Message For the Day…” Divine Love is Free From Self Interest…”

 

There can be no joy in a dry, barren heart. Divine Love alone can make a dry heart fit for the sprouting of the sapling of joy. Divine Love is free from self-interest. That love alone is sacred and divine which is based on complete obliviousness to one’s self and is solely concerned with the yearning for God. Only when such a precious diamond of love is shining in your heart, you will have sacred and divine thoughts. In ancient days, sages lived in the forests amidst wild animals and performed penance. How were they able to live in peace amongst these animals? Because they were filled with divine love, they extended that love to the wild beasts also. They had no lethal weapons with them, only the weapon of love, which transformed even the nature of the wild animals. Therefore fill your hearts with love.  

 

Sathya Sai Baba

How Krishnans Brought Wimbledon Home …!!!

 

 

Ramanathan Krishnan and Lalitha Krishnan at their natural grass court patterned on those at Wimbledon. Photo : R Ravindran.

 

 

The English championship is two months away and fans are making plans to be there. But the first family of Indian tennis has other ideas

No sprightly girls and boys to chase the yellow balls. No linesmen to yell out calls. No electronic board to flash the scores. But superlative matches are played every day at this grass court, where tall trees fill in for spectators.

These ‘matches’ defy the humdrum order of time, space and sequence. One moment, an iceberg-cool Borg and a fiery McEnroe are locked in a nail-biting tie-breaker. In the next, Ashe gets the better of Connors with a clever mix of slice and spin. Then come Nadal and Federer fighting a war of attrition, which is followed by an emotion-soaked final where a kind Duchess of Kent offers her shoulder to a teary-eyed Jana Novotna, disconsolate after her loss to Steffi Graf.

Welcome to the private grass court at Oliver Road in Mylapore, maintained by Indian tennis’ first family, the Krishnans, as a tribute to Wimbledon. For the Krishnans, this natural grass court, which borrows features from the hallowed courts of Wimbledon, serves as a mind screen to replay and relive the timeless matches from the prestigious English championship. (Also significant is that this court is one of the very few natural grass courts in the country.)

 “Wimbledon is dear to every member of our family. We have followed the championship closely for decades,” says Ramanathan Krishnan, 77 now.

 The Krishnans not only tracked Wimbledon, they also excelled in it — a fact that largely shaped their deep attachment to the championship and also the decision to design a natural grass court patterned on those at Wimbledon. Ramanathan Krishnan is a two-time semi-finalist (1960 and 1961) at Wimbledon and his son Ramesh Krishnan, the winner of the 1979 Wimbledon juniors title and a quarter-finalist in the men’s section in 1986.

 “It was our son Ramesh’s idea to design a Wimbledon-type grass court at our house on Oliver Road. Around four years ago, he came up with this plan and everyone was excited about it. Ramesh got all the necessary information from Wimbledon. My wife Lalitha assisted in executing the project. And when it was done, we knew we had brought Wimbledon home,” declares Ramanathan, who spends the evening hours with Lalitha at this private grass court, both of them merrily parked in broad, deliciously comfortable bamboo chairs.  “When Wimbledon is on, we bring out the television set and watch the matches sitting here,” says Lalitha, 70.

The Krishnans are going to a lot of trouble to make Wimbledon more immediate for themselves: they have put two men, A. Shanmugam and M. Manickam, on the job of maintaining the court. Natural grass court maintenance is costly and cumbersome, the reason we don’t have many of them around.

Notably, this grass court is not used regularly — for ‘real’ matches, that is. “Once in two months, Ramesh, who lives in R.A. Puram, brings some of his friends along for a game,” says Ramanathan.

Besides the love of Wimbledon, there are other sentiments that spur the desire to keep the court in shape and working order. Beneath the grass, lie clayey memories of long practice hours and family bonding. “This was a clay court for well over three decades, before it was turned into a grass court four years ago. We set up the clay court in 1975. It was a training ground for Ramesh,” says Ramanathan.

 “Father would train Ramesh from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. at this court,” recalls Gowri Krishnan-Tirumurti, Ramanathan’s daughter, who also trained at the court and is the 1982 Indian national juniors champion.

In its clayey days, the court saw five south Indian champions play and practise the sport — T.K. Ramanathan, Ramanathan Krishnan, Ramesh Krishnan, Gowri Krishnan and Shankar Krishnan (a cousin of Ramesh and Gowri). “Just like my dad and brother, Shankar went on to play Davis Cup,” says Gowri.

This private tennis court may have created champions, but its charm lies in the sense of togetherness it has fostered among the Krishnans. “I remember when we would be practising, our mother would sit on the sidelines and peel oranges for us,” says Gowri.

The bonding has extended to the youngest generation. Ramanathan’s grandchildren — Gayathri, Nandita, Bhavani and Vishwajit — are in their twenties and studies have taken some of them away from home; yet, when they visit their grandparents, they love to sit around this clay-turned-grass court. Says Gowri, “Successive generations have learnt many things around this court. Discipline is one of them.”

 And, surely, also what it takes to be a winner.

Keywords: KrishnansWimbledon

 

source:::: The Hindu…

natarajan

 

Happiness is… Laughing Baby !!!

 

Happiness is a baby, a dog and a cloud of bubbles

 Baby Molly wasn’t impressed by the airy bubbles her mother blew to amuse her until Bennie the dog joined in the fun. 

Bennie leaping around popping the bubbles turned out to be the funniest thing not-quite-10-months-old Molly had ever seen in her short life. 

Tail wagging, Bennie waits expectantly for the next rush of bubbles. Gurgling and giggling in equal parts, so does little Molly. 

We dare you not to fall over laughing just like Molly does. And we guarantee this video of baby, dog and ‘Hysterical Bubbles’ will make you more than a little bit wistful, nostalgic about those long-gone days when all it took to make the sun shine brighter was a bottle of soap water and a plastic ring that created a rainbow-tinted cloud of happiness, a fragile joy. 

Watch Molly and Bennie have fun with bubbles: 

source::::You Tube and NDTV

Natarajan

ஒரு “மை”…. அது உனக்கு பெரு “மை “…!!!

ஒரு “மை” … உன் விரலில் ஒரு கரு “மை”

வேண்டும் உனக்கு பொறு “மை” … ” மை ”

அதன் அரு “மை” தெரிய !!! பெரு “மை ”

உனக்குதான்… அந்த “மை” யின் வலி “மை”

புரியும் நேரம் !!!

நடராஜன்

இரண்டாம் வாய்ப்பு !!!….

 


மின்சார பல்பைக் கண்டுபிடித்தது யார் என்று கேட்டால், தாமஸ் ஆல்வா எடிசன் எனப் பட்டெனக் கூறிவிடுவீர்கள். அவர் மின்சார பல்பைக் கண்டுபிடிப்பதற்கு முன்னர் ஆயிரம் முறையாவது சோதித்துப் பார்த்திருப்பார்.

ஒரு நாள் எடிசனின் சோதனை வெற்றிபெற்றது. அவரது உதவியாளர்கள் மகிழ்ச்சியில் திளைத்தனர். அப்போது எடிசன், அலுவலகப் பையனை அழைத்தார்.

‘‘இந்த பல்பைச் சோதனை செய்’’ என்றார் எடிசன்.

எடிசன் சொன்னவுடன் அவனுக்கு ஒரே பதற்றம். பல்பை வாங்கும்போதே தவறுதலாகக் கீழே போட்டுவிட்டான். எடிசனுக்குக் கோபம் வந்தது. ஆனால், ஒன்றும் சொல்லவில்லை. எடிசன் தன்னை வேலையை விட்டு அனுப்பிவிடுவார் என்று அந்தப் பையன் பயந்தான்.

எடிசன் மீண்டும் ஒரு புதிய பல்பை உருவாக்கினார். மறுபடியும் அதே அலுவலகப் பையனை அழைத்தார்.

‘‘இந்தப் பல்பையாவது சரியாக வாங்கிச் சோதனை செய்’’ என்று சொன்னார் எடிசன்.

எடிசனின் இந்தச் செயல் அவரது உதவியாளர்களுக்கு ஆச்சரியத்தை அளித்தது. அவர்களுள் ஒருவர், ‘‘ஏற்கெனவே ஒருமுறை பல்பை உடைத்துவிட்டான், மீண்டும் அவனுக்கு எதற்கு வாய்ப்பு தர வேண்டும்?’’ என்று கேட்டார்.

இன்னொரு உதவியாளரோ, “மீண்டும் அவன் பல்பை உடைத்துவிட்டால் உங்கள் உழைப்பு வீணாகிவிடாதா’’ என எடிசனிடம் கேள்வி எழுப்பினார்.

அதற்கு எடிசன் பொறுமையாகப் பதில் கூறினார். “இந்தப் புதிய பல்பை உருவாக்குவதற்கு எனக்கு ஒரு நாள்தான் ஆனது. மீண்டும் அது கீழே விழுந்து உடைந்துவிட்டால், ஒரே நாளில் என்னால் புதிதாக இன்னொரு பல்பை உருவாக்கிவிட முடியும். ஆனால், இந்த வேலையை மறுபடி அவனிடம் ஒப்படைக்காவிட்டால், அவன் தன்னுடைய தன்னம்பிக்கையை இழந்துவிடுவான். அதை மீண்டும் அவ்வளவு எளிதாக அவனிடம் உருவாக்க முடியாது. அப்படி நடப்பதை நான் விரும்பவில்லை” என்று சொன்னார்.

source:::::The Hindu… Tamil…
natarajan

” நல்லதாப் போச்சு … நீ என்ன பண்றே ? !….”


இப்போதெல்லாம், சமையல் வகுப்புகளை
தொலைக்காட்சிகள் ஒளிபரப்பி வருகின்றன.
சின்னத்திரையில் காட்டுகிறபடி செய்து பார்த்தால்,
கடைசியாக உருவாகும் பண்டத்தை வாயில் வைக்க
முடியுமா.? என்பதே சந்தேகம்.
இல்லாவிட்டால், முருங்கைக்காய் சாம்பார்,
வெண்டைக்காய் பொறியல் என்று, காலம் காலமாக
வருகிற குழம்பு – பொறியல்களையே ஆங்கில வார்த்தைகள்
மிலி அளவுகள் சொல்லி நிகழ்ச்சியை ஒப்பேற்றிவிடுவார்கள்.
பெரியவா, பூர்வாசிரமத்தில் சமையற்கட்டுப் பக்கம்
போனதில்லை; சந்நியாசம் ஏற்றபிறகு அதற்கு அவசியமும்
இல்லாமல் போய்விட்டது. ஆனால் பெரியவாளுடைய
சமையல் பக்குவம் செய்யும் புதுமை முறைகள்
எப்படியோ அத்துபடியாகியிருந்தது.!.
பண்டரிபுரத்திலிருந்து திரும்பிக் கொண்டிருந்தோம்.
சின்னஞ்சிறு கிராமம். நாலைந்து குடிசைகள் மட்டுமே..
ஒரு பெரிய மரத்தடியில் முகாம்.
பெரியவாளுக்குப் பிட்சை தயார் செய்தபின்,
மிகுதியாக இருந்த சில பொருள்களைக் கொண்டு
ஒருவழியாக எங்கள் மதிய உணவை முடித்துக்கொண்டோம்.
சற்று ஓய்வெடுக்கும் வேளை.
அமர்க்களமாக வந்து இறங்கினார்கள்,இருபது பேர்கள்.
எல்லோரும் சென்னைப் பகுதியிலிருந்து வந்தவர்கள்.
ஸ்ரீமடம் முகாமில், ஸ்ரீசந்த்ரமௌளீஸ்வர பிரசாதமாக
அருமையான உணவு கிடைக்கும் என்ற நம்பிக்கையுடன்
வந்தவர்கள்.
ஆனால் ஸ்ரீமடம் ஒரு பெரிய மரத்தின் அடியில்
அல்லவா முகாமிட்டிருக்கிறது.
சமைப்பதற்குத் தேவையான பாத்திரங்கள்,
சாமான்கள் கிடையாதே.?.
பரமாசாரியாளுக்கு அதைப் பற்றியெல்லாம் கவலையில்லை!
பசியுடன் வந்திருக்கும் அன்பர்களுக்குச் சாப்பாடு
போட வேண்டும் என்பது மட்டுமே குறிக்கோள்.
பிரும்மசாரி ராமகிருஷ்ணன் என்று ஓர் அணுக்கத் தொண்டர்
அவரிடம், “எல்லோருக்கும் சமையல் செய்”
என்று உத்திரவும் இட்டார்கள்.
ராமகிருஷ்ணன் கைகளைப் பிசைந்துகொண்டு பரிதாபமாக
நின்றான்.”அடுத்த ஊர் போனதும் சமைத்துப் போடுகிறேனே.?
என்றான்.
ஏதோ பிரச்சினை இருக்கிறது என்பது பெரியவாளுக்குப்
புரிந்துவிட்டது.
“அரிசி இருக்கோன்னோ.?”
“இருக்கு.கொஞ்சம் பயத்தம்பருப்பும் இருக்கு.”
(மோர்)..”நல்லதாப் போச்சு.! நீ என்ன பண்றே.? அரிசியைக்
…………..களைஞ்சு, அந்த ஜலத்தைத் தனியா ஒரு பாத்திரத்திலே
………….வெச்சுக்கோ.அந்த ஜலத்தில் கொஞ்சம் உப்புப் போட்டு
………….எலுமிச்சம் பழம் பிழிஞ்சு, நாரத்தை இலையைக்
………….கிள்ளிப் போடு. இதுதான் மோர்.
(ரசம்)..”பயத்தம்பருப்பை வேகவைச்சு-நிறைய ஜலம் விட்டு
…………- அந்தக் கொதிநீரிலே எலுமிச்சம்பழ ரசம் (சாறு)
………….சேர்த்துட்டேன்னா, அதுதான் ரசம்.
(கறி)….”வேகவெச்ச பயத்தம்பருப்பு இருக்கே.? உப்பு போடு
…………..ரெண்டு பச்சைமிளகா கிள்ளிப் போடு.
…………..இதுதான் கறி.!”
எல்லாம் அரைமணியில் ரெடி.அதற்குள், எல்லோருக்கும்
இலை, தண்ணீர் சேகரித்து வைத்தோம்.
சாதம்,பயத்தம்பருப்புக் கறி, ரசம், மோர் -என்று
அறுசுவை டின்னர்.!.”
“சாப்பாடு ஏ ஒன்.!” என்றார் ஒருவர்.
“தேவாமிர்தம்.!” என்றார் இன்னொருவர்.
“இவ்வளவு ருசியான சாப்பாட்டைச் சாப்பிட்டதே இல்லை.!”
என்றார். மற்றொருவர்.
தொண்டர்களாகிய நாங்கள் எங்களுக்குள் சிரித்துக்
கொண்டோம். எல்லாம் பெரியவாள் வாக்கின் ருசி
என்பது எங்களுக்குத் தெரிந்ததுதான்.
விருந்தோம்பல் பற்றி, பெரியவாளிடம் பாடம் கற்க வேண்டும்.
அது அட்சய பாத்திரம்.!.

-The inner Light illuminates our minds–  source:::::  input from a friend of mine
  natarajan

 

Jokes For the Day…

 


“How long have you been working here?” one employee asked to another.

“Ever since the boss threatened to fire me.”

………………..


A customer sent an order to a distributor for a large amount of goods totaling a great deal of money. The distributor noticed that the previous bill hadn’t been paid, so he asked his collections manager to leave a voice-mail for them saying, “We can’t ship your new order until you pay for the last one.” The next day the collections manager received a collect phone call, “Please cancel the order. We can’t wait that long.”  

………………………….

 


Kathy goes to her local bank, walks into the manager’s office, and says, “I want a loan; I am going to divorce my husband.” “Oh, we don’t give loans for divorces,” the manager says. “We offer loans only for things like real estate, appliances, automobiles, businesses, and home improvement.” Kathy interrupts: “Stop right there. This definitely falls into the category of ‘Home Improvement.’”

……………………………..


Following a miserable year, the CEO of a company called all the Project Managers for a performance review meeting. After giving them a piece of his mind, he asked each Manager to present his/her case. One of the Managers gave a long winding speech of excuses on his Project’s performance over which the CEO got irritated and yelled “Just tell me Yes or No”. The Manager coolly said “Yes or No” and sat down!  

……………………

source::::joke a day.com

natarajan

 

Message For The Day…” Speak Less and Speak Sweet … “

Do not indulge in arguments and disputations; one who clamours aloud has not grasped the Truth, believe Me! Silence is the only language of the realised. Practice moderation in speech; that will help you in many ways. It will develop Prema, for most misunderstandings and factions arise out of carelessly spoken words. When the foot slips, the wound can be healed; but when the tongue slips, the wound it causes in the heart of another will fester for life. The tongue is liable to four big errors: uttering falsehood, scandalising, finding fault with others and excessive talk. These must be avoided if there must be peace for the individual and society. The bond of brotherhood will be tightened if people speak less and speak sweet. That is why silence (mounam) was prescribed as a vow for spiritual aspirants by scriptures. As spiritual aspirants in various stages of the road, this discipline will be very valuable for you.

 

Sathya Sai Baba

Take 2 For Terminal 2 of Heathrow ….Ready For Take off On June 4 …

  • The new Terminal 2 is to be rebranded to become ‘The Queen’s Terminal’ when it opens on June 4
  • Spacious new air transit facility will be able to handle 20million passengers a year, flying to 51 destinations

By DAMIEN GAYLE   in mailonline.com UK

NATARAJAN


Heathrow Airport’s new Terminal 2 is set to open in months, giving the capital a spacious new air transit point able to handle 20million passengers a year.

Replacing the old, overcrowded Terminal 2 which had stood since the Fifties, the new facility was today hailed as a cornerstone of Heathrow’s revitalisation ahead of its opening on June 4.

Shafts of natural light and high quality acoustics should make the building a calm space for travellers accustomed to high anxiety at dark, noisy airports, said lead architect Luis Vidal.

Spacious: British artist Richard Wilson's sculpture Slipstream dominates this view of the new Terminal 2 at Heathrow Airport on April 23, 2014 in London, England. The rebuilding of the transit point has taken five years at a cost of £2.5billion, but it is finally slated to open on June 4

Spacious: British artist Richard Wilson’s sculpture Slipstream dominates this view of the new Terminal 2 at Heathrow Airport on April 23, 2014 in London, England. The rebuilding of the transit point has taken five years at a cost of £2.5billion, but it is finally slated to open on June 4

Gateway to the world: The departure area of the new 'Queen's Terminal', which is expected to manage up to 20million passengers every year

Gateway to the world: The departure area of the new ‘Queen’s Terminal’, which is expected to manage up to 20million passengers every year

Breath of fresh air: Visitors walk past a doorway at the new building, which replaces the old, overcrowded Terminal 2 which had stood since the Fifties

Breath of fresh air: Visitors walk past a doorway at the new building, which replaces the old, overcrowded Terminal 2 which had stood since the Fifties

‘If you make it intuitive, pleasant, joyful, you can take away a completely different memory of the terminal,’ Mr Vidal told The Associated Press.

‘You can never completely erase your memory of the former Terminal 2, because it was a dreadful experience. This will be completely the opposite. This will be a destination. People will want to come here.’

In an effort to dispense with those past bad associations, the new Terminal 2 will be rebranded as ‘The Queen’s Terminal’. Queen Elizabeth will open the building herself – just as she did the original Terminal 2 in 1955.

The completion of the £2.5billion project, in conjunction with the relatively new Terminal 5 that opened in 2008, gives Heathrow two modern terminals. It is part of an £11billion refurbishment designed to keep London’s biggest airport competitive with other major European hubs including Amsterdam, Frankfurt and Paris.

 
The Slipstream sculpture is the centrepiece of the development, hanging 18m above the ground with a design intended to evoke the path of a plane in flight

The Slipstream sculpture is the centrepiece of the development, hanging 18m above the ground with a design intended to evoke the path of a plane in flight

Luxurious: With London increasingly becoming a destination of choice for the world's super-rich, Terminal 2 will have no shortage of pricey shops

Luxurious: With London increasingly becoming a destination of choice for the world’s super-rich, Terminal 2 will have no shortage of pricey shops

World of possibility: A construction worker puts the finishing touches to a sign at Terminal 2, which is to be rebranded 'The Queen's Terminal' when it opens this summer

World of possibility: A construction worker puts the finishing touches to a sign at Terminal 2, which is to be rebranded ‘The Queen’s Terminal’ when it opens this summer

The Queen’s Terminal will host 26 airlines, including United, Air Canada, Singapore Airlines and others that are part of the global Star Alliance, and offer flights to 51 destinations.

Of course, with London increasingly becoming a destination of choice for the world’s super-rich, Terminal 2 will have no shortage of pricey shops.

Officials say Terminal 2 will be the first in the world to offer a ‘complimentary personal shopping lounge where trained stylists will present a curated range of products for each client.’

The interior of the new terminal is dominated by a huge aluminium sculpture hanging 18m above the ground that is inspired by the flight path of a stunt place.

British artist Richard Wilson’s ‘Slipstream’ weighs 77 tonnes and is 78m in length, its vast bulk looming above the terminal’s main lobby and escalators, evoking the journeys that those who see it are set to embark on.

Slipstream weighs 77 tonnes and is 78m in length, its vast bulk looming above the terminal's main lobby and escalators

Slipstream weighs 77 tonnes and is 78m in length, its vast bulk looming above the terminal’s main lobby and escalators

Airport officials chastened by the chaos that plagued the opening of Terminal 5 in 2008 are planning a 'soft' opening of the new terminal

Airport officials chastened by the chaos that plagued the opening of Terminal 5 in 2008 are planning a ‘soft’ opening of the new terminal

Only one flight is planned the first day so, even if things go awry, the number of people affected will be small

Only one flight is planned the first day so, even if things go awry, the number of people affected will be small

The new terminal will gradually be brought to full capacity over six months

The new terminal will gradually be brought to full capacity over six months

Chastened by the problems that plagued the opening of Terminal 5, which included chaos when the luggage handling system broke down, airport officials are planning a ‘soft’ opening of the new terminal.

Only one flight is planned the first day so, even if things go awry, the number of people affected will be small.

The new terminal will gradually be brought to full capacity over six months.

Queues at the old Terminal 2: The old, overcrowded terminal building had stood since the Fifties

Queues at the old Terminal 2: The old, overcrowded terminal building had stood since the Fifties

Old fashioned: The building suffered from poor design and a lack of natural light, problems exacerbated by its handling far more passengers than it was ever intended to

Old fashioned: The building suffered from poor design and a lack of natural light, problems exacerbated by its handling far more passengers than it was ever intended to

Passengers try to sleep on uncomfortable seats at Terminal 2 after the UK's then newly privatised air traffic control system crashed

Passengers try to sleep on uncomfortable seats at Terminal 2 after the UK’s then newly privatised air traffic control system crashed

Heathrow officials say they are still pushing to build a controversial third runway, which is opposed by London Mayor Boris Johnson and influential environmental groups.

John Holland-Kaye, Heathrow’s development director, said the completion of the new terminal shows Heathrow has complied with the last Labour government’s directive that Heathrow should improve without growing.

‘Our challenge now is to make the case to expand,’ he said, admitting that getting permission would be ‘politically complex.’

Mr Holland-Kaye said private money is available to pay for a third runway, which would greatly add to Heathrow’s capacity.

He also claimed the new Terminal 2 would reduce the ‘stacking’ problem over Heathrow that often causes delays as planes await permission to land.