” Watch This Bangalore Kid Control Traffic Like a Pro!…”

Remember that feeling when you were stuck in traffic for about 20 minutes – chaos all around, cars honking for no obvious reason, and the frustration level crossing all limits? And then, suddenly, everything seems to have been organised. Lines are formed, the vehicles that should be moving are moving, and those who should be waiting are patient. “How did that happen?” you wonder. And looking out of the window, you usually find someone signalling instructions – either a traffic cop, or someone else who just decided to clear things up without any help.

But imagine looking out to find that the person, who is suddenly making the traffic flow so smoothly, is actually a kid. Yes! A kid, manning the traffic signal like a pro.

Watch it happening in this video, when a kid decided to take up the role of a traffic controller at the Jayanagar South End junction in Bangalore.

While many seem to be ignoring him in the beginning, he has an attitude that definitely cannot be ignored for long.

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

Natarajan

This Engineer from a Village in Karnataka Won the Wildlife Photographer of the Year Award in London

Have a hobby that you love? Pursue it with passion and hard work. That is exactly what Raviprakash, an engineer from a small village in Karnataka, did. And his efforts were recognized in London, where he won a very prestigious award for wildlife photography. Here is what he has to say to other aspiring photographers.

“It is a dream come true,” says Raviprakash SS — last year’s winner of the Wildlife Photographer of the Year award in the ‘Amphibians and Reptiles’ category. “I won the category award for the picture titled Divine Snake – a shot of a green vine snake clicked from behind it, focussing only on the eye. That is the most memorable picture I have taken till now. It has always been one of my favourites,” he adds.

Born in Hosahalli village, located in the Malnad region of Karnataka, Raviprakash grew up amidst the beauty of the Western Ghats.\

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Raviprakash SS

He was surrounded by rich biodiversity and a picturesque environment. It was there that he first developed his love for exploring nature and wildlife.

Photography

Raviprakash is interested in Macro Photography

“I was very interested in photography since childhood. During my high school days my father bought me a point and shoot camera, with which I used to capture all family functions or outings.”

Building upon this hobby later in life, Raviprakash began exploring macro photography techniques.

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Divine Snake

The macro mode interested me. I started by capturing flowers, butterflies, dew drops, etc. My interest went on developing. Based on the suggestions of my friends and mentors, I bought a DSLR camera about seven years ago,” he recounts. Macro photography is extreme close up photography of small objects; it captures them in such a way that the size of the subjects appears larger than the life size in the photograph.

On October 21, 2014, at the Natural History Museum in London, 37-year-old Raviprakash’s talent was recognized and he received the Wildlife Photographer of the Year award.

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The prestigious award

Considered to be one of the most prestigious honours for wildlife photography, this award ceremony, which dates back to 1965, is organized every year by the Natural History Museum. The photographs are showcased at an exhibition in the Museum and appear on their website. They are also published in BBC Wildlife Magazine and other leading publications. Last year was the 50th year of the award, and the exhibition attracted nearly 1.5 lakh visitors.

A popular choice award was also introduced and Raviprakash won the second prize, based on worldwide voting.

The Museum calls for entries every year and participants can enter up to 24 photos. Last year, the competition received about 43,000 entries from 96 countries. The panel of judges includes people from different fields related to photography and the environment. There are 14 categories, with four finalists in each. Winners receive a cash prize of £ 1,250, and the trip to London is also sponsored.

Raviprakash is a software engineer by profession. Photography for him was always a weekend hobby.

Photography

Macro photography is very beautiful and colourful but very few people are exploring it well.

“The support given by my family and friends encouraged me to take it up more passionately. I did some reading and watched online videos. I had many mentors too, some of whom are guiding me even now. Once in a while, I used to visit my hometown, just to spend my days shooting. And after the award I started taking it a lot more seriously.”

Initially, after taking many pictures for about three years, Raviprakash felt that he was only documenting things — like seeing a butterfly and capturing its image. This became somewhat boring for the artist in him. Then, one of his mentors, Ganesh H. Shankar, formed a website called Creative Nature Photography.

The aim was to capture things in a unique and artistic manner, rather than just documenting them.]

Photography

“It has become a very interesting journey from then on. I am not really interested in capturing all the details of the subject. I am more interested in capturing in an artistic way,” says an enthusiastic Raviprakash. Currently posted in Bangalore, he plans to take up wildlife photography full time in the future.

Speaking about the equipment he uses, Raviprakash says, “I feel a lot of photographers these days think that only a high end camera can result in good pictures. But my award winning pictures are from an old Nikon D5000 camera.”

He also has some useful tips for amateur photographers who want to take up wildlife photography as a career.

SS5

1. Understand your equipment well because you don’t need expensive cameras. I am not against someone buying an advanced camera that will definitely help in taking better pictures. But ultimately it’s the person behind the camera who matters the most.

2. Some people think that wildlife photography is all about big cats and elephants. But you don’t need to visit wildlife sanctuaries to become a good photographer. Macro photography is very beautiful and colourful but very few people are exploring it well.

3. Understand your location and subject(s). Pay attention to factors like light, angles and moods.

4. Learn to click, click to learn — click as many pictures as possible for practical knowledge.

5. Background is as important as subject. Choose it carefully.

6. Share your pictures on various forums that are frequented by good photographers and be open to criticism.

7. Shoot in aperture/shutter priority/manual modes. Control your output rather than leaving everything to the camera to decide.

8. Don’t get bogged down by technical terms and details.

9. A two-hour field trip along with good photographers helps you gain more knowledge than two days of indoor workshops or online learning.

“Hard work always gives the right dividends. I hail from a small village. That’s where my journey started. I want to highlight that the result may not be visible overnight but if someone is interested in something they should pursue it passionately and should be open to criticism and learning,” concludes Raviprakash.

Source….Tanaya Singh in http://www.the betterindia .com\

Natarajan

 

” : I Lost Everything in the #ChennaiFloods but It Still Left Me with Gratitude…”

Our home was destroyed. We were stranded. But wave upon wave of humanity kept our spirits high and our belief in the Indian people afloat.

It was Tuesday morning. I woke up at 6 am, made breakfast and bid goodbye to my husband who left for office at 7:15 am. I was still trying to get my house back in order since the first wave of floods had hit us the week before. The cleaning and washing seemed to be never ending. I started the washing machine and lay down next to my 5-year-old daughter, checking to see if there was anything about the incessant rains in the news. There was nothing – the media seemed to be obsessed with how Aamir Khan had the right to be afraid of living in India, and the twists in the Sheena Bora case.

The rain was still at its peak. At 8 am, I looked outside. The water level had reached the main gate. I knew my maid wouldn’t come now, so I thought I’d clean the dishes first. I had barely done two dishes when I felt the urge to look out again.

The water had touched the porch now.

Chennai

I left the dishes and started putting our clothes in a travel bag. Thankfully, I had the keys to an empty second floor flat. I went upstairs and left our clothes there, then packed the induction cook top, electric kettle, a few utensils, my laptop, a couple of rice and daal packets, and biscuits. After carrying this bag upstairs, I thought I’d wake up my baby and give her breakfast. But by the time I came back to the ground floor, water had started entering the verandah. I woke up my kid, took six bottles of water and her brush and toothpaste, and rushed her to the second floor.

After settling her there, I came back and tried to put as many of our belongings as I could on the beds and on the top shelves of the cupboards. By this time the water was about to enter the house. I thought I’d drag a mattress and a few blankets upstairs but suddenly the power went off. I got worried that my daughter would get scared in the dark, so I just picked up three blankets and rushed to the second floor. Around this time my husband called and said he was leaving office to come back home. His office is an hour away so I was praying that he would reach us safely.

I kept trying to call for help. Taxi services were busy. Rescue teams assured me that they would send help. But none was forthcoming as yet.

Chennai

My daughter was hungry by now. I had raw food but no resources to cook it. I kept standing near the window, waiting for my husband. Suddenly, I saw four young men going through the water on the other side of the road. I thought they were the rescue people sent for me. I called out for help. At first they did not hear me but when they passed by a second time they did. I asked if they were from the rescue team.

“We are not a rescue team ma’am but we will help. Tell us what you want,” said one of them.

These were four unknown boys. I was not sure if I was doing the right thing but I called them in. My husband was stuck in a water wave in the lane next to our house. His phone was not reachable now.

The boys came in. I asked if they could get the gas stove and cylinder to the second floor. Without wasting a second, they started helping me.

Chennai

I gathered more food while they were trying to take the stove upstairs. They also helped me get the drinking water can to the second floor.

After ensuring that my daughter and I were alright, they left, smiling and giggling.

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The four boys who helped without expecting anything in return – Sagar, Suresh, Jagan and Gopal

The water was rising so fast, that by this time it had reached knee level inside my house. Thankfully, my husband reached home by 2 pm and started rescuing as many of our belongings as he could. Things like the fridge, washing machine, sofa and bed had started floating.

By 5:30 pm, it was so dark that it was impossible to see anything inside the house. We went back up to the second floor, waiting for the rain to stop. But it kept raining…

Next morning.

Chennai

The entire ground floor was under water!

A few families from the ground floor flats had shifted to their neighbours’ homes on the first floor. But this morning they just wanted to get out of there. It was only a matter of a few hours before the water would reach this floor too.

We finally saw a boat at the entrance of our area at 9 am. The boat rescued just one family and went away. People kept whistling, clapping and calling out for help. Later on, I came to know that it was the family of the municipality head of our area. No helplines were working. The next boat came at 1 pm. It did not stop anywhere else but only at a house next to our flats. The family was rescued. We pleaded with the boatman to come back, and he said he would, but never did!

I could see from our terrace that a couple on the terrace behind ours was desperate to leave. I asked them if they were alright and they said they had climbed up to the first floor without any food or water. We started sharing food with them. But water was too limited!

By 5:30 pm it was almost dark and we lost hope of getting any help now. Several helicopters had flown by during the day but food and water had not yet been distributed.

Next morning.

Chennai

The water level was going down. We could see the boundary walls of the ground floor houses now. Our neighbours decided to walk through the water once it came down to hip level. We were in a dilemma whether to do the same but finally decided to go ahead. We were about to leave when a small boat carrying two elderly ladies passed us from the backyard. We called out for help. When we told them that we have a kid with us, they allowed us to get in.

The boat left us till the main road where an ambulance was ready to take people to a government school. All this was being done by an organization called TMMK.

When we asked them where we should go, one of them offered us his own home.

Chennai

We kept looking for hotels and finally got a room in one. Once our family was safe, my husband went back to our area to help others.

In the meantime, my friends were using social media to the fullest extent possible to help me. Some had tagged as many as they could on Twitter. Others had posted my address on Facebook. One friend had even arranged for us to join her relative in his hotel room.

There were friends who kept calling helpline numbers and sending me the same too. My employers ordered food for us, called up the disaster management team, and managed to speak to a boat guy to come rescue us.

All this time, I don’t know why, but I was pretty relaxed. We were happy about all the positive things that were happening with us amongst all the chaos.

Here are 6 lessons I learnt:

Chennai

1. The water level in our area rose so suddenly, not due to rain, but because the canal water had to be opened by the government. We don’t know why this decision was made but perhaps we could have been alerted.

2. When the lady from the balcony opposite ours came out and saw me on the second floor, she exclaimed: “Thank God, you are safe.” She is Tamilian and I am North Indian (as she knows). Yes, Tamilians and North Indians feel happy when they see each other safe!

3. The four young boys who helped me did not know my name, status or religion. Yes, young boys are good people too. And there are still people who will help without expecting anything in return.

4. My husband risked his life to reach us and kept struggling till the end to save our belongings. Yes, though men don’t show their emotions, they can go to any extent to save their families.

5. I have always understood the plight of farmers and tried to help them. But this time, when my house was sinking with all the little things inside it that my husband and I had put together through our efforts in the past seven years, I could feel the pain that a farmer goes through every year his crop is destroyed.

6. When government boats decided to rescue only important people, a common man’s organization came forward to help the needy. Do you know what TMMK stands for? Tamil Nadu Muslim Munnetra Kazagham. They did not ask if we were Hindus or Muslims or Christians. So this whole debate about India being intolerant is just a news and social media creation. During the three days, whenever I switched on my phone to check for important messages, all I saw was that my Hindu, Muslim and Christian friends were equally concerned about me. I did not see any intolerance anywhere.

When actors say they don’t feel safe in our country… I just pity their thinking.

 

Jai Hind!

Source….” My Story ” of a Chennai Resident as reported by  Manabi Katoch in http://www.the betterindia.com

Natarajan

” A Mall Santa Goes The Extra Mile For A Boy With Autism….”

After Erin Deely learned of her three-year-old son’s autism diagnosis, she knew that there would be a number of “normal” things that he’d never be able to experience — and right near the top of the list was meeting Santa. Because of the noise, lights, and people, it simply would probably be too much for him to handle, and it broke her heart to know Brayden wouldn’t be able to experience this childhood rite of passage.

Until she heard about the Caring Santa program, that is. This annual program — brought to families byAutism Speaks — brings special Santas to malls around the country each year who know how to make children with autism comfortable and happy. Jumping at the chance, Erin brought Brayden to the event in Charlotte, North Carolina, and captured a moment that she’ll never forget.

“I thought we would never get those holiday pictures with him because it’s something he can’t handle — the noise and the pressure. He gets anxious if you ask him to smile. It’s all too much for him,” said Erin.

"I thought we would never get those holiday pictures with him because it's something he can't handle -- the noise and the pressure. He gets anxious if you ask him to smile. It's all too much for him," said Erin.

“Brayden was shy and inched his way over slowly, and then Santa just slowly got out of his seat and got on the ground. He began playing with the toys that my son brought.”

 

"Brayden was shy and inched his way over slowly, and then Santa just slowly got out of his seat and got on the ground. He began playing with the toys that my son brought."

The result was something truly adorable, and forever memorable. “Oh my gosh, to be able to do something that other families do was wonderful. Normally, a lot of things are harder for us as a family, and we got to do the same tradition as everyone else. We just did it on the floor,” she laughed.

Want to learn more about this amazing program? Check out the video below:

In the end, Brayden got the Christmas experience that he and his family had always wanted. “I just want to hug this man. He’s so wonderful!” she said. We do, too!

Source……..www.viralnova.com

Natarajan

ஒரு வானொலி இருந்திருந்தால்…

வெள்ள நாட்களில் சென்னையில் யாரும் யாருடனும் செல்பேசி/தொலைபேசி ஊடாகத் தொடர்புகொள்ள முடியவில்லை. நிமிடத்துக்கு ஒரு முறை செல்பேசி மூலம் ‘அப்டேட்’ கொடுப்பவர்கள் அன்றைக்கு யார் பாதுகாப்பாக இருக்கிறார்கள் என்றுகூட அறிந்துகொள்ள முடியாத சூழலில், பித்துப்பிடித்தவர்கள்போல் ஆயினர்.

எனக்கு வானொலிகளின் காலம் ஞாபகத்துக்கு வந்தது. எனக்குத் தெரிந்து இன்றைக்கு எந்த அலுவலகத்திலும் வானொலிப் பெட்டிகள் இல்லை. இப்போது செல்பேசிகள் டார்ச், வானொலி என்று எல்லா வசதிகளையும் உள்ளடக்கியவையாக மாறிவிட்டன. ஆனால், வீட்டுக்கு ஒரு சின்ன வானொலி இருந்திருந்தாலும் மழை பாதித்த நேரத்தில் பேட்டரியில் இயங்கவைத்து வெளியில் என்ன நிலவரம் என்பதை அறிந்துகொண்டிருக்கலாம். ‘இப்போது மட்டும் வானொலி இருந்திருந்தால்’ என்ற ஏக்கத்தில் இருந்தவர்களை அந்த நேரத்தில் பார்க்க முடிந்தது.

வானொலி நண்பன்

கடந்த ஒரு வார காலமாக சென்னை மக்கள் வெள்ளத்தால் பெரிதும் அவதிப்பட்டு வருவதை நாம் அறிவோம். நகர் முழுவதும் வெள்ளக்காடாக இருக்கிறது. கான்கிரீட் காடுகள் வெள்ளத்தில் மிதக்கின்றன. வெளியே எங்கும் செல்ல முடியவில்லை. மின்சாரம் இல்லை. அத்தியாவசியப் பொருட்களும் கிடைப்பதில் பெரும் தட்டுப்பாடு. தொலைத்தொடர்பு சாதனங்கள் அனைத்தும் செயலிழந்துவிட்டன.

இப்படியான சூழலுக்கு வானொலி மிகச் சிறந்த நண்பன். காரணம், அதற்கு குறைந்த சக்தி மின்சாரம் இருந்தால் போதும். இன்றைய தொழில்நுட்ப உலகத்தில் டைனமோ வானொலிப் பெட்டிகள் எல்லாம் சந்தையில் கிடைக்கின்றன. பத்து முறை சுற்றினால் பேட்டரி சார்ஜ் ஆகி இரண்டு மணி நேரம் பாடும். ஆனால், நாம் அதை மறந்துவிட்டோமே!

எனக்கு 75 வயது மதிக்கத்தக்க ஒரு வானொலி நண்பர் இருக்கிறார். செல்பேசி சேவை கிடைத்த பிறகு, நேற்று பேசினேன். பதற்றத்தோடு, எப்படி இருக்கிறீர்கள் என்று கேட்டேன். அகில இந்திய வானொலியில் வானிலை அறிக்கையைத் தொடர்ந்து கேட்டதன் பயனாக தனக்கு ஒரு வாரத்துக்குத் தேவையான பொருட்களை எல்லாம் வாங்கி வைத்துக்கொண்டதைச் சொன்னார். பாதுகாப்பான இடம் நோக்கி நகர்ந்துவிட்டதையும் சொன்னார்.

ஹாம் ரேடியோ தெரியுமா?

வானொலிப் பெட்டியைப் பற்றிப் பேசும்போது இன்னும் ஒன்று எனக்கு நினைவுக்கு வருகிறது. நம்மில் எத்தனை பேருக்கு ஹாம் அல்லது அமெச்சூர் வானொலிகளைப் பற்றித் தெரியும்? போலீஸாரின் கைகளில் உள்ள வயர்லெஸ் வாக்கி டாக்கிகளைப் பார்த்திருப்பீர்கள். அதனை ‘வாக்கி டாக்கி’ என்று கூறுவதே தவறு. ‘வாக்கி டாக்கி’ என்பது நகரின் பெரிய மால்களிலும் தியேட்டர்களிலும் உள்ள பணியாளர்கள் பயன்படுத்துவார்களே, அதைத்தான் வாக்கி டாக்கி என்பர். போலீஸ் வைத்திருப்பது வயர்லெஸ் வானொலிகள்.

வாக்கி டாக்கி என்பவை 500 மீட்டர் முதல் ஒரு கி.மீ. சுற்றளவு மட்டுமே தனது சக்தியைப் பொருத்து எடுக்கும் திறன் கொண்டது. ஆனால், போலீஸார் வைத்திருப்பது 10 கி.மீ. சுற்றளவு வரை எடுக்கக் கூடியது. ‘ரிப்பீட்டர்கள்’ கிடைத்தால் மேலும் 50 முதல் 100 கி.மீ வரை கூடத் தொடர்புகொள்ளலாம்.

ஜப்பானியர்களின் பயன்பாடு

எதற்காக இதைச் சொல்கிறேன் என்றால், காவலர்கள் வைத்திருக்கும் இதே போன்ற கருவியை நீங்களும் வைத்துக்கொள்ள அரசு அனுமதி அளிக்கிறது. நான் வைத்திருக்கிறேன், உரிமத்துடன். யாருடன் பேச? உலகம் முழுவதும் நம்மைப் போல் உரிமம் வாங்கி வைத்துள்ள அனைவருடனும். இப்படி உரிமம் வாங்கிப் பயன்படுத்துபவர்களைத்தான் நாம் ஹாம் வானொலி உபயோகிப்பாளர்கள் என்கிறோம். இதுபோன்ற ஆபத்துக் காலங்களில் இந்த ஹாம் வானொலிதான் தகவல் தொடர்புக்கு உலகெங்கும் கை கொடுத்தது, கொடுத்தும்வருகிறது.

உலகிலேயே அதிகம் ஹாம் ரேடியோக்களைப் பயன்படுத்துபவர்கள் ஜப்பானியர்கள். அவர்கள் அதிக பேரிடர்களை எதிர்கொள்வதே இதற்குக் காரணம்.

ஹாம் வானொலியைப் பயன்படுத்த எந்த ஒரு செல்பேசி கோபுரமும் தேவையில்லை. மின்சாரமும் குறைந்த அளவே தேவை. எங்கே இருக்கிறோமோ அந்த நொடியில் அங்கு இருந்து உலகம் முழுவதும் தொடர்புகொள்ள முடியும். மாதம் ஆனதும் சர்வதேச அழைப்புகளுக்குப் பில் தொகை எகிருமே என்ற கவலையும் வேண்டாம். தனிநபர்களால் வாங்க முடியாத சூழலில் ஒவ்வொரு பகுதியிலும் தொடர்புகள் தெரிவிக்கும் வகையில் அமைப்புகளேனும் வாங்கிப் பயன்படுத்தலாம்.

எனக்குத் தெரிந்து சென்னையில் உள்ள எந்த ஊடகமும் ஹாம் வானொலிப் பிரிவைத் தன்னகத்தே கொண்டதாகத் தெரியவில்லை. இனியேனும் யோசிப்போமா?

– தங்க. ஜெய்சக்திவேல், உதவிப் பேராசிரியர், இதழியல் மற்றும் தொடர்பியல் துறை, சென்னைப் பல்கலைக்கழகம்.

தொடர்புக்கு: ardicdxclub@yahoo.co.in

Source….தங்க.ஜெய்சக்திவேல் in http://www.tamil.thehindu.com

Natarajan

Message for the Day…””You must spread the glory of dharma by making yourself a shining example of the peace and joy it gives.”

In ancient times, people never gave up the practice of Dharma even when threatened with death at the point of the sword. Now without even the slightest pressure from others, people slide down and fall into unrighteousness (Adharma). Practicing Dharma is not an ordinary affair. The one who does not practice dharma is as bad as dead; one who practices it is of the divine nature. Presently there is an urgent need to turn people onto the dharmic path through the traditional methods of counselling with good advice, sharing with them the attractive consequences of following the path, threatening to dissociate from those who do not, and inflicting punishment as a last resort. You should derive the greatest possible benefit from dharma and while following it, avoid causing any injury to yourselves or others. You must spread the glory of dharma by making yourself a shining example of the peace and joy it gives.

Sathya Sai Baba

 

Message for the Day…” God has equal affection towards all HIS children…”

Everyone, be they learned or illiterate, should feel an overwhelming urge to know God. God has equal affection toward all His children, for to illumine is the nature of light. Utilising that illumination, some choose to read good books while others do their daily tasks, whatever they are! Similarly uttering God’s name, one can progress in the realisation of God, another may choose to do wicked deeds! It all depends on how you choose to use the light. But the Lord’s name is without blemish, always and forever. God’s name must be recited and listened to. For some ailments medicines are prescribed for external application while for others, they are to be consumed. But for this universal ailment of the cycle of birth and death (bhava-roga), the medicines prescribed are listening to spiritual discourses (sravana), singing God’s name(kirtana), and the like.

Sathya Sai Baba

 

“சென்னை அழியாது… ஏன்? – ஒரு நெகிழ்ச்சிப் பதிவு”….

செல்வா, ஆதீஸ்வரி தம்பதி

செல்வா, ஆதீஸ்வரி தம்பதி

வெள்ளத்தில் தத்தளிக்கிறது சென்னை. வெள்ள நிவாரணப் பணிகள் தொடர்பாக செய்தி சேகரிக்கச் சென்றிருந்தபோது செல்வா ஆதீஸ்வரி தம்பதியைச் சந்திக்க நேர்ந்தது.

மறைந்த நடிகர் சிவாஜி கணேசனின் இல்லத்துக்குப் பின்புறம் உள்ள கோபு சாலையில் வரிசையாக இருக்கின்றன குடிசை வீடுகள். அதில் இரண்டு ஆட்கள் நின்று பேசும் அளவுக்கான உயரத்தில் மூன்று பேர் அமர்ந்து பேசும் அகலத்தில் ஒரு குடிசை வீடு.

“இது வீடில்லைங்க. எங்க இஸ்திரி கடை. எங்க வீடு தண்ணீல போய்டிச்சி. இப்ப இங்கதான் நாங்க இருக்கோம்” என்கிறார் செல்வா.

“பூனைங்க எல்லாம் உங்களுதா..?”

“ஆமாங்க. நாங்களே வளக்குறோம். இதுங்க நம்ம கொழந்தைங்க மாதிரி” ஆதீஸ்வரி.

“உங்களுக்குக் குழந்தைங்க இருக்கா..?”

“நாலு பேருங்க…” ஆதீஸ்வரி.

“சரி… நீங்களே வீடில்லாம கஷ்டப்படுறீங்க. இப்ப பூனைங்க எல்லாம் தேவையா?” என்று செயற்கைத்தனமாய் கேட்டேன்.

“என்ன பண்றதுங்க… வாயில்லா ஜீவனுங்க. இதுங்களுக்கு சாப்பாடு கொடுக்கறதால மனசுல ஒரு சந்தோஷங்க” செல்வா.

பேரிடர் சார்ந்த களப் பணியாற்றுவோரின் பார்வையில் படுகின்ற பல்லாயிரக்கணக்கான நி(நெ)கிழ்வுகளுள் இது ஒற்றைத் துளி.

இன்னும் எத்தனை முறை மழை வந்தாலும் சென்னை ஏன் அழியாது என்பதற்கு வேறு காரணம் வேண்டுமா?

Source…..ந.வினோத் குமார்….www.tamil.thehindu.com

Natarajan

” Humanity Amidst Calamity in Chennai…”

 

 

Message for the Day…” When the indications are that dharma is in danger, The Lord will come to protect dharma from harm.”

The Lord descends now and then to uplift the downtrodden and to reestablish righteousness (dharma). Clearly grasp this truth. Many who read the Bhagavad Gita take it that the Lord incarnates when dharmais ‘destroyed’ and when the forces of unrighteousness (adharma)begin to prevail. This is incorrect; The Gita does not say nor is there any basis to draw the conclusion that dharma gets destroyed. The word used is ‘diminish’ (glaani); that is to say, when the indications are that dharma is in danger, “The Lord will come to protect dharma from harm.” Lord Krishna did not say that He will come down to protect and preserve it after dharma has been destroyed! Of what use is a doctor after life has left? So too, the Lord will rush when the practice is declining or weakening. The protection of dharma is the task of the Lord, for dharma is the very breath of every soul (jivi).

Sathya Sai Baba