These 35 Girls Share One Pair of Boxing Gloves, But They’re Sure Of Reaching the Olympics Someday…

In Chennai, 23-year-old Narmada J, ex-boxing champ at state-level, is training young girls for free along with her friends. Even without adequate boxing gear and facilities, they aim to box their way into the Olympics.

Every day after they are done with their classes Chithra, Mercy, Kalaivani, Gayathri and others make a beeline for a sandy ground located near the Police Boys Girls Club and the Housing Board tenements of Kannagi Nagar, one of Chennai’s suburban localities chosen by the state government’s slum clearance board to relocate the city’s poorest. This is where the youngsters spend a few hours working out followed by some sessions of boxing held under the watchful eye of their coach, J. Narmada, 23.

They don’t have access to even the most basic boxing gear like a punching bag or a proper rink. They have to share a single pair of gloves among 35 girls. And, the most nutritious diet they can afford is millet porridge with an occasional egg.

But such deprivations haven’t stopped them from performing well at divisional level boxing tournaments at Kannagi Nagar.

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Girls in select lower income neighbourhoods of Chennai are receiving training in boxing, something that has given them the confidence to stand up for themselves and dream big

Credit: Hema Vijay\WFS

In fact, today there are 70 other girls training hard to become professional boxers in at the Corporation Higher Secondary School in Ayanavaram and the Jayagoplal Garodia Government Girls Higher Secondary School at Choolaimedu.

“Chennai girls are the best. They have the guts to dream. In places like Manipur, where boxing is almost a part of regular schooling, they have good training facilities and boxing gears. But even though Chennai girls don’t have that, they have no doubts that they can punch their way to the Olympics,” remarks a proud Narmada. This young coach’s face lights up when she talks about “my girls”, and how much they have progressed in the last few months.

“With just four months of training, the girls at Kannagi Nagar have managed to bag two gold and two silver medals at the Divisional Level boxing tournament held in Kancheepuram district. They also won one gold medal and three silver medals at the Chennai Divisional tournaments. Imagine how far they can go with intensive training and the right equipment,” she points out.

Narmada perfectly understands the tough circumstances those training under her face on an everyday basis. Like her parents, those of her pupils, too, eke out a living as fishermen or daily wage labourers. But, being unaccustomed to an easy existence, they are eager to grab the few opportunities that come their way. They are extremely tough and spirited, qualities that give them a definite edge in a ruthless sport like boxing.

Today, Narmada is a heroine to these primary and secondary school girls.

boxing in Chennai

Coach, J. Narmada, 23, is a true heroine for the primary and secondary school girls she trains for free week-after week.

Credit: Hema Vijay\WFS

And why not, as she and her friends train them for free, week after week. The sessions take place after school hours, and sometimes, during school as well. “On my own, it might have been difficult to convince the schools to support the girls’ training. But the fact that I work with Magic Bus, a non-profit that works with schools to bring about behavioural changes in children through sports, has been of immense help,” remarks the committed sportsperson.

She has won bronze medals at the Nationals in 2007 and 2008, and was named the best boxer at the state level in 2008. She has also won the Gold at the state level in 2006, 2007, 2008 and 2009.

Though she didn’t make it to the international platform, Narmada has made up her mind to ensure that her girls do. To make her “mission” a success she has roped in her old classmates E. Sevvandhi, M. Bhuvaneshwari, M. Nila, and S. Durga to join hands with Magic Bus.

Narmada herself had gotten into boxing in 2006 when she was in Class 6, thanks to a Chennai Corporation initiative. “We didn’t even know what the sport was called, but we would go to tournaments and feel happy when we won a medal,” recalls her friend and fellow player Sevvandhi. It was around that time that the state government had introduced boxing along with judo, karate and other such combat sports for girls in corporation-run schools.

Of course, even back then, boxing was not new to Chennai slums; like carrom tournaments, men and boys in the lower income neighbourhoods, especially those in north Chennai, had taken to boxing, with local ‘area’ and ‘street’ tournaments holding sway. The craze for this extreme sport perhaps began in the 1970s when the Nehru Stadium in the area had hosted boxing legend Muhammad Ali.

So, how did Narmada’s parents react when she decided to take up boxing? “More than my parents, my relatives were afraid that I would injure myself. My parents were very supportive; though they rue that all my medals and certificates have not come useful as they haven’t got me a job,” she says. Narmada credits much of her own progress to her coach J. Loganathan, who she says has been motivating and guiding her all along.

After school, Narmada enrolled for a degree in physical education (B.Sc. Physical Education) and became an instructor with Magic Bus. As a social worker, her “salary is less, but satisfaction is boundless”. She says, “Frankly, to bring about behavioural change in children, I had to bring in behavioural changes in myself, as I am a role model to them,” she muses candidly. A remarkably talented woman, Narmada works as a gym trainer in the mornings to earn her bread and butter.

At the moment, Narmada’s main priority is to get a few boxing bags and gloves for the girls training with her.

Credit: Hema Vijay\WFS

As of now, her friends and she have pooled in some money to buy three pairs of boxing gloves that are shared between 100 girls! A pair of gloves costs Rs 2,000, while a boxing bag costs Rs 2,800. They are hopeful that someone would step in and sponsor the same for them.

What does boxing give these young women? “To some extent, the ability to protect themselves. But the crucial thing is the self esteem they develop as they play; it comes with moving to the next level and winning the cash awards at the various tournaments,” explains Narmada. They carry themselves with a lot of confidence, which is crucial for moving ahead in life. “My speed is not what it was but if my girls make it to the big leagues then I will be more delighted than if I would have made it myself,” says Narmada.

Even though it remains to seen whether they make their state and country proud in the future – although they are raring to make it big in the boxing arena – for the time being, the opportunity to play has given them the boost they needed to stand up for themselves and dream.

Written by Hema Vijay for Women’s Feature Service (WFS) and republished here in arrangement with WFS.
Source…..Hema Vijay in http://www.the betterindia.com
Natarajan

 

Behind The Success of Rajasthan’s Star Female Athlete Is a Woman: Her Mother-In-Law…!!!

Meet Sneha Jain, one of Rajasthan’s best female athletes – national and Asian record holder, winner of 149 gold medals in Masters tournaments, and the mother of two.

The track has been an integral part of Sneha Jain’s life for decades now. As one of Rajasthan’s best female athletes, she has worked hard to build a successful sporting career. From representing her state nationally in 100 metre sprint, long jump and triple jump competitions, to setting national and Asian track and field records, to winning 149 gold medals in Masters tournaments, this 40-something mother of two has done it all. But here’s an interesting fact – she became a sporting sensation after her marriage.

Unlike many Indian sportswomen for whom nuptials essentially mark the beginning of the end of their career, Jain has blazed her own trail of gold glory with the support of one woman – her mother-in-law.

Sneha Jain has represented Rajasthan nationally in 100 metre sprint, long jump and triple jump competitions

Sneha Jain has represented Rajasthan nationally in 100 metre sprint, long jump and triple jump competitions

Recently, when Jain couldn’t make it to Sri Lanka to participate in the International Masters Athletics meet to make a bid for achieving a landmark personal medal tally of 150 golds because an uncle suffered a massive cardiac arrest, it was a déjà vu moment for her. A decade ago, in 1996, she had missed the opportunity to become part of the national athletics squad as she had to rush back home from the national sports camp at Bengaluru after her mother, who was suffering from uterine cancer, passed away suddenly.

When this tragedy struck her young life, Jain had established herself as a foremost female sportsperson in her state and had, in fact, been a regular at the nationals since 1989. She was ready to distinguish herself in the big league but fate had something else in store for her.

Jain had already given up on education having dropped out of college after the first year. She had more pressing obligations at home, taking care of her mother and younger brother besides travelling to Mumbai on and off as her mother was being treated there. There was simply no time to go to class. Then she lost her mother and her sporting career also came to a near standstill. Between 1996 and 2000, she wasn’t able to do anything concrete to further her dream of playing for the country.

It almost seemed like the end of her career – and then she got married.

“My elder sister, Lata, decided that I should get married so that I can move on from the loss of my mother and start life afresh. It did turn out to be a wise thing to do because it was my mother-in-law who motivated me to revive my career. Unlike most mothers-in-law, mine offered to lend me a helping hand in the household chores if I agreed to return to the track! Could I ask for more,” shares Jain, who began practicing regularly once again and even managed to get into the nationals in the very next year –and in the subsequent years thereafter.

“However, I didn’t win any medals because my body needed some more time to return to form,” she elaborates. Of course, by the time she regained full fitness she had turned 35 and became ineligible for professional sporting events.

As one of Rajasthan’s foremost female athletes she has worked hard to build a successful sporting career.

As one of Rajasthan’s foremost female athletes she has worked hard to build a successful sporting career.

“I hadn’t heard about the Masters competitions back then. I was quite disappointed that in my second stint I was unable to hit my earlier performance levels,” she says. It was in 2007 that she came to know about the Masters tournament and that gave her fillip to go on. “I took part in my first Masters National Games, which was held in Jaipur, where I created a national record in long jump,” she says, adding that this record remains unbeaten.

Back in form and full of confidence, Jain restarted her hunt for medals. During the 15 years of marriage, she has won 149 gold medals and holds a national and an Asian record in her name. Last year, in Vidisha, Madhya Pradesh, during the 37th Masters National Games, she was adjudged the best athlete after she won five golds – in 100 metres, long jump, triple jump, 4×100 metres and 4×400 metres relays.

In many Indian families, it’s not all that easy for daughters-in-law to continue pursuing their passions – especially if they are related to sports. Yet, Jain is conscious of the fact that she has been fortunate because the elders in her marital home not only supported her career but also pushed her to become the best and win laurels.

“My husband accompanied me when I participated in my first Nationals post marriage in Hyderabad. Once my daughter was born, in 2002, I took her along with me everywhere,” she says, adding, “I’m out of town for nearly three to four months in a year participating in some competition or the other but the family has never complained.”

In fact, as Jain had started running by the time she turned five she has inspired her two children – daughter Aarchie and son, Vansh – to follow in her footsteps and get an early start.

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Whereas Vansh, 10, is doing well on the track in school, Aarchie, who is in Class 9, has already been part of two under-14 national events held in Ranchi, Jharkhand, and Hardwar, Uttarakhand, respectively. “She’s been practicing with me for the last two years. I’m her coach. I want her to continue my legacy. She participated in the 100 metres sprint and 100 metres hurdles competitions,” says the proud mother. Aarchie joins her mother at the Barkatullah Stadium, two kilometres from their home, every evening at four to put in a three-hour practice session. By the time Jain is back after this gruelling routine, her mother-in-law has already done the preparations for dinner so she has “to just cook”.

Apart from her two children, no one in the family is into sports. Her sisters-in-law’s children are studying to be chartered accountants or company secretaries. Her husband is into transport business and her brothers have their own businesses as well. Jain got a job in the Post and Telegraph Department in 1993, when she was in the first year of graduation, under the sports quota and has been representing the Department ever since.

She’s currently posted at Jodhpur’s head post office located on Station Road where she shows up in tracksuit because she has to head to the stadium directly after office.

“As a sportsperson who has won medals, I get two hours off in duty. My office hours are from 10 am to 4 pm,” she informs. Apart from that Jain is on the executive body of the Masters Athletics Federation of India and is involved in organising national events. Today, she is gearing up to fulfil a long cherished dream. in May, Jain will head to Singapore to participate in the Asian Masters championship in the hope that she will finally be able to achieve the 150 medal mark.

Source….Written by Renu R. for Women’s Feature Service (WFS) and republished here in arrangement with WFS.

Tanaya Singh  in http://www.the betterindia.com

Natarajan

” How I Lost 40 Kilos in One Year Without Going to the Gym…” Story of Shekhar Vijayan

A year ago I weighed 125 kilos and broke the commode! Today, I’m 40 kg lighter and feel on top of the world when I fit into my 16-year-old nephew’s clothes. If I can do it, you can too. Here’s how.

I am an international entertainer by profession and I host events across all genres in India and overseas. A year back I weighed 125 kilos and had hit rock bottom – physically and mentally.

I was seriously overweight and at risk for many diseases.

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I could never find clothes my size – my waist was 46 inches and the only shirts and trousers that could fit me were the stretchable variety.

I was working as a transitions manager in a leading multinational a couple of years ago and the only exercise I ever had was typing on my laptop and making those killer presentations. Until that commode happened. I was at my in-laws place in Chennai and the commode that I was sitting on broke (not entirely because of me…the fixture was loose). It became a joke in the family and that’s when I realised I wanted to lose weight.

I didn’t join a gym (although I am guilty of joining on the 1st of January in previous years and then forgetting all about it because of sheer laziness and lack of effort).

I decided I would build stamina so I started walking 2 kms everyday, and then graduated to running 6 kms with my dog leading the way.

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I run 15 kms every day now, be it morning or night, and I don’t need any sort of motivation (running partner or music) – I just love the sound of my shoes hitting the road or stairs and the sweat trickling down my body. I also couple the running with doing freehand exercises…I love the challenge of doing a plank. Try it…it does wonders for your body.

I watch what I eat because I strongly feel your body is made in the kitchen. I avoid everything white (salt, sugar, milk, idli, dosa, mayonnaise sauce, maida). I don’t know the taste of rice…I have not tasted it for the last one year. I don’t consume aerated drinks and packaged juices – I used to have two cans of diet coke earlier on a daily basis. I avoid fried foods and also packaged foods like aloo bhujiya, namkeen, etc. Earlier, my weekends were all about KFC buckets and gaming – I don’t eat junk food now.

Instead, I have lots of greens and fruits. I have replaced tea with green tea. I used to gorge on chicken and red meat – now I have replaced that with grilled chicken and fish. What also worked for me was that I am a teetotaller.

These days, I eat my breakfast like an Indian king, lunch like a middle class man and dinner like a pauper (which is always liquid).

I used to weigh 125 kilos and my waist was 46 inches. I shed 40 kilos in a year and my waist size is 32 now. I fit into clothes that used to fit me 15 years ago.

I wear my 16-year-old nephew’s T-shirts and jeans and they fit me like a dream – this gives me such a high!

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Running worked for me because it builds your core body and I watch what I eat like a hawk. The world is very judgemental and I want to tell everyone who is fighting the battle of the bulge…make your body your best friend. It listens to you…trust your body and yourself. You are capable of so much more than you think.

The outcome is I feel much lighter, and have a fit, strong and supple body. I get irritated if I have to use the elevator to get anywhere. I love using the stairs, which is also a metaphor for losing weight the hard way. I have not fallen sick in the last one year and I strongly believe being stubborn really helps.

Here are 10 ways you too can lose 40 kilos in a year:

1) Take the stairs. Never ever use short cuts. I hop, skip and jump to the stairs even if I have to reach the 18th floor.

2) Exercise control over what you are eating. I do go to malls and food courts – smell the food that was the biggest stress reliever for me a year back – and come back challenged, knowing that my mind is strong enough to handle this.

3) Sweat is good. That moment when I have sweat trickling down my body after running 15kms, be it morning or night, is the biggest high I get.

4) Avoid everything white – white bread, maida, milk, salt, rice, and sugar. Replace with steamed, grilled green vegetables and fish with olive oil. Avoid aerated, packaged drinks and junk food. Avoid everything that comes out of a packet.

5) I have increased the quality of the food that goes into my body and reduced the quantity, ensuring I have food every two hours.

6) Invest in your health – treat your body like it’s your best friend, respect it, love it, adore it. I always wanted to see how I would look in a life size mirror minus the lard around my stomach. The weighing machine, from being my enemy, became my friend in arms.

7) Be inspired – inspiration comes from within. I am not inspired by anyone and I am only inspired by myself. I never ever gave up on myself, to the point of being stubborn and determined to turn things around come what may. I hate the word ‘luck’. Losing weight and staying fit cannot be achieved by just being lucky. It’s about having complete faith and trust in yourself more than anyone else and doing everything with determination, discipline and loads of passion.

8) I am a teetotaller and avoid anything addictive. I have replaced my tea and coffee with green tea.

9) Use your ego as a positive trait to stay fit. The high you get when you get into clothes that are really old (I now fit into clothes that used to fit me 15 years ago) makes it worthwhile to keep running all your life.

10) Losing 40 kilos in a year from 46 inches on the waist to 80 kilos and 32 inches is possible. It’s all about the fight between the mind and the body and you have to get your mind to win.

Source….Shekar Vijayan in http://www.the betterindia.com

Natarajan

படித்து ரசித்தது …”ஆசிரியர் , மாணவர் …ஒரு உதாரணம் …”!

‘பெரியோர்கள் வாழ்விலே’ நூலிலிருந்து: கல்வி வள்ளல் அழகப்ப செட்டியார், ஒருமுறை கேரளாவுக்கு செல்லும் போது, வழியில், கோவையில், சர்.ஆர்.கே. சண்முகம் செட்டியார் இல்லத்தில் தங்கினார். அப்போது, தன் தமிழ் ஆசிரியரான பலராம ஐயர், அவ்வூரில் வாழ்ந்து வரும் தகவலை அறிந்தார்.
உடனே, ஆசிரியரை சந்திக்க விரும்பி, கைப்பட கடிதம் எழுதி, தன் ஊழியரிடம் கொடுத்து, அவரை அழைத்து வரச் சொல்லி, தன் காரை அவர் இல்லத்திற்கு அனுப்பி வைத்தார்.
கடிதத்தை வாங்கி படித்த ஆசிரியர், உடனே பதில் கடிதம் தந்தார். அதில், தன் மாணவன் இன்று நல்ல நிலையில் இருப்பதற்கு தன் மகிழ்ச்சியையும், வாழ்த்தையும் தெரிவித்து, மூன்று காரணங்களால், அவரை சந்திக்க வருவது, சாத்தியமில்லை என்று குறிப்பிட்டிருந்தார். அது, ‘முதலாவதாக, நான் வயோதிகன்; நீ இளைஞன். இரண்டாவதாக, நான் ஆசிரியன்; நீ மாணவன். மூன்றாவதாக, நான் வறியவன்; நீ செல்வந்தன். எனவே, நான் வந்து உன்னை பார்ப்பது பெருமையல்ல…’ என்ற, பொருள்பட ஆசிரியரின் கடிதம் இருந்தது.
அதைப் பார்த்ததும், பதறி, ஆசிரியரை பார்க்க, தானே அவர் இல்லத்திற்கு புறப்பட்டார் அழகப்ப செட்டியார்.
பூ மற்றும் பழங்கள் வாங்கி சென்ற அழகப்பர், கையில் தயாராக வைத்திருந்த மாலையை ஆசிரியருக்கு அணிவித்து வணங்கி, ‘இங்கிதம் அறியாமல், தங்களை அழைத்து வருமாறு கூறி விட்டேன்…’ என்று வருத்தம் தெரிவித்தார். ஆசிரியரும் மனம் நெகிழ்ந்து, தன் மாணவரோடு மனம் விட்டு அளவளாவினார்.
அழகப்பர் விடை பெறும்போது, ஒரு வெள்ளி தட்டில், 100 ரூபாய் கட்டுகளை வைத்து, அதை ஏற்று கொள்ளுமாறு ஆசிரியர் முன் சமர்ப்பித்தார்.
ஆசிரியரோ, புன்சிரிப்பை உதிர்த்து, ‘உன் அன்புக்கு மிக்க மகிழ்ச்சி; ஆனால், இந்த பணத்தால், பலனடையும் வயதை தாண்டி விட்டேன். எனவே, என்னை வற்புறுத்தாமல் நீயே இதை எடுத்துக் கொள்…’ என்றார்.
ஆசிரியருக்கு அவரும், மாணவருக்கு இவரும் உதாரணம்!

Source…….www.dinamalar.com

Natarajan

Message for the Day….” Children should be provided with the Right Values…”

Whenever the children go astray, wittingly or unwittingly, parents must quickly correct their faults and bring them to the righteous path. The obligations of parents do not end with providing food, schooling and knowledge of worldly matters. The children should also be provided with right values. They should not be made to think that the acquisition of wealth is the be-all and end-all of life. Wealth will not accompany anyone when they leave the world. Wealth is necessary only for meeting your essential needs. Too much wealth is an embarrassment like an oversized shoe. Too little of it is likely to be painful, like a tight fitting shoe. So, it is desirable to have only that amount of wealth that is adequate for your basic needs. It is deplorable that today, in the mad pursuit of money, people are forgetting all human qualities.

Sathya Sai Baba

Joke of the Day… ” What did you teach ? ” !!!!

I was sitting in the waiting room for my first appointment with a new dentist. I noticed his DDS diploma on the wall, which bore his full name.

 

Suddenly, I remembered a tall, handsome, dark-haired boy with the same name had been in my high school class, some 30-odd years ago.

Could he be the same guy that I had a secret crush on way back then? Upon seeing him, however, I quickly discarded any such thought. This balding, gray-haired man was way too old to have been my classmate.

After he examined my teeth, I asked him if he had attended Northmont high school.

“Yes. Yes, I did. I’m a thunderbolt,” he said gleaming with pride.

“When did you graduate?” I asked.

He answered, “in 1975. Why do you ask?”

“You were in my class!”, I exclaimed.

He looked at me closely, then, the ugly, old, bald, wrinkle-faced, fat, gray-haired, decrepit fool asked, “What did you teach?”!!!!

 

Source…….www.ba-bamail.com

Natarajan

Image of the Day…” An Iconic Building view with the Moon behind it….”

Moon and Empire State Building

A distant view of an iconic building, with the moon behind it.

Photo taken March 23, 2016 by Jennifer Khordi.

Photo taken March 23, 2016 by Jennifer Khordi.

Jennifer Khordi posted this photo at EarthSky Facebook this week. It’s the full moon, seen behind the Empire State Building in New York City. Jennifer caught a telephoto view of this building and moon, from New Jersey. She wrote on March 23, 2016:

The full Worm Moon as it passed behind the Empire State Building tonight, from New Jersey, at 560mm.

Source…..www.earthsky.org

Natarajan

Message for the Day…” Is it not our duty to pay tax of Gratitude to God …? “

Sathya Sai Baba

Can any high-powered bulb equal the matchless brilliance of the Sun? Can any pump in the world supply as much water as we get from a heavy downpour? Can any fan in the world give as much coolness as given by the Wind-God? The gifts of God are abundant, bountiful and beyond compare. We pay tax for many facilities we enjoy, like water-tax to the corporation, tax to the electricity department for providing power, etc. But what taxes are we paying to the great Lord who provides us with endless power, light and wind? When we pay tax to the different departments for services provided, is it not our duty to pay the tax of gratitude to God? We do not show any gratitude to God who has gifted us the five elements, which never get depleted. In fact, our foremost duty should be to express our gratitude to God, who gives us so much in endless abundance.

 

படித்து ரசித்தது …”இதுதான் அத்வைதம் …” !!!

> ஒரு இளம் ஸன்யாஸி காஞ்சிபுரம் வந்து  பெரியவாளை தரிசனம் பண்ணினார்.
> “என்ன பண்ணிண்டிருக்கே?”
> “அதிகநாள் எந்த இடத்லையும் தங்கறதில்லே பெரியவா …..இப்படி ஊர் ஊராப் போயிண்டிருக்கேன். பிக்ஷையா எது கிடைக்கறதோ சாப்பிட்டு, முடிஞ்ச அளவு நிறைய ஜபம் பண்றேன். சில இடங்கள்ள எதாவுது பேச சொன்னா எனக்கு தெரிஞ்ச பகவத் விஷயங்களை சொல்லுவேன். அவ்ளோதான்”
> நல்லது. அத்வைத ப்ரசாரம் பண்ணேன்!
> ஆனா எனக்கு அத்வைதம் பத்தி என்ன தெரியும் பெரியவா?” குரலில் தாபம்.
> “அது ஒண்ணும் பெரிய விஷயமில்லே! நான் ஒரு கதை சொல்றேன். அதை நீ போற கிராமத்துலல்லாம் சொல்லு!”-
> “பெரியவா சொல்றபடி செய்யறேன்..”
> “ஒரு ஊர்ல ராமஸாமி ராமஸாமின்னு ஒருத்தன் வேலை வெட்டி எதுவுமில்லே. ஆளைப் பாத்தா நன்னா ஆஜானுபாஹுவா ஸாண்டோ மாதிரி இருப்பானா அதுனால ஆத்துல எல்லாரும் அவனை  “ஏண்டா, இப்டி தீவட்டி தடியனாட்டம் ஒக்காந்து நன்னா சாப்பிடறியே? எதாவது வேலை பாத்து பொழைக்க வேணாமான்னு திட்ட ஆரம்பிச்சா. அவனுக்கு ரொம்ப ரோஷம் வந்து எங்கயாவுது வேலை கிடைக்குமான்னு தேடிண்டு இருந்தான்.
> அந்த ஊர்ல ஒரு ஸர்க்கஸ் கம்பெனி  வந்து டேரா போட்டுது.  இவன் அந்த ஸர்க்கஸ் மானேஜர்கிட்ட போனான்.
> “ஸார் ஸார் எனக்கு ஒரு வேலை போட்டுக் குடுங்கோ” ன்னு கெஞ்சினான்.
> அந்த நேரம் ஸர்க்கஸ்ல ஒரு ஆதிவாஸி ஒர்த்தன் வித்தை காமிச்சுண்டு இருந்தான். என்ன வித்தைன்னா, அவன் ஆங்கிலம் பேசுவான்! ஆதிவாஸி ஆங்கிலம் பேசறான்னுட்டு அதுக்குன்னே கூட்டம் வரும். அவன் கொஞ்சநாள் முன்னால செத்துப் போய்ட்டான். அதுனால ஸர்க்கஸ் ரொம்ப டல்லா இருந்துது. ராமஸாமி அந்த ஆதிவாஸி மாதிரி ஆஜானுபாஹுவா, நல்ல தாட்டியா இருந்தானா அதுனால, அந்த ஆதிவாஸியாட்டம் நடிக்கற வேலை கிடைத்தது. பழையபடி கூட்டம் வர ஆரம்பிச்சுது.
> சர்க்கஸ் மானேஜர் ஒருநாள் ராமஸாமிகிட்டே “ஏம்பா…இப்படி எத்தனை நாள் ஆதிவாஸியா ஆங்கிலம் மட்டும் பேசி நடிப்பே? ஸர்க்கஸ்ல மீதி வித்தை எல்லாம் இருக்கே! கயிறு மேல பாலன்ஸ் பண்ணி நடக்கறது மாதிரி இதெல்லாமும் கத்துக்கோன்னார். கத்துண்டான். அன்னிக்கி ஆதிவாஸி மாதிரி ட்ரெஸ் பண்ணிண்டு மொத மொத, ஜனங்கள் பாக்கறச்சே, கயறு மேல பெரிய குச்சியை பாலன்ஸ் பண்ணிண்டு இவன் நடந்துண்டு இருக்கான்…….லேஸா கீழ பாத்தா ஒரு புலி !
> “கரணம் தப்பினா மரணம்”ன்னு யாரோ மைக்குல பேசி இவனை உத்ஸாகப் படுத்திண்டு இருக்கா! கரணம் தப்பிடுமோ? மரணந்தானோ? புலியைப் பாத்தானோ இல்லியோ, இவனோட கான்சன்ட்ரேஷன் போயிடுத்து. காலெல்லாம் நடுங்க ஆரம்பிச்சுது. “தீவட்டி தடியனாவே இருந்திருக்கலாமோ! கொஞ்சம் பாலன்ஸ் போச்சுன்னா புலியோட வாய்க்குள்ளன்னா போவோம்!” ன்னு பயம் வந்துதோ இல்லியோ, அடுத்த க்ஷணம் “தொபுகடீர்”ன்னு பாலன்ஸ் தவறி நேரா புலி மேலேயே போய் விழுந்தான்! அவ்ளோவ் கிட்ட புலியை பாத்ததும் ஸப்தநாடியும் ஒடுங்கிப் போய்டுத்து!
> அந்தப் புலி மெதுவா இவன் கிட்ட வந்து “டேய், ராமஸாமி! பயப்படாதேடா, நான் தான் க்ருஷ்ணஸாமி! ஒனக்கு ஆதிவாஸி வேஷம் குடுத்தா மாதிரி, எனக்கு புலி வேஷம் குடுத்திருக்கா……” ன்னு புலிஸாமி பேசினதும், ராமஸாமியோட பயம் போய்டுத்து!
> இதான் அத்வைதம்! எல்லாத்துக்குள்ளயும் அந்தர்யாமியா இருக்கற ஆத்மஸ்வரூபம் ஒண்ணுதான்! வெளில வேற வேற ரூபம் தாங்கிண்டு இருக்கு. அவ்ளோவ்தான்!
> ‘ஸ ஏக: ன்னு தெரிஞ்சுண்டுட்டா…ஶாந்திதா ன்! இதான் அத்வைதம். இந்த கதையை சொல்லு போறும்……” என்று கூறி ஆஸிர்வதித்தார்.
> விளையாட்டாக,கதை மாதிரி சொல்லி  ஒரு  பெரிய அத்வைத சித்தாந்தம் சொல்ல  மஹா பெரியவாளாலே சுலபமா முடியும்…

Source…input from a friend of mine

Natarajan

 

 

Meet delivery “boy” Sreekumari.S….@ Thiruvananthapuram …

She’s one of the first women to ride into the male-dominated world of e-commerce delivery agents.
T E Narasimhan meets Sreekumari S.

Lady delivery boy

Sreekumari S, a 42-year-old mother of two, reaches her office at Thiruvananthapuram at 8 every morning. After sorting the packets that are waiting for her, she loads the lot into a large backpack, which she then hoists on her shoulders and heads to her Honda Activa scooter, determined to hit the road.

The red bindi on her forehead and the vermilion in the parting of her hair peek out of the helmet firmly placed on her head.

Sreekumari is ready for the day.

A resident of Chempazhanthy, a suburb of Thiruvananthapuram, Sreekumari is one of the first women to ride into the male-dominated world of e-commerce delivery agents — or ‘delivery associates’ as they are called at Amazon.

Until recently, she contributed to her family income by working as a tailor from home. In January, her sister who works at the residence of Divya Syam, Amazon’s service partner in the region, told her that the e-commerce company was looking to employ, for the first time in India, women as delivery agents.

To qualify for the job, all she needed was good communication skills, basic knowledge of English and a scooter.

Sreekumari jumped at the opportunity.

One of her two sons worked as a delivery associate at Amazon. He suggested that she take up the job. She could be another member from the family — which also includes her husband, who is a mechanic, and her parents — to join the sizeable last-mile logistics network of one of the world’s largest e-commerce companies.

She says it did not scare her that she had never stepped out of home to do a job until now. After a two-day training, which included traffic rules, personal security and operating mobile applications, she says she was ready.

She now delivers around 40 packages a day riding on her two-wheeler within a 3-km radius of her office. Many of the deliveries are to Technopark, the city’s information technology hub.

For every package delivered, the service partner earns a fee of Rs 30. Sreekumari and the others are not willing to reveal how much they earn in a month, but say it is more than what they have ever made.

Encouraged by her success, two women known to her have also joined the company as delivery associates. There are currently seven women, including Sreekumari, who work as delivery associates. Seeing them, she says, more women have started enquiring about the job and what it entails.

One of the questions that pop up frequently is if it is safe. The women delivery agents say they have not encountered any problem so far. In fact, they say people go out of their way to be helpful when they see a woman delivering the package.

There are, however, plans to offer self-defence classes to women delivery associates and launch a helpline for them.

The Kerala initiative is Amazon’s first-of its-kind delivery station. Recently, another one opened in Chennai. From management to product delivery, women run the show.

Syam worked in a company at Technopark, while her husband and brother-in-law managed the delivery station that had 25 delivery boys. During her free time, she helped out at the station. She says she would often wonder why there weren’t any women delivery agents. So, when she learnt that Amazon was planning to launch all-women delivery stations, she immediately pitched for one.

Samuel Thomas, director (transportation), Amazon India, says the company decided to launch the pilot projects in Thiruvananthapuram and Chennai based on the interest women here showed in joining the workforce.

Sreekumari, meanwhile, wraps up the deliveries by 3 pm and then heads home, back to her sewing machine.

 

Source……www.rediff.com

Natarajan