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Similarly, in metaphysics, karma is the belief that states that every act, no matter how insignificant, eventually returns to the individual with equal impact. The third law of motion given by Isaac Newton states that for every action there is an equal and opposite reaction.
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Karma describes the principle of cause and effect, which says that past deeds will come back later in the life. Reincarnation and karma form the principal beliefs of Hinduism. It is these aspects of grief that Talaash touches. She says if Suri can go out all night to be with someone, why can't she do something that gives her peace and happiness, even it might not be considered a rational belief. All the while, Roshni had not been taking any medicines but she got healed. Some people speak to psychologists, some people believe in the supernatural, some people just need to talk to someone. Generally, time heals everything, but sometimes, people need more than the instrument of time to heal. Each of us have our own way of overcoming grief. All we can do is slowly learn to heal ourselves.
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But life is inherently unfair, and death is inevitable. Some people blame God, and some people blame themselves, like Suri does. Many a time, we need to blame someone for the cause of grief, and it makes us question as to why only it had to happen to us. We try to avoid reality by imagining alternate scenarios, like Suri does where he imagines he could have stopped Karan from going to play, or he could have gone with him. Losing a loved one, especially one's own child, is devastating. I remember Jab Tak Hai Jaan released at the same time as Talaash, and though it was much derided, in some ways, it dealt with the bargaining aspect of grief. There is a little bit of these emotions in Suri, with depression being the most prevalent one in his case. The stages are not a linear and predictable progression but only a collation of five common experiences for the bereaved that can occur in any order, if at all. Talaash is a spectacular story on the theory of grief. Elisabeth Kübler-Ross had famously postulated the five stages of grief-denial, anger, bargaining, depression, and acceptance.