Siddhartha's Luck, Or Power Of His Will?

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Siddhartha’s luck, or power of his will?!
Siddhartha is not lucky, rather he determines his density. There are several reasons for this assertion. First, he improves his soul’s power by doing self-denial practices and meditations. For example, when the oldest Samanas gets angry of Siddhartha (because of his decision to leaving them), He Hypnotizes the oldest Samanas with a powerful glance, to show him that he has learned a lot. It shows that Siddhartha’s mental powers are getting powerful. In Colin Butler’s Hermann Hesse’s “Siddhartha”: Some critical objections (1971), he suggests, “His [Siddhartha] objective always remains the same: to find the sense of life as if there were a single sense to be found” (121). This passage supports this assertion Siddhartha always has only one …show more content…

By focusing his mind’s powers, on his only target, he can pass all the obstacles. Also, Siddhartha decides independently, almost all the times. He makes his independent decisions when he is pondering. For example, He decides to leave his father’s home and join the Samanas, He decides to leave the Samanas and find Buddha and at the end, he leaves Buddha to find his own unique way. Siddhartha makes these decisions by consideration and pondering. To illustrate this point, a person who thinks and decides a lot, he is improving his ability of decision making, so it will help him/her in future to get the better results from his/her decisions. More importantly, Siddhartha believes that all the events that happened to him are not because of being lucky. For instance, there are many people all around the world who can do unusual things (such as bending spoons) only by the power of their minds. Therefore, this is a power which is in all human beings and everyone can awaken it. In the “Kamala” chapter, Siddhartha says, “This is what Siddhartha has learned among the Samanas. This is what fools call magic and of which they

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