Roll Call @ School of Life ….A Ground Reality Today !!!

Dedicated to all well-wishes and friends!!

Class Attendance

School Name: Life

Class: 40 th Std (All students are above 40 years)

Anger – Present sir
Anxiety – Present sir
Boredom – Present sir
Desires – Present sir (in full volume)
Frustration – Present sir
Monthly EMI – Present sir (in full volume)
Office Tension – Present sir
Sadness – Present sir
Worries – Present sir
Uncertainties – Present sir
Happiness – ??? (no sound)
Happiness – ???
Happiness – Absent sir
Peace of mind – Absent sir
Contentment – Absent sir

Class teacher: In life, there is nothing called sadness. Either Happiness Present or Happiness Absent.

Life is very simple to live, but many find it difficult to be simple.

Make it Simple!

Have a fabulous Life
Brilliant words –

“The amount of money that’s in your bank at the time of death, is the extra work you did which was not necessary”

Live life,Make it Simple !!!!

Source…input from a friend of mine

Natarajan

What is Wrong with this Picture …?…Can You Find out …?

Can you see? ... Some Twitter users have been up in arms over this photo, but it may be h

Can you see? … Some Twitter users have been up in arms over this photo, but it may be hard for some to tell why. Picture: Twitter Source: Twitter

SOME Twitter users have been up in arms over this normal looking photo, but what is it that’s got them worked up? Can you spot the problem?

The Mirror reports that the photo isn’t some kind of optical illusion. But as some users noted, the man is allowing the woman to walk on the wrong side of the sidewalk — the side closest to the road.

“I’m sure half of you guys don’t even know what’s wrong with this picture. Smh (shake my head),” Twitter user ibi said on the original post.

Many were utterly clueless as to what the issue was, but many, such as Denzell Lowery saw it straight away.

“He should switch sides with her and hold her hand,” he commented.

“I think it’s just the ‘gentleman thing’ to do. just like opening doors. some women may not like that, but it doesn’t change,” another said.

According to Modern Gentleman Magazine, for men: “While walking down the street you should walk on the right side.

“No need to mention but if you have an umbrella with you, you should not swing with it. You never know who you might hit and hurt.”

“If you are walking down a street in the company of a woman or a man know that the right side is honorary side. You will let a woman walk on the right side of you or a man if he is a senior person. In this way we honour them,” the magazine state.

“This custom dates from the middle ages when knights wore the sword on the left side keeping the right side free, since the right arm was ‘fighting arm.’”

COMMENT: Is this a thing of the past? Or is it a rule that men should still follow? 

Source….www.news.com.au

Natarajan

 

Message For the Day…”All Forms of Ideal are Equally Valid and true …No Need for senseless hatred…”

People worship the Supreme Lord (Paramatma) as existing in some faraway place – say Ayodhya or Dwaraka and nowhere else, or as found in places where some image or picture exists and nowhere else. They worship that form itself as complete (Purna). Of course, it is not wrong to do so. What is wrong is to proclaim that only their belief is the truth, that the names and forms that they have ascribed are the only names and forms of the Divine, and that all other forms and names are worthless and inferior. It should be realized that the names and forms that are the ideals of others are as dear and sacred to those others as such names and forms are to oneself. Everyone should acquire the vision that all forms of the ideal are equally valid and true, without giving room to senseless hatred. Without internalizing this wisdom, it is impossible to realize the Divine.

Sathya Sai Baba

Meet Saravanan….Chennai Super King’s Super Fan ….!!!

Saravanan has attained the status of Chennai Super Kings

Saravanan has attained the status of Chennai Super Kings’ super fan and is a hugely popular figure at the Chepauk. (BCCI)

The afternoon sun is at its harshest in Chennai, as it always is during May. The Chennai Super Kings players arrive at the MA Chidambaram stadium in Chepauk and get set for another match in the most testing of conditions. Right opposite the stadium, despite the scorching heat, H Saravanan, arguably their biggest fan, is busy with his own preparation: getting his body covered in yellow paint with the name ‘Dhoni’ and the number ‘7′ written in bold across his chest.

Three years ago, Saravanan was threatened by security personnel when he went to the team hotel with a hope of meeting MS Dhoni. Now, he travels with the Chennai team for all their Indian Premier League matches, interacts with the players like he’s a part of the side and even leads their victory lap after their final home match.

Saravanan is the Chennai version of Sudhir Kumar Chaudhry, the Sachin Tendulkar fanatic – that rare fan who almost sacrifices their own life to follow their heroes.

Saravanan, like Chaudhry, hails from a modest background. His father is an autorickshaw driver and mother a housewife. But, unlike Sudhir, who abandoned his family and job to dedicate his life to follow Tendulkar and now the Indian team, Saravanan has a stable job as a warehouse in-charge at a construction material company in Chennai. By his own admission, Saravanan is “nowhere close to Sudhir”, but stresses that Dhoni and Chennai are his “life and biggest priority”.

“Sudhir is great. He has done a lot and he’s definitely an inspiration,” says Saravanan, even as the painter carries on with his job. “I’m nowhere near and I can’t even be compared with him. But Tendulkar already has such a fan and I wanted Dhoni also to have one such fan. More importantly, I wanted to be that fan.”

Initially a fan of Tendulkar, Saravanan’s admiration for Dhoni started after India’s victory in the 2007 World T20. It took an accident in 2010 and a World Cup victory under Dhoni in 2011 to inspire him to make the leap to being a super-fan.

“My only ambition then (2007) was to get an autograph from Dhoni,” he recalls. “But I didn’t know where and how to proceed with it as he had no connection with Chennai and I had no connection with cricketers. Luckily for me, in 2008, he came to Chennai through the IPL and I sensed a chance.”

At first, Saravanan was just like any other fan, only his face painted while supporting Chennai. “I met with an accident and injured my leg in December 2010 and was stuck to bed for six months. It forced me to watch every single match of the 2011 World Cup and the IPL. India won the World Cup and

Chennai won the IPL, so it was a double boost for me and my love for Dhoni grew rapidly. I wasn’t there for 1983 World Cup, so this really moved me. I badly wanted to do something in return for Dhoni.”

The injury forced him to miss the 2012 IPL as well, but his passion didn’t wane. In 2013, he started painting his entire body, and instantly became a hit among spectators in Chennai. Friends and relatives mocked him, but Saravanan had already become a mini-celebrity in the stands, with people queueing up to take pictures with him.

Lack of funds and Chennai’s home matches moving out of the city were major roadblocks, but Saravanan worked his way around both and gradually became an official fan of the franchise. A fellow Chennai supporter created a social media profile in his name and after repeated requests, the franchise officials agreed to take him along for a couple of matches in Ranchi during the Champions League Twenty20 2013.

“That was the first time I went away from Chennai to watch a match,” he says. “Again in 2014, there were no matches in Chennai. I had become a fanatic by then and couldn’t imagine the possibility of missing Chennai’s matches. Kasi Viswanathan, the Tamil Nadu Cricket Association secretary, helped me a lot and the franchise took me to all matches during the India leg of the tournament. It cost me Rs 50000 in 2013 but the franchise takes care of most of my expenses now and I have seen all Chennai matches in India from then.

“I missed only one match,” he admits, “because I got engaged that day. The first time I met my fiancee, I told her very clearly that this is my life and my biggest priority. Everything else comes after this.”

Saravanan’s routine starts five hours before a match. He rents a room opposite the stadium and gets his friend, who is no professional painter, to completely paint his body in yellow. On an average, around 15 small bottles of paint are used and Saravanan has to stand throughout the painstaking process. He does not sit even during the match to avoid the paint peeling off and consumes only water during the whole period, which comes to around 11 hours.

Finally, it all seemed to pay off, when at an event in Bangalore last year, he met his idol.

“I went fully painted as I wanted him to see me like that first time,” he says, the pride in his voice evident. “Suresh Raina, Brendon McCullum and Ravindra Jadeja walked in front of me and I was looking at them, when Dhoni suddenly came from behind. I was speechless and immediately fell at his feet. He lifted me and spoke something, but I couldn’t understand anything as it was all in Hindi. I have a language problem with him and the only thing I know is that he calls me ‘yellow man’.

“I share a good rapport with some other players too. R Ashwin often asks me with concern why I do all this and why I spoil my body, but, luckily, I’ve not had any allergy or skin problems until now. I’m not scared of it.”

In a tournament where squads and loyalties are fluid, Saravanan is an exception. Is all this worth it though?

“Definitely. I don’t expect anything for what I do,” he says. “All this is only for happiness. When fans call me Dhoni when I walk on the street with the paint on, I feel happy … I’m Chennai’s Dhoni. He’s Ranchi’s Dhoni.”

 

Source….www.ibnlive.com

Natarajan

” இப்போ நீங்க எந்த “விங்க்”லே இருக்கிங்க …” ?

11061714_927176563979794_3577538682040105331_n.jpg

ஒருமுறை ஸ்பெயின் நாட்டிலிருந்து ஓர் அரச குடும்பத்தைச்

சேர்ந்த ஒரு பிரமுகர் வந்து மகானைத் தரிசனம் செய்கிறார்.

அவர் ஸ்பானிஷ் மொழியில் பேசியதை மகானுக்கு ஒருவர்

மொழிபெயர்த்துச் சொல்லிக்கொண்டு இருந்தார்.

நாட்டின் அதிபரைப் பற்றியோ, சீதோஷ்ண நிலையைப்

பற்றியோ விசாரிக்கலாம். இல்லை மக்களின் பண்பாடு,

கலாச்சாரம் இவற்றைப் பற்றியும் பேசி இருக்கலாம்.

இந்த எல்லா விஷயங்களையும் பத்திரிகை வாயிலாக

எல்லோருக்கும் தெரிய வாய்ப்பு உண்டு.

ஆனால் மகான் இதைப் பற்றியெல்லாம் அந்த ஸ்பெயின்

பிரபுவிடம் கேட்கவில்லை.

அவர் என்ன கேட்டார் பாருங்கள்.

“உங்கள் அரண்மனையில் நியூவிங், ஓல்ட்விங் என்று

இரண்டு இருக்கோ?”

“ஆமாம்”

“இப்ப நீங்க எந்த ‘விங்’லே இருக்கீங்க?”

“நியூவிங்” என்கிறார் அவர்.

“அங்கே தண்ணீர்,மத்தவசதி எல்லாம் இருக்கோ?”

“ஆமாம் நியூவிங் மிகவும் வசதியாக இருக்கிறதாலே தான்

அங்கே தங்கியிருக்கிறோம்.”

அடுத்து மகான் அவரிடம் ஒரு பெரிய குண்டைத்

தூக்கிப் போடுகிறார்.

“அப்போ அந்த உபயோகப்படாம இருக்கிற ஓல்ட்விங்கை

இடிச்சுட்டு, நந்தவனமா பண்ணிடலாமே” என்று அந்த

மகான் சொன்னதைக் கேட்டதும் ஸ்பெயின்

பிரமுகருக்கு ஒரு பலமான சந்தேகம் மனதில் எழுந்தது.

இப்படி தன் நாட்டின் ஒரு குறிப்பட்ட இடத்தைப் பற்றி

இத்தனை விரிவாகச் சொல்லி, அதை இப்படி மாற்றலாம்

என்று அறிவுரை வேறு கூறுகிறாரே என்று நினைத்த அவர்,

மொழிபெயர்ப்பாளரிடம், “மகான் எப்போது ஸ்பெயின்

நாட்டிற்கு விஜயம் செய்தார்?” என்று கேட்டார்.

மொழிபெயர்ப்பாளர் அதை மொழிபெயர்ப்பு செய்து பதில்

கேட்பதற்கு முன்பே சாட்சாத் பரமேஸ்வரரான மகான்,

ஒரு சைகையின் மூலம் அந்த ஸ்பெயின் பிரமுகருக்கு

பதிலளித்து விட்டார்.

தன் திருக்கரத்தால் ஒரு வட்டம் போடுவது போல் சைகை

காண்பித்து, ஓர் அர்த்த புன்னகையோடு அந்தப் பிரமுகரைப்

பார்த்தார். ஸ்பெயின் பிரமுகருக்கு அந்தக் கணமே எல்லாம்

புரிந்து போயிற்று.

‘இவர் சாட்சாத் பரமேஸ்வரரின் கலியுக அவதாரம்” என்று

தெரிந்து கொண்ட அவருக்கு மெய்சிலிர்க்க, கீழே விழுந்து

வணங்கி எழுந்து, மகானின் ஆசியைப் பெற்றார்.

Source….www.periva.proboards.com

Natarajan

” To Bee or Not to Bee….”

Bees are an investment with high returns — the crop yield increases and products become healthier.

When bees are kept alongside farming activities, production increases between 20-200 per cent besides, of course, getting to sell honey on the market.

Shrikant Gajbhiye, founder of Bee The Change is helping spread awareness on bee keeping and its multiple merits. Read on to know more… 

Shrikant Gajbhiye

The new name for the butterfly effect is the ‘bee effect’, at least these days.

These buzzing clusters of little black and yellow insects pollinate almost 70 per cent of the crops that feed 90 per cent of humanity. But this  long and intricate natural chain, created by these busy bees, has been getting altered.

The sudden drop in bee populations worldwide is threatening the balance of the ecosystem with unpredictable consequences.

Shrikant Gajbhiye is the founder of Bee The Change, which offers free bee-keeping training to farmers and forest populations in Maharashtra.

He argues that when bees are kept alongside farming activities, production increases between 20 to 200 per cent besides, of course, getting to sell honey on the market.

A study in the UK has revealed that honeybees contribute £200 million a year with the services they indirectly enhance through their activities, and £1 billion with what they pollinate.

Similar studies are available in few other countries, but the function of bees in the food chain is the same everywhere.

In the US, some species of bees have virtually disappeared, the European Union has admitted their risk of extinction, and in India the number of the insects has drastically decreased — some point out RFR emitted by mobile phones and towers as one of the main causes. And this alarming fall in bee numbers is alarming everyone.

Given these assumptions, talking about ‘bee effect’ to indicate the massive consequences that can result from a relatively small cause, does not seem an exaggeration.

This is why Shrikant’s venture is not only about producing honey, but is directed towards broader outcomes.

Two years ago, after graduating from IIM Kozhikode, he took up a five-day hobby course on bee-keeping at a government institute in Pune, and fell in love with the striped honey-makers.

“I learnt some of the most amazing facts about bees and the role they play in the ecosystem by means of cross pollination.”

This opened my eyes not only on the key role bees play in nature, but also on the potential they have in changing the lives of people at the bottom of the pyramid,” Gajbhiye says.

Bee the Change trains the people in bee keeping

In the last few months, Bee The Change has trained more than 500 farmers and forest populations, and currently its network counts 50 trainees.

“As part of our operations, we meet farmers in rural areas and provide them with bee boxes and free training. Then, once they start bee-keeping, we buy back the honey at a pre-determined price. Ours is a not-for-profit outfit, and we generate income by selling this honey to retailers under our own brand.”

For farmers, the proceedings of honey and wax sales are only one of the numerous gains.

Bees are an investment with high returns — the crop yield increases and products become healthier.

“Bee-keeping and pesticides don’t really go hand in hand because chemicals cause the insects to die. So the farmers are asked to refrain from using pesticides while rearing the bees,” explains Shrikant.

This automatically reduces the use of pesticides.

Twenty-five Bee the Change trainees are working towards obtaining the certification for organic farming, which they usually apply for in groups generating cooperative work.

It is not easy to persuade farmers to take up the challenge because bee-keeping requires an investment.

“A bee box costs around Rs 5,000 and bees start producing honey only after a few months. Usually, in areas where we haven’t worked before, one out of ten farmers is willing to keep bees for a year. But once this farmer shows an exponential increase in crop production, others follow.”

Also, each bee colony can give as much as two more bee colonies through division each year providing additional income.

Shrikant Gajbiye explains the process of bee keeping

The organisation works with populations in the forests a little differently.

“We train them in techniques of natural honey hunting, which consists in extracting honey from existing combs without hurting the bees. This allows them to increase their income, and bees to be preserved in the wild.”

Be the Change also trains women in bee keeping

Gajbhiye says that there are very few organisations working on a similar models, but most of them working only with farmers, whereas Bee the Change includes populations living in the forests.

“Also, these organisations have priced their products in the premium range; whereas we have kept our product accessible,” he says.

Lack of training facilities for bee keeping in Maharashtra, unavailability of bee colonies, difficulties in maintaining a system of support for trainees, getting over negative preconceptions against bees, language barriers, and lack of funds are some of the challenges Bee The Change had to go through.

However, Gajbhiye says, “We dealt with these problems by getting ourselves trained first. We work with experts who help us with training and support, and importing colonies from elsewhere. We believe that exemplifying success stories is the best way of spreading awareness and gaining social interest.”

Currently, the number of colonies in nature is very low. This results in the costs of mobilising and installing these colonies is much higher than the price of the colonies itself.

“We are trying to rear the bee colonies in nature, breed them, and multiply them through our network to such levels that economies of scale can be exploited to increase our operational

efficiency,”says Srikanth.

Moreover, to further diversify the sources of income, Bee The Change is also planning to start training groups of women to produce organic honey and wax-based cosmetics.

The relevance of what Bee The Change is doing is undoubtedly huge and the team, which counts 20 volunteers, seems to have a great time in the process.

Shrikant Gajbhiye quotes Steve Jobs, “At least make a dent in the universe, else, why even be here.”

However, in a venture where resources are not abundant and ambition must scale up ten times faster that the venture itself, not a dent, but a revolution is the goal.

Source…..www.rediff.com

Natarajan

” Spider Rain in Australia…” !!!

Millions of tiny spiders recently fell from the sky in Australia, alarming residents whose properties were suddenly covered with not only the creepy critters, but also mounds of their silky threads. But that’s not where the frightful news ends: Experts say such arachnid rains aren’t as uncommon as you might think.

This month’s spider downpour in the country’s Southern Tablelands region is just the most recent example of a phenomenon commonly known as “spider rain” or, in some circles, “angel hair,” because of the silky, hairlike threads the spiders leave behind. Ian Watson, who lives in the region affected by the spooky shower, took to Facebook to describe what this strange “weather” looks like, according to the Goulburn Post.

“Anyone else experiencing this “Angel Hair” or maybe aka millions of spiders falling from the sky right now? I’m 10 minutes out of town, and you can clearly see hundreds of little spiders floating along with their webs and my home is covered in them. Someone call a scientist!” Watson wrote on the Goulburn Community Forum Facebook page. [Fishy Rain to Fire Whirlwinds: The World’s Weirdest Weather]

So, here at Live Science, call a scientist (or two) is exactly what we did. Rick Vetter, a retired arachnologist at the University of California at Riverside, said Watson and his neighbors most likely saw a form of spider transportation known as ballooning.
spiderweb

“Ballooning is a not-uncommon behavior of many spiders,” Vetter told Live Science. “They climb some high area and stick their butts up in the air and release silk. Then they just take off. This is going on all around us all the time. We just don’t notice it.”

People don’t usually notice this ingenious spider behavior because it is not common for millions of spiders to do this at the same time, and then land in the same place, said Todd Blackledge, a biology professor at the University of Akron in Ohio.

“In these kinds of events [spider rains], what’s thought to be going on is that there’s a whole cohort of spiders that’s ready to do this ballooning dispersal behavior, but for whatever reason, the weather conditions haven’t been optimal and allowed them to do that. But then the weather changes, and they have the proper conditions to balloon, and they all start to do it,” Blackledge told Live Science.

spiderweb

This is most likely what happened in New South Wales, where certain species of small spiders — as well as the tiny hatchlings of larger spider species — are known to balloon around the Outback during late autumn (May) and early spring (August).

But, as Blackledge explained, an abrupt change in the weather or wind pattern may have carried these migrating spiders up and away and then back down to earth en masse — not the orderly dispersal that they (or the residents of the Southern Tablelands region) were expecting.

For the startled citizens of Goulburn and surrounding areas, however, the tiny spiders raining down from the sky probably pose no threat to humans, both Blackledge and Vetter said.

“There’s a tiny, tiny number of species that have venom that’s actually dangerous to people. And even then, if these are juvenile spiders, they’re going to be too small to even bite, in all likelihood,” Blackledge said.

spiderweb

But such a huge group of spiders could damage crops, which might become so enshrouded in silk that they don’t get enough sunlight, Vetter said.

Watson (the Goulburn resident who recommended that someone call a scientist) noted that tiny spiders had a way of becoming entangled in human facial hair.

“You couldn’t go out without getting spider webs on you. And I’ve got a beard as well, so they kept getting in my beard,” Watson told Yahoo News.

Source…..ELIZABETH PALERMO, LIVESCIENCE  in  www.businessinsider.com

Natarajan

Message For the Day…” Harmony is the Very Heart of all Religions…”

Though religions have distinct names and doctrines, in essence, all are one. They emphasize the common core. Unfortunately, the apparent differences amongst religions have subverted the amity of all men. All religious dogmas, except a few, can easily be harmonized and reconciled. The experience and wisdom of great seers who expounded universal love are not appreciated, accepted, and respected. The same God is extolled and adored in various names through varied ceremonial rituals. In every age, for every race or community, God has sent prophets to establish peace and goodwill. All great people are images of God. They form one single caste in the realm of God; they belong to one nation, the divine fellowship. The principle of harmonizing is the very heart of all religions and faiths. Interest yourself in understanding the practices and beliefs of others. This cleanses your mind. Then, with a loving heart, you will attain the Divine Presence.

Sathya Sai Baba