Published: July 29, 2010
Hindus Suggest Adopting Meditation-Yoga-Spirituality to Lindsay Lohan
Finding inner peace through meditation, spirituality and yoga and adopting these as a permanent lifestyle would prove very helpful to Hollywood diva Lindsay Lohan (Mean Girls), Hindu statesman Rajan Zed stated in Nevada today.
Lohan reportedly will head to rehab soon after completing her jail sentence (since July 20 for probation violation) in Lynwood (California, USA), as she has been ordered to check into rehab within 24 hours of her release.
Zed, who is President of Universal Society of Hinduism, suggested for Lohan to determinedly seek herself through mediation and learn self-control.
Talking about those who have "conquered themselves", Lord Krishna revealed in ancient Hindu scripture Bhagavad-Gita (Song of the Lord) "They live in peace, alike in cold and heat, pleasure and pain, praise and blame."
Reports indicate that Lohan is most likely to enter the Malibu Beach Recovery Center in upscale Malibu (California), which uses "ancient wisdom of yoga and meditation" and "holistic body-mind-spirit methodology", "restores body and mind", and helps clients to "open to a Higher Power".
Six clients share 6,500 square feet Center which is perched high on a hill overlooking the Pacific Ocean and where the floors are made from exotic woods, marble and hued travertine and which offers exclusive custom-tailored treatment plan for "Brain Restoration." Day at this Center begins at 7 am and ends at 11 pm with "evening meditation" (with a little free time) and includes, among other things, "breathing exercises adapted from yoga". According to the Center, "having sex" is a healthy addiction, while "laziness" is an unhealthy/unnatural addiction.
MTV Award winner Lindsay Dee Lohan, 24, is a well known American actress-singer-model and has topped Maxim's "Hot 100." Apparently showing her belief in 'karma', Lohan wrote on social networking service 'twitter' sometime back: "i'm all about Karma.. what goes around comes around!"
Hinduism is the oldest and third largest religion of the world with about one billion adherents and moksh (liberation) is its ultimate goal.