Message for the Day…” All of us Will have to Leave this world Empty-Handed …”

Sathya Sai Baba

Though Alexander the Great conquered most parts of the world, he could not take with him even an iota of the property he won. He left the world with empty hands. To demonstrate this truth to the world, he instructed his ministers to take his dead body in a procession through the streets of his capital keeping both his hands in a raised position pointing the sky. When the ministers asked him the reason for this strange request, Emperor Alexander replied, “I conquered several countries, accumulated great wealth and controlled a vast army; yet, I am going back with empty hands – demonstrate this truth to everyone.” You may spend a lot of time struggling to acquire a lot of wealth. Yet, not even a handful of earth will come along when you leave the body. Hence at least now accept the fact that you are Divine, and strive to appreciate the same Divinity in everyone around you.

14 Signs You’re not Drinking Enough Water…

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There’s not much in this world more refreshing than a tall, ice-cold glass of water. I don’t think there’s anyone alive that can deny that sometimes, a simple glass of water can be more satisfying than a cup of coffee or a can of soda. Despite this, too many of us don’t drink enough water on a daily basis. By depriving ourselves of the world’s most natural resource, we are continuously damaging our bodies. If you experience any of the following, you can improve your situation by starting with a glass of H2O.

1. Your Mouth is Dry

This seems pretty obvious, but the ramifications might not be so. Of course, any time you feel that sticky, nasty feeling in your mouth, you’d obviously reach for some sort of liquid. But sugary drinks are only a temporary solution to a larger problem. Drinking water lubricates the mucus membranes in your mouth and throat, which will continue to keep your mouth moist with saliva long after that first sip.

2. Your Skin is Dry

Your skin is your body’s largest organ, so of course it needs to stay hydrated. In fact, dry skin is one of the earliest signs of full-on dehydration, which can lead to much larger problems. A lack of water means a lack of sweat, which leads to a body’s inability to wash away excess dirt and oil accumulated throughout the day. If you want to stave off breakouts, your first recourse should be to drink more water.

3. You’re Overly Thirsty

We went over dry mouth already, but thirst goes beyond a desert-like tongue. Anyone who’s ever had a hangover can tell you that, upon waking up, your body just can’t get enough water. Alcohol dehydrates the entire body, and drinking water sends “YES PLEASE!” signals to the brain until your fluid levels get back to baseline.  Listen to what your body is telling you; it knows what it’s talking about!

4. Your Eyes Are Dry

By now it should be clear that drinking water affects more than just your mouth and throat. A lack of water intake leads to dry, bloodshot eyes (again, think of that last pounding hangover). Without water in the body,your tear ducts dry up. If you’re thinking “So what if I can’t cry?”, realize that this could cause much more harm to your eyes, especially if you wear contacts on a daily basis.

5. You Experience Joint Pain

Our cartilage and spinal discs are made up of about 80% water. This is an absolute necessity to keep our bones from grinding against each other with every step we take. By keeping your body hydrated, you ensure that your joints can absorb the shock of sudden movements, such as running, jumping, or falling awkwardly.

6. Your Muscle Mass Decreases

Your muscles, also, are comprised mostly of water. Obviously, less water in the body means less muscle mass. Drinking water before, during, and after a workout not only keeps you hydrated and comfortable, it also brings water to the right places in your body, and decreases the chance of developing inflammation and soreness related to exercise and weightlifting.

7. You Stay Sick Longer

Drinking water allows your body to continuously flush out toxins. Your organs work to filter our certain waste products like a machine, but if you don’t fuel the machine with water, it cannot work properly. What ends up happening in a dehydrated body is organs start to pull water from stored areas like your blood, which leads to a whole new set of problems.

8. You Feel Fatigued and Lethargic

As we just mentioned, when a body is dehydrated it “borrows” water from your blood. A lack of properly hydrated blood leads to a lack of oxygen being brought throughout the body. Of course, a lack of oxygen leads tosleepiness and outright fatigue. A lack of stamina means you”ll start to experience that 2PM crash earlier and earlier in your day (and remember, coffee won’t help in the long run).

9. You Experience Hunger Pangs

When you’re dehydrated, your body might start to think it needs some food. This happens throughout the day, and overnight when you wake up craving that midnight snack. However, eating food creates more work for your body, whereas drinking water purifies and your organs and supplies it with the fuel it needs to go through the other processes a body goes through.

10. You Experience Digestive Problems

We spoke before about the mucus in our mouth and throat, and how keeping hydrated allows the membrane to function correctly. This also applies to the entire digestive system. Without proper hydration, the amount and strength of mucus in the stomach lessens, allowing stomach acid to do some major damage to your insides. This leads to what we commonly refer to as heartburn and indigestion.

11. You Experience Constipation

Like we said, staying hydrated helps lubricate the digestive system. During the process of dehydration, the colon uses up the water that would have been used by the intestines in the next step of the digestive process. Without going into too much detail, I’ll let you figure out what a lack of lubricant in the intestines leads to.

12. You Experience Reduced Urination

Believe it or not, if you’re not taking a trip to the restroom 4-7 times a day, you’re probably not drinking enough water. And when you do go #1, it should be a light yellow or clear color. If it’s a darker yellow, your body is telling you it’s lacking proper hydration. In extreme cases, dehydration can lead to urinary tract infections, in which case you should consult a doctor right away.

13. You Experience Premature Aging

The amount of water our bodies retain naturally decreases as we age. Obviously, what this means is that, as we get older, we should consciously increase our water intake. While premature aging is more evident on the outside, the damage it does to our insides will ultimately be felt over time. To decrease the risk of running your body raw, it’s important to continue to drink water throughout your lifetime.

14. You’re Reading This And Have Gotten This Far

I drink water all the time. I almost always have a glass or bottle of water next to me, whether I’m working, working out, or vegging out in front of the TV. If you clicked on this article, chances are you thought to yourself “Hm, I don’t think I drink enough water.” So if you don’t think you do, pour a glass right now! Don’t overdo it, of course, but if you’re not getting the recommended amount (which is higher than you’d think), there’s no harm in drinking more. Now if you’ll excuse me, all this typing has made me thirsty.

Featured photo credit: Pixabay via pixabay.com

 

Source….www.stumbleupon.com

Natarajan

Are you Nomophobic ?….

Nomophobia — the fear of being out of mobile phone contact — is on the rise.

Nomophobia is the fear of being out of mobile phone contact.Sapna K, a 19-year-old history student, would log onto social networking sites from her smartphone in between classes.

Slowly, her need to check her phone turned into a craving.

Did someone comment on her Facebook post?

Did she miss out on a WhatsApp message?

Why hadn’t her phone buzzed in the past hour or so?

She would sleep with the phone under her pillow and check her messages in the middle of the night.

Her obsessive attachment to the phone began to interfere with her daily chores and mental peace.

“One day she left her phone at a friend’s party.

She felt anxious the entire time that she reached home and insisted that her father immediately walk back to the friend’s house to pick it up,” says Manoj Kumar Sharma, additional professor (department of clinical psychology) at Bengaluru’s NIMHANS.

He is, at the moment, taking care of at least 60 cases in which the patient is suffering from anxiety related to losing the mobile phone.

 

What is nomophobia?

This rising obsessive attachment with the phone and the resulting anxiety has prompted medical practitioners to finally christen this behaviour.

It’s called nomophobia.

Although it is not yet listed in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, it finds a mention in the appendix for further research.

Listed or not, medical practitioners maintain that nomophobia is very much a reality – one that is growing to gargantuan proportions.

“Nomophobia literally means ‘no mobile’ phobia; that is the fear of being out of mobile phone contact,” mentions a study conducted by the department of community medicine at Indore’s MGM College.

This survey studied mobile phone dependence among medical students under 25 years of age.

It observed that when the respondent was in an area of no network or had run out of balance or battery, he or she tended to feel anxious and this adversely affected the concentration levels.

“I have seen nomophobia affect children as young as 11 years old right up to adults in the age group of 40 to 50,” says Sameer Malhotra, director (department of mental health and behavioural sciences), Max Healthcare.

He has seen a drastic rise in the numbers afflicted from mobile phone obsession in the past couple of years with numbers running into hundreds.

Such is this obsession that it can destroy marriages and create rifts in families.

Ramesh Vats, 32, and his wife, Urmila, had been married for three years and were parents to a toddler.

From the outside their lives seemed perfect. Yet, not a word was exchanged between them at home.

Ramesh would either be busy at work or would spend the entire night sending Whatsapp messages or checking social networking sites. It was taking a toll on the marriage.

“Finally, a member of the extended family intervened and got them to me. On further assessment, we found out that this discord was an indirect manifestation of his obsession with the phone,” says Delhi-based clinical psychologist Amitabh Saha.

Young children and teenagers are even more vulnerable to this affliction as they force their parents to buy expensive smartphones and tablets out of peer pressure.

Saha recalls the case of a couple of school children who would exchange notes at night on WhatsApp. Just before the exams, their parents banned the use of the mobile phone.

“As a result of this, none of them could concentrate on his studies and would be irritable and aggressive through the day,” he says.

Are you nomophobic?

Clinical psychologists have come up with a list of signs and symptoms that you need to watch out for:

Are you neglecting your priorities?

“If your phone is becoming enmeshed with your being in an intrusive way, you should immediately step back and assess your behaviour,” says Samir Parikh, director (mental health and behavioural sciences), Fortis Healthcare.

For instance, if you can’t concentrate on your chores just because you missed a call or because someone has not got in touch with you, then that should act as a wakeup call.

Are you missing out on sleep?

“People have a tendency to check their phones at odd hours, as a result of which their sleep pattern gets affected. They don’t even get six hours of sleep,” says Saha. This adversely affects their health and performance at work.

Are you constantly irritated and restless?

“Ask yourself if your restlessness is due to being away from your phone for brief periods. If it’s leading to distress and dysfunction then do something quickly about it,” says Malhotra.

Are you turning into a recluse?

“The phone becomes such a source of connectivity with the world that if it’s not there then a person suffers from loneliness and often depression.

The interpersonal interaction with peers goes down,” says Sharma.

Steps to follow

The patient is made to understand that he needs to control technology and not be controlled by it

Sleep patterns are assessed and a schedule is drawn up to correct it

Offline contact is promoted. Some like Sharma encourage Internet fasting, which involves being away from the phone for a couple of hours every day. The patient is then counseled on the distress quotient

The person suffering from nomophobia is encouraged to take up a physical sport or engage in a hobby. The idea is to convince him or her that life without a phone is possible.

The person suffering from nomophobia is encouraged to take up a physical sport or engage in a hobby. The idea is to convince him or her that life without a phone is possible.

The patient is advised to focus on the essential chores of the day. Stretching exercises are introduced to improve concentration. Anytime that you feel the urge to touch the phone, just stretch your hands and neck for five minutes

Most importantly, the patient must switch off their phone when not at work.

Seek the right kind of help

Once you have asked the right questions, it’s time to seek the right help.

It’s wise to visit practitioners who have had experience in dealing with anxiety resulting from the overuse of technology.

For instance, based on the feedback from focus group discussion, NIMHANS has started SHUT Clinic, or Service for Healthy Use of Technology.

Drawing faculty from departments of clinical psychology, psychiatry, psychiatric social work and epidemiology, the clinic aims at raising awareness about the excessive use of technology, training of counselors and developing timely intervention.

Prior experience will help clinical psychologists to ask the right kind of questions.

For instance, if a person has sought help for anxiety or depression, the psychologist will need to identify if use of mobile phone is one of the co-morbid factors leading up to this.

“Usually people don’t come to us directly for nomophobia. It’s up to us to figure out that it’s one of the many factors leading to this mental state and then treat accordingly,” says Saha.

Max Healthcare’s Malhotra (left) concurs: “We need to assess if there is an underlying medical condition such as obsessive compulsive disorder that is behind this overuse of the phone or a deranged lifestyle that is responsible. Then one can decide if there is need for correction or medical intervention,” he says.

Lead image used for representational purposes only. Image: Reuters

 

Avantika Bhuyan

Source:    & http://www.rediff.com
Natarajan

Message for the Day…” Cultivate Faith in Righteousness as the core of Your Personality…”

No other person can bind you; you do it yourself! You choose to become bound, straying away from the righteous (dharmic) path. If faith in God’s omnipresence is deep-rooted, you would become aware that He is within you and you will choose to be free. For that faith to grow, you must grasp the Divine (Atmic) bliss firmly. The reality of the Divinity (Atma) is the bedrock, that is the incontrovertible wisdom (nishchitha-jnana). Without that foundation, you will easily become the target of doubt, despair, and delusion. Therefore, first endeavour to be free. That is to say, as a prerequisite to successful living, cultivate faith in righteousness (dharma) as the core of your personality, and then learn and practise the discipline necessary to reach down to that core. When you acquire that qualification, you can engage fully in worldly activities, following the prescribed right conduct (dharma). Thus you transform yourself to be a moral individual (dharma-purusha).

Sathya Sai Baba

படித்ததில் பிடித்தது ….” மறந்து போன மனித நேயம் உன் ஜனன தேதியில் மட்டும் தலை காட்டும்” ….

அமைதி ஆயுதம் போதும்!

உலகம் போற்றும்
உத்தமனே
உன்னால்தானே
உரிமை பெற்றோம்!

நாங்கள்
உயரப் பறக்க
சிறகுகள் தந்து
உன் உயிர் சிறகை
உதிர்த்துக் கொண்டாயே!

அன்னையின்
அடிமைச்சங்கிலி உடைக்க
அர்ஜுனனைப் போல
அஸ்திரம் ஏந்தவில்லை!

சச்சரவுகள் தீர்க்க
வாசுதேவனைப் போல
சாவகாசமாக வந்து
சர்க்கரை பேச்சு பேசி
சமரச முயற்சியும்
மேற்கொள்ளவில்லை!

ஆயுதம் எடுக்கவில்லை
அறைகூவல் விடுக்கவில்லை
அடிமைச்சங்கிலியை
எப்படி அடக்கம் செய்தாய்?

அமைதிப்பிரியனே…
உன் மவுன யுத்தத்தின்
உச்சி தவத்தால் தான்
எத்தனை மகத்துவம்!

மறந்து போன மனித நேயம்
உன் ஜனன தேதியில் மட்டும்
மறுமுளை விட்டு
மறுபடியும்
மறைந்து கொள்கிறது!

ஆனாலும்
மகாத்மா என்ற சகாப்தத்தின்
தலைமகன் நாமம் மட்டும்
மறந்து போவதே இல்லை
கருவறையிலிருந்து கல்லறை
செல்லும் வரை!

நீ அழைத்துச் செல்ல மறந்த
அகிம்சையென்னும்
அமைதி ஆயுதம் ஒன்று போதும்
இந்த உலகம் உயர்ந்து நிற்கும்
உன் பேர் என்றும் நிலைத்து நிற்கும்!

க.அழகர்சாமி, கொச்சி.

Source….www.dinamalar.com

Natarajan

இதோ ஒரு அரிய சந்தர்ப்பம்…..

செப்., 28 மகாளய பட்சம் ஆரம்பம்

ஜென்மங்களிலேயே உயர்ந்தது மனித ஜென்மம்; மனித பிறவியில் மட்டுமே நாம் பிறவிப் பிணியில் இருந்து மீள முடியும். ஆனால், பிறந்தால் இறந்தாக வேண்டும், நோயில் சிக்கியாக வேண்டும், கஷ்டங்களை அனுபவித்தே தீர வேண்டும். இதில் ஏழை, பணக்காரர் என்ற வித்தியாசமில்லை.
ஒரு சிலர், பணக்காரர்களைப் பார்த்து, அவருக்குள்ள வசதி நமக்கு இல்லையே என, ஏங்குவர். இவர்கள் ஒன்றைப் புரிந்து கொள்ள வேண்டும். அந்த பணக்காரர்கள் காபியில் சர்க்கரை சேர்த்து குடிக்காதவர்களாக இருப்பர். ஏங்குகிற நீங்களோ, காபி போதாதென்று கேசரியையும் சேர்த்து விழுங்கிக் கொண்டிருப்பீர்கள். இப்போது சொல்லுங்கள்… யார் கொடுத்து வைத்தவர்!
மானிடப் பிறவி உயர்ந்தது தான்; அதை தாழ்த்துவது அவரவர் எண்ணங்களும், செயல்களுமே! கோடி ரூபாய் சம்பாதித்தாலும், சாப்பிடப் போவது இரண்டு இட்லி தான் என்ற சிந்தனை மட்டும் இருந்து விடுமானால், நம் பிறவி, அர்த்தமுள்ளதாகி விடும்.
பல பிறவிகளின் புண்ணியத்தால் நமக்கு கிடைத்துள்ளதே மானிடப் பிறவி. இந்தப் பிறவியை நமக்கு வழங்கியவர்கள் நம் பெற்றோர். அந்த பெற்றோரை வழங்கியது அவர்களது பெற்றோர். இப்படியே நம் முந்தைய தலைமுறை விரிவடைந்து கொண்டே செல்கிறது. அந்த தலைமுறையை வணங்கவும், அவர்களது வாழ்த்தைப் பெறவும், ஆண்டில், 15 நாட்கள் மகாளய பட்சம் என்ற ஒன்றை உருவாக்கியுள்ளனர்.
‘மகாளயம்’ என்றால், கூட்டமாக வருதல்; புரட்டாசி மாதம் மகாளய அமாவாசையன்று நம் முன்னோர், கூட்டமாக நம்மை காண வருவதாக ஐதீகம். அன்று நாம், அவர்களை வரவேற்று தர்ப்பணம் செய்து, அவர்களுக்கு பிடித்த உணவு வகைகளை படைத்து வணங்க வேண்டும். அமாவாசைக்கு முந்தைய, 15 நாட்கள், தினமும் தர்ப்பணம் செய்ய வேண்டும்.
இது ஒன்றும் பெரிய விஷயமல்ல; அவர்கள் பெயரைச் சொல்லி சிறிது எள்ளும், தண்ணீரும் நீர் நிலைகளிலோ, கால் படாத இடங்களிலோ விட்டாலே போதும். புரோகிதர் மூலமாகச் செய்தால் மிகவும் நல்லது. வசதிப்படுவோர் கங்கை, காவிரி, தாமிரபரணி உள்ளிட்ட புண்ணிய தீர்த்தங்களுக்கு ஒரு நாளாவது சென்று தர்ப்பணம் செய்து வரலாம். பெற்றோர் இறந்த திதியன்று புண்ணியத் தீர்த்தங்களுக்கு செல்வது மிகவும் நல்லது. இந்நாட்களில் பசுவுக்கு கீரை, பழம் கொடுக்க வேண்டும். சக்திக்கேற்ப தான தர்மம் செய்யலாம்.
நமக்காக, பெற்றோரும், தாத்தா, பாட்டிகளும் எத்தனையோ தியாகங்களை செய்துள்ளனர். அவர்கள் ஆத்மசாந்தி பெறவும், நம் குடும்பம் வாழையடி வாழையாக தழைக்கவும், இந்த வழிபாட்டை செய்து வரலாம்.
இந்த ஆண்டு செப்.,28 துவங்கி, அக்.,12 வரை, மகாளய காலம். இந்த அரிய சந்தர்ப்பத்தை தவற விட்டு விடாதீர்கள்!

Source….தி.செல்லப்பா   in http://www.dinamalar.com

natarajan

This 12 Year Old Wrote His Exams Blindfolded to Create Awareness About an Important Cause …

12-year-old R Madheswaran says that he can read even when he is blindfolded. The class 7 student decided to put these skills to better use and appeared blindfolded for his English exam. He did this to spread awareness about a very important cause.

Sri Ramakrishna Matriculation Higher Secondary School in Coimbatore, witnessed an unusual scenario during the recently held quarterly examinations at school. Among all the students who were writing their papers on Friday, there was one who attracted everyone’s attention.

R Madheswaran, a Class 7 student, sat for the exam blindfolded. And he even managed to finish the paper within the prescribed two hours.-

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Photo: blog.onlinerti.com

No, Madheswaran did not have an eye injury, nor is he visually impaired. The 12-year-old boy took this unusual step to spread awareness about eye donation. He wanted to feel how visually impaired people experience the world, and at the same time, wanted to spread awareness about the various talents that they possess.

Madheswaran claims to have some unusual skills which enable him to read phone messages, question papers and text books while he is blindfolded. .

The young boy decided to put his unique skills to use when writing his English exam paper. The questions paper was not in Braille, and neither were the alphabets embossed.

So how did this young fellow complete this unusual task? Madheswaran says that every word and number has a different smell, and this smell helps him read them in his mind. He also wrote perfectly, right between the lines, using the same technique of smelling the words and the sheet.

His parents claim that Madheswaran acquired these special skills after attending a brain fold activation programme which improved his concentration and enabled him to sense many things without seeing them. Confident of his skills, Madheswaran and his family approached the school authorities to seek permission for this special act and they happily agreed.

Though these skills look unrealistic, we can’t help praising the young boy who took this step to spread awareness for a cause. After all, it is the thought that counts.

Source………www.the better india .com

Natarajan

Dr Uma Rajan, 75-Year-Old Indian-Singaporean Doctor, Honoured for Her Community Service ….

This doctor has been working relentlessly and has contributed immensely to the field of healthcare and community service. And now, the 75-year-old has been honoured for her inspiring work.

Dr. Uma Rajan, an Indian-Singaporean doctor, dedicated 38 years of her life to healthcare and community service. And for this, the 75-year-old doctor has been honoured by the Indian community in Singapore.

She has now become the first woman to receive the tabla! Community Champion Award.

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Source: Facebook

Singapore Press Holdings’ publication – tabla! is a weekly English language newspaper, which launched the Community Champion Award in 2011. The award, in its fifth year, was given by Minister of State for Law and Education, Indranee Rajah, yesterday at the Singapore International Indian Shopping Festival.

Dr. Rajan, who is currently the vice-chairman of the Siglap South Community Centre, won USD 10,000 and she donated the entire amount to two voluntary welfare organizations – Singapore Children’s Society and Asian Women’s Welfare Association in Singapore.

The doctor has been a part of many philanthropic activities, and has many achievements in her name. She was the director of the elder care department at the Ministry of Health from 1996 to 2000. In this time, she started about 10 elderly care centres with voluntary welfare organisations. She also created the blue booklet which is still being used by students in Singapore for their annual health check-ups. She had come up with this idea in early 1980s, when she was the Director at the School Health Service. She felt that booklets should be introduced for school children so they do not have to carry their medical cards. The booklet helps parents remain updated about their children’s medical conditions. She also participated in extensive research into problems such as obesity, myopia and scoliosis

Dr. Rajan lost her husband 38 years ago, after which she started giving her time to the community. She is also known for her contribution to the field of arts, and was one of the founding members of the Singapore Indian Fine Arts Society. She received the title of Natyakala Bushanam (ornament of dance) from the Indian Institute of Fine Arts in Chennai in 1954.

Source………www.the better india.com

Natarajan

 

MY STORY: “I Grew up in Karnataka Disliking Tamilians. Then This Happened….”

In the MY STORY section, we present some of the most compelling and pertinent stories and experiences shared with us by our readers. Do you have something to share? Write to us: contact@thebetterindia.com with “MY STORY” in the subject line.

He had grown up observing the endless conflict between Karnataka and Tamil Nadu and had formed some preconceived notions about Tamilians and their language. But once he got a chance to live in TN, his perspective changed forever. There were several humbling incidents that led to this change. And here is one of them.

Having been born and bought up in Karnataka, I had witnessed a lot of conflict between the states of Karnataka and Tamil Nadu while growing up – sometimes for water and sometimes for linguistic equality. That’s why when I got a job in Chennai, I was really shocked. Over the years, I had developed an unfortunate prejudice against the people and language of the other state. And now, I had to go and live there. I was very unsure about this decision initially. Little did I know that I was in for a surprise.

After reaching Chennai, with every passing day, I slowly began to realise that the reality was very different from what I had grown up imagining.

People here were caring, honest, friendly and really inspiring. They completely changed my attitude towards the state. I also learnt that Tamilians love and have a high regard for Kannadigas. –

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Photo for representation purpose. Cedit: Ryan/Flickr

Today, I have been in Chennai for three years. I know how to speak Tamil, and I cannot tolerate it if someone says something bad about the state. This place has always offered me its best. It has helped me attain financial stability, and has supported my journey towards my dreams.

There were several incidents which changed my outlook towards Tamil Nadu and its people, and here is one of them.

While in Chennai, I got associated with an NGO. This had always been my dream, and was also my way of giving back to the city which had welcomed me with open arms. One day, as part of the work related to this NGO, my roommate and I were travelling to SODEWS (Society for the Development of Economically Weaker Sections), which is situated near Yelagiri, 200km away from Chennai.

We took a train from Chennai to Vaniyambadi station and from there we took a private bus that goes to Alangayam. We had to get down at Niniyampattu station which is 7km away from Alangayam.

I had a bag which contained a few things that we had to deliver to some children in SODEWS. The bus was so crowded that I had to keep the bag in the separate luggage section.

It was a new place, so we were extra alert about getting off at the right stop. But when we finally did, I forgot to take my bag along. We then went into a small shop, and it was only five minutes later when I realised that I had left my bag.

It was a remote area. I did not remember anything about the bus except for its colour. And there was very little chance of finding another vehicle to chase the bus. I started asking around the shop, but the owner told me that there was no chance of finding the bus and I should forget about the bag. I told him that it had one book, a bunch of pencils purchased for SODEWS students, and my mother’s medical reports.

Suddenly, another person who was purchasing something at the shop and was listening to our conversation, said – “One of you can come along with me and I will help you catch the bus.”

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He helped me in a completely selfless way

I told him that it was not very important, but he insisted, saying that we should give it a try. We rode for about 7km in search of the bus and finally found it as it was entering the Alangayam bus stand! –

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Photo for representation purpose. Credit: cotaro70s/Flickr

Since vehicles were not allowed inside the stand, he asked me to go and collect my belongings. And then, he even dropped me back to the same place from where we had started.

I was really grateful for the way he helped me in such a selfless manner.

This was one man who was not concerned about where I came from, what language I spoke, or what religion I followed. All he was doing was helping me out in a time of need, just for the sake of humanity.

With this story, I would like to tell all my Kannadiga and Tamilian brothers and sisters, that instead of discussing and arguing about who is superior, and who is not, let’s all take pride in being human beings. Let’s maintain brotherhood and work with each other towards the development of the country as a whole.

-Anonymous

Source………www.the better india .com

Natarajan

 

The healthy foods you’re not eating…….

Purple carrots contain vitamin E and beta carotene like their orange counterparts but are also full of other goodies.

You may be all over quinoa and love kale, but there are some less common health foods that you need to start incorporating into your diet.

These foods are jam-packed with nutrients and are a great way to mix up your diet.

Red cabbage

Go for this vibrant-hued cabbage the next time you’re in the mood to mix things up in the vegie department. Red cabbage is low in calories, high in fibre, plus it’s rich in vitamin A, vitamin C and vitamin K.

Sardines

They may be tiny but sardines pack a punch in the nutrition department. They’re high in omega-3 fats which are great for the heart, along with vitamin D, iron, magnesium, zinc, potassium and B vitamins. If you’re looking for a fish alternative consider adding sardines to your food repertoire.

Pumpkin seeds

You may occasionally come across these tiny bite-sized bits of goodness in a protein ball recipe or as a topping on salads but consider adding them to your diet as a snack alternative. The seeds are actually the most nutritious part of a pumpkin! They’re high in magnesium, full of copper, protein and zinc and are also a great source of antioxidants.

Radishes

Radishes are a great detoxifier and help eliminate toxins and free radicals from the body. They’re also jam packed with vitamin C and are a great source of folate, fibre, vitamin B6, magnesium and potassium.

Purple carrots

Orange carrots? Been there, done that. So how about the purple variety? They’re equally as healthy, if not more so. Purple carrots contain vitamin E and beta carotene like their orange counterparts but are also full of anthocyanins, the antioxidant compound that can help improve memory, protect against heart attacks and enhance vision. Plus who doesn’t love the novelty of a purple carrot?

Swiss chard

You may know this green leafy vegetable by its other name silverbeet. Just one cup of Swiss chard can provide you with 300 per cent of your required daily intake of vitamin K. It’s also a great source of vitamin C and vitamin A and is full of magnesium, potassium, iron and fibre.

Turnips

Along with broccoli, brussels sprouts and kale, turnips are part of the nutritious cruciferous family. Turnips are full of vitamin C, B vitamins, calcium and potassium. They’re a great low-calorie alternative to potatoes and are packed full of fibre which will help you stay full for longer.

For more articles on nutrition, head to Body + Soul.

Source……..Tania Gomez ….www.news.com.au

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