Message For the Day…” Don’t waste your Precious Time…Dedicate every minute to discovering truth and contemplating on ever-true God…”

Discarding the path and wasting one’s life is an insult to the very name of the species! Instead of getting enslaved to the evanescent and the false, and wasting precious time in their pursuit, dedicate every minute to discovering truth and contemplating on the everlasting, ever-true Lord. Such dedication is the real function of the soul. On the other hand, spending time in illusory appetites is the drag of the world. One shouldn’t fall victim to the poisonous attractions of worldly luxuries or the wiles of seductive beauty. One day, all these fascinating scenes will vanish as a story unfolded in dream! The characteristic of a spiritual aspirant is the attainment of truth, not the search of the unreal in this evanescent world. In this false world, there can be no true living (sathya-achara). There can be only false living (mithya-achara). True living consists in the realisation of the Lord. This must be borne in mind by everyone every moment of their life.

Sathya Sai Baba

” வாடகை காரில் பயணம் செய்த ஒரு முதல்வர் …” காமராஜர் …

பொ.க.சாமிநாதன் எழுதிய “மூன்று முதல்வர்களுடன்’ நூலிலிருந்து….

காலை 8.30 மணிக்கு மேல் பார்வையாளர்கள் யார் வந்தாலும் அவர்களை முதல்வர் காமராஜர் சந்திப்பது வழக்கம். ஒருநாள் காமராஜரைப் பார்க்க

kdrkamaraj

முன்பின் தெரியாத ஒரு டாக்சி டிரைவர் வந்திருந்தார். “ஒரே கதவு உள்ள “கேசல்’ டாக்சியை வைத்து தான் பிழைத்து வருவதாகவும், அதனால் வண்டியில் ஏற, பயணிகள் மிகவும் சிரமப்படுவதாகவும், இரண்டு கதவுகள் உள்ள “பியட்’ வண்டி கிடைத்தால்தான் நல்லபடியாக தான் வாழ்க்கை நடத்த முடியும் என்று முதல்வரிடம் கோரிக்கை வைத்தார்.

அந்தக் காலத்தில் “பியட்’ காரை பணம் கொடுத்து உடனே வாங்க முடியாது. அரசு மூலம் கோட்டா பெற வேண்டும். கார் விற்பனையில் ஒருசில சதவீதம் அலுவலர்களுக்கும், எம்.எல்.ஏக்கள் போன்றவர்களுக்கும் ஒருசில சதவீதம் டாக்சி ஓட்டுபவர்களுக்கும் ஒதுக்குவது வழக்கம். அதுபோல தனக்கு ஒதுக்கும்படி அந்த டிரைவர் கேட்டார். அந்த டிரைவரின் பெயர் கந்தசாமி.

முதல்வர் என்னை அழைத்து, “அந்த டிரைவர் சொல்வது உண்மையா? அவர் சொல்லியபடி அவரது வண்டி ஒரே கதவுள்ள வண்டியாக உள்ளதா, அது அவரது வண்டிதானா’ என்று பார்த்து வரச் சொன்னார். நானும் அவ்வாறு பார்த்து, அவர் சொல்வது உண்மையென்று சொன்னேன்.

முதல்வர் காமராஜர் உடனே என்னிடம், “”அவர் கேட்பது நியாயமாகத்தான் இருக்கிறது. உள்துறை செயலரிடம் சொல்லி அவருக்கு ஒரு பியட் கார் ஒதுக்கீடு செய்யும்படி நான் சொன்னதாகச் சொல்லவும்” என்றார்.

சில மாதங்கள் கழித்து அந்த டிரைவர், முதல்வர் வீட்டிற்கு மீண்டும் வந்தார். என்னைப் பார்த்து, “”ஐயா, தங்கள் உதவியாலும் முதல்வரின் உத்தரவுப்படியும் எனக்கு ஒரு பியட் கார் ஒதுக்கீட்டில் கிடைத்துவிட்டது. புது வண்டி வாங்கி வந்துள்ளேன். முதல்வரை இந்த காரில் அமர வைத்து சிறிது தூரமாவது சவாரி செய்ய வேண்டும் என்பது என் ஆசை. முடியுமா?” என்று கேட்டார். நான் “”சிறிது நேரம் பொறுத்திருங்கள். ஐயா கீழே வருவார்கள். அவரிடமே கேளுங்கள்” என்றேன்.

முதல்வர் வந்தவுடன் டிரைவர் அவரிடம் கேட்க, காத்திருந்த பார்வையாளர்களிடம் “”இதோ வந்து விடுகிறேன்” என்று சொல்லிவிட்டு சிறிதும் தயங்காமல், காரில் ஏறிக் கொண்டார் காமராஜர். சிறிது தூரம் பயணம் செய்து அந்த டிரைவரை மகிழ்வித்தார்.

பின்னர் திரும்பி வந்து காத்திருந்த பார்வையாளர்களைப் பார்த்தார். அனைவருக்கும் ஒரே மகிழ்ச்சி. ஒரு முதல்வர் இவ்வளவு எளியவராகப் பழகுகிறாரே என்று தங்களுக்குள் பேசிக் கொண்டார்கள். அந்த டிரைவரும் தான் ஒரு கோட்டையைப் பிடித்த பெருமிதத்தில் மகிழ்ச்சியோடு திரும்பினார்.

முதல்வர் காமராஜர் தான் ஆட்சி செய்த காலம் முழுவதும் சென்னையில் கூட அரசு வாகனத்தைப் பயன்படுத்தவில்லை. “எம்.டி.டி.2727′ என்னும் செவர்லே காரைச் சொந்தமாக வைத்து உபயோகித்து வந்தார். அதேபோல் சென்னையில் தங்குவதற்கும் அரசு கட்டடத்தை உபயோகிக்கவில்லை. வாடகை வீட்டிலேயே தங்கியிருந்தார். தான் இறக்கும்வரை காமராஜர் அந்த வீட்டிலேயே குறைந்த வாடகைக்குத் தங்கியிருந்தார்

Source…blog.dinamani.com

Natarajan

Why Do People say “Say Cheese” when taking Pictures …?

Why do people say “say cheese” when taking pictures?  Also, why did people not smile in old pictures and when did they start?

smiling-little-girls“Say cheese!” This simple command is meant to elicit a smile from potential photography subjects no matter what their age. It has become so commonplace that the word “say” is often no longer uttered. A simple “cheese” spreads a smile across anyone’s face, and with a click of a button, that smile is captured for eternity.

No one can say for sure who coined the phrase “say cheese” for use in getting people to smile, nor can we say with 100% certainty why that particular phrase was chosen as the smile spreader. The leading theory, however, as to the “why” of “say cheese” is that the “ch” sound causes one to position the teeth just so, and the long “ee” sound parts their lips, forming something close to a smile.

The phrase appears to have been first used in this way around the 1940s, with one of the earliest references appearing in The Big Spring Herald in 1943:

Now here’s something worth knowing. It’s a formula for smiling when you have your picture taken. It comes from former Ambassador Joseph E. Davies and is guaranteed to make you look pleasant no matter what you’re thinking. Mr. Davies disclosed the formula while having his own picture taken on the set of his “Mission to Moscow.” It’s simple. Just say “Cheese,” It’s an automatic smile. “I learned that from a politician,” Mr. Davies chuckled. “An astute politician, a very great politician. But, of course, I cannot tell you who he was…”

It is thought the “politician” he was referring to was none other than Franklin D. Roosevelt, who Ambassador Davies served under.  So did President Roosevelt himself come up with the phrase or simply learn it from someone else?  Nobody knows, but soon after, saying cheese became a common phrase for people to utter when trying to get people to smile in photographs.

You wouldn’t have had to worry so much about this cheesiness in the Victorian era (1837-1901). During this period, etiquette and beauty standards were much different than they are today. In Victorian times, a small, tightly controlled mouth was considered beautiful. In fact, photographers during this era elicited the desired portrait expression by having their subjects “say prunes”. Smiles during this time were only typically captured on children, peasants, and drunks.

One of the most common culprits blamed for the neutral expressions on subjects during the Victorian era is the long exposure time for photographs to be taken. To understand where this reasoning comes from and why it is likely incorrect, you need a very brief history of photography.

The creation of permanent images began with Thomas Wedgewood in 1790, but the earliest known camera image belongs to French inventor Joseph Nicephore Niepce in 1826. The photograph is entitled, “View From the Window at Le Gras”. It is historically said to have required 8 hours of exposure time, but in reality it could have taken as long as a few days.

An exposure time of this length was obviously not conducive to capturing images of people and so the quest to do so continued. In 1839, Louis Daguerre introduced a new form of photography, Daguerrotype, where a positive of the image was developed directly on the photographic plate. This did not allow for reproduction of shots taken, but it did cut down exposure time significantly. Daguerrotypes remained extremely popular until the 1860s. From 1839 – 1845, exposure time for Daguerrotypes was about 60 – 90 seconds, which was a long time to remain motionless and hold a smile, but not impossible.

By 1845, exposure time on daguerrotypes was cut to only a few seconds. The majority of pictures we see are daguerrotypes taken after 1845, thus eliminating the blame for the lack of pearly whites shown by our ancestors of the Victorian era on long exposure time.

Speaking of pearly whites- the next most common reason cited for people not smiling in photographs in the Victorian era is blamed on dental hygiene. The most common cure for sick teeth during this time was to pull them out. There were no caps or other fixes to make chipped or broken teeth more aesthetically pleasing. So perhaps the reason tightly controlled mouths were considered more beautiful than beaming smiles in the Victorian era was in part due to dental hygiene.

Keep in mind too that daguerrotypes were expensive. The rich were more likely to be photographed than the poor, and even then, most families were only photographed on special occasions, perhaps only even once in a lifetime. The majority of these photographs were taken in a professional photography studio. There was nothing casual about photos taken then and the etiquette for formal occasions at that time was to act “prim and proper”. What was socially acceptable in photography during the Victorian era mirrored the beauty and etiquette standards of the times.  You wouldn’t want to pay all that money and have the one time you’re photographed in your lifetime showing you smiling like a drunkard!

Fast forward to 1888. This is the year George Eastman founded Kodak, a company most widely known for its production of photographic films. Kodak changed the face of photography in more ways than one. Kodak brought photography to the masses and to all occasions ranging from super casual to superbly formal. The company introduced its first pocket camera at a cost of $5 ($135 today), the Pocket Kodak, in 1895. It was the introduction of Kodak’s $1 Brownie camera in 1900, however, that changed the world of photography forever.

The Brownie camera was intended to be so inexpensive and so simple to use that anyone could take a picture. In fact, the Kodak slogan at this time was, “You push the button, we do the rest.” Photography as a hobby was now a possibility. Capturing “everyday” moments was now a reality- more and more smiles were now captured on film.

With the invention of film also came the movie industry. Although the majority of films made before 1930s were silent, everyday moments and facial expressions were reproduced on the big screen for all to see. Movie stars of that era were captured in photographs with *gasp* smiles. As we know, the media and Hollywood have a huge influence on social etiquette and beauty standards. As more and more celebrities were captured on film smiling, the smile became more socially accepted as beautiful and as an acceptable thing to do in photographs.

So when did it become tradition for people to smile in photographs? This happened in the beginning of the 1900s, due to more and more casual moments being caught on film both in Hollywood and amongst family and friends.

Bonus Facts:

  • George Washington is one of those who had incredibly bad teeth and by his inauguration in 1789, he had only one natural tooth remaining- this would have been hardly a dignified look in his Presidential portrait, had he chosen to smile. ;-)  Despite what you may have heard, though, he did not have wooden dentures.
  • Today, one of the more well-known and inexplicably popular photographic “smiles” for teenagers and some young adults is the “duckface”. This is usually performed by females during self-photographs with said photography subjects pressing their lips together in a half pout, half kiss formation, causing them to look very similar to a duck’s bill. This may be yet again owing to the influence of Hollywood, with the obsession with botoxed, full-looking lips. Who knew Daisy Duck would become the new face of “beauty”?

[Smiling Girls Image via Shutterstock]

Source…www.today i foundout.com

Natarajan

Young woman steers Chennai’s first Metro train….

This file photo shows A. Preethi and Jayashree, two women CMRL loco-pilots. Steered by A. Preethi, the first train of the Chennai Metro Rail chugged off from Alandur Station in Chennai on Monday after being flagged off by Chief Minister J. Jayalalithaa. Photo: M. Karunakaran

This file photo shows A. Preethi and Jayashree, two women CMRL loco-pilots. Steered by A. Preethi, the first train of the Chennai Metro Rail chugged off from Alandur Station in Chennai on Monday after being flagged off by Chief Minister J. Jayalalithaa. Photo: M. Karunakaran

The first train which left at 12.15 p.m. from Alandur to Koyambedu was driven by A. Preethi, a 28-year-old diploma holder in engineering.

Steered by a young woman, the first train of the Chennai Metro Rail chugged along from Alandur Station in Chennai on Monday after being flagged off by Chief Minister J. Jayalalithaa.

The first train which left at 12.15 p.m. from Alandur to Koyambedu was driven by A. Preethi, a 28-year-old diploma holder in engineering from Government Dharmambal Polytechnic College in Chennai.

The Chief Minister inaugurated it by flagging it off via live video from the State Secretariat in Chennai.

“I am excited, my daughter’s dream of becoming a loco pilot of Metro Rail has come true,” Preethi’s father R Anbu told PTI.

He explained how his daughter was chasing her dream of becoming a loco pilot after the metro rail project began taking shape.

“She quit her first job, applied for a job in Chennai Metro rail, and she was the first woman to get selected,” he said with joy.

“Three other women joined as pilots after her and I am happy that she was successful,” he said.

Preethi was trained for a year and half like others in Chennai and in Delhi for the purpose.

Meanwhile, the sprawling and swanky Alandur metro station, the biggest in Chennai, was brimming with activity, with enthusiastic passengers eager to board the first train.

I wanted to board the first metro train, I hope metro makes travel easier and a pleasure,” said K Ramesh a young executive.

Keywords: Chennai Metro Rail LimitedCMRLChief Minister JayalalithaaA. Preethiwoman loco-pilot

Source…www.thehindu.com

Natarajan

India-Photographs that will Make You Say…” Vow”…!!!

Why travel overseas when you can travel in India?

The latest in our series on #India-Photos!

We start with this picture of River Narmada at Maheshwar, Madhya Pradesh

Photograph: Palanki Narayana

This unnamed but stunning landscape

Photograph: Sudeep Chakraverty

An Indian Army Post in Kashmir at Mahagunus Top 14500 feet above sea level.

Photograph: Parmod Sharma

The beautiful Nohkalikai Falls in Shillong

Photograph: Kishan Shah

Kalimpong under a cloud cover

Photograph: Bijit Bhusan

And Darjeeling in rain-drenched June

Photograph: Bijit Bhusan

Humayun’s Tomb, New Delhi

Photograph: Nitin Chavan

And this view of Dhauladhar range from Sidbari, Himachal Pradesh

Photograph: Nitin Chavan

This is the Patalpani waterfall, located some 36 km from Indore, Madhya Pradesh.

Photograph: Vaibhav Rege

 

breathtaking view of Tsongo Lake in Sikkim.

Photograph: Madhusudan Reddy

Source….www.rediff.com
Natarajan

Eat Right Food for Healthy Life ….

As the world celebrated Yoga Day in style, it’s useful to remember that eating right is a big part of the Yogic way of life. Our wise ancestors laid down the principle that we are what we eat and that the right food can help us along the route to wellness of body and mind.

Here are some recipes ideas for Sattvic dishes, which contribute to the maintenance of Sattva guna — the state of being calm and peaceful.

Tabbouleh, a healthy salad

Photographs: Food Stories/Creative Commons

  • 1 cup broken wheat (dalia)
  • 2 cups water
  • 1 cup fresh mint, finely chopped
  • 1 cup fresh parsley, chopped
  • 2 tomatoes, chopped
  • 2 tbsp lime juice
  • 2 tbsp olive oil
  • Salt and pepper to taste

Soak the wheat in water for an hour or so. All the water should be absorbed. Drain, if there is excess water. Add all the other ingredients and mix well. Allow to stand for half an hour for the flavours to develop. You can add some pomegranate kernels to give this salad a sweet twist.

Yogic Chocolate Orange Cake, a sweet that’s good for you

Photographs: Stephanie Kilgast/Creative Commons

  • 1 1/2 cups flour
  • 1/3 cup cocoa powder, preferably organic
  • 1 tsp baking powder
  • 1 cup raw sugar
  • 1/2 cup vegetable oil
  • 2/3 cup orange juice
  • 1 tsp vanilla essence
  • Zest of 1 orange
  • 2 tbsp fruit vinegar

Grease and line a 9-inch cake tin. Pre-heat the oven to 180 deg C. Combine all the dry ingredients in a bowl. Stir all the liquids, except for the vinegar, in another bowl, whisking until smooth. Fold liquids into dry ingredients and then add the vinegar. Pour into the prepared tin and bake for 25-30 minutes. Turn out once cool. This cake can be topped with melted dark chocolate.

Dal and palak soup, a nourishing meal

Photographs: Angus Dwyer/Creative Commons

  • 1/2 cup moong dal, washed
  • 2 teaspoons vegetable oil
  • Pinch of asafoetida
  • 1 tsp cumin seeds
  • 1/2 inch piece ginger, chopped
  • 1 green chilli, chopped
  • A pinch of turmeric powder
  • 1 bunch palak, cleaned and chopped
  • Salt to taste
  • 1 tbsp lime juice

Heat the oil in a pressure cooker, add the asafoetida and the cumin. Follow with the ginger and green chilli. Add the dal and turmeric, saute for a minute. Add two cups water and pressure cook for 6-8 mins.

Release pressure, and mash the dal. Add the palak and the salt. Add more water if soup is too thick. Heat until the palak is just cooked, add lime juice to taste and serve. You can add a spoonful of cooked rice to the soup bowl to turn this into a substantial meal.

Tips for Yogic cooking and eating

 

 

  • Avoid animal products, overly spiced and greasy foods
  • Eat freshly cooked foods
  • Do not consume stale food, food that’s been refrigerated too long or microwaved food
  • Eat local and seasonal
  • Do not cook in a state of anger or distress
  • Eat calmly, slowly, mindfully

 

Source…www.ba-bamail.com

Natarajan

Message For the Day…” Develop Self Confidence and Lead a Successful Life…”

Sathya Sai BabaEmbodiments of love! Where the six qualities of zeal, determination, courage, intelligence, ability and heroism are present, there Divine help will manifest. In any field, at any time, success is assured to the person endowed with all these six precious qualities. They help you confront various difficulties from time to time and contribute to your all-round well-being. Just as a student must pass various tests and examinations, these qualities are also subject to trials. Such trials are your stepping stones to high achievements. These trials come in the form of losses, troubles, pains, sufferings and calumny. Unfortunately, many students and elderly alike, lack self-confidence and have become a prey to peacelessness because of their involvement in sensual pleasures. Youth, students and everyone must develop self-confidence. In fact, self-confidence should be the life-breath of every person. Develop self-confidence and embark on the journey of life with faith in God….

” I am Not only a Taxi Driver…But Also a Goodwill Ambassador of My Country” …

Shiv Khera’s experience in Singapore:
 
Six years ago in Singapore I gave a taxi driver a business card to take me to a particular address. At the last point, he circled round the building. His meter read 11$, but he took only 10. I said Henry, your meter reads 11$ how come you are taking only 10. 
 
He said Sir, I am a taxi driver, I am supposed to be bringing you straight to the destination. Since I did not know the last spot, I had to circle around the building. Had I brought you straight here, the meter would have read 10$. Why should you be paying for my ignorance? He said Sir, legally, I can claim 11$, but ethically I am entitled to only 10. He further added that Singapore is a tourist
destination and many people come here for three or four days. After clearing the imigration and customs, the first experience is always with the taxi driver and if that is not good, the balance three to four days are not pleasant either. He said Sir I am not a taxi driver, I am the Ambassador of Singapore without a diplomatic passport.
In my opinion, he probably did not go to school beyond the 8th grade, but to me he was a professional. To me, his behavior reflected pride in performance and character.That day I learned that one needs more than professional qualifications to be a professional.
 
In one line, be a “Professional with a human touch and Values ” that makes all the more difference.
Knowledge, skill, money, education, all comes later. First comes Integrity.
Professionalism:

“It is NOT the job you DO,
It is HOW you DO the job. 
Source….Unknown…input from a friend of mine.
Natarajan

” Do Not Royally Annoy the Guards…” !!!

The Queen’s Guard guard the Queen’s official royal residences in the UK.

The Queen’s Guard guard the Queen’s official royal residences in the UK. Source: YouTube

THIS is the reason people don’t touch the Queen’s Guards — they fight back.

The guards have quite a reputation for getting narky with misbehaving tourists, but one man got the shock of his life when he made what appeared to be a friendly gesture toward the guard outside Windsor Castle.

The tourist was seem attempting to mimic the guard’s march when he made the epic mistake of placing his hand on the back of the guard’s shoulder.

But the guard didn’t appreciate the tourist getting handsy. “Step back from the Queen’s Guard,” he yells.

The guard quickly grabs for his gun and points it directly at the tourist’s head as he runs away.

Footage of the incident was uploaded to YouTube and has been watched more than a million times.

It’s not the first time a tourist has fallen foul of an aggressive guard. Earlier this month a photographer was barged by guards after he inadvertedly stood in their way during a march, The Independent reports.

While a woman called, “The guards are coming down, Derek. Mind! Mind!” The man ignored the plea and was mowed down by the parade.

The moral of the story: Don’t royally annoy the guards. No good can come of it

Source….www.news.com.au and http://www.you tube.com

Natarajan