5 Things Lucky People Do …

Author Ashwin Sanghi says that it is indeed possible to ‘attract’ good luck! Here’s how!

Ashwin Sanghi is the author of four bestselling books — The Rozabal Line, Chanakya’s Chant, The Krishna Key and Private India, the last of which he co-authored with the American bestselling writer James Patterson.

Sanghi’s next book, like all his previous ones, is also a page-turner. But 13 Steps to Bloody Good Luck also happens to be his first work of non-fiction.

In it, Sanghi suggests that while some people are ‘luckier’ than others, it is also possible to ‘attract’ good luck your way.

Lady Luck, he says, isn’t all that fickle after all because we can ‘train’ ourselves to be lucky!

So what is it exactly that lucky people do?

Speaking to Rediff.com, Sanghi lists out five important things that most lucky people seem to do:

1. Lucky people grow and strengthen their network

Luck hates loneliness. It’s almost impossible to be lucky alone. A story that will illustrate this point is that of Sitar maestro Pandit Ravi Shankar.

Ravi Shankar was a music director with All India Radio (or AIR) from 1949 to 1956. VK Narayana Menon, Director of AIR, introduced Shankar to the renowned violinist Yehudi Menuhin.

Menuhin invited Shankar to perform in America.

In America, Shankar became friends with Richard Bock, founder of World Pacific Records.

Shankar executed several recordings at Bock’s studio.

The American rock band The Byrds who also used to record there heard Shankar’s music and incorporated some of his music into their tracks.

These tracks came to the attention of George Harrison of the Beatles and Harrison soon visited India to study the sitar under Ravi Shankar.

The Beatles went on to use the sitar in their ‘Norwegian Wood’ track.

Shankar’s association with The Beatles got him invited to Woodstock and made him the most famous Indian musician on the planet by 1966.

That’s called the network effect.

2. Lucky people listen to their intuition and develop it

All of us seem to have two voices inside us.

The first is intuition, our ‘inner wizard’.

It tries to tell us what we should be doing and what will be good for us.

The second voice inside us is the ‘inner critic’, which sends a steady stream of destructive thoughts directed towards us and others.

Ignoring the critic and listening to the wizard is a key trait of lucky people.

An example of intuitive good luck is the story of Conrad Hilton, the legendary founder of Hilton Hotels.

Hilton claimed that his incredible success as a hotelier was often due to his lucky hunches.

On one particular occasion, Hilton submitted a sealed bid of $165,000 to buy a rundown Chicago hotel in a sealed bid auction.

The next morning, something didn’t feel right. Acting on his intuition, he submitted another bid of $180,000.

When the bids were examined, Hilton’s was the winning bid.

The next highest offer was $179,800.

3. Lucky people are willing to try new things

The overall willingness of lucky people to try new things simply increases the number of opportunities that come their way thus increasing their good luck.

Consider the story of the great painter Henri Matisse. Matisse went to Paris to study law and started working as a court administrator in Le Cateau-Cambresis after gaining his qualification.

Following an attack of appendicitis in 1889, he underwent a period of convalescence.

His mother bought him some art supplies so that he could keep himself occupied even though Matisse had never painted in his life.

Little did his mother realise that her son would discover ‘a kind of paradise’ as he later described the experience.

He decided to become an artist, deeply disappointing his father by that decision but going on to become one of the greatest painters ever.

The good luck would simply not have kicked in without Matisse’s openness to try a new activity.

4. Lucky people make the best of bad situations, stay positive and persevere

Lucky people are simply those who use every bad situation to the best of their abilities.

The life stories of some of the ‘luckiest’ people reveal that most of them thrived under conditions of adversity.

Beethoven composed his best-known masterpieces after he became deaf while Sir Walter Raleigh wrote History of the World during his 13 years in prison.

The Discovery of India was written by Jawaharlal Nehru during his imprisonment in Ahmednagar Fort from 1942 to 1946 while Martin Luther translated the Holy Bible while confined in the Castle of Wartburg.

With a sentence of death hanging over him, Dante wrote The Divine Comedy during 20 years of exile.

5. Lucky people stay alert and informed

Most lucky people have understood that calming the mind is a key method to increase alertness.

Lucky people find their own unique ways to tame their minds.

Hence they are better able to deal with difficult or stressful situations in their lives.

Often it is this alertness that allows ‘lucky’ people to spot opportunities when they arise.

Consider the case of Ray Kroc, the person credited with creating the McDonald’s franchising system.

The brothers Richard and Maurice McDonald had established McDonald’s, a fast food restaurant.

The restaurant used Castle Multimixers to make milkshakes.

Ray Kroc supplied these machines to McDonald’s among others.

When Ray noticed that the McDonald brothers had purchased eight Multimixers in a very short period of time, he visited their San Bernardino restaurant to investigate.

Seeing their efficient operation convinced Ray that their scientific restaurant processes could be converted into a national franchising opportunity.

He quickly offered to become a franchising agent for the brothers and opened McDonald’s Inc’s very first restaurant in Des Plaines, Illinois.

He eventually bought out the company from the brothers in 1961 for $2.7 million.

Good luck for Ray Kroc?

Yes. But his good luck only happened because he was alert to a sudden spike in the sales of Castle Multimixers!

SOURCE::: http://www.rediff.com

Natarajan

” ஹனுமனுக்கு வடை மாலை , ஜாங்கிரி மாலை ஏன்…? “

ஒரு முறை வட நாட்டில் இருந்து ஓர் அன்பர் மஹபெரியவாளைத தரிசிக்க வந்தார். மனம் குளிரும்வண்ணம் அவரது தரிசனம் முடிந்த பிறகு சற்றே நெளிந்தவாறு நின்றார். இவரது மனதில் ஏதோ கேள்வி இழையோடுகிறது போலும் என்று தீர்மானித்த பெரியவா,

“என்ன சந்தேகம். கேளுங்கோ” என்றார்.

அந்த வட நாட்டு அன்பருக்கு ஆஞ்சநேயர் குறித்த ஒரு சந்தேகம் நெடு நாட்களாகவே இருந்து வந்தது.

இதுகுறித்துப் பலரிடமும் விளக்கம் கேட்டு விட்டார். ஆனால் எவரிடம் இருந்தும் சரியான பதில் வரவில்லை. அவர், அந்த சந்தேகத்தை மஹா பெரியவாளிடம் கேட்கலாமா என்று யோசித்துக் கொண்டிருந்த போதுதான், ஸ்வாமிகளே உத்தரவு கொடுத்து விட்டார்.

“ஆஞ்சநேயரைப் பற்றி எனக்கு ஒரு சந்தேகம்…” இழுத்தார் அன்பர்.

“வாயுபுத்திரனைப் பத்தியா… கேளேன்” என்றார் ஸ்வாமிகள்.

“ஸ்வாமி.. ஆஞ்சநேயர் பலருக்கும் இஷ்ட தெய்வமாக இருக்கிறார். எல்லாருமே அவரை வணங்கி அருள்பெறுகிறார்கள். ஆனால் அவருக்கு அணிவிக்கப்படும் மாலை பற்றித் தான் என் சந்தேகம்….”
பெரியவா மெளனமாக இருக்கவே… அன்பரே தொடர்ந்தார்: “அனுமனுக்குத் தென்னிந்தியாவில் காரமானமிளகு கலந்த வடை மாலை சாற்றுகிறார்கள். ஆனால் நான் வசிக்கும் வட இந்தியாவிலோ ஜாங்கிரி மாலைசாற்றுகிறார்கள். ஏன் இப்படி வித்தியாசப்படுகிறது ?”

பதிலுக்காக மஹபெரியவாளையே பார்த்துக் கொண்டிருந்தார் வட நாட்டில் இருந்து வந்த அன்பர்.

தன்னுடைய நீண்ட நாளைய சந்தேகத்துக்கு, பெரியவாளிடம் இருந்தாவது தகுந்த பதில் வருமா என்கிற எதிர்பார்ப்பு அவரது முகத்தில் இருந்தது. கேள்வி கேட்ட வட நாட்டு அன்பர் மட்டுமல்ல… பெரியவா சொல்லப்போகும் பதிலுக்காக அன்று அங்கு கூடிஇருந்த அனைவருமே ஆவலுடன் இருந்தனர்.

ஒரு புன்முறுவலுக்குப் பிறகு பெரியவா பதில் சொல்ல ஆரம்பித்தார்.

“பெரும்பாலோர் வீட்டில் கைக்குழந்தைகள் சாப்பிடுவதற்கு அடம் செய்தால், வீட்டுக்கு வெளியே குழந்தையை இடுப்பில் தூக்கிக் கொண்டு வந்து, ‘அதோ பார் நிலா…’ என்று சந்திரனை அந்தக் குழந்தைக்கு வேடிக்கை காட்டி உணவை சாப்பிட வைப்பார்கள் பெண்கள். அழகான நிலாவையும் வெளிக்காற்றையும் சுவாசிக்க நேரும் குழந்தைகள் அடம் பண்ணாமல் சமர்த்தாக உணவை சாப்பிட்டு விடும் . சம்பந்தப்பட்ட அம்மாக்களுக்கும் இது சந்தோஷத்தைத் தரும். உங்களில் பலர் வீடுகளிலும் இது நிகழ்ந்திருக்கும்.

சாதாரண குழந்தைகளுக்கு நிலா விளையாட்டுப் பொருள் என்றால், ராமதூதனான அனுமனுக்கு சூரியன் விளையாட்டுப் பொருள் ஆனது. அதுவும் எப்படி ? பார்ப்பதற்கு ஏதோ ஒரு பழம் போல் காட்சி தந்த சூரியனைஅடுத்த கணமே தன் கையில் பிடித்துச் சாப்பிட வேண்டும் என்று தீராத ஆசை ஏற்பட்டது அனுமனுக்கு.

அனுமன் கைக்குழந்தையாக விளையாடிக் கொண்டிருந்தபோது வானத்தில் செக்கச்செவேல் என்று ஒரு பழம்போல்‘ஜிவுஜிவு’ என்று தோற்றமளித்த சூரியன், அவரை மிகவும் கவர்ந்து விட்டது. மனித வாழ்க்கையின் ஜீவாதாரத்துக்குக் காரணமான சூரியனை, சாப்பிடுவதற்கு உகந்த ஒரு பழம் என்று நினைத்து விட்டார் அனுமன். வாயுபுத்திரன் அல்லவா ? அடுத்த கணமே அது தன் கையில் வந்து விட வேண்டும் என்று விரும்பினார். வாயு வேகத்தில் வானத்தில் பறந்தார். பிறந்து சில நாட்களே ஆன ஒரு பச்சிளங்குழந்தை சூரியனையே விழுங்குவதற்காக இப்படிப் பறந்து செல்வது கண்டு தேவர்கள் திகைத்தனர்.வாயுபுத்திரனின் வேகத்தை எவராலும் தடுக்க முடியவில்லை.

அதே நேரத்தில் ராகு கிரஹமும் சூரியனைப் பிடித்து கிரஹண காலத்தை உண்டுபண்ணுவதற்காக நகர்ந்து கொண்டிருந்தது. ஆனால், அனுமன் சென்ற வேகத்தில் ராகு பகவானால் செல்ல முடியவில்லை. சூரியனைப் பிடிப்பதற்காக நடந்த இந்த ரேசில் அனுமனிடம் ராகு பகவான் தோற்றுப் போனார். இந்த நிகழ்ச்சியின் முடிவாக, அனுமனுக்கு ஒரு அங்கீகாரம் கொடுத்தார் ராகு பகவான். அதாவது, தனக்கு மிகவும் உகந்த தானியமான உளுந்தால் உணவுப் பண்டம் தயாரித்து எவர் ஒருவர் அனுமனை வணங்குகிறாரோ ,அவரை எந்தக் காலத்திலும் தான் பீடிப்பதில்லை எனவும், தன்னால் வரும் தோஷங்கள்
அனைத்தும் நிவர்த்திஆகி விடும் எனவும் ராகு பகவான் அனுமனிடம் தெரிவித்தார். இந்த உணவுப் பண்டம் எப்படி இருக்கவேண்டும் என்றும் ராகு பகவான் அனுமனிடம் சொன்னார். அதாவது தன் உடல் போல்(பாம்பு போல்) வளைந்து இருக்க வேண்டும் எனவும் சொன்னார். அதைதான் உளுந்தினால் ஆன மாலைகளாகத் தயாரித்து அனுமனுக்கு சமர்ப்பிக்கிறோம். ஆக, ராகு தோஷத்தால் பாதிக்கப்பட்டிருப்பவர் உளுந்து தானியத்தால் ஆனவடை மாலைகளை அனுமனுக்குச் சார்த்தி வழிபட்டால், ராகு தோஷம் நிவர்த்தி ஆகி விடும் என்பது இதில் இருந்து தெரிகிறது.

இப்போது மிளகு வடை மற்றும் ஜாங்கிரி விஷயத்துக்கு வருகிறேன்.

வடையாகட்டும்… ஜாங்கிரி ஆகட்டும். இரண்டுமே உளுந்தினால் செய்யப்பட்டவை தான். தென்னிந்தியாவில் இருப்பவர்கள் அனுமனுக்கு உளுந்து வடை மாலை சாற்றுகிறார்கள். இங்கே உப்பளங்கள் அதிகம் உள்ளன. இங்கிருந்து பல வெளி நாடுகளுக்கும் உப்பு அதிக அளவில் ஏற்றுமதி ஆகிறது. ஆகவே, உப்பும் உளுந்தும் கலந்து கூடவே மிளகும் சேர்த்து பாம்பின் உடல் போல் மாலையாகத் தயாரித்து, அனுமனுக்கு சார்த்தி வழிபடும் வழக்கம் நம்மூரில் அதிகம் உண்டு.

வட இந்தியாவில் பல மாநிலங்களில் கரும்பு விளைச்சல் அமோகமாக இருக்கிறது. சர்க்கரை பெருமளவில் அங்கு உற்பத்தி ஆகி, வெளிநாடுகளுக்கெல்லாம் ஏற்றுமதி ஆகிறது. தவிர, வட இந்தியர்கள் இனிப்புப்பண்டங்களை அதிகம் விரும்பிச் சாப்பிடுபவர்கள். அதுவும், அவர்களுக்குக் காலை நேரத்திலேயே —அதாவது பிரேக் ஃபாஸ்ட் வேளையில் இனிப்புப் பண்டங்களையும் ரெகுலர் டிஃபனோடு சேர்த்துக்
கொள்வார்கள். அவர்கள் இனிப்பு விரும்பிகள். எனவேதான், அவர்கள் உளுந்தினால் ஆன ஜாங்கிரி மாலையை அனுமனுக்கு சாரதி வழிபடுகிறார்கள்.

எது எப்படியோ… அனுமனிடம் ராகு பகவான் கேட்டுக் கொண்டபடி உளுந்து மாலைகள் அனுமனுக்கு விழுந்துகொண்டே இருக்கின்றன.

அது உப்பாக இருந்தால் என்ன… சர்க்கரையாக இருந்தால் என்ன.. மாலை சார்த்திவழிபடும் பக்தர்களுக்கு ராகு தோஷம் தொலைந்து போனால் சரி” என்று சொல்லி விட்டு, இடி இடியெனச்சிரித்தார் மஹபெரியவா.

பெரியவாளின் விளக்கமான இந்த பதிலைக் கேட்ட வட நாட்டு அன்பர் முகத்தில் பரவசம். சடாரென மகானின திருப்பாதங்களுக்கு ஒரு நமஸ்காரம் செய்து தன் நன்றியைத் தெரிவித்தார். கூடி இருந்த அநேகபக்தர்களும் பெரியவாளின் விளக்கத்தால் நெகிழ்ந்து போனார்கள்.

SOURCE:::: http://www.periva.proboards.com

Natarajan
Read more: http://periva.proboards.com/thread/3209#ixzz3LwvrfFnE

Message For the Day…” Learn From The WATCH the Lesson it Teaches to us …”

You dread that it is very difficult, nay, impossible, to realise God. It is very simple; its very simplicity makes you feel that there must be some hidden trap. You do not appreciate simple things and habits. For example, there is nothing so simple as speaking the truth; yet how many stick to Truth! If you venture into untruth, you have to invent new stories all along the line and keep in memory all the stories and all the persons to whom you have related them. Each student has a watch on his wrist. And, you look at the watch at least a hundred times a day. Well, learn from the watch a great lesson. When you watch the watch, remember the five letters of the word, WATCH; each is giving you a fine lesson for life: W tells you ‘Watch your Words’; A warns you ‘Watch your Action’; T indicates ‘Watch your Thoughts’; C advises ‘Watch your Character’; and H declares ‘Watch your Heart.’ When you are consulting your watch, imbibe this lesson that the watch is imparting.  

Sathya Sai Baba

 

” Origin of Filter Coffee … Not From India “… Surprising !!!… Read More !!!

The Heartbreaking Truth About Indian Foods That Are Not Indian at All !!!

You’ve been eating and drinking them all your life without knowing the actual origins! We bet you never knew these Indian foods are not Indian at all but are a gift of foreign influences.

1. Samosa

Samosa

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That delicious samosa you always munch on as a tea-time snack or when sudden hunger-pangs hit is not Indian at all! The triangular potato/meat-filled savoury dish that is easily found on every street-corner actually has origins in the Middle East. Originally called ‘sambosa‘, the Indian samosa was actually introduced to the country sometime between the 13th and 14th century by traders of the Middle East. But whatever, we’re just happy we get to hog these yummy yummy snacks!

2. Gulab Jamuns

Gulab Jamuns

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Ooh. We’re sure your mouth is already watering. The very thought of these calorie-filled dough balls, deep-fried and then soaked is enough to send anyone to food heaven. And what’s more, this dish is so versatile that you can enjoy it hot, cold or simply at room temperature. But the favourite Indian dessert originated in the Mediterranean and Persia. Though the original form of the dessert is called luqmat al qadi and made of dough balls deep fried, soaked in honey syrup and sprinkled with sugar, once it reached India, the recipe was modified. How we wish it was lunch-time already!

3. Vindaloo

Vindaloo

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The very sound takes you to the beaches of Goa and a relaxed family lunch. But the very spicy meat curry is not Goan at all! Vindaloo has it’s roots in Portuguese cuisine and it has been adapted from the very famous carne de vinha d’alhos which is the Portuguese name for Vindaloo. Originally, Vindaloo was made of wine, pork and garlic and that is how it derived it’s name (vin – wine, alhos – garlic) though Indians modified it by using palm vinegar, pork/beef/chicken and multiple spices. Though the original recipe does not use potatoes, Indians modified the recipe further by using potatoes as the word “aloo” in Vindaloo means potato in Hindi. Now you know where that sudden piece of potato popped up from between those meat chunks.

4. Shukto

Shukto

Mix and Stir

This mouth-watering Bengali delicacy is another surprise which has it’s origins in Portuguese cuisine. The Portuguese influence extended all the way from Goa to Eastern Bengal or Bangladesh and the influences are visible in Bengali food even today. Shukto is prepared from Karela or Bitter Gourd which is Indian in origin but was prepared by the Portuguese in olden days. Slowly, Indian influences like multiple other vegetables and a dash of milk/sweet to cut the spice were added to the dish. Just be happy you get to savour this amazing dish today!

5. Chai

Chai

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The unassuming comfort drink of almost every Indian is in no way true desi. Famous the world over as chai (Starbucks has a Chai Latte on their menu), tea has it’s origins in China. While the Chinese used it as a medicinal drink, the Britains soon discovered it and loved it’s versatile nature. Now, the British being British wanted to cut China’s monopoly in the tea market. So, they brought the humble ‘chai’ to India (by teaching cultivation techniques to the tribals in North-East India plus offering incentives to Britons who wanted to cultivate in India). And it has been a part of India ever since! In fact, it was only in the 1950s that tea became so popular. Now, don’t suddenly look down into that cup you’re sipping from while reading this!

6. Dal Bhaat

Dal Rice

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Dal Bhaat or Dal-rice is a comfort food all over India. There are even variations of this food like the Khichdi which are very popular among Indians. Though dal bhaat seems like a very simple, Indian dish, it is not Indian at all. Dal bhaat is actually of Nepali origin and it was through North Indian influences that the dish entered India and spread throughout the region. We’re sure you’re going to dream of the Himalayas the next time you’re eating this simple food!

7. Rajma

Rajma

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Rajma chawal has quickly spread from being a North Indian staple to being loved by most Indians. The dish which is as popular as the North Indian chole-bhature is a wholesome meal in itself. However, the preparation of Rajma or the kidney bean in Rajma chawal is not Indian. The bean was brought to India through Central Mexico and Guatemala. The initial preparation or soaking and boiling the beans and adding a few spices is adapted from Mexican recipes. Rajma is a staple in Mexican diet even today though it’s Indian variants are quite different from the Mexican preparations. The bean and recipes prepared using Rajma are famous in North India and the locals often add Indian spices and vegetables like onions and tomatoes to make it tangy. Cool, isn’t it?

8. Bandel Cheese

Bandel Cheese

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This is another staple Bengali dish which has Portuguese influences. While the cheese was developed in India and has it’s origins in Eastern India, it was created by the Portuguese using their own techniques for making cheese and breads. The cheese which has developed into a wide variety today was originally available in just one variety. Over time, people experimented and created the smoked flavor of Bandel cheese. It was the fermentation techniques of the Portuguese that helped developed this cheese and in the olden days, it was made by Burmese cooks under Portuguese supervision.

9. Naan

Naan

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This is one dish that is loved all over the world. A type of leavened bread, Naan is a staple of North India and is available in almost all North Indian restaurants across the country. The Americans and Europeans have recently discovered the joys of this bread and love pairing it with their chicken tikka. However, naan is not Indian but was brought to India during the Mughal era. Naan has it’s roots in Persian cuisine though the form of leavened bread is actually Iranian. The soft, melt-in-the-mouth bread is surely a favourite but trying different forms with rose-water, khus or stuffed naan might actually tingle your taste buds!

10. Jalebi

jalebi

We even have an item number associated with this delicious sweet! How can it not be Indian? But it isn’t. Jalebi is actually from the Middle East though different variations of the sweet were found across different Asian regions. Originally called zalabiya (Arabic)or the zalibiya (Persian), the dish was brought to India by Persian invaders. Today, the dessert Jalebi is famous all over the country in different forms. While North India loves their thin and crispy jalebis, the South Indian version consists of thicker and have a slightly different shape. Jaangiri and Imartee are variations of the Jalebi. Wow! So many variations of just one sweet. No wonder you thought it was Indian!

11. Filter Coffee

Filter Coffee

“What?”, you say, “How can Filter coffee not be Indian? Well, filter coffee became popular in India pretty late, in the 1950s, around the same time Chai began to get traction. Coffee was not a part of India till the 16th century when it was smuggled into the country, by Baba Budan, on his pilgrimage to Mecca. On returning, he cultivated coffee and the drink soon became popular. Indians would drink coffee without milk or sugar in place of liqueur. Filter coffee was popularised by Coffee Cess Committee when they set up their first Coffee House in then Bombay in 1936. So much information! Time for a kaapi break?

source:::: http://www.indiatimes.com

Natarajan

” SRI CHAKRAM ” Formation on Desert Sand ? …

ஶ்ரீ சக்ரம் (சுயம்பு )

Published on Dec 1, 2014

அமெரிக்காவின் ஒரெகன் மாநிலத்தின் ஸ்டீன்ஸ் மலைகளின் தென்கிழக்குல் உள்ள இடம்தான் மிக்கி பேசின் சூரியனின் வெப்பத்தில் மணல் கொப்பளிக்கும் அளவுக்கு பாலைவன தேசம்.பில் மில்லர் என்கிற ராணுவ அதிகாரி இந்த இடத்தை குட்டி விமானம் மூலம் கடந்து செல்கையில் 13.3 mile சதுர அளவுக்கு வரி வரியாக வரைபடம் போன்ற ஒன்றை கண்டார் ஏதோ நாட்டின் வரை படம் என்று நினைத்து அதை பற்றி ஆராய்ந்தவருக்கு பயங்கர அதிர்ச்சி காரணம் அது நம் இந்து மதத்தில் காலம் காலமாக வழிபடும் சிவ விஷ்ணு பராசக்தியை குறிக்கும் ஶ்ரீசக்கரம் தான் அவர் பார்த்தது தொடர்ந்து 30 நிமிடங்கள் வட்டமிட்ட பின்னே தான் அவரால் முழு சக்கரத்தையும் 1 தடவை சுற்ற முடிந்தது. இதை ப் போலவே வரைய அவர்களால் எவ்வளவு முயன்றும் (1990 to 2014) இன்று வரை முடியவில்லை காரணம் நாலாயிரம் அடி மேலே பறந்து பார்த்தால் தான் ஶ்ரீசக்கரம் என்றே தெரியும். UFO ஆராய்ச்சியாளர்கள் டான் நியுமேன்,ஆலன் டெக்ளர் இருவரும் இந்த இடத்தை செப் 15 ல் ஆய்வு செய்தனர் அந்த ஆய்வில் இந்த இடத்தை சுற்றியுள்ள எந்த பகுதியிலும் மனித கால் தடமோ வாகன வந்து சென்ற தடமோ இல்லை என்றும் மனிதனால் இது சாத்தியமே இல்லை என்றும் கருத்து தெரிவித்துள்ளனர்

SOURCE::: http://www.youtube.com

Natarajan

” Better to be Paranoid Than Careless … ” Woman”s Safety Guide Tip …

‘As I sat down in the cab, I forwarded details of the cab number, driver’s name and phone number to a family member.’

‘I also switched on the GPS on my phone.’

Upasna Pandey, who travels at odd hours in taxis every 15 days, reveals how she stays safe.

Delhi at night

I’m both, a novice and expert on Delhi roads. I am a novice because I have travelled to all parts of Delhi, but cannot give directions if the need arises.

I’m an expert because I have used all possible modes of public transport — from the Delhi Metro to a cycle rickshaw.

When I need to travel long distances at odd hours and have to select a cab service, which may happen at least once in 15 days, the decision is usually a quick one, based on earlier experiences.

I am sharing with you one such experience at night.

It started with a trip to Dwarka for a family event which was to end post dinner. I requested a cab to take me from Dwarka to Noida opting for 10 pm as the pickup time.

Dwarka is one of the biggest residential hubs in Delhi, located close to the Indira Gandhi International Airport. It is densely populated and well-connected through a deep reach of public transport. So when I decided to use a private cab, I was confident it was a safe decision.

The driver turned up at the designated time. He was a middle aged man, heavy built, tall with a heavy voice. This is important to share as I am the opposite of this in size, so an immediate sense of intimidation is almost natural.

As I sat down in the cab, I forwarded the details of the cab registration number, driver’s name and phone number to a family member for reference. I also switched on the GPS on my mobile phone to understand the most suitable route to reach Noida.

There is one more thing which I have been doing for many years, almost instinctively: As soon as I board a cab, I remove all expensive jewellery in case I am wearing any.

We were on our way when I realised that the route shown on the GPS was actually a deserted stretch and my instinct was to move on to the busier roads which may have taken much longer.

Some panic had set in as I worried over this while the driver continued to drive on the GPS route; he also assured me that we would be reaching a busy road soon.

I called up my family member to share the exact location and seek an opinion on whether it was safe to continue on it or to deviate to a busy road.

I noticed that the driver was speaking to someone in Punjabi on his phone. I understood the language so was at ease to know it was his personal call, and nothing with reference to me. It did bother me when he chose to speak in his native language, I would have preferred if he spoke in Hindi or English.

The 5 to 10 minutes drive on a deserted stretch was enough to give me goosebumps; I resolved not to commit myself to any such engagements which would require me to travel alone at night in cabs.

I was waiting anxiously to see a busy road and some streetlights, which are also missing in many parts of Delhi, regardless of these being well developed areas.

Soon we hit a busy National Highway and then the Ring road which is the lifeline of Delhi, heading for Noida. I had the option of taking one more relatively lonely stretch which would help enter Noida via Mayur Vihar or taking a toll road which required payment, I chose the latter.

I was not consistently on the phone with my family member but making repeated phone calls, so I could remain attentive and alert to the route and the driver’s behaviour; this is crucial.

Keeping myself rooted in the reality of being alone with a stranger for a short span on the road made more sense for me instead of talking over the phone with a loved one, as an escape to comfort.

I saw a couple of police patrol vehicles en route, which was also comforting but I was praying I wouldn’t need to reach out for any help.

I reached home in almost an hour, paid the cab fare, and thanked the driver for a service which was more about safety than about distance.

I knew if there is one learning for me from this experience, it was simple: It’s better to be paranoid than be casual and careless.

The driver would normally be a good person, but the risk is too high if he isn’t. It is better to be slightly aloof than being friendly and being misunderstood.

Let’s not take a chance.

SOURCE:::: http://www.rediff.com

Natarajan

Meet the Lesser Known Malalas …

Image: Nobel Peace Prize laureate Malala Yousafzai (centre) poses for a photo with young activists she invited to accompany her in Oslo. From left to right: Amina Yusuf of Nigeria, Kainat Soomro of Pakistan, Shazia Ramzan of Pakistan, Malala, Mezon Almellehan of Syria and Kainat Riaz of Pakistan. Photograph: Suzanne Plunkett/Reuters

“I am Shazia.”

“I am Kainat Riaz.”

“I am Kainat Somro.”

“I am Mezon.”

“I am Amina.”

“I am those 66 million girls who are out of school,” said Malala Yousafzai after she was conferred the Nobel Prize on Wednesday in Oslo. The five names mentioned by the world’s youngest laureate in her Nobel lecture are her friends from across the world and what united them is the campaign for education for every child.

Rediff.com profiles Malala’s five extraordinary young friends and fellow activists.

Kainat Riaz

Kainat Riaz was sitting next to Malala in the same bus when a gunman appeared and opened fire on them. Kainat was shot in the upper right arm, while Malala received a bullet injury in her head on October 9, 2012.

“When you are educated, you are able to do everything,” Riaz said. “If you are not educated, you can’t do anything,” she told the media after the ceremony. “The Malala mission is our mission. She’s my friend. And she inspired us. We will always support her,” she said.

Shazia Ramzan

Shazia, then 13, was sitting in front of Malala and Kainat when the gunman barged in and asked, “Who is Malala?”

The brave identified herself; the gunman shot her. He then turned his gun at Shazia.

He shot Shazia twice — below her collarbone and in her left hand. Finally, he shot Kainat and then jumped off the bus.

Both Shazia and Kainat are now studying in Wales at the UWC Atlantic College and both want to become doctors.

Kainat Soomro

She was only 13 when she was gang-raped in Pakistan’s Mehar. Her struggle to obtain justice drew global attention in 2007.

Soomro’s father was ridiculed by the police. The conservative community in Pakistan said that she should be “killed for honour”; her family stood by her and rejected it outright. Fearing the subsequent backlash, the family left for Karachi.

Defying all norms, she took her alleged perpetrators to court, and has worked tirelessly since then to bring them to justice. The alleged rapists are still at large.

Mezon Almellehan

This 16-year-old Syrian refugee, who lives with her family in a camp in Azraq, Jordan champions for girls’ education within the camps.

She met Malala earlier this year at the large Syrian refugee camp, Za’atari, where Almellehan was living at the time.

Amina Yusuf

Amina Yusuf, 17, is a girls’ education activist from northern Nigeria where the terror group Boko Haram abducted more than 200 schoolgirls during a raid in April 2014.

SOURCE::: http://www.rediff.com

Natarajan

 

Most Dangerous Nations in this World ….

A resident walks near burning oil tankers which were set ablaze by an bomb explosion in Peshawar. Photograph: Fayaz Aziz/Reuters

The Country Threat Index compiled by IntelCenter, a Washington-based company working for intelligence agencies, has placed Pakistan 8th in its list of the most dangerous countries in the world.

Afghanistan, the only other South Asian country in the list, is placed fourth, while Iraq ranks first.

The rankings were prepared after examining the volume of terrorist and rebel alerts, messaging traffic, videos, photos, incidents and the number of killed and injured in a country over the past 30 days.

There are a total of 45 countries with a CTI greater than zero. The average CTI for these countries is 74 and the global CTI is 3,313.

Iraq

Rank 1

CTI score: 576

An explosion is seen during a car bomb attack at a rally by militant group, Asaib Ahl Haq (League of the Righteous), to introduce its candidates for elections at a soccer stadium in Baghdad. Photograph: Reuters

Iraq tops the Country Threat Index as the most dangerous country in the world.

Insurgency continues to cause thousands of fatalities even as the country faces political instability.

In February 2011 the Arab Spring protests spread to Iraq and in 2014 Sunni insurgents belonging to the Islamic State terrorist group seized control of large swathes of land including major Iraqi cities, like Tikrit, Fallujah and Mosul.

Nigeria

Rank 2           

CTI score: 458

 

Security and emergency agency staff investigate the Kano Central Mosque bombing scene in Kano. Photograph: Reuters

Nigeria has been a victim of ethnic violence because of its diverse ethno-linguistic groups.

The country has been witnessing sectarian violence by Islamist movement Boko Haram that seeks to abolish secular system of government and establish Sharia law.

Thousands have been killed by religious violence in Nigeria. In May 2014 Benin, Chad, Cameroon and Niger joined Nigeria in a united effort to combat Boko Haram in the aftermath of the 2014 Chibok kidnapping of 276 schoolgirls.

Somalia

Rank 3           

CTI score: 336

 

A Somali al-Shabab fighter stands guard during a public flogging by the hardline Islamic group in Bula Marer town. Photograph: Ismail Taxta/Reuters

Somalia has been a happy hunting ground for radical Islamist groups.  It suffers from ineffective government, famine, piracy and militant extremism.

Al Qaida-affiliate Al Shabaab, an Islamist armed group organisation, holds sway over the region.

Somalia’s long-running armed conflict has been responsible for serious violations of international law and abuses.

On April 14, Al-Shabaab attacked Mogadishu’s main court complex leaving at least 30 civilians dead. An attack on the UN compound in Mogadishu killed at least 14 people. On September 7, at least 15 people were killed in an attack on Village restaurant, popular among journalists and politicians, for the second time in under a year.

Afghanistan

Rank 4

CTI score: 309

 

US troops and Afghan policemen inspect the site of a suicide attack on the outskirts of Jalalabad. Photograph: Parwiz /Reuters

Innocent lives are lost to insurgency in this country with the Taliban stepping up attacks across the country. As foreign troops wind up their combat missions by December 31, the attacks have only increased.

A Reuters report says that civilian casualties were up by 24 percent in the first half of the year to 4,853, according to the United Nations. About 4,600 members of the Afghan security forces were killed as of November, up more than 6 percent over the corresponding period of 2013.

The past 12 months having been the bloodiest since 2001, with thousands of Afghans dying in fighting.

Yemen

Rank 5

CTI score: 290

 

An armed man stands by a damaged gate at a house, belonging to a Shi’ite Houthi man, after a a bomb explosion in Sanaa. Photograph: Khaled Abdullah/Reuters

Yemen faces a growing humanitarian crisis, with nearly half the population lacking sufficient food, according to UN agencies.

According to the Human Rights Watch report, the fragile transition government that succeeded President Ali Abdullah Saleh in 2012 following mass protests has failed to address multiple human rights challenges.

Conflict-related abuses, legally sanctioned discrimination against women, judicial executions of child offenders, and non-accountability for the previous government’s human rights violations all persisted.

Syria

Rank 6

CTI score: 233

Rebel fighters ride a motorbike in the old city of Aleppo. Photograph: Abdalrhman Ismail/Reuters

The 3-year old civil war that has gripped the country has killed thousand and resulted in war crimes. Minority Alawites and Christians have been increasingly targeted by Islamists and other groups fighting in the Syrian civil war.

The unrest began in the early spring of 2011 with nationwide protests against President Bashar al-Assad’s government, whose forces responded with violent crackdowns. As of April 2014 the death toll had risen above 190,000.

The humanitarian disaster in Syria has been outlined by the United Nations and several international organisations. More than 6.5 million Syrians have been displaced, more than 3 million Syrians have fled the country and millions have been left in poor living conditions with shortages of food and drinking water.

Libya

Rank 7

CTI score: 166

A hospital staff inspects the damage at the Benghazi Medical Center after a shell hit the sixth floor causing a fire in part of the building, according to the security office at the hospital, in Benghazi. Photograph: Esam Omran Al-Fetori/Reuters

The Civil War in Libya is an armed conflict fought between Islamist forces and forces aligned with the Libyan parliament and General Khalifa Haftar.

Prominent Islamist incidents in 2013-14 included the kidnapping of Prime Minister Ali Zeidan in October 2013, and the kidnapping of Egyptian diplomats in January 2014. Both incidents were carried out by the Libya Revolutionaries Operations Room.

Pakistan

Rank 8

CTI score: 162

A volunteer (in yellow jacket) collects debris from the crime scene, after a bomb explosion in Quetta. Photograph: Naseer Ahmed/Reuters

Pakistan has been facing religious extremism and sectarian violence. Terror outfits like the Lashkar-e-Tayiba, the Harkat-ul-Mujahideen and the Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan are a threat to the citizens of Pakistan.

According to a policy document on internal national security, Pakistan is the country most affected by terrorism in the world after Iraq, but if the severity of the incidents is considered, it even surpasses the Middle Eastern nation.

The report states that from 2001 to 2013, there were 13,721 incidents in Pakistan which is marginally less than Iraq. From 2001 to 2005, there were 523 terrorist incidents in Pakistan but from 2007 to November 2013, the total number of incidents has risen to 13,198.

According to data released by the US National Consortium for the Study of Terrorism and Responses for Terrorism (Start), Pakistan led the chart with 1,404 terrorist attacks in 2012.

Egypt

Rank 9

CTI score: 95

Anti-Mubarak protesters gesture after former Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak’s verdict, in front of barbed wire, soldiers with armoured personnel carriers (APCs) and police vehicles as they close one of the entrances which lead to Tahrir square in downtown Cairo. Photograph: Amr Abdallah Dalsh/Reuters

Egypt has been in political turmoil since the overthrow of military dictator Hosni Mubarak during the 2011 Egyptian Revolution and later under Morsi, the country’s first democratically elected president.

Morsi’s term was plagued by political uncertainty and violence in a deeply polarised country that ultimately led to his ouster by the powerful military.

Kenya

Rank 10

CTI score: 86

Kenya Defence Forces soldiers take their position at the Westgate shopping centre, on the fourth day since militants stormed into the mall, in Nairobi. Photograph: Noor Khamis/Reuters

Violence in Kenya has been escalating and attacks on tourists have contributed to a steep decline in tourism in Kenya.

Since the attack on Nairobi’s upmarket Westgate Mall killed more than 70 and injured scores, northern Kenya, from the Somali border to Mombasa, has suffered from a string of bomb and grenade attacks, killing dozens. Most incidents have targeted public venues such as churches, nightclubs, and bus stations, reports Aljazeera.

The Al-Shabab had claimed responsibility for the Westgate attack and vowed to continue its attacks until Kenya withdrew its troops from Somalia.

The attack on Nairobi’s upmarket Westgate Mall killed more than 70 and injured scores.

Al-Shabab claimed responsibility for the Westgate attack via Twitter, vowing to continue wreaking destruction until Kenya withdraws its troops from Somalia.

SOURCE:::: http://www.rediff.com

Natarajan

Joke of the Day…” Only one Parachute Left Now … ” !!!

Four people are in an airplane, the pilot, the smartest man in the world, the richest man in the world, and a punk teenager. The airplane experiences some difficulties, and the pilot informs the three passengers that the plane is going to crash, and there are only three parachutes on the plane. The richest man in the world takes one, because he says that his lawyers will sue everyone else on the plane if he doesn’t survive. The smartest man in the world takes a parachute, because he thinks that the world would be a worse place without him. The pilot says to the punk “There’s only one parachute left, I’ll fight you for it.” “That won’t be necessary,” said the punk, “The smartest man in the world took my backpack.”  

SOURCE:::: http://www.joke a day.com

Natarajan