Leaf People…Branch People….and Root People….

A beautiful analogy��
I have this tree analogy when
I think of people in my life, be it friends , family, acquaintances, employees, co-workers, whomever… They­ are all placed inside what I call my tree test.
It goes like this:

LEAF PEOPLE
Some people come into your life and they are like leaves on a tree. They are only there for a season. You can’t depend on them or count on them because they are weak and only there to give you shade. Like leaves, they are there to take what they need and as soon as it gets cold or a wind blows in your life they are gone. You can’t be angry at them, it’s just who they are.������

BRANCH PEOPLE
There are some people who come into your life and they are like branches on a tree. They are stronger than leaves, but you have to be careful with them. They will stick around through most seasons, but if you go through a storm or two in your life it’s possible that you could lose them. Most times they break away when it’s tough. Although they are stronger than leaves, you have to test them out before you run out there and put all your weight on them. In most cases they can’t handle too much weight. But again, you can’t be mad with them, it’s just who they are.�� 

ROOT PEOPLE
If you can find some people in your life who are like the roots of a tree then you have found something special. Like the roots of a tree, they are hard to find because they are not trying to be seen. Their only job is to hold you up and help you live a strong and healthy life. If you thrive, they are happy. They stay low key and don’t let the world know that they are there. And if you go through an awful storm they will hold you up. Their job is to hold you up, come what may, and to nourish you, feed you and water you.�� 
Source……input from a friend of mine
Natarajan

Common Mistakes we Make Every Day….

We all make health-related mistakes every day. From sneezing into our palms, to forgetting to wash our hands before eating, but there are a few very common health mistakes that don’t necessarily make sense unless you’re  a doctor. These few. mistakes that people are guilty of without even knowing…

health mistakes

Taking the Same Pill for Hangovers as Headaches

The problem: Using pain killers, even mild ones while you still have alcohol in your system will put your kidneys through a beating. A study conducted on the painkiller acetaminophen in Dallas, Texas, found that subjects who took the painkiller and drank small to moderate amounts of alcohol weekly, were prone to kidney disease, in alarming rates.
The Solution: Simple. Don’t combine any acetaminophen with alcohol, and check well which pain killer you are about to use. Best bet – and I’m sorry to say this – let it pass naturally, and drink a lot of water. You’ll be sparing your kidneys and have a reason not to drink too much again, which isn’t healthy for you anyway, let’s admit.

health mistakes

Carrying a Shiny Yellow Handbag

The Problem: This may not sound like an actual problem, but it is. Purses, wallets and belts made of bright colored ‘pleather’ (which is usually PVC or vinyl) frequently contain lead levels that are very high. Higher, in fact, than is allowed in children’s toys. The lead content is higher in yellow colored items, and then by this order: green, orange and red. The lead can be passed from handbag to hand to mouth, causing developmental problems in children and heart disease or cancer in adults. Although the CEH (Center for Environmental Health) has agreed with many retailers, in 2010, to limit the amount of lead in their products, more than 15% are still found to contain these high levels.
The Solution: Stay safe and avoid fake-leather purses and wallets if you can, and choose nylon, leather, hemp or canvas instead. If you really want a fake-leather purse, get a darker color.
health mistakes
Brushing  Right After Breakfast
The Problem: We’ve been told to brush our teeth after meals, and of course it is true you should at some point. However, when you drink something like coffee or orange juice, the acidity levels in your mouth go through the roof. If you rush off to brush your teeth afterwards, before your saliva has time to neutralize the pH levels, you’ll actually be pushing the acid into the enamel of your teeth, causing erosion. A study conducted in 2004 found that those who brush within 20 minutes of eating breakfast lost more dentil (the layer underneath the enamel) than those who waited.
The solution: After drinking an acidic beverage such as soda, wine, coffee or a fruit juice, drink a glass of water and wait 20-30 minutes before brushing, that will give enough time for the saliva in your mouth, which has a PH of 7, to neutralize the acidity.
health mistakes
Storing potatoes in the fridge
The problem: Most of our go-to carbs like chips, fries, potatoes, cookies etc. contain 2 ingredients that can be, in certain temperatures, quite volatile. These 2 are sugar and an amino acid called aspargine. When heated to high levels (as in during roasting, frying or baking), the two substances form a third – a chemical called acrylamide, which has been linked to several cancers (including endometrial, renal and ovarian cancers), which recently made the US FDA issue a consumer warning. This goes double for potato chips and french fries, especially when they’ve been kept in cold temperatures, which converts more starch into sugar, and thus, when heated – more carcinogens come out.
The Solution: Try cooking methods that releases a lot less acrylamide, such as boiling, steaming or microwaving. When storing, don’t store in the fridge but put the spuds in a cool, dark place. You can also soak the raw slices in water for 15-30 minutes before cooking.
A general rule of thumb – The darker the starch after being cooked, the more acrylamide it contains.
health mistakes
Airing Laundry Inside.
The Problem: When you hang up damp cloth inside the house, even fresh from the washer and looking clean, it will pollute the air. This is the conclusion of a study held by the Mackintosh Environmental Architecture Research Unit at the Glasgow School. Damp clothes increase humidity, which in turn creates an allergenic environment which dust mites and mold spores find irresistible, and can grow up to 300% of what is considered safe limits. During the study, about 25% of all homes in which laundry was air-dried came back positive for spergillus fumigatus, a fungus that causes lung infections, especially in people with a weak immune system.
The Solution: If you have a reason not to use a dryer, experts recommend that you hang damp cloth in an independent area with its own heat source and ventilation. For instance, hang in a closed room with a fan and open windows.
Source….www.ba-bamail.com
Natarajan

Message For the Day…” Eyes with which one can see everything that is outside can not see themselves…”

 

Vikshepa is an affliction of the mind that consists of worldly distractions; various spiritual exercises (sadhanas) are undertaken to overcome it and realise the Divine. The sadhanas include meditation, concentration and performance of good deeds for achieving purity of mind. When one succeeds in overcoming Vikshepa, one is confronted with avarana (akin to a thick covering in which one is enveloped). This covering is known as maya (delusion). It envelops everything in the universe. The eyes with which one can see everything that is outside cannot see themselves. Likewise, Maya, which reveals the entire universe, cannot reveal the Divine. Because we are enveloped in Maya, we seek worldly pleasures and do not seek our own Divine essence. ‘Yaddhrushyam than-nashyathi – Whatever is perceptible, is perishable.’ In the pursuit of fleeting and impermanent pleasures, we are throwing away the permanent, the unchanging and the real elements in human life.  

Sathya Sai Baba

” These Guys were offered to act in a Big Film …” See What happens next …?

India’s first superstar Prank, Where is an opportunity for everyone to become a superstar !. But Do you really want to become that Superstar ???? Check out the video !!

How can you say no to a film which releases on silver screen along with films starring Shah Rukh Khan, Amitabh Bachhan, Aamir Khan etc. These guys went around the street offering people an audition for a very popular role, and people couldn’t help but show interest in what they were saying. After they had their full attention, they revealed something unexpected which took people by surprise.

PrankBaaz has come up with a very innovative way to spread a social messages because no one listens when you directly tell them to not do anything. I’m frankly impressed with the idea. I’m sure you will be too.

Well done PrankBaaz! :)

 

Source…..www.storypick.com

Natarajan

29 Indian-Americans among 43 Semifinalists @ National Spelling Bee competition …

Indian-Americans have dominated most of the prestigious spelling awards in the United States for several years now, and this year is no different. Out of 49 semi finalists of the annual Scripps National Spelling Bee, 25 are of the Indian origin dominating another prestigious annual event.

The semi finals which are scheduled on Friday will have all 49 contestants competing for a place in the finals of 88th Scripps National Spelling Bee.

S-1

14 years old Gokul Venkatachalam who finished third in 2014 is performing fairly well this year and is one of the best contenders for the prize. Another good contender is 13 years old Vanya Shivashankar, who is making a fifth appearance in the Spelling Bee. Vanya’s elder sister Kavya won the 2009 Championship. Sriram Hathwar and Ansun Sujoe were the joint winners in 2014.

The National Spelling Bee has been going on since 1925. It started with 9 contestants and this year it received participation from all 50 states. This year’s winner will be awarded with a cash prize of $ 35,000.

News Source: The Hindu

 

Source….www.storypick.com

natarajan

Meet Abhishek Singhania …an IIT Madras Graduate who works with Farmers…

Indrani Roy/Rediff.com meets Abhishek Singhania who left a bright career at PricewaterhouseCoopers, Mumbai, to work in a food security project at Khentia village in Bengal, as a research fellow.

Abhishek Singhania with farmers

Image: Abhishek Singhania (standing extreme right clockwise). Photograph: Dipak Chakraborty/Rediff.com

Abhishek Singhania is a strange young man. Graduating in metallurgy from Indian Institute of Technology – Madras in 2012, he got himself a dream job of a consultant at PricewaterhouseCoopers, Mumbai. But unlike the youngsters of his age, the cushy job that fetched him Rs 90K per month failed to satisfy him.

Instead, he wanted to dedicate his time to a job more meaningful, an endeavour that would have a direct and positive impact on the growth of India.

“I should be working with farmers instead,” Abhishek told himself.

A few months into his job at PwC, he was sent to Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, for six months on an assignment.

“There was no problem with the consultant’s job as such but an inner voice kept pestering me that I was not meant for this. I needed to do something else,” Abhishek told rediff.com.

“I started thinking deeply about my career and my future.

“I was not sure if I would continue with my job at PwC or join the automobile sector (I am passionate about cars) or agriculture,” Abhishek said.

“It was around this time that I started preparing for Graduate Record Examinations but soon lost interest.

“For some time, I have been reading reports of farmers’ suicides and they have perturbed me a lot,” Abhishek said.

“I thought if technical people like us can train these farmers, it can lead to better production and lesser suicides”.

Abhishek returned to India from Jeddah in June 2014.

He took a break from office and visited Temathani village near Kharagpur.

“I met the farmers there and discussed the problems that they face,” Abhishek said.

“I was taken aback by their sheer lack of knowledge,” he said.

“I could understand that they did not know how to treat the soil with right kind of fertilisers for higher production.

“I also realised that the farmers did not know how to save their crops from pests.

Abhishek Singhania (extreme right clockwise) experimenting with biochar

Abhishek Singhania (standing extreme right clockwise) experimenting with biochar. Photograph: Kind courtesy, Abhishek Singhania

“I came to know that they were often using the wrong pesticides that caused more harm to the soil than good.

One fine morning, Abhishek came to IIT Kharagpur from Temathani.

“I knew that this IIT alone has an agriculture department and food technology schools.

“I heard from a cousin of mine, who is a student here, that Dr PBS Bhadoria and Dr Dilip Kumar Swain, were doing a food security project here.

“When I met them they said a project is expected to take off soon in a village nearby.

They, however, could not give me a timeline. ”

In December, Abhishek resigned from PwC and went to Pondicherry to take a look at some organic farms and startups there.

The biochar is made

Image: The biochar is made. Photograph: Kind courtesy, Abhishek Singhania

“I was integrating within me all the necessary information about agriculture,” Abhishek said.

He revisited Kharagpur IIT in February end and after a second round of discussion with Bhadoria and Swain, he decided to join, as a research fellow, the duo’s Food Security Project at Khentia village located 10 km from the institute.

The fact that his stipend would now be a meagre 15K a month did not deter Abhishek even once.

“Rather, I was happy to have finally made up my mind”, he told rediff.com.

Now, Abhishek spends hours with farmers of Khentia village, teaching them essential skills of farming.

Under this project, a barren 14 acres of land has been ‘adopted’ from 14 farmers by the IIT team.

In a collaborative approach, wherein the farmers give free labour and the IIT team the technical knowhow, the land has been treated and made ready for cultivation.

Irrigation system has been revamped and the farmers can now produce rice for their own consumption (earlier they needed to buy rice from the market).

Riding on the success of abundant production of rice, Abhishek’s team has taught the Khentia farmers to produce soyabean, sweet corn, peanut and sesame.

“Target of our project is to make these farmers self-sufficent so that apart from growing their food themselves, they can enhance their income by selling the cash crops to the retail market.

The IIT team plans to give hands on training to the farmers only for a year and once the team feels that the farmers are confident and skilled enough to run the show themselves, the team will move out to other villages of Kharagpur to replicate the same project there.

Abhishek Singhania with a dhenki

Abhishek Singhania poses with a dhenki, machine used by rural folks to produce rice from paddy. Photograph: Dipak Chakraborty/Rediff.com

Abhishek leads the team of trainers from the IIT that keeps visiting the farmers regularly.

At present, he has his hands full making a sustainable farming-cum-marketing model so that once the IIT team leaves Khentia, the farmers there can do everything on their own.

“We want the farmers to form a cooperative that will work towards their interests and well being,” Abhishek told rediff.com.

Abhishek is also making environment-friendly biochar and biogas for the Khentia farmers.

“Generally the farmers burn the plant residue on the field after harvesting. In the process, most of the carbon from the plants get transferred back to the atmosphere in the form of carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide, methane, etc thereby increasing global warming,” Abhishek said.

“Instead, if we do pyrolysis in controlled conditions, we can retain a substantial amount of the carbon in the final product (biochar).

“Biochar increases soil fertility and has many other advantages.

“Our primary aim is to develop an ideal setup for producing biochar which should be simple so that farmers can operate it, it should be inexpensive and should have high efficiency.

“Till now we have done five experiments with 3 different set ups.”

“If my experiments on these products is successful here, I’ll carry them to other villages as well,” he told rediff.com.

As he guided us around the Khentia village in the scorching May heat, sweats covered Abhishek’s forehead.

But his smile spoke for itself how much he enjoyed this new assignment of his.

Isn’t this rigorous farm work tiring?

“Na didi, it’s fun. I had always dreamt about doing something meaningful in life. After a long wait, I have got an opportunity to follow my dream,” said a beaming Abhishek.

Abhishek Singhania poses with a rice storage container

Abhishek Singhania poses with a rice storage container. Photograph: Dipak Chakraborty/Rediff.com

Once his research at IIT-Kharagpur gets over, Abhishek wants to set up a firm that will lend technical assistance towards integrated farming.

After completing his research, Abhishek wants to travel to villages all over Bengal to interact with farmers and share his experience and knowledge with them.

“At present, with the current population, implementation of National Food Security Act requires 61 metric tones of foodgrains annually,” said Abhishek.

“Moreover, India needs to double its agricultural productivity by 2040 to reduce the supply and demand gap.”

These statistics, Abhishek said, outline the need for research in the field of food production.

“I am happy to be a small part of this gigantic research,” he told rediff.com.

Asked if he missed his high profile career at PwC, the young farming enthusiast said, “Not in the least. I am being true to my soul. I have transformed my passion into my profession.

“All that I ever wanted was to have a car of my own. I drive a Hyundai i10 now. What more can I ask for?” Abhishek said.

“For the entire six months of my stay at Jeddah, I stayed at Radisson. But here at Kharagpur IIT, I am staying in a small hostel room with a common washroom.

“The huge difference between my living arrangements here and there never bother me for a minute.

“We get only one life. Why waste it chasing frivolous things?”

Indrani Roy / Rediff.com in Kharagpur

Source………….www.rediff.com
Natarajan
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Message for the Day…” Handover your wealth of Love to God…”

Youth today are becoming exceedingly greedy and totally selfish, harboring feelings of hatred and jealousy. Their lifestyle of enjoying worldly and carnal pleasures (bhoga) will result in diseases (roga).In ancient times, youth and saints alike, lead a life of sacrifice and sense control (tyaga and yoga) and enjoyed peace and joy. When going on a tour, people like to carry sufficient money for expenses and when they finish the journey or reach the goal, they deposit or hand over the remainder to a trustworthy friend and sleep soundly. All of you are blessed with the wealth of love from the moment of your birth. In this field of worldly activity (Karmakshetra), it is very difficult to safeguard the treasure of love (Prema). Therefore you need to find a faithful friend to hand it over – and the only true friend is God. So hand over the wealth of your love to God, and lead a secured life filled with peace and joy.

Sathya Sai Baba

“ஆணவம் அழிவுக்கு வழி வகுக்கும் …”

பாரதப்போர் முடிவில் கிருஷ்ணர் தேரில் அமர்ந்தபடி,””அர்ஜூனா! போர் தான் முடிந்து விட்டதே! இனியும் ஏன் நின்று கொண்டிருக்கிறாய். தேரை விட்டு இறங்கு!” என்றார்.

“”மைத்துனா! நீ என்னை போரில் வெற்றி பெறச் செய்தாய். மகிழ்ச்சி! ஆனால், வெற்றி பெற்றவனை, தேரோட்டி தான் கையைப் பிடித்து இறக்கி விட வேண்டும் என்ற சம்பிரதாயம் உண்டே! அதை மறந்து விட்டாயே! அப்படி செய்வது எனக்கும் பெருமை அல்லவா! நீயோ என்னைக் கீழே இறங்கு என்று ஆணையிடுகிறாய். இது என்ன நியாயம்? ”

அர்ஜுனனின் வார்த்தைகளை கிருஷ்ணர், காதில் வாங்கிக் கொண்டதாகவே தெரியவில்லை. “”தேரை விட்டு இறங்கு!” என்றார் கண்டிப்புடன்.

வருத்தத்துடன் அர்ஜுனன் கீழிறங்கினான்.

அப்போது அவர்,”” தேரின் பக்கத்தில் நிற்காதே! சற்று தள்ளி நில்!” என்றார் அதட்டலுடன்!

அர்ஜூனனால் கிருஷ்ணரின் அதட்டலைப் பொறுத்துக் கொள்ளவே முடியவில்லை. வெற்றி பெற்ற மகிழ்ச்சி கூட மனதை விட்டு அகன்றுவிட்டது. ஒன்றும் புரியாதவனாய் தள்ளி நின்றான்.

வாடிய முகத்துடன் நின்ற அவனைக் கண்டு புன்னகைத்த கிருஷ்ணர், தேரிலிருந்து குதித்து ஓடிச்சென்று, அர்ஜுனனை இறுகக் கட்டியணைத்துக் கொண்டார். அந்த கணமே தேர் தீப்பற்றி எரிந்தது.

“”பார்த்தாயா? தேர் எரிகிறது! அதனால் தான் உன்னை இறங்கச் சொன்னேன்!,” என்றார் புன்முறுவலுடன்.

“தேர் ஏன் எரிந்தது?’ அர்ஜுனன் ஏதும் புரியாமல் கேட்டான்.

“”அர்ஜூனா! போர் புரியும்போது கவுரவர்கள் உன் மீது பல அஸ்திரங்களை ஏவினர். அவற்றின் சக்தி அளவிட முடியாதது. தேரில் நானும், தேர்க்கொடியில் அனுமனும் இவ்வளவுநேரம் அதை தடுத்துக் கொண்டிருந்தோம். அதனால், அவை வலிமையற்றுக் கிடந்தன.
தேரை விட்டு நான் குதித்ததும், தேர்க்கொடியில் இருந்துஅனுமனும் புறப்பட்டு விட்டான். அஸ்திரங்களின் சக்தி தலைதூக்கியது. தேர் பற்றி எரியத் தொடங்கிவிட்டது.
உண்மை இப்படி இருக்க, நீயோ போரில் வெற்றி பெற்ற உன்னைக் கவுரவிக்கவில்லை என்று வருத்தப்படுகிறாய்.

வெற்றி பெற்றதும் “நான்’ என்னும் ஆணவம் உனக்கு வந்து விட்டது. ஆணவம் அழிவுக்கு வழிவகுக்கும் என்பதை மறந்து விடாதே,” என்று அறிவுரை கூறினார்.

தேர் பற்றி எரிந்ததுபோல, அர்ஜுனனிடம் இருந்த ஆணவமும் பற்றி எரிந்து சாம்பலானது.

இறைவன் காரணமில்லாமல் நமக்கு கஷ்டம் எதையும் தருவதில்லை !

Source……Input from a friend of mine

Natarajan

“அடுத்தவன் பொருளுக்கு ஆசைப்படாதவன் தர்மத்தைக் காப்பாத்தறான் …”

இந்த சம்பவம் சுமார் எழுபது வர்ஷங்களுக்கு முன் நடந்தது.

பெரியவாளிடம் அளவற்ற பக்தி கொண்ட ஒரு முதியவர், காலகதி அடையும் தறுவாயில் தன் மகனை அழைத்து சில விஷயங்களை சொல்லும் போது, தான் ஒருவரிடம் நூறு ரூபாய் கடன் வாங்கியதாகவும், அதை அவன் திருப்பித் தரவேண்டும் என்று சொல்லிவிட்டு இறந்தார். அப்போது மகனுக்கே 62 வயது. கிராமத்தில் கர்ணம் வேலை பார்த்துக்கொண்டிருந்தார். சம்பளமோ 15 ரூபாய்தான். அப்பாவின் கடைசி வாக்கை காப்பாற்ற கஷ்டப்பட்டு மூன்று வர்ஷங்களில் எப்படியோ 100 ரூபாய் சேர்த்தார். இதில் வேடிக்கை என்னவென்றால், அப்பாவுக்கு கடன் குடுத்தவர் யாரென்றே தெரியாது! சேமித்த பணத்தை யாரிடம் கொடுப்பது?

மஹாபெரியவா – திக்கற்றவருக்கு தெய்வமே துணை! ஓடினார் பெரியவாளிடம்! விவரத்தை சொன்னார்.

“மடத்ல ஒரு நாள் தங்கு” உத்தரவானது. மறுநாள் காலை பெரியவா அவரிடம் “இங்கேர்ந்து நேரா…………நீ ஆலத்தம்பாடி கிராமத்துக்கு போ! அங்க இருக்கும் அக்ரஹாரத்ல கடைசியா இருக்கும் வீட்ல இருக்கறவர்கிட்டதான் ஒங்கப்பா கடன் வாங்கினார்”.

ஆலத்தம்பாடி அக்ரஹாரத்தில் பெரியவா சொன்ன வீட்டுக்கு சென்றால்……ஆச்சர்யம்! அந்த வீட்டுப் பெரியவர் காலகதி அடைந்துவிட்டார். அவருடைய மகனிடம் விஷயத்தை சொன்னதும், அவருக்கு ஒரே வியப்பு! “எங்கப்பாவும் செத்துப் போகும்போது சில விஷயங்கள்லாம் சொன்னார்……..ஆனா, உங்கப்பாவுக்கு குடுத்த கடன் பத்தின விஷயத்தை சொல்லவேயில்லையே! அதுனால, இந்த பணத்தை நான் வாங்கிக்க மாட்டேன்” திட்டவட்டமாக சொல்லிவிட்டார். அவரையும் அழைத்துக் கொண்டு பெரியவாளிடம் வந்தார். ரெண்டுபக்கத்து ஞாயத்தை கேட்டதும், பெரியவா முகத்தில் புன்னகை.

“இங்கதான் தர்மம் இருக்கு. இன்னொர்த்தர் சாமானை வாங்கறப்போ…….நமக்கு ரொம்ப சந்தோஷமா இருக்கும். ஆனா, அதை திருப்பித் தரணும்னா……யோசிப்போம்! அதுனால, கடன் வாங்கின பாவத்துக்கு பரிகாரமே இல்லை. இங்க, ஒங்க ரெண்டு பேரோட விவகாரம் எப்டி? வாங்கினவர் திருப்பித் தரணும்..ன்னு நெனைக்கிறார்……..குடுத்தவரோட பிள்ளையோ, அப்பா தங்கிட்ட அதைப் பத்தி சொல்லாததால, வாங்கிக்க மாட்டேங்கறார்……ஆனா, தர்மம் ஒங்களுக்கு தெரியாது இல்லியா?

அடுத்தவா பொருளுக்கு ஆசைப்படாதவன் தர்மத்தை காப்பாத்தறான். ரெண்டு பேரும் காமாக்ஷி கோவிலுக்கு போய், இந்த பணத்தை அங்க உண்டியல்ல போட்டுடுங்கோ! அது அவளோட பணம்” ஆசீர்வாதம் பண்ணினார்.

Read more: http://periva.proboards.com/thread/5174/#ixzz3bFfNj1lp

Source….www.periva.proboards.com

Natarajan

How this Aussie Girl Won Sir Richard Branson Over …

Isley Hermansen has dyslexia. Her video about the condition inspired billionaire Richard

Isley Hermansen has dyslexia. Her video about the condition inspired billionaire Richard Branson, who also has dyslexia. Source: Supplied

WHAT does this 12-year-old girl from northern NSW have in common with Sir Richard Branson, the charismatic entrepreneur with a net worth of $US4.9 billion?

They both have dyslexia.

It’s an unlikely pairing, but Isley Hermansen caught the attention of the Virgin Group founder through a heartwarming video she made about the struggle dyslexics face.

Isley started high school this year and was struggling to keep up in class, her mother Julie Hermansen told news.com.au.

“She was suffering a lot from anxiety, which goes hand in hand with dyslexia, and I was trying to think of a way to build her self esteem and empower her,” Julie said.

One Saturday afternoon, Isley Googled ‘famous dyslexics’ and discovered a long rollcall of high profile men and women, including Stephen Hawking, Cher, Roald Dahl and Jamie Oliver.

“She decided to put all these famous faces together in a PowerPoint presentation. She did all the animation and everything on her own, we found a powerful song and we put the video on YouTube,” said Julie.

In the video, Isley explains what it’s like to live with the condition.

“Right now it seems like you have got it all over us … because being in a classroom is not our strong point. Sitting for tests, writing essays and reading are all a struggle for us. You don’t see us put our hand up for answers much, and we might try and hide in the classroom,” she writes.

“One day I’m going to fly like a dyslexic,” the video says, accompanied with images of Branson and other dyslexic celebrities including Keira Knightley, Orlando Bloom and Michael Jordan.

Julie shared the video on a dyslexic support Facebook group and was overwhelmed with the response.

“We were contacted by other families who said they cried when they saw it. It got shared in the US and the UK. We got so much feedback from people saying they found it inspirational and from teaching advocates who wanted to use it in schools,” she said.

 

Sir Richard Branson is the UK’s seventh richest man. Photo: Rob Kim.

Sir Richard Branson is the UK’s seventh richest man. Photo: Rob Kim. Source: Getty Images

Julie and Isley then went “went straight to the top” and contacted Branson’s team around five weeks ago.

“We didn’t think we’d get anywhere. We thought, ‘Oh well, we tried’. But then last week I received an email from Richard’s team and it all spiralled from there. It’s incredible to have his support and to have the issue out there in the public eye.”

Branson shared the video on his Facebook page and wrote a blog post about Isley.

‘Every now and then you come across something so inspiring that you can’t help but share it. This was certainly the case with this wonderful idea from 12-year-old Isley, who has severe dyslexia,” Branson wrote.

“Isley’s mum wrote to me saying that one of the main problems with dyslexia is a misunderstanding of the condition, which leads to people feeling ashamed to be dyslexic.

“She said that some kids prefer to fail rather than admit to the shame of being dyslexic. While awareness about dyslexia is growing, it can still hold so many people back.

The note that inspired Richard Branson

sley’s letter to Sir Richard Branson. Source: Supplied

“But with videos like Isley’s, the word is spreading that dyslexics can ‘Shake the Shame’ and see all of the positives of being dyslexic. I see my condition as a gift, not a disability. It has helped me learn the art of delegation, focus my skills, and work with incredible people,” he wrote.

Isley says she’s stoked with the worldwide response to her video.

“It makes me feel very special,” she told news.com.au. “She’s really happy,” her mum added.

Julie says dyslexia is a “hidden disability”.

“There’s no funding for it. Teachers aren’t trained to deal with it and they don’t know how to identify it.

“It’s got nothing to do with intelligence — Richard Branson is a highly intelligent man. It’s just that dyslexics learn differently. They need to be taught differently and we need the school system to change,” she said.

Dyslexia is hereditary and affects an estimated 10 per cent of all Australians, according to the Australian Dyslexia Association.

Source……..www.news.com.au

natarajan