An interesting link….pl click the above link and see.Natarajan
communication
Image of the Day…Moon Set Behind Trees…
Moonset behind trees
Increasingly golden or orange color as the moon sets is due to the fact that – as it sinks – you’re seeing the moon through more and more of Earth’s atmosphere.

Ken Christison posted this photo to EarthSky Facebook and wrote:
Watching the moon set behind the trees. I always liked to get clean images of the moon, but this morning I just kept it running through the trees. I think it does add to the whole atmosphere.
SOURCE::::Deborah Byrd IN earthsky.org Photo By …Ken Christison
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Cartoon of the Day…
Srirangam Ranganathaswamy Temple Navarathri Golu At 1000 Pillars Mandapam…
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Cartoon of the Day…
” Hello Uncle….Hello Aunty …” !!!

On being pushed up in the seniority stakes after marriage, no matter what your age.
We all know that age carries clout in India. As the website indianchild.com says, “Respect for elders is a major component in Indian culture”. In ancient times, this meant that youngsters would touch the feet of elders in greeting, talk to them deferentially and fetch things for them. But the modern guideline for respecting elders in India is crisper: simply address them ‘uncle’ and ‘aunty’.
I discovered this truth early in my marriage, at the tender age of 24. An older couple and their three-year-old daughter were staying in the ground floor of our apartment building. On our first visit to their house, the girl smiled sweetly at us and said, “Hello uncle; hello aunty’. My wife and I found it endearing to be addressed like this by the little one. Two days later, we were trudging up the stairs to our flat when the door of the apartment on the second floor opened and a man walked out. He politely moved out of the way to let us pass and said, “Hullo uncle; hullo aunty.” I looked at him closely. He had a thick moustache and a three-day stubble that made him look older than me. Yet he was calling me ‘uncle’ and his only excuse was that I was married!
“Hullo,” I said coldly and offered my hand. “I’m Paddy. And you?”
As he shook hands with me, his smile became friendlier. I thought he had recognised his error and would now address me by my name. “I’m Ajit, uncle,” he said. “I just finished my B. Com and am looking for a job.” Maybe he needed a broader hint. “I’m a graduate engineering trainee at Telco,” I said, subtly conveying that I had an engineering degree and had just got a job, and was, therefore, not more than two years older than him. “That’s great, uncle,” he said. “My dad works there too, at the forge.” After that initiation, my wife and I became reconciled to being addressed as ‘uncle’ and ‘aunty’ by men and women who did not look much younger than us. We would return their greetings graciously and later, in the privacy of our bedroom, have a quiet laugh together. A few years later, on another staircase to another flat in another city, we met another young man.
At six feet five inches, he towered over us and, in the dimly lit corridor, looked a shade dangerous. I remember thinking that if I had met him in a dark, lonely alley, I’d have handed him my wallet and watch without waiting to be asked. But, as he greeted us, it was obvious that he had met my wife, “Hello akka(elder sister),” he said, “nice to see you again.” I smiled with pleasure at his ability to impart respect without making my wife feel ancient. As I beamed at him, I noticed how pleasant and gentle he was and wondered how I could have thought he looked dangerous.
“And is this your husband?” the fine fellow continued. As my wife nodded, he turned to me and offered his hand. “Hullo uncle! So nice to meet you at last.”
“Nasty specimen,” I said to my wife when we entered our flat. “Doesn’t he look like a villain.?”
“No!” she said. “I think he looks sweet and innocent.”
I realised that as long as we had shared the rewards of seniority equally and had been able to laugh together at the foibles of youth, things had been bearable. But now it appeared that I might overtake my wife on the path to seniority. I felt a shiver go down my spine. What if, over the years, I got promoted from ‘uncle’ to thatha (grandfather) while she remained akka? Luckily, that didn’t happen. Apart from the occasional akka thrown her way, we’ve collected an equal quota of ‘uncles’ and ‘aunties’ from an array of fellow Indians in different places and at different times. Just last week, returning from an outing, we saw a couple in their late forties struggling with their shopping at the entrance to our apartment. The man was balding and, among the few hairs left on his head, the colour grey dominated. My wife and I helped them by picking up a few bags and carrying them to the lift. “Thank you so much,” the man said as the lift came to a stop. I began to smile to imply ‘it was no trouble’ when he continued, “It’s so kind of you, uncle.”
“I think I have more hair on my head than you,” I wanted to say but he had left the lift. Two days after this I was talking to my 26-year-old son in Mumbai. “You won’t believe this, appa,” he said. “In the lift today, I met a man in his thirties and his three-year-old son. The boy called me ‘uncle’! I felt very old.”
“Don’t worry,” I told him. “Once you marry, the boy’s father will also call you ‘uncle’!”
Paddy Rangappa is a freelance writer.
E-mail: Paddy.Rangappa@apmea.mcd.com
Keywords: After marriage life, seniority, human Interest
SOURCE:::: Paddy Rangappa in http://www.thehindu.com
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” Silence is the Thing, amid the Din…”

A French black-and-white silent movie, The Artist, won top honours at the Academy Awards in 2012. It had to happen. There is so much eloquence in silence. Remember the Charlie Chaplin genre of films? Are they coming back? I am no movie buff. But violence and noise are things humankind should shun. And silence being golden is a good break, and we are in dire need of it. The cacophony all around is killing.
We watch on television the noise and confusion that reigns in the world around us. Everybody has something to say but nobody wants to listen. There is zero tolerance.
We watch programmes on TV where the anchor and a panel of experts discuss and analyse issues. They begin nicely enough, but when the debate gets heated, sparks fly and everyone begins to talk simultaneously. Even the anchor has a problem controlling them. The one with most lung power out-speaks others. We are left numb.
Thank god we have the option of switching off the TV to get instant relief. Today’s music is also all noise. Where are the lyrics and the soft and soothing voices? Thank god for classical music — we still can listen to them and derive soul satisfaction.
I admire the silence of the West. Their neighbourhoods are so quiet. One can drink deep of such silence, especially when one is on a walk absorbing a lot of things. I love my India alright, but our strong point is not silence. We may well be one of the noisiest countries on the planet. In the bus, or in queues, in movies theatres, restaurants or even when they go for walks, people talk so loudly that they will wake up entire neighbourhoods — especially early in the morning. Now with dogs abounding on every street, if one dog starts barking, others follow it up with a chorus.
Even children don’t lag behind. I remember watching kids at play in a neighbourhood, abroad. There, like the adults the kids hardly ever scream or shout. Only Indian children scream their throats out.
This happened when I was once holidaying in the U.S. in Silicon Valley. A Japanese lady complained to the office of an apartment complex about an Indian family. The parents were off to work, and the grandparents had come for a holiday and they were teaching the kids slokas. Everytime the kids recited back what had been taught, the grandparents and the kids clapped with all their might, creating a ruckus.
The Japanese lady said: “That is the time my baby is fast asleep and my neighbours are yelling their heads off. The baby is startled into waking up and I am unable to finish my house work.” Being in the adjoining building, I too had heard the kids reciting the slokas and thought it to be laudable. The grandparents, I thought, were spending quality time with them, but they could have kept the decibel level low.
Once upon a time fire-crackers were lighted only during Deepavali. Now they are set off on birthdays, weddings, elections and what have you. Accompanying them on such occasions is loud film music. The world, as Wordsworth wrote, ‘is too much with us’. We are drowning in a welter of noise and other negative factors like road rage, violence, fisticuffs and streetfights. We see so much pent-up anger in people on a number of issues waiting to explode. The word ‘kolaveri’ said it all.
Remember the ‘Tower of Babel’ where people were shouting themselves hoarse in a diversity of tongues and nobody wanted to hear the other? We thought it was mythical, but no, it was real enough. All the chaos is back, it seems. As they say there is nothing new under the sun and history has a way of repeating itself. Things have to come full circle.
Keywords: Silence, noise pollution, noise tolerance
SOURCE::::: Prema Ramakrishnan in http://www.thehindu.com
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