

For spiritual seekers, it supports to enhance one’s spiritual growth. Rudrakshas (also called as Rudraksh) are very supportive in maintaining physical and mental balance. What are the benefits of wearing a Rudraksha? The word Rudraksha comes from "Rudra" (name of Shiva) and "Aksha" meaning tears. It is also called “Tears of Shiva” and there are many legends connected to Lord Shiva that describe its origin. We further decompose these results to find that the systemic risk of insurance and deposit - taking institutions differs importantly, the latter experienced a decline from late 2007, in line with the burst of the housing price bubble, while the former continued to climb up to the rescue of AIG.Rudraksha (also called as Rudraksh) are dried seeds of a tree, which grows in select locations of South East Asia, botanically known as Elaeocarpus Ganitrus. Anxiety about European debt markets saw the systemic risk begin to rise again from April 2010. Second, the systemic risk in the financial sector built up from early 2005, peaked in September 2008, and greatly reduced after the introduction of TARP and the rescue of AIG. At the end of the sample, insurance firms emerge as systemic. Citigroup and Lehman Brothers also were consistently in the top 10 up to late 2008. First, Bank of America, JP Morgan and Wells Fargo are consistently in the top 10 throughout the sample.

Results from applying this approach to all firms in the S&P5-2011 are twofold. We present a general systemic risk index for the financial sector. terms of risk connectedness and firm characteristics. Daily dynamic centrality measures allow us to rank firms in. The metric for the connections of the nodes is the correlation between these shocks. We view the risks of firms - including both the financial sector and the real economy - as a network with nodes representing the volatility shocks. We propose a simple network-based methodology for ranking systemically important financial institutions. Yaksha who was none other than Yama, the god of death, was very pleased with Yudhishthira’s attitude and brought back to life all the brothers of Yudhishthira. As he, Kunti Devi’s son, was alive, it was only just and equitable that Nakula, the eldest son of Madri, should also be alive. Yudhishthira replied that his father had two wives Kunti and Madri both of whom he treated equally as his mothers. Yaksha asked him why he was asking Nakula, the son of Madri, to be brought to life instead of Bhima or Arjuna who were his own brothers being Kunti’s children. Yudhishthira wanted Nakula to be brought back to life. Then, Yaksha said that he would bring back to life one of his brothers. Yudhishthira gave him appropriate replies and Yaksha was pleased. Yaksha revealed to him his terrible form and warned him that he should answer his questions before helping himself to the water in the lake. Finally, Yudhishthira went to the lake and he was shocked to see all his brothers dead. He too met the same fate as did his elder brothers Arjuna and Bhima who followed him. Seeing Sahadeva not returning, Nakula was sent to search for him. No sooner had he touched the water than he fell dead on the bank of the lake. When he reached the lake to bring water for Yudhushthira, he heard a voice that said “Beware! Don’t touch the water before you answer my questions.” Without paying to the cautionary, Sahadeva started collecting water from the lake. Sahadeva, the youngest of the Pandavas climbed up a tree and spotted a lake at a distance. One day during their incognito vanavasa (living in the forests), Yudhishthira felt very thirsty and there was no water in sight to quench his thirst. The episode known as Yaksha Prashna in Mahabharata relates to the exchange of questions and answers between Yama in the guise of a Yaksha who poses 126 difficult questions to Yudhishthira who gives the most fitting answers to those questions.
