoms with medicines/creams.
- Supports the school meal program (standardised
millet-based meals, fresh food focus, RO water, stainless steel cups).
- Reduces long-term healthcare burden through
prevention.
- Builds lifelong healthy habits from childhood.
Government Implementation
- Develop and distribute standard training modules,
charts, student materials, and parent booklets.
- Fund and conduct teacher training programs.
- Integrate into school curriculum and PTM schedules.
- Monitor effectiveness through feedback and health
indicators (BMI, attendance, reported issues).
This education component,
combined with free standardised meals, safe drinking water (250 ml seamless
stainless steel cups provided daily, steamed for hygiene + bulk RO
mineral/alkaline water systems), and targeted support for obese/underweight
children, creates a complete ecosystem for child health.
It ensures every child, parent,
and teacher understands the power of food and lifestyle in building strong
immunity, preventing diseases, and maintaining healthy weight and hormonal
balance — using natural, accessible methods.
110.
Teaching All School Children Food-Based
Healthcare for Prevention and Management of Common and Chronic Diseases
From a very young age, school
children must be taught that food is the primary and most powerful form of
healthcare — both for prevention and for supporting the body during illness.
This education is necessary because most parents and children today immediately
rush to pharmacy products, tablets, injections, or market-advertised “instant
relief” items even for small illnesses like cold, fever, or diarrhoea.
Children’s bodies are still developing and are not fully equipped to handle the
chemicals and side effects of medicines repeatedly. When children grow up believing that only
pharmacy is the solution, they develop a lifelong dependence on medicines
instead of trusting the body’s natural ability to heal with proper food and
lifestyle support.
Teaching them “Food First,
Always” builds self-reliance, reduces unnecessary use of medicines, lowers the
risk of antibiotic resistance and side effects, and empowers them to understand
their own body. It aligns with the ancient wisdom: “Let food be thy medicine” —
a principle that has sustained humanity for thousands of years.
This knowledge, when started
early in school through simple stories, practical demonstrations, and regular
lessons, creates a generation that is healthier, more self-reliant, and wiser
about true healthcare. It prevents many chronic lifestyle diseases and reduces
the overall healthcare burden on families and the nation.
Core Philosophy to Teach Children
- Food First, Always: Most common illnesses and even
many chronic conditions can be prevented or greatly reduced through daily
food choices.
- Vitamins and Minerals from Food: Every vitamin and
mineral the body needs should ideally come from whole foods (vegetables,
fruits, sprouts, millets, nuts, seeds, leafy greens, etc.). Supplements
are not routine solutions.
- Last Resort Approach:
- First → Food-based support and natural remedies.
- If symptoms persist or are severe → Consult a
qualified doctor.
- Allopathic medicine and supplements should be used
only when truly necessary, completing the full course as advised, and
mainly for serious or prolonged conditions.
- Reject Gimmicks: Teach children to be critical of
advertisements promising “instant relief.” True healing takes time and
consistent supportive habits.
- Prevention is Better than Cure: Daily healthy eating
builds strong immunity and resilience so that illnesses occur less
frequently and are milder when they do.
Specific Food-Based Approaches
for Common Issues
1. Flu, Cold, and Respiratory
Issues
Instead of flu shots or tablets as the first response:
- Golden Milk (Haldi Doodh): Warm plant-based milk with
turmeric, a pinch of black pepper (for better absorption), ginger, and a
little palm jaggery or honey. Turmeric’s curcumin has anti-inflammatory
and immune-supporting properties. It helps soothe sore throat, reduce
congestion, and support recovery.
- Leafy Green Decoctions or Soups: Spinach, moringa, or
other greens provide Vitamin C, antioxidants, and immune support.
- Oregano Tea or Black Seed (Kalonji/Nigella sativa):
Oregano tea or a small amount of black seed can help with infection
control due to their natural antimicrobial and immune-modulating
properties.
- Oregano Essential Oil on Foot Soles: Dilute 1 drop of
oregano essential oil in 5–10 drops of carrier oil (like coconut oil) and
gently massage on the soles of the feet. This traditional supportive
method may help with respiratory comfort. Always use highly diluted and
test for sensitivity.
2. Fever and General Infections
- Warm herbal teas with ginger, tulsi, or black seed.
- Light, easily digestible foods like millet porridge,
vegetable soups, and plenty of fluids.
- Black seed is traditionally used for its supportive
role in immune response during infections.
3. Gas, Bloating, Constipation,
and Digestive Issues
Instead of market-bought laxatives, instant relief tablets, or antibiotics:
- Increase fibre-rich whole foods: Siridhanya millets,
soaked/sprouted legumes, leafy greens, and plenty of vegetables.
- Eat guava and papaya regularly (especially guava with
skin) — these are excellent natural remedies for constipation and healthy
digestion.
- Completely avoid cane sugar, processed foods, refined
flour, and excess dairy.
- Use ginger, fennel, cumin, or turmeric in daily meals
or as teas.
- Proper chewing, not drinking too much water during
meals, and regular meal timings also help greatly.
4. Pimples, Acne, Skin Rashes,
and Other Skin Issues
Instead of creams, lotions, or market products:
- Improve diet: Reduce sugar, processed foods, fried
items, and dairy. Increase fresh vegetables, fruits, sprouts, and millets.
- Drink plenty of water and herbal decoctions.
- Use natural supports: Fresh turmeric paste (from
root), neem leaves, or aloe vera gel externally when needed.
- Address internal causes through better gut health,
reduced inflammation, and balanced hormones via food. Consistent good food
choices often clear skin naturally over time.
5. Depression, Anxiety, and
Stress
Daily inclusion of:
- Magnesium-rich foods: Leafy greens (spinach,
amaranth), nuts, seeds (pumpkin, chia), banana, avocado.
- Omega-3 sources: Flax seeds, chia seeds, walnuts
(soaked).
- B-vitamin rich foods: Whole millets, sprouts, leafy
greens.
- Balanced blood sugar through complex carbs (millets)
+ protein + fibre prevents mood swings.
These nutrients support brain chemistry, reduce inflammation, and help the body manage stress naturally.
Vitamins, Minerals, and Energy
from Food (Not Supplements)
Children must understand:
- Nature has packed every essential nutrient in whole
foods in the perfect combination and quantity the body can use
efficiently.
- Relying on supplements for daily needs can create
imbalances and reduce the body’s natural ability to absorb from food.
- Only in cases of diagnosed deficiency or during
serious recovery (under medical guidance) should supplements be considered
— and even then, food should remain the foundation.
When Allopathy or Supplements May
Be Needed
- For mild common illnesses → Prioritise food support
for 1–3 days.
- If symptoms worsen, persist, or the child is very
unwell (high fever, difficulty breathing, dehydration, etc.) → Seek
medical advice promptly.
- Allopathic medicines should be taken exactly as
prescribed and the full course completed.
- Supplements are reserved for genuine recovery support
in prolonged or severe conditions, not for everyday wellness or quick
fixes.
How to Teach This in Schools
- Integrate into daily mid-day meal time with short
storytelling about how specific foods help the body.
- Practical demonstrations: Preparing golden milk,
herbal teas, or simple sprout salads.
- Age-appropriate lessons on “Food as Medicine” in
health/science classes.
- Regular sessions on reading food labels,
understanding advertisements, and building critical thinking.
- Encourage home practice with parents through simple
take-home recipes and challenges.
Long-Term Benefits
Children who grow up with this
knowledge become adults who:
- Have stronger natural immunity.
- Experience fewer chronic lifestyle diseases.
- Depend less on medicines and have lower healthcare
costs.
- Make informed, confident choices for themselves and
their families.
- Contribute to a healthier society with reduced
antibiotic resistance and pharmaceutical overuse.
Every day, through the food you
eat, you are either building health or creating problems. Choose foods that
love your body back — fresh vegetables, sprouts, millets, fruits, nuts, and
simple spices. When you feel unwell, first support your body with warm golden
milk, soothing teas, guava, papaya, and nourishing soups. Trust that consistent
good food works slowly but deeply and safely. Medicines from outside are
sometimes needed, but they should always be the last option after you have
given your body the best chance with real food. Start today — become the master
of your own health through the beautiful power of food. This education, started early in school, will
create a generation that is healthier, more self-reliant, and wiser about true
healthcare
111.
Why Packed & Processed Foods Are
Unhealthy — Large-Scale Production, Chemicals & Why Fresh Home-Made Food is
Always Better
Packed and processed foods
(chips, biscuits, juices, canned items, bakery products, noodles, etc.) look
colourful, tasty, and convenient. But most of them are made in very large
factories using machines. Teaching students from a young age why these foods
are unhealthy and why fresh home-made food is always better is very
necessary.
Children must understand through
audio-video presentations how mass-produced food is made — how fruits and
vegetables are washed (sometimes not properly), cut, and crushed by machines,
how small insects, fungus, or dust can get mixed in, and how factories add
chemicals, preservatives, artificial colours, and flavours to make the food
last for months without spoiling. For example, in factory-made tomato ketchup
there is often excess sugar and less real tomato, and chips are fried multiple
times in the same oil that becomes rancid and harmful. There is no guarantee
that spoiled vegetables, fruits with worms, or unhygienic conditions during
large-scale production do not enter the final product, even if it looks decent
and neatly packed.
When children learn these facts
early, they naturally start preferring fresh fruits, home-made meals, and
freshly cooked snacks. This protects their health, supports local farmers,
reduces chemical intake, and develops respect for real food. Fresh home-made
food has more nutrition, better taste, and no harmful additives. This education
helps children make wise choices and stay healthier throughout their life
Packed foods (chips, biscuits,
juices, canned items, bakery products, noodles, etc.) look colourful, tasty,
and convenient. But most of them are made in very large factories using
machines. While they may look attractive and last for months without spoiling,
they are often unhealthy because of the way they are produced and the chemicals
added to them.
How Packed Foods Are Made in
Large Volume
Factories produce these foods in
huge quantities using big machines:
- Fruits and vegetables are washed (sometimes not
properly), cut, and crushed by machines.
- In machine-made fruit juices, small insects, fungus,
or dust that were on the fruits can get mixed inside. Factories then add
chemicals and preservatives to kill bacteria, fungus, and insects so the
juice does not spoil quickly and looks clean.
- Oils used for deep-frying chips and snacks are heated
again and again in large tanks. When oil is heated repeatedly at high
temperatures, it becomes rancid (bad and harmful). Rancid oil creates
harmful substances that are bad for our heart, liver, and overall health.
- To make the food last for many months on shop
shelves, factories add preservatives, artificial colours, flavours, and
stabilisers.
Example 1: Fruit Juices
A packed fruit juice can stay on
the shelf for many months without spoiling. But fresh-cut fruits or home-made
juice spoils in a few hours. This happens because packed juices contain
chemicals that stop spoilage. These chemicals are not natural and are not good
for our body when consumed regularly.
Example 2: Chips and Deep-Fried
Snacks
If you make chips at home and
leave them in open air, they become soft and spoil in 1–2 days. But
factory-packed chips remain crispy even after many weeks or months. This is
because factories add preservatives and sometimes use special packaging. The
oil used in factories is heated in very large quantities repeatedly, making it
rancid and unhealthy.
Why Packed Deep-Fried Foods &
Chips Should Be Avoided (or Eaten Very Rarely)
- The oil becomes harmful when heated again and again.
- Preservatives and artificial flavours are added.
- They are high in salt, unhealthy fats, and sometimes
hidden sugars.
- Regular eating can lead to weight gain, acidity, poor
digestion, and long-term health problems.
Best Rule: Eat packed chips,
biscuits, or deep-fried snacks only very occasionally and in very small
quantities (once in a while, not daily).
Even then, prefer small local
brands if possible, but fresh home-made snacks are always better.
Why Fresh Fruits Are Best — Not
Packed Juices
- Fresh whole fruits give you fibre, vitamins, and
natural taste.
- Packed juices lose most of the fibre during
processing.
- Even “100% juice” often has added chemicals or is
made from concentrate.
- Local fresh fruit juice shops (made in front of you
with ice, without cane sugar or refrigeration for long) are much better
than packed juices.
Golden Rule: Eat the whole fruit.
If you want juice, make it fresh at home or buy from a trusted local shop where
you can see it being made.
Why Home-Made Foods Are Always
Better
- You know exactly what ingredients are used.
- No harmful chemicals or preservatives are added.
- Freshly cooked food has more nutrition and better
taste.
- You can control oil, salt, and spices according to
your health.
Bakery Products & Street Food
Made in Large Quantities
When food (samosas, patties,
cakes, bread, etc.) is made in very large volumes in factories or big kitchens,
it becomes difficult to maintain perfect hygiene and freshness every single
time. Small home-made or freshly prepared food in limited quantity is usually
safer and healthier. Unless there is no other option, always prefer fresh
home-made food.
Simple Message for Students (From
Class 3 Onwards)
Packed foods look nice and last
long because factories add chemicals and preservatives. These chemicals help
the food not to spoil, but they are not good for our body. Fresh fruits,
home-made meals, and freshly cooked snacks are always better for our health and
energy. When you eat fresh food, you respect the farmer’s hard work and
nature’s gifts. Avoid eating packed chips, juices, and biscuits every day. Eat
them only once in a while in very small amounts. Your body will feel lighter,
stronger, and healthier when you choose fresh and home-made food.
How to Teach This in Schools
- Show short videos of factories vs home cooking.
- Conduct simple experiments (e.g., leave homemade
chips and packed chips in open air and observe after 2–3 days).
- Organise quizzes and drawing competitions on “Fresh
Food vs Packed Food”.
- Repeat these lessons every year with more details as
children grow older.
When children understand these
things from a young age, they naturally start choosing fresh and home-made
food. This protects their health, supports local farmers, reduces chemical use,
and helps them develop respect for real food.
Group 26 Professions
112.
Every Profession is Important — Respect
the Dignity of Labour in Every Job
In today’s society, many children
grow up looking down on certain jobs and thinking only a few professions (like
doctor, engineer, or lawyer) are respectable. This attitude creates
discrimination, disrespect for hard work, and an unbalanced society. Teaching
students from a young age that every honest profession is important and has
dignity is necessary to build respect for labour, reduce social division, and
develop good character.
Whether it is a farmer who grows
our food, a sweeper who keeps our surroundings clean, a house maid who helps in
daily chores, a driver who takes us safely, a mechanic who repairs machines, a
tailor who stitches our clothes, a cobbler who mends our footwear, a watchman
who protects our homes, or a garbage lifter who removes waste — every worker
plays a vital role in making our daily life smooth and comfortable. When
children learn to respect all professions, they understand the true value of
hard work, become humble, and develop a balanced and responsible attitude
towards society. This education also encourages them to choose any career with
interest and dignity instead of running after only a few “high-status”
jobs.
When combined with good food,
hygiene, self-defence, and value education, respect for the dignity of labour
creates well-rounded citizens who value equality, hard work, and contribution
to society.
Every honest profession is
important for society. A farmer grows our food, a weaver makes our clothes, a
potter creates useful items, a cook prepares meals, a sweeper keeps places
clean, a garbage lifter removes waste, a driver helps us travel, a mechanic
repairs machines, a tailor stitches our clothes, a cobbler makes and repairs
footwear, a house maid helps in daily chores, a washerman washes clothes, and
an iron person presses them neatly. All these jobs, along with doctor,
engineer, lawyer, nurse, and teacher, keep our life running smoothly.
From a young age (Class 3
onwards), children must learn that no work is small or big — every profession
has dignity.
We must respect every worker and
never look down on any job. This builds a healthy, respectful, and balanced
society.
Dignity of Labour — Why Every
Profession Deserves Respect
All professions contribute to our
daily life. When we respect every worker, we understand the value of hard work
and develop good character. Children should be taught that judging any
profession as “low” or “high” is wrong. Every person who works honestly
deserves respect and fair treatment.
Specific Examples of Important
Professions and Their Value
House Maid / Domestic Helper
A house maid helps with cleaning,
cooking, and other chores. Even 30 minutes of help in the busy morning saves a
lot of time and energy for mothers and families. This allows mothers
(especially working women) to focus on their jobs without stress. Their support
helps the entire family function better.
Cook / Chef
Cooks prepare healthy and tasty
meals for families, hotels, and events. They face long working hours, heat in
the kitchen, and the responsibility of feeding many people. A good cook at home
helps working parents earn money peacefully because their mind is not disturbed
by daily cooking worries. Good food keeps the family healthy and happy.
Driver
Drivers help people reach offices, schools, hospitals, and other places safely
and on time. They save time and physical strain for families, especially in
busy cities. Their careful driving protects lives every day.
Sweeper (in School, Office, or
Apartment)
Sweepers keep schools, offices,
and homes clean. They reduce dust, which prevents allergies and breathing
problems. A clean environment helps students study better and workers focus
more. Their work creates a healthy and pleasant atmosphere for everyone.
Garbage Lifter / Waste Collector
If garbage lifters do not collect
waste, our homes, colonies, and cities would become extremely dirty and
unhygienic. This would lead to bad smell, rodents, bacteria, viruses, fungus,
and diseases. Their work protects public health and keeps our surroundings
clean and safe.
Tailor
Tailors stitch clothes so that we can wear comfortable and well-fitting
outfits. Without them, we would not have proper clothes for daily use, school,
or special occasions.
Weaver
Weavers make the cloth from thread. The clothes we wear every day come from
their skill and hard work.
Cobbler (Shoe Maker / Repairer)
Cobblers face many difficulties
while working with leather and tools. They make and repair shoes and chappals
that protect our feet and reduce strain while walking. Their work helps us move
comfortably every day.
Washerman and Iron Person
Washermen wash our clothes and
keep them clean. Iron persons press clothes neatly so we look presentable.
Their work saves our time and effort.
Carpenter
Carpenters make and repair wooden
furniture, doors, windows, and other useful items. Their skilled hands turn
wood into beautiful and functional things we use every day.
Construction Worker, Mason, and
Road Worker
These workers build houses,
schools, offices, roads, and bridges. They work in harsh sun, rain, and dust.
Without their hard labour, we would not have safe buildings or good roads to
travel on. Their work creates the infrastructure we all depend on.
Electrician and Plumber
Electricians bring light and
power into our homes and fix electrical problems. Plumbers ensure clean water
reaches us and waste water is removed safely. Their work prevents accidents and
keeps our homes comfortable and hygienic.
Mechanic
Mechanics repair vehicles,
machines, and equipment. They keep our transport and daily tools working
smoothly.
Watchman / Security Personnel
Watchmen and security guards stay
awake at night or work long shifts to protect our homes, schools, apartments,
offices, and colonies. They check who is entering, prevent theft, and keep us
safe from danger. Their alertness and sense of responsibility give us peace of
mind so that we can sleep, study, and work without worry. Their job may look
simple, but it is very important for everyone’s safety.
It is Always Better to Do Your
Own Work When Possible
While we respect and value the
help of others, children should also learn to do their own work. Simple tasks
like cleaning their own room, washing their own utensils sometimes, or keeping
things neat build self-reliance, discipline, and respect for labour. When we do
our own work, we understand how much effort goes into every job.
How to Teach This Effectively in
Schools
- Show short videos and stories of different workers
and how their jobs help society.
- Conduct role plays where children act as farmer,
cook, sweeper, driver, tailor, etc.
- Organise quizzes, drawing competitions, and
discussions on “Why every job is important.”
- Take children on simple field visits or show real
examples from daily life.
- Clearly teach: “Never make fun of any worker. Say
‘Thank you’ and treat everyone with respect.”
- Repeat these lessons every year with more examples as
children grow older.
Every profession is important and
has dignity. The farmer, the weaver, the potter, the cook, the house maid, the
sweeper, the garbage lifter, the driver, the mechanic, the tailor, the cobbler,
the washerman, the iron person — all of them work hard so that our life becomes
easier and better. Respect every worker you see. Never look down on any job. It
is good to do your own small works sometimes because it teaches you the value
of labour. When you grow up, choose any profession with interest and work with
honesty and respect. A person who respects all professions and works hard will
always be successful and happy.”
This teaching, when started early
and done regularly, will create a generation that values hard work, honesty,
and respect for every profession. It will reduce discrimination and build a
more harmonious and responsible society.
113.
Teaching Students About All Professions
with Respect and Dignity — Helping Children Discover and Choose What They Want
to Become
Many parents unintentionally make
their children choiceless by constantly enforcing and pampering the idea that
only a few professions — such as software engineer, doctor, lawyer, or
chartered accountant — are great because they bring high earnings and social
respect. They often look down upon arts, commerce, science streams, and
completely ignore vocational training. This narrow mindset creates unnecessary
pressure and prevents children from discovering their true interests and
talents.
Students must be taught from a
young age that every honest profession is important and respectable. If no one
chooses to become a driver, how will goods and food be transported from one
part of the country to another? Similarly, if no one becomes a farmer, weaver,
potter, tailor, mechanic, or musician, society cannot function smoothly. Some
children may happily want to become musicians, weavers, artists, or follow
traditional crafts. This education will help revive and carry forward India’s
rich traditional professions and crafts that are slowly disappearing.
Nowadays, only software and a few
white-collar jobs are being over-pampered, while many valuable professions are
looked down upon. When children are taught the true value and dignity of every
profession, they develop genuine interest and liking for the work that suits
them. They understand that real happiness comes not just from making money, but
from choosing a profession they love and serving society directly or
indirectly. This balanced approach will help every child grow into a confident,
fulfilled, and responsible individual.
Every profession is important for
society to function smoothly. A farmer who grows our food, a weaver who makes
our clothes, a potter who makes utensils, a cobbler who repairs shoes, a barber
who cuts hair, a mechanic who fixes vehicles, a nurse who cares for the sick,
an air hostess who ensures safe travel, an engineer who builds, a doctor who
heals, and a lawyer who upholds justice — all are equally valuable.
From a very young age (Class 3
onwards), children should learn about every profession with equal respect. This
removes the wrong idea that only doctor, engineer, or lawyer are “good” jobs.
It helps children discover their own interests and talents instead of blindly
following what society considers “prestigious.”
Why Teaching All Professions is
Important
- It builds dignity of labour — the understanding that
no work is small or big; every honest work has value.
- It prevents children from developing bias or looking
down on certain jobs.
- It helps them choose a career based on interest,
skill, and happiness, not just money or social status.
- It creates a balanced society where every profession
is respected.
How to Teach Profession-Wise
(Government & School Role)The Government and schools should provide:
- Age-appropriate literature (simple story books and
charts)
- Audio and video content (short animated films,
real-life videos, interviews)
- Interactive activities (role plays, quizzes, drawing
competitions, “What I want to become” sessions)
Teaching should start from Class
3 and continue with increasing detail every year
Examples of Professions to Cover
1. Farmer
How a farmer prepares soil, sows
seeds, waters crops, protects them, and harvests. Their hardships, dependence
on rain, and contribution to feeding the entire nation. Videos of real farmers
and their daily life.
2. Weaver & Textile Worker
How thread is made into beautiful
cloth using handlooms or power looms. Importance of traditional weaving and
handloom products.
3. Potter
How clay is shaped into pots,
diyas, and utensils using hands and wheels. The skill, creativity, and
usefulness of pottery in daily life.
4. Cobbler (Shoe Repair)
How old shoes are repaired and
given new life. Importance of repairing instead of always buying new things.
5. Barber / Hair Stylist
How hair is cut and styled
neatly. Importance of personal grooming and hygiene.6. Mechanic
How engines, vehicles, and machines are repaired. The technical skill required.
7. Nurse
How nurses care for patients,
give medicines, monitor health, and provide comfort. Their long working hours
and dedication.
8. Air Hostess / Cabin Crew
Why they fly (to ensure passenger
safety and comfort during air travel). Health risks (jet lag, irregular
timings, pressure changes, radiation exposure at high altitude, fatigue).
Training they undergo and importance of their role in aviation safety.
9. Engineer
How they design and build roads,
bridges, machines, buildings, and technology that make life easier.
10. Doctor
How they diagnose illness, treat
patients, and perform surgeries. Their long study and responsibility towards
life.
11. Lawyer
How they help people get justice,
fight legal cases, and protect rights.
12. Scientist
How scientists conduct
experiments, discover new knowledge, invent medicines, develop new
technologies, and solve big problems like diseases, climate change, and food
shortages. Their curiosity, patience, and contribution to human progress.
13. Business
Entrepreneur
How entrepreneurs start
companies, contractor, create jobs, innovate products and services, take risks
to build successful businesses. They drive economic growth and provide
employment to many people.
14. Banker
How bankers manage money, give
loans, help people save, support businesses, and keep the economy running
smoothly. Their role in financial security and development.
15. Chartered
Accountant
How chartered accountants manage
accounts, do auditing, help with taxation, and ensure businesses and
individuals handle money honestly and legally. Their importance in financial
discipline and preventing fraud.
16. Palm
Jaggery Maker & Other Traditional Professions
How palm sap is collected and
converted into healthy jaggery. Importance of traditional skills and natural
products.
Teaching Approach (Make it
Interesting & Age-Appropriate)
- Show short videos of real people doing each job
happily.
- Share simple stories of how each profession helps
society.
- Conduct role-play activities where children act as
farmer, potter, nurse, etc.
- Organise quizzes and competitions like “Guess the
Profession” or “Why this job is important”.
- Take children on field visits (farm, potter’s
workshop, local mechanic shop, hospital) whenever possible.
- Use charts and posters showing different professions
with equal respect.
- Discuss pros and cons of each job honestly (for
example, air hostess has travel opportunities but also health challenges
like jet lag).
Benefits for Children
- They develop respect for all workers.
- They understand that happiness and interest in work
matter more than only money or status.
- They get a chance to explore their own talents and
interests early.
- It reduces pressure on children to become only doctor
or engineer.
- Society becomes more balanced and respectful when
children grow up with this mindset.
Every profession is like a
different instrument in an orchestra. The farmer, the weaver, the potter, the
mechanic, the nurse, the air hostess, the doctor, the lawyer — all are needed
to make our life beautiful and complete. Do not think only doctor, engineer or
lawyer are great jobs. Every honest work is great. Observe different
professions, understand their importance, and when you grow up, choose the work
that makes you happy and uses your talent. Respect every worker you see — the
person who cleans the road, the person who sells vegetables, the teacher who
teaches you — all are doing important work. Your future will be bright when you
choose work with interest and respect for all professions.
This teaching, when started early
and done regularly with good audio-video materials and activities, will create
a generation that values dignity of labour, makes wise career choices, and
contributes to a harmonious and respectful society.
114.
Why the Government Should Replace Class
Leaders and Class Captains with Rotating Class Committees, Ban Student Union
Elections, and Teach Leadership Principles from the Bhagavad Gita
In most schools and colleges,
only a few students become class leaders or captains, while the majority remain
followers. Student union elections often lead to bias, money power, political
interference, and division. To give every student an equal opportunity to
develop leadership qualities, the Government should introduce rotating Class
Committees in place of traditional class leaders and completely ban student
union elections and political affiliations in educational institutions.
Proposed System: Rotating Class
Committees
Instead of a single class leader
or captain, every class from 1st standard onwards should have a Student
Committee consisting of 10% of the students in that class.
- The committee members should change every month
through rotation or lottery.
- Within one academic year, every student in the class
gets the opportunity to serve on the committee at least once.
- The highest class in the school/college can lead the
overall student committee of the institution, with monthly rotation.
This system ensures that
leadership is not limited to a few “popular” or well-connected students. It
gives equal opportunity to all students irrespective of caste, religion,
gender, economic background, or academic performance.
How Class Committees Develop
Leadership in Every Student
- Every student gets practical experience in
leadership, responsibility, and administration from a young age.
- By the time a student reaches Class 10, 12, or
graduation, he or she will have developed strong leadership qualities and
will be familiar with student-related issues.
- This practical training builds self-confidence,
decision-making ability, and a sense of responsibility.
- It directly benefits students from lower-income
groups and disadvantaged backgrounds who otherwise rarely get leadership
opportunities.
Teaching Leadership Principles
from the Bhagavad Gita
The Bhagavad Gita teaches that
true leadership is universal and that every individual has equal potential for
wisdom, courage, and responsibility. When students are taught these principles
(not religious chanting, only leadership principles respecting harmony) along
with practical committee work, they develop the self-confidence to lead
meaningfully in life — not just in school, but in their future careers and
society. This removes the false notion that leadership is the “birth right” of
only a few elite sections.
Role and Responsibilities of
Student Committees
The Student Committee will:
- Interact with all students in the class and
understand their difficulties and problems.
- Monitor activities and identify any wrong behaviour
(such as fighting, theft, smoking, watching inappropriate content, bunking
classes, etc.).
- Report such issues to teachers and the Parents
Committee so that timely corrective action can be taken.
- Help maintain discipline and a healthy environment in
the class.
Accountability: If a committee
member hides or fails to report wrongdoing (especially if witnessed), they will
lose the chance to serve on the committee in higher classes. They may also face
a deduction of up to 3% in annual marks for bad conduct. The same penalty will
apply to students involved in the wrongdoing. This system promotes ethical and
responsible behaviour.
Why Student Union Elections
Should Be Banned
Student union elections often
involve:
- Heavy spending of money by parents.
- Political interference and bias.
- Nepotism and favouritism.
- Promotion of division along caste, religion, or
economic lines.
By replacing unions with rotating
committees and using a lottery/rotation system, we eliminate these problems.
Every student gets a fair chance without needing money, influence, or political
backing. This also prevents students from being used as tools for political
mileage during their prime learning years.
Reduction in Anti-Social
Activities and Bad Habits
This system helps reduce:
- Smoking, drug use, and premarital relationships
inside campuses.
- Theft, bunking classes to watch movies, and other
indiscipline.
- Political strikes and dharnas during school/college
hours.
Issues should first be raised
through Student Committees → Parents Committees → School/College Management.
Strikes, if necessary, should be limited to a few hours on weekends only and
only for genuine educational issues of their own institution. Complete ban on
students joining protests of other institutions or for non-educational matters.
Benefits of This Reform
- Equal Opportunity: Every student, especially from
lower-income and disadvantaged groups, gets a chance to lead every year.
- Development of Leadership Skills: Practical
experience builds confidence and prepares students for responsible roles
in life.
- Better Discipline: Collective responsibility reduces
wrongdoing.
- Reduction in Politics and Wastage: No money is wasted
on elections. Political interference in education is minimised.
- Holistic Development: Combined with teachings from
the Bhagavad Gita, students learn that leadership is about duty,
self-control, and service — not power or popularity.
Leadership is not the property of
a few. Every one of you has the potential to lead. The rotating Class Committee
system gives every student a fair chance to develop leadership qualities from
childhood. When you serve on the committee, you learn responsibility, teamwork,
and problem-solving. Avoid bad habits like smoking, drugs, or bunking classes.
Follow the discipline of the committee and support your teachers and parents.
True leadership comes from good
character and service — as taught in the Bhagavad Gita. When every student gets
this opportunity, our schools and colleges will produce not just good students,
but responsible future leaders of the nation.”
This reform will create a more
equal, disciplined, and value-based education system. It will help every child
— especially those from weaker sections — gain confidence and become capable
leaders in their own lives
Group 28 Religiousness – Self Belief - Power of Sub
Conscious Mind
115.
Teaching Students the Universal Goodness
and Moral Values from All Religions — Building Harmony, Humanity, and Free
Choice
In a diverse country like India,
where children from different religions, castes, and backgrounds study together
in the same classrooms, it is essential to teach them the universal goodness
and moral values found in all faiths from a young age.
This education is especially
necessary today because young minds in India are being corrupted in the name of
religion by vested interest groups, religious fundamentalists, registered or
unregistered NGOs, and certain individuals spreading across the country. Some
institutions and people try to divide society by creating hatred towards other
religions. In certain cases, hatred starts at a very tender age inside
religious institutions, while in others it is instilled at homes or schools by
parents or teachers. Often, the very people who instigate such division ensure
that their own children or close relatives receive high-quality modern
education abroad or in elite institutions, while encouraging the children of
the poor to fight in the streets in the name of religion. This is a deliberate
attempt by a minority section to control the minds of the majority.
In this dangerous process, they
prop up some uneducated or semi-educated individuals as “babas” or “gurus”
claiming miracle powers, mainly because they belong to certain upper castes or
influential groups. They demand that all religious institutions remain
completely free from government control so they can loot the public in the name
of religion. As a result, many youth are losing sight of the real goodness,
peace, and humanity that every religion actually teaches, and some are becoming
narrow-minded fundamentalists.
Therefore, there is an urgent
need to establish true religious harmony in India through proper education.
Schools must teach students the beautiful common values from all religions
while allowing them to follow their mother or birth religion with love and
respect at least until they become adults (18 years). After that, they should
have the freedom to make an informed and mature choice about their faith. This
balanced approach will prevent division, reduce hatred, build social harmony,
and raise responsible, broad-minded citizens who understand that humanity is
the highest religion.
Every religion in the world
carries beautiful teachings of love, kindness, honesty, discipline, service to
others, and respect for nature. Hinduism, Islam, Christianity, Buddhism,
Zoroastrianism, Sikhism, Jainism, and many others ultimately teach the same
core truth: Humanity is the highest religion, and taking care of ourselves,
others, and the world around us is true spirituality.
The purpose of teaching these
values in schools is not to convert anyone or create division. It is to help
children understand that goodness exists in every religion and that being a
good human being is more important than any label. This builds religious
harmony, reduces hatred and bias, and raises responsible, kind, and confident
individuals.
Core Universal Values to Teach
(Common in All Religions)
- Humanity and Kindness — Treat every person with
respect, irrespective of their religion, caste, or background. Help others
to the best of your ability.
- Self-Care and Personal Discipline — Take care of your
body and mind. Daily hygiene, cleanliness, exercise, and good habits are
part of spiritual life.
- Respect and Care for Parents & Elders — Serving
and respecting parents is one of the highest duties taught in every faith.
- Honesty and Truthfulness — Never tell lies, never
cheat, never steal. Being truthful brings inner peace and blessings.
- Not Hurting Others with Words or Actions — Kind
speech and avoiding scolding or gossip are real religiousness.
- Daily Gratitude and Discipline Practices
- Simple physical activities like Surya Namaskar (as
exercise for strength and flexibility) and the movements of Namaz (as
posture and focus exercise).
- Lighting a small lamp (diya) with a little oil
every day — this builds regularity, gratitude, and a calm mind. It is not
about any one religion but about creating a moment of discipline and
positivity.
7.
Respecting Food, Water, and Our Surroundings —
This is True Godliness
All religions
teach us to value what nature and God have given us. Students must be taught
from a young age:
- Respect food — Never waste food. Eat what you need,
serve what is required, and finish what is on your plate. Wasting food is
like insulting the hard work of farmers and the blessings we receive.
- Do not waste water — Use water carefully while
drinking, bathing, and washing. Saving water is saving life.
- Save money and resources — Avoid unnecessary
spending. A simple and mindful life brings peace.
- Do not pollute — Keep your surroundings clean. No
littering, no throwing garbage anywhere.
- Maintain cleanliness everywhere — No clutter, no
dust, no mold in homes, classrooms, or public places. A clean environment
reflects a clean mind and is a form of worship in every religion.
“Cleanliness is next to
godliness” — this idea appears in different words across all faiths. Keeping
our body, home, school, and nature clean is real religious practice.
How to Teach Without Forcing or
Bias
- From Class 3 onwards, share simple moral stories from
different religions in a balanced way. Always highlight the common
message.
- Clearly tell children: “Follow your parents’ religion
with love and respect until you turn 18. After that, you are free to
choose your own path when you are mature.”
- Never allow any teaching that spreads hate,
superiority, or negativity towards any religion.
- Emphasise that respecting all religions and all
people is true religiousness.
Benefits of This Balanced
Approach
- Children grow up broad-minded and respectful of
diversity.
- It reduces religious conflicts and builds social
harmony.
- Students develop strong character, discipline,
honesty, compassion, and environmental responsibility.
- They learn that goodness and cleanliness matter more
than rituals or labels.
- When they turn 18, they can make a mature, free, and
informed choice about their faith.
Every religion teaches us to be
good human beings. Love and respect your parents’ faith. Learn the beautiful
values from all religions — kindness, honesty, cleanliness, helping others, not
wasting food or water, and keeping surroundings clean. These are the real
blessings. Never hate anyone because of their religion. Be truthful, be clean,
help others, save resources, and live simply. When you become 18, you can
choose your path freely. Until then, become the best human being you can be.
That is the highest religion — the religion of humanity.”
This approach, when combined with
good food habits, hygiene, exercises, post-meal walks, proper footwear, and
disciplined living, will create a generation that is healthy, harmonious,
responsible, and spiritually mature.
116.
Motivation, Power of Subconscious Mind,
Body Language, Mudras & Balanced Approach to Religion — To Be Taught to
Every Student for Achieving Success in Life
In today’s competitive and
challenging world, students need more than just academic knowledge to succeed
and live a happy, meaningful life. They must be taught the practical tools of
motivation, the power of the subconscious mind, positive body language, simple
mudras, and a balanced approach to religion. These teachings are necessary
because they build inner strength, self-confidence, focus, and discipline from
a young age.
Many students face self-doubt,
fear of failure, lack of motivation, or confusion about religion and life’s
purpose. Learning how to programme their subconscious mind with positive
thoughts, maintain strong body language, practise simple mudras for calmness
and energy, and understand that all religions ultimately teach humanity and
goodness helps them overcome these challenges. It prevents blind belief in fake
gurus or shortcuts and encourages them to achieve success through hard work,
determination, and ethical living.
When combined with good food,
hygiene, physical fitness, and value education, this knowledge creates
confident, focused, resilient, and spiritually mature individuals who can face
any situation in life with courage and clarity. It transforms students from
passive learners into active, self-motivated future leaders.
Every student should be taught
the power of motivation, self-discipline, subconscious mind, body language, and
mudras. These tools, combined with determination, dedication, and hard work (no
shortcuts), help them achieve meaningful success and a peaceful, purposeful
life.
1. Motivation & Determination
- Motivation is the inner drive that pushes you to set
goals and work towards them.
- True success comes from self-motivation — believing
in yourself and staying determined even when facing difficulties.
- Teach students: Success is not just high marks or
ranks. It is leading a meaningful, peaceful, healthy, and responsible
life.
- Key message: Hard work, consistency, and learning
from failures lead to real achievement. No shortcuts or magic solutions
work in the long run.
2. Power of the Subconscious Mind
The subconscious mind is like a
powerful inner force that works below conscious awareness. It influences
thoughts, habits, and actions.
- Positive thoughts, visualisation, and repeated
affirmations (e.g., “I work hard and achieve my goals”) programme the
subconscious mind for success.
- Teach simple daily practices:
- Morning and evening positive affirmations.
- Visualising goals clearly.
- Breathing meditation (slow, deep breathing with
calm thoughts) for a few minutes daily.
- A calm, positive subconscious mind improves focus,
memory, confidence, and problem-solving ability.
3. Body Language & Strong
Posture
Body language communicates
confidence and affects how others perceive you and how you feel internally.
- Strong Posture: Stand and sit straight (head, neck,
spine aligned). This boosts confidence and energy.
- Hand & Leg Gestures: Open palms show honesty;
avoid closed fists or crossed arms (defensive). Steady eye contact
(without staring) shows confidence.
- Teach students to observe their own body language and
improve it. Good body language helps in interviews, public speaking, and
daily interactions.
4. Mudras (Simple Hand Gestures)
Mudras are ancient hand positions
that help balance energy and calm the mind. They are easy to practise and
support focus and well-being.
Examples suitable for students:
- Jnana Mudra (thumb + index finger touch, other
fingers straight) — improves concentration and memory.
- Prana Mudra (thumb + little & ring fingers) —
boosts energy and immunity.
- Practise for 5–10 minutes daily while sitting calmly
or during breathing exercises.
Mudras are tools for inner
strength and peace of mind — not magic.5. Balanced Approach to Religion &
Spirituality
Religion should be a tool for
peace of mind and personal growth, not the prime mover of life or a source of
superiority.
- Key Teachings for Students:
· All
humans are equal before God — no caste, sub-caste, income group, or religious
superiority.
· Religion
should advocate humanity, equality, transparency, and accountability.
· Follow
old religious customs reasonably if they do not degrade, disrespect, or limit
others.
· Preserve
the goodness of religion (compassion, ethics, charity) for future generations.
· Traditions
like lighting diyas, oil lamps, candles, or chanting understandable hymns are
acceptable as cultural practice.
· No
room for fundamentalism, discrimination, or domination in the name of religion.
· Reject
Fake Gurus and Blind Beliefs
Students must
firmly reject all forms of blind belief in so-called miracle cures, magic
remedies, or self-proclaimed gurus who promise instant solutions for financial
difficulties, health problems, exam success, or any other life challenges.
These claims are frequently made by ordinary, self-centred and selfish
individuals — people from any background, irrespective of age, caste, religion,
or education level — who suddenly position themselves as powerful “gurus,”
“babas,” or spiritual masters.
They often rely
on simple magic tricks, dramatic storytelling, emotional manipulation, or
staged “miracles” to create an illusion of supernatural powers. In the name of
religion or spirituality, they cleverly turn these performances into a
profitable business, extracting money, gifts, and donations from desperate and
innocent people who seek quick fixes. Many spread exaggerated stories of
miracles that rarely produce any real, lasting change.
Following such
fake gurus distracts students from the real path to success — consistent hard
work, self-discipline, focused education, positive thinking, and the power of
the subconscious mind. Instead of investing time in studies, building good
habits, developing skills, and working sincerely toward their goals, some
students waste precious time, energy, and money chasing false promises.
True and lasting
success comes only through determination, dedication, healthy daily habits, and
rational effort — never through shortcuts or magic. Students should stay
completely away from such self-centred individuals and never believe or follow
them. Real strength, confidence, and progress arise only when you believe in
yourself, stay grounded in reality, and commit to sincere, consistent action.
· Self-motivation,
determination, hard work, healthy eating, clean habits, and positive
subconscious programming are the real paths to success.
- Success is not just exam ranks or marks. It is
leading a meaningful, peaceful, healthy, and responsible life while
following nature (no excessive commercial foods, plastics, etc.).
How to Teach These to Students
- Include in school curriculum with practical sessions
(posture practice, mudras, breathing, goal-setting exercises).
- Display simple charts in classrooms.
- Regular discussions and real-life examples.
- Parents and teachers should model these behaviours.
When students master motivation,
subconscious mind power, body language, mudras, and a balanced view of life and
religion, they become confident, focused, and ethical individuals who achieve
real success through hard work and discipline.
This education perfectly
complements other areas (financial discipline, social responsibility, personal
hygiene, study centres, healthy food, physical activity, etc.) and prepares
students for a bright, meaningful future.
Conclusion
This comprehensive vision
presents a complete blueprint for raising healthier, disciplined,
knowledgeable, and responsible future citizens of India. It creates an
integrated ecosystem that addresses food, water, hygiene, sleep, physical
activity, mental wellbeing, values, community, environment, and governance —
all working together for the holistic development of every child.
At its foundation is a complete
overhaul of children’s diets. Harmful or low-nutrition items such as soy
products, commercial dairy paneer, poultry eggs, refined oils, deep-fried
foods, cane sugar, and high-fructose corn syrup are to be strictly avoided or
severely limited. In their place, nutrient-dense options take centre stage:
sprouted chickpeas and black-eyed beans with moringa, fermented siridhanya
millet java, daily carrot-beetroot-tomato-radish preparations, sweet potato and
potato rotation, palm jaggery at the end of meals, homemade amla candy, crunchy
nuts or sesame laddoos, and freshly wood-pressed oils used thoughtfully on
boiled vegetables.
A National Palm Jaggery
Revolution stands as a transformative step. With 100% government funding for
mini processing centres in every village and mandal, fresh sap collected early
morning before sunrise can be boiled hygienically in steel vessels. Specially
designed collection pots with fine mesh or muslin cloth ensure 100% pure sap
free from contaminants. Double filtration, strict hygiene protocols, and
ISI-level quality testing guarantee safety and purity. Leveraging India’s vast
palm tree resources, this initiative can drastically reduce cane sugar
production, conserve enormous quantities of water, generate millions of direct
and indirect rural jobs in sap collection, processing, packing, and
distribution, and shift households, tea stalls, bakeries, religious
institutions, and commercial users to a mineral-rich, low-glycemic traditional
sweetener.
Portion control, respect for
food, and food-based healthcare education empower prevention over cure. The
result is lower obesity, insulin resistance, hormonal imbalance, digestive
problems, and lifestyle diseases, along with reduced government spending on
healthcare.
Oral hygiene emerges as a
powerful gateway to gut health, memory, reduced anxiety, better nutrient
absorption, and overall wellbeing. Natural practices such as clove-infused
water, gargling, and coconut oil with turmeric brushing, combined with abundant
Tridax procumbens, Changeri, neem, peepal, eucalyptus, and other medicinal
plants in schools and communities, provide accessible first-aid and
environmental support. Strict standards for 100% cotton uniforms and
undergarments, loose comfortable clothing, and restrictions on tight
synthetics, high heels, artificial jewellery, tattoos, and excessive piercing
protect physical comfort and long-term immune health. Genital and menstrual
hygiene education from a young age, especially for girls, addresses early puberty,
PCOS/PCOD, and safety.
School systems are reimagined for
true equality. Standardised, hygienic, free mid-day meals and breakfast in all
schools (government and private), with no separate tiffin boxes, eliminate
class distinctions. Mandatory school buses, bicycle training, ergonomic
furniture, proper lighting, reduced bag weight, and morning sunlight exposure
create a health-supportive environment. Rotating class committees, active
discussion clubs, and value-based education promote genuine leadership and
critical thinking.
Lifestyle changes are equally
important. Limiting screen time and night-time internet, regulating 24/7 news,
promoting post-meal walks, martial arts, simple yoga, and disciplined morning
routines address anxiety, depression, poor focus, and addiction. Avoiding
comparisons, practising forgiveness, truthfulness, and measuring success by
knowledge gained rather than marks build emotional resilience and strong
character.
Parents are encouraged to avoid
unnecessary pressure, model honesty (especially financial), and focus on
knowledge and contentment. Community study centres, social responsibility
education, dignity of all professions, financial discipline, regulated alcohol,
and restrictions on inappropriate social media use foster equality and mutual
respect. Shifting celebrations and gifting toward healthier options — nuts,
palm jaggery sweets, live herbal plants — builds a culture of wellness and
simplicity.
This framework connects
everything into one cohesive system: food, water, trees, hygiene, exercise,
sleep, values, and governance. It conserves water by reducing sugarcane
cultivation, generates rural employment through palm jaggery and related
activities, lowers healthcare costs, improves hormonal balance and vitality,
strengthens immunity, and nurtures mentally strong, disciplined citizens who
respect labour, nature, and each other.
By replacing harmful habits with
natural, traditional, and sustainable alternatives, India can significantly
reduce obesity, diabetes, infertility issues, depression, and lifestyle
diseases. Children will grow with better digestion, sharper minds, stronger
bodies, and higher self-respect. Families will experience improved harmony, and
society will move toward equality, simplicity, and service.
The Government of India, state
governments, educational institutions, parents, teachers, and communities must
treat this vision as a national mission. Implement village-level palm jaggery
centres immediately, enforce uniform healthy meals, regulate harmful products
and media, plant medicinal and fruit trees everywhere, integrate these
principles into school curricula, and promote simplicity, discipline, and moral
values from an early age.
This is a civilisational reset
for a healthier, self-reliant, and morally strong Bharat. When every child eats
right, sleeps well, moves daily, thinks clearly, and lives with discipline and
compassion, India will naturally rise as a global leader in human wellness and
sustainable development.
Jai Hind. Let us build a Viksit,
Swasth, and Sanskaari Bharat — one healthy child at a time.
***
References :
Simple and Effective Reforms for Controlling Corruption
http://pradeepkunche.blogspot.com/2011/12/simple-and-effective-reforms-for.html
https://www.scribd.com/document/113775082/CORRUPTION-CONTROL-CURBING-BLACK-MONEY
Unorganized Employment to Organized Employment
http://pradeepkunche.blogspot.com/2013/03/unorganised-employment-to-organised.html
https://www.scribd.com/document/127934229/Un-Organised-Employment-to-Organised-Document-Employmen
Media Regulations
Educational Sector Reforms
Additional Reforms To National
Education Policy-2020
http://scribd.com/document/540948201/Additional-Reforms-to-National-Education-Policy-2020
“Re Establishing “Rama Rajya Via
Religious Reforms”
https://scribd.com/document/507080205/Re-Establishing-Rama-Rajya-via-Religious-Reforms#
http://pradeepkunche.blogspot.com/2021/05/re-establishing-rama-rajya-via.html
Artificial Intelligence &
Blockchain Technology in Health Care
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1mjnflAQIarOn-GDtA_ljmJEJKC1rdJwF/view?usp=drive_link
Best Health (Preventive- Cure)
from Farm not from Pharma
https://drive.google.com/file/d/11f_8uZ9R_ZOS6MAbBRUDRs1TZDfL7dk9/view?usp=drive_link
Simple Life Style &
Behavioural Changes For Better Health (Preventive - Cure)
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1sFILcafkIQyGK9wlcJ-OoN00OalLONoM/view?usp=drive_link
***
Pradeep Kumar Kunche
Kunchepk@gmail.com - tweet@pradeepkunche
www.Scribd.com/Pradeep_kunche www.pradeepkunche.blogspot.com
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