” Renu Raj…2nd Rank Holder in Civil Services Exam…Has Exploded Civil Services Myths…”

The popular belief is that unless they come from English speaking, sophisticated and affluent families, prepare at a young age, get educated in a first rate college, go to a coaching class in one of the metro cities, take the examination several times, the aspirants cannot make it to the civil services list, particularly its very top.’

Ambassador T P Sreenivasan — who serves in an honorary capacity at the NSS Academy where Renu coached for the IAS — on how she surprised even herself by topping the UPSC exam.

Renu Raj, 2nd rank-holder in UPSC exam, with her parents

Image: Dr Renu Raj, who stood 2nd in the UPSC exams, celebrates with her parents. Photograph: PTI.

By securing the second rank in the UPSC civil services examination this year, a 27-year-old married medical graduate, born in a Kerala village to a bus conductor father and educated, but unemployed mother, Renu Raj has exploded many civil services myths.

The popular belief is that unless they come from English speaking, sophisticated and affluent families, prepare at a young age, get educated in a first rate college, go to a coaching class in one of the metro cities, take the examination several times, the aspirants cannot make it to the civil services list, particularly its very top.

Renu Raj is not the first to explode some of these myths. Several other women have registered major successes. Two years ago, Haritha Kumar, from a similar background, an engineer, made it to the first rank.

Many years earlier, Nirupama Rao had secured the first rank. Last year, Divya Iyer, a doctor, did well and joined the coveted Kerala cadre. A rank holder throughout her academic life, a high achiever in many areas and a published author and editor, she was expected to be at the very top.

Renu is undoubtedly a product of the changing civil services scene across the country. The examination was always tough, as it followed the pattern of selection of the Indian civil service officers in the colonial era.

The change came first when the profile of the recruits changed from the urban to the rural. The rural rich landowners in several states lost their old wealth and power on account of land reforms and distribution of wealth. They discovered that the only way for them to recover their lost prestige was to get their children into the civil services, particularly IAS and IPS.

Hordes of young people migrated to Delhi to find short cuts to success in the civil services examination. A virtual IAS industry grew from the elite institutes like Rao’s Study Circle in Connaught Place to sweat shops on Mukherjee Street, where youngsters were spoon fed with readymade answers to old question papers and digested notes on every optional subject.

Aspirants from Bihar and UP began to qualify in large numbers.

Kerala had made a modest contribution to the civil services throughout, but it caught on to the new trend only in the beginning of the 21st century.

 

The first State Civil Services Academy came into being in 2004 and several other coaching centres came up all over the state.

A major facility offered by the government was the ‘adoption scheme’, which provides airfare and accommodation in the comfortable Kerala House in Delhi at the time of the UPSC interview.

The number of entrants from Kerala, which had reduced to a trickle in the 1980s and 1990s, picked up. The trend has continued and Kerala began to produce about 8 per cent of the recruits in the last ten years. This year, there are nearly 40 recruits, many of them with high ranks.

The increase in the age limit and the number of permissible chances changed the scene completely. The upper age limit rose from 23 to 32 and the chances increased from 2 to 6. This enabled doctors, engineers, IIT and IIM graduates and others to take the place of arts and humanities graduates to a great extent.

Instead of a few, who took the risk of not taking up professional studies, the brighter students went to professional courses, secured jobs, worked for a few years, raised families in some cases and then took the civil services examination.

Though the standard expected of the candidates is at the master’s level, graduates began to prepare full time in the academies instead of joining postgraduate courses. Introduction of Hindi and regional languages and literature also contributed to the change of the profile of the candidates further.

The lure of Mukherjee Road took some to Delhi and other metro cities. The theory of ‘catch them young’ was given the go by.

For Renu, who obtained the 4th rank in the Class 10 and 13th rank in plus two exams, it opened up immense possibilities because of the changed circumstances and nature of the examination.

She breezed into a government medical college, passed the MBBS examination in flying colours, married a doctor and began to practice medicine.

Her parents, who had seen her win prizes for elocution and do well in extra curricular activities, developed ambitions to get her into the IAS, shifted to a rented house in Thiruvananthapuram to support her, with the full encouragement of her husband, L S Bhagat, who pursued his own medical studies elsewhere and the backing of her sister, Ramya Raj, also a medical student.

Her mother, V S Latha, a Malayalam literature graduate, trained her for the optional paper. Renu rose to the occasion, prepared on her own, even while working and later joined the State Academy, went to the Pala Academy for her Malayalam literature optional paper and the NSS Academy for the international relations module and model interviews.

She said that the International Relations Module was enough for her to score well in the relevant part of the General Studies paper.

Most aspirants go to several institutions for selected courses, for which they are famous. For instance, Pala has specialised in Malayalam and the NSS Academy in international relations. Everyone signs up with the State Academy to avail of the adoption scheme.

Renu went through the three stages, becoming one of the 13,000 out of 450,000 at the preliminary level, one of 5,000 at the mains level and second out of the 5,000.

She could not believe that she had spectacular success even after she saw her name on the UPSC web site.

An evangelist of the civil services, particularly, the IFS, I have been teaching at the various academies for more than ten years. In the last two years, I have been directing, in an honorary capacity, the NSS Academy.

The UPSC springs surprises every year. Some aspirants, with great promise, do not make it, while others do better than expected. The dynamics of the examination have their own vagaries. But one thing is certain: No one makes it without talent and hard work, even if some of the best do fail.

I noticed Renu at an International Relations Module, a special offering of the NSS Academy. Though she was not showy, she impressed me because of her pleasant demeanour, eagerness to learn and command of the language. In the tests we conducted, she always stood first. I was not surprised when she was chosen for the third stage of the examination and after a couple of model interviews, I was convinced that she would do extremely well.

I chose her, together with another aspirant, Parvathi, for a model interview on television, which went extremely well. Sadly, Parvathi, an economist, did not make it and Renu went on to get the second rank.

Renu Raj with Ambassador T P Sreenivasan at the NSS Academy

Renu Raj with Ambassador T P Sreenivasan, to her right, and her family at the NSS Academy in Thiruvananthapuram. Photograph courtesy, Ambassador T P Sreenivasan.

The civil services examination is truly transformational for those who make it. They are like pupae, which turn into butterflies overnight.

Others begin to see a halo around them and themselves blossom into mature, responsible and sophisticated individuals, as they climb the bureaucratic hierarchy. The nightmare of the preparations for the examination turns into a dream come true.

Renu may not have fully realised the transformation as yet, but all her interviews and speeches are joyous, generous about sharing credit with family, teachers and friends and expressing her concern for the poorest, lowliest and lost.

She attributes her success to commitment and hard work, not to any exceptional ability. She says she had expected to do well, but never dreamt of the second rank, particularly because, as a first timer, she did not have a sense of her capabilities in comparison to the others.

She will realise the full extent of her accomplishment and blessing only when she reaches the Lal Bahadur Shastri National Academy of Administration in Mussourie and meets the many well-healed and talented youngsters, with greater opportunities, whom she overcame.

Kerala is agog with jubilation over the repeated successes of its men and women, who have been joining the civil services in recent years. Among the men who have done extremely well in recent years are V Sriram, Johny Tom Varghese, Alby John and Abhiram Shankar.

One consequence of these successes will be an exponential growth in aspirants and training centres. The nation needs the best civil servants and Kerala is ready to make its contribution with officers like Renu, bright, committed and full of idealism.

source….T.P.Sreenivasan in http://www.rediff.com

Natarajan

 

 

Message for the Day…” Before You Preach Good Conduct to Others, Set Yourself as an Example…”

Sathya Sai Baba

Everyone is liable to make mistakes without being aware of it. However bright a fire may be, there will be smoke emanating from it. So also, whatever good a person might do, there will be a minute trace of evil. Make every effort to ensure that the bad or evil is minimised, and good is maximised. You may not succeed in the first attempt. Carefully think over the consequences of whatever you do or talk. In whatever way you want others to honour you, love you, or behave with you, in the same way you should first behave with others, and love and honour them. Then they will reciprocate. Instead, without you honouring or loving others, if you complain that they are not treating you properly, it is surely a wrong conclusion. Those who advise others about true and good conduct must follow the advice themselves. Then there is no need for advice, others would simply learn the lesson by example.

” Captain Cool”….A Captain who Stands Out as a Leader ….MSD

MS Dhoni turns 34 today and birthdays are always special. The captain with the Midas touch had an eventful last year when he retired from Test cricket and led India to World Cup 2015 semis. But, this one is his first as a proud father and as a retired Test cricketer.

From the young dasher with long locks, Dhoni has evolved into this calm figure who has helped Indian cricket touch dizzying heights.

In his 34 years, Dhoni has touched upon and seized every accolade that could possibly ever come a cricketer’s way.

Let’s take a look at the decade-long journey and his achievements that speak of his contributions to the Indian cricket.

2004: Run out for a duck in his debut match

2004-dhoni

Dhoni, a former Ticket Inspector with the Indian Railways blasted two centuries for India A in Nairobi in 2004. He did not have a great start to his ODI career, getting run out for a duck on debut.

 

2005: Highest score by a wicketkeeper-batsman

2005

Long-haired and fearless, he soon swaggered into international cricket scoring 148 against Pakistan and surpassing the earlier record for the highest score by an Indian wicket-keeper. However, his 183 not out against Sri Lanka in Jaipur later that year was even more brutal. It still remains the highest score by a wicketkeeper-batsman in ODIs.

 

2006: Number one in ODI ranking

2006

Due to his consistent ODI performances, Dhoni overtook Ricky Ponting as number one batsman in the ICC ODI Rankings.

 

2007: Won the inaugural ICC World T20 

2007

Dhoni led India to victory in the inaugural ICC World T20 in 2007. As the senior pros had opted out of the inaugural edition of the World T20 in South Africa, Dhoni was handed the reins with a young team at his disposal. No one expected India to lift the title. Dhoni was born as a captain.

 

2008: Won a test match for the first time

2008

Dhoni led a Test match for the first time in Anil Kumble’s absence. India beat South Africa within three days at Kanpur and in his first full series as captain, he led India to a 1-0 win over England.

 

2009: ICC ODI Player of the Year for the second time

2009

Dhoni had an excellent year in ODIs in 2009 scoring 1198 runs in just 24 innings at an astonishing average of 70.43 and was the top-scorer in ODIs. He led India to beat New Zealand for the first time in an ODI series on their home ground after 42 years.

Dhoni went on to win the ICC ODI Player of the Year for the second time in 2009.

 

2010: ICC  No. 1 Test Team

2010

India became the No. 1 Team in the ICC’s Test Rankings for the very first time and he was presented with the ICC Test Championship Mace for this achievement. His team CSK clinched the Indian Premier League (IPL) and the Champions League T20 (CLT20) in 2010 to become the first team to complete the double with total success.

 

2011: ‘Dhoni finishes off in style and India wins the world cup after 28years’

2011

He became the first Indian wicketkeeper to complete 200 dismissals in Tests. Syed Kirmani, who held the record earlier, had 198 dismissals to his credit, from 88 Tests. Dhoni surpassed the mark in only his 62nd Test.

And yes, the dream of a billion-strong nation was fulfilled. His innings of unbeaten 91 won India the ICC WORLD CUP and he fittingly won the game with a trademark six over long-on.

 

2012:  Highest score by an Indian wicketkeeper-batsman in Test cricket

2012

His best innings in the traditional format was the match-winning 224 that he scored against Australia at Chennai in 2012-13, which is still the highest score by an Indian wicketkeeper-batsman in Test cricket.

 

2013: Led India to victory at the ICC Champions Trophy

2013

Dhoni became the first Indian captain to win four Tests in a series, when India defeated Australia 4-0 to win the Border-Gavaskar Trophy and surpassed Sourav Ganguly’s tally of 21 wins as captain to become India’s most successful Test skipper ever.

Team India underwent a change in 2007 with the old guard making way for the new, but still he led a new-look side to victory at the ICC Champions Trophy 2013.

 

2015: Quit Test Cricket

2015

Dhoni left Test cricket, the way he entered. Quiet, understated and without any fuss.

The fact is, anybody can walk in as a captain. But only a few can walk out as a leader.

Here’s wishing India’s greatest captain ever ‘Captain Cool’ a year full of happiness and success.

source…Shuvro Ghoshal  in www.storypick.com

Natarajan

World’s Oldest Living Person…

Susannah Mushatt Jones, 116, from Brooklyn took the title from Jeralean Talley.

A woman in the United States who celebrated her 116th birthday on Monday has officially been recognised as the world’s oldest living person by Guinness World Records.

Guinness World Records has confirmed that Susannah Mushatt Jones of Brooklyn, New York, born on July 6, 1899, is now the world’s oldest living person.

In addition to the early present from Guinness World Records, Jones is celebrating this milestone year with two birthday parties — an intimate gathering of family on Monday and a larger celebration with her housing community, friends and local officials in attendance on Tuesday.

Jones became the record holder at the age of 115 years and 346 days, as of June 17, 2015.

Jones took the title of the world’s oldest living person from Jeralean Talley who died, just 26 days after her 116th birthday at her home in Inkster, a Detroit suburb, on June 17.

Asked for the secret of her longevity, Jones said “sleep!” While she has lost her eyesight and is hard of hearing, Jones is not bed-bound and only takes two medications a day.

Jones, known as ‘T’ to her 100 nieces and nephews, will also become the oldest living female, Guinness said.

Jones was born in Lowndes County, Alabama, to Mary and Callie Mushatt. Her father was a sharecropper who picked cotton to support his wife and ten children.

In 1922, Jones left Alabama for New Jersey before moving to New York City in 1923, finding employment as a live-in housekeeper and childcare provider.

Image: Susannah Mushatt Jones will also become the oldest living female. Photograph: Guinnessworldrecords.com

Source…www.rediff.com

Natarajan

Message For the Day…” Understand Properly the True and Divine Nature of the AHAM {I}….

Sathya Sai Baba

You may ask: “How am I to declare, Aham Brahmasmi (I am Divine)?” Yes, you can do so. But, first understand the Aham, the ‘I’, the Divine Principle. Scriptures declare – Ekam Eva adhvitheyam Brahma – The Absolute is One without a second. Though people worship the Absolute with different names and forms, the Supreme Reality is only one. Just as the same person is called in different names by different people at different times, God has many names and forms – all these are creations of the human mind. Scriptures emphatically declare that the Lord is the nameless and attributeless Eternal Reality. Understand properly the true and Divine nature of the Aham (‘I’). The ‘I’ is the master of your body, senses and the intellect, and is the power that permeates the entire cosmos.

Message For the Day…” Talk Less…Think or Work More…”

Sathya Sai Baba

Avoid unnecessary and excessive association with all and sundry. People visit Puttaparthi from America, Japan, Germany, Russia, and so on leaving their parents and kith and kin. Why then should you cultivate new relationships? Keep your association with anyone to the barest minimum. Keep your mind pure. There is no need to indulge in chatter. Talk less, think or work more. Cultivate this habit. Unnecessary association with strangers may have undesirable consequences. To join bad company and come to grief is a self-wrought calamity. Genuine spiritual aspirants should be particularly careful in eschewing bad company. They should create an environment conducive to their spiritual progress and mental peace. That is the only thing Swami wants. Do not waste time. Do not give room for useless thoughts.

 

Watch this Couple Travel 60 Years into the Future….!!!

 

Using the power of makeup, a couple travels 60 years into the future.

In this tearjerker, a soon-to-be-wed couple takes a seat in the makeup chair. They’re not prepping for their wedding, but rather the rest of their lives– using stage makeup and prosthetics, a team of artists showed what the happy couple would look like as they aged. It’s pretty emotional– the couple gets a “preview” of their lives as 40-year-old parents, 60-year-old retirees, and an elderly man and woman having spent their whole lives together. The whole experiment ends with much emotional crying and vow-writing. It’s sappy and wonderful.

Source: Field Day  and http://www.you tube.com

Natarajan

” தண்டனை யாருக்கு …ஒரு சுவராஸ்யமான உண்மை சம்பவம் …” !!!

அமெரிக்காவில் உள்ள கலிபோர்னியாவில் உள்ள ஆப்பிள் நிறுவனத்தின் பிரதான வாயில். 20.11.13 அன்று முப்பது லாரிகள் அதன் முன்பு அணி வகுத்து நிற்கின்றன. “”கேட் முன் நிறுத்தாதே…” பாதுகாவலர்கள் கத்திக் கொண்டே வருகிறார்கள்.

லாரி டிரைவர்களில் ஒருவர், “”இல்லை… இந்த லாரியில் உள்ளவை உங்கள் முகவரிக்குத்தான் வந்திருக்கின்றன” என்றார்.

அதே நேரம், ஆப்பிள் நிறுவனத்தின் தலைமைச் செயல் அதிகாரி டிம் குக்குக்கு ஒரு போன் வருகிறது. பேசியவர் சாம்சன் எலக்ட்ரானிக்ஸ் நிறுவனத்தின் தலைமைச் செயல் அதிகாரி குவான் கியூன்:

“”உங்களுக்கு நாங்கள் தர வேண்டிய நஷ்ட ஈட்டைத்தான் 30 லாரிகளில் அனுப்பியிருக்கிறோம். பெற்றுக் கொள்ளுங்கள்”.

திகைத்துப் போகிறார் டிம் குக்.

கொரிய நிறுவனமான சாம்சங் 100 கோடி டாலரை(ரூ.6200 கோடி) அமெரிக்காவின் ஆப்பிள் நிறுவனத்துக்கு அளிக்க வேண்டும் என அமெரிக்க நீதிமன்றம் காப்புரிமை வழக்கு ஒன்றில் சாம்சங் நிறுவனத்துக்கு எதிராகத்  தீர்ப்பளித்தது. அதுதான் சாம்சங் நிறுவனம் தர வேண்டிய நஷ்ட ஈடு. அதற்கு எதற்கு முப்பது லாரிகள்?

பாதுகாவலர்கள் லாரிகளில் வந்தது என்ன? என்று பார்த்தார்கள்.

30 லாரிகளிலும் சில்லறைக் காசுகள்!

5 சென்ட் நாணயங்களாக மொத்தம் 2 ஆயிரம் கோடி காசுகள். அபராதத் தொகையை அனுப்பி வைத்திருக்கிறார்கள்!

இவற்றை எப்படி எண்ணுவது? முப்பது லாரி சில்லறைகளையும் எப்படி பாதுகாப்பாக வைத்துக் கொள்வது? இவ்வளவு சில்லறைகளையும் எந்த வங்கியிலும் போட்டு வைக்க முடியாதே! ஆப்பிள் நிறுவன அதிகாரிகள் தலையைப் பிய்த்துக் கொண்டு நின்றார்கள்.

அபராதம் கட்டும் அளவுக்கு சாம்சங் நிறுவனம் செய்த தவறு என்ன?

ஆன்ட்ராய்டு போன்களில், ஆப்பிள் நிறுவன போன்களில் உள்ள தொழில்நுட்பத்தைக் காப்பி அடித்து சாம்சங் நிறுவன போன்கள் தயாராகின்றன என்பதே குற்றச்சாட்டு. இல்லையில்லை எங்களைத்தான் ஆப்பிள் நிறுவனம் காப்பி அடித்துவிட்டது என்பது சாம்சங் நிறுவனத்தின் பதில் குற்றச்சாட்டு.

கலிபோர்னியாவின் சான் ஜோஸ் நீதிமன்றத்தில் நடந்த வழக்கில் சாம்சங் நிறுவனம் காப்புரிமை விதிகளை மீறிவிட்டதாகத் தீர்ப்பளித்து, அபராதமும் விதித்தது நீதிமன்றம்.

”எல்லா ஸ்மார்ட்போனும் செவ்வக வடிவத்தில்தான் இருக்கும். செவ்வக வடிவத்துக்கு எல்லாம் காப்புரிமை வாங்கி வைத்துக் கொண்டு, யாரும் அந்த சைஸில் போன் தயாரிக்கக் கூடாது என்று சொல்வது அநியாயம்” என்று சாம்சங் நிறுவனம் வாதிட்டாலும், நீதிமன்றம் அதனை ஏற்கவில்லை. அதனையொட்டிதான் அபராதம். என்றாலும், அபராத பணத்தைக் கட்டித்தானே ஆக வேண்டும்?

தான் தண்டனைக்குட்பட்டாலும், ஆப்பிள் நிறுவனத்துக்கும் தண்டனை அளிக்க சாம்சங் நிறுவனம் நினைத்தது.

விளைவு?

30 லாரிகளில் சில்லறைக் காசுகள்……

Source….www.dinamani.com

Natarajan

” இதோ அந்த அம்மா லக்ஷ போஜனம் செய்திருக்கா ….பல லக்ஷ தீபம் போட்டிருக்கா …”

“ஏதோ ஒரு கோயிலில் லக்ஷதீபம் போட, நீ திரவியம்

கொடுத்திருக்கே. லக்ஷம் தீபத்துக்கு எண்ணெய் – திரி

போட்டு உன்னால் ஏற்றவே முடிந்திருக்காது”

சொன்னவர்; ஸ்ரீமடம் பாலு.

தொகுப்பாளர்;டி.எஸ்.கோதண்டராம சர்மா

தட்டச்சு;வரகூரான் நாராயணன்.

ஓர் ஏழைப் பாட்டி.பெரியவாளிடம் அபார பக்தி.

கையிலிருந்த சொற்ப பணத்தைக் கொண்டு மிகவும்

சிக்கனமாக வாழ்க்கையைக் கழித்துக் கொண்டிருந்தாள்.

மடி ஆசாரம் பார்ப்பாள். ஏராளமான பக்தி.

தினமும் பெரியவர் இருக்கும் இடத்தைச் சுத்தம் செய்வாள்.

கோலம் போடுவாள். தீபம் ஏற்றி வைப்பாள்.

இரண்டு புடவைகள் தான் அவளுடைய ஆஸ்தி.இன்னொரு

புடவை வாங்கக் கூட அந்தப் பாட்டியிடம் பொருளில்லை.

ஒரு பக்தர் அரிசிக் குறுணையும்,வெல்லமும்

பெரியவாளிடம் சமர்ப்பிந்திருந்தார்.அவற்றை நல்லபடியாக

விநியோகம் செய்ய வேண்டுமே?

பாட்டிக்கு பெரியவா உத்தரவு போட்டார்கள்.

“காஞ்சிபுரத்தில் உள்ள எல்லா எறும்புப் புற்றுக்களிலேயும்

கொஞ்சம் கொஞ்சம் போட்டுட்டு வா. அரை ஆழாக்கு

வீதம் போடு…” என்றார்கள்.

அந்தப் பாட்டியும் பக்தி சிரத்தையுடன் அலைந்து திரிந்து,

பல எறும்புப் புற்றுகளில் அரிசிக் குறுணையும்,

வெல்லமும் போட்டு விட்டு வந்தாள்.

அந்த வேலை முடிந்ததும் பெரியவா அந்தப் பாட்டியைக்

கூப்பிட்டார்கள்.

பெரிய மாலை போலத் திரிநூல் இருந்தது.

ஒரு டின் நிறைய எண்ணெய் இருந்தது.

“திரிநூலை கட் பண்ணி ஒவ்வொரு கோயிலுக்காகப் போய்,

எவ்வளவு விளக்குக்குப் போட முடியுமோ, அவ்வளவுக்குப்

போடு.ஒவ்வொரு நாளும் இரண்டு,மூன்று கோயில்களுக்குப் போய் விளக்கேற்றினாலும் போதும்” என்றார்கள்.

பாட்டிக்குப் பரம சந்தோஷம். பரம சிரத்தையுடன் நாள்தோறும் சில கோயில்களுக்குச் சென்று பெரியவா உத்தரவை நிறைவேற்றி வந்தாள்.சில நாட்களில் இந்தக் கைங்கரியம் நிறைவு பெற்றது.அந்தச் செய்தியையும் தெரிவித்தாள் பாட்டி.

பாட்டியின் பணிகள் முடிந்த சில நாட்களுக்குப்பின்,

ஒரு பெரிய மனிதர், ஆடம்பரமாக மடத்துக்கு வந்தார்.

பெரிய மனுஷத் தோரணை, அகங்காரம்.

“ஸஹஸ்ரபோஜனம் செய்துட்டு வந்திருக்கேன்.

லட்சதீபம் போட்டிருக்கேன்…..” என்று தற்பெருமை

தொனிக்கப் பெரியவாளிடம் சொன்னார்.

பெரியவாளுக்கு அவருடைய அகம்பாவம் புலப்பட்டது.

தர்ம காரியங்கள் செய்துவிட்டு அதைப் பற்றி பேசிக்

கொள்வது புண்ணியத்தைத் தராது. தர்மம் செய்தவருக்கு

நற்பலன்கள் கிடைக்காமல் போய்விடும்.

வினயத்துடன் சொல்லியிருந்தால் பெரியவா

சந்தோஷப்பட்டிருப்பார்கள். ஆனால்,அந்தப்

பெரிய மனிதர் அகம்பாவத்துடன் பேசினார்.

பெரியவா சொன்னார்கள்.

“இங்கே ஒரு பாட்டி இருக்கா. அந்த அம்மா
0023_zpsf9c90622.jpg

லக்ஷபோஜனம் செய்திருக்காள்.

பல லக்ஷதீபம் போட்டிருக்காள்….”

ஆணவப் பணக்காரருக்கு சற்று திடுக்கிட்டது.

‘யார் அந்தப் பாட்டி…அவ்வளவு பெரிய பணாக்காரி?’

என்று தெரிந்து கொள்ள ஆவல் பிறந்தது.

பெரியவா அந்தப் பாட்டியை அழைத்து வரச் சொன்னார்கள்.

“இவள்தான் அவ்வளவு பெரிய உத்தமமான காரியம்

செய்தவள்…”

அழுக்கான கிழிசல் புடவையைக் கட்டிக்கொண்டு

வந்து நின்ற பாட்டியைப் பார்த்து, பெரிய மனிதர்

அயர்ந்து போனார்.பாட்டியின் நெற்றியிலிருந்த

வெள்ளை வெளேரென்ற திருநீற்றுப் பூச்சு,

அவளுடைய இதய சுத்தத்தை விளாக்கினாற்போலிருந்தது.

பெரியவா சொன்னார்கள்.

“ஸர்வ ஜீவனிலும் பகவான் வியாபித்திருக்கிறார்.

பிரும்மா முதல் பிபீலிகம் (எறும்பு) வரை பகவான்

இருக்கிறார். மனுஷ்யாளிடத்திலும் இருக்கிறார்.

“நீ ஆயிரம் பேருக்கு அன்னம் போட்டிருக்கிறாய்.

ஆனால், இந்தப் பாட்டியோ பல லக்ஷம் ஜீவன்களுக்கு

(எறும்புகளுக்கு) ஆகாரம் போட்டிருக்கிறாள்.

“ஏதோ ஒரு கோயிலில் லக்ஷதீபம் போட, நீ திரவியம்

கொடுத்திருக்கே. லக்ஷம் தீபத்துக்கு எண்ணெய் – திரி

போட்டு உன்னால் ஏற்றவே முடிந்திருக்காது. இந்தப்

பாட்டி, பல கோயில்களுக்குப் போயிருக்கிறாள்.

பக்தி சிரத்தையாய் அகல் வாங்கி,எண்ணெய் ஊற்றி,திரி

போட்டு தன் கையாலேயே ஏற்றியிருக்கிறாள்….”

கேட்டுக் கொண்டிருந்த பிரமுகர் தலைகுனிந்தார்.

பெரியவாளிடம் பவ்யமாகவும்,அகங்காரமில்லாமலும்

பேசவேண்டும் என்பதைப் புரிந்து கொண்டார்.பின்னால்

பல பக்தர்கள் வந்து நிற்பதைப் பார்த்து சற்றே நகர்ந்து

இடம் கொடுத்தார்.

சிறிது நேரம் கழித்து, பெரியவாளே அந்தப் பெரிய

மனிதரைக் கூப்பிட்டு, உட்கார வைத்து,பல சமாசாரங்கள்

பேசி, பிரசாதம் கொடுத்தனுப்பினார்கள்.

அடக்கம் கற்றுக்கொண்ட அவர், ஆனந்தமாகத்

திரும்பிச் சென்றார்

Read more: http://periva.proboards.com/thread/9619/#ixzz3f1lxqqsA

Source….www.periva.proboards.com

Natarajan

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

” Some Thoughts on Thought …” !!!

What is the speed of thought?

It feels instantaneous, but how long does it really take to think a thought?

Just how quickly are those thoughts bouncing around in there? Image credit: shutterstock

By Tim Welsh, University of Toronto

As inquisitive beings, we are constantly questioning and quantifying the speed of various things. With a fair degree of accuracy, scientists have quantified the speed of light, the speed of sound, the speed at which the earth revolves around the sun, the speed at which hummingbirds beat their wings, the average speed of continental drift….

These values are all well-characterized. But what about the speed of thought? It’s a challenging question that’s not easily answerable – but we can give it a shot.

What’s a thought? Photo credit: Fergus Macdonald

First, some thoughts on thought

To quantify the speed of anything, one needs to identify its beginning and end. For our purposes, a “thought” will be defined as the mental activities engaged from the moment sensory information is received to the moment an action is initiated. This definition necessarily excludes many experiences and processes one might consider to be “thoughts.”

Here, a “thought” includes processes related to perception (determining what is in the environment and where), decision-making (determining what to do) and action-planning (determining how to do it). The distinction between, and independence of, each of these processes is blurry. Further, each of these processes, and perhaps even their sub-components, could be considered “thoughts” on their own. But we have to set our start- and endpoints somewhere to have any hope of tackling the question.

Finally, trying to identify one value for the “speed of thought” is a little like trying to identify one maximum speed for all forms of transportation, from bicycles to rockets. There are many different kinds of thoughts that can vary greatly in timescale. Consider the differences between simple, speedy reactions like the sprinter deciding to run after the crack of the starting pistol (on the order of 150 milliseconds [ms]), and more complex decisions like deciding when to change lanes while driving on a highway or figuring out the appropriate strategy to solve a math problem (on the order of seconds to minutes).

Even looking inside the brain, we can’t see thoughts. Photo credit: Duke University Photography Jim Wallace

Thoughts are invisible, so what should we measure?

Thought is ultimately an internal and very individualized process that’s not readily observable. It relies on interactions across complex networks of neurons distributed throughout the peripheral and central nervous systems. Researchers can use imaging techniques, such as functional magnetic resonance imaging and electroencephalography, to see what areas of the nervous system are active during different thought processes, and how information flows through the nervous system. We’re still a long way from reliably relating these signals to the mental events they represent, though.

Many scientists consider the best proxy measure of the speed or efficiency of thought processes to be reaction time – the time from the onset of a specific signal to the moment an action is initiated. Indeed, researchers interested in assessing how fast information travels through the nervous system have used reaction time since the mid-1800s. This approach makes sense because thoughts are ultimately expressed through overt actions. Reaction time provides an index of how efficiently someone receives and interprets sensory information, decides what to do based on that information, and plans and initiates an action based on that decision.

Neural factors involved

The time it takes for all thoughts to occur is ultimately shaped by the characteristics of the neurons and the networks involved. Many things influence the speed at which information flows through the system, but three key factors are:

  • Distance – The farther signals need to travel, the longer the reaction time is going to be. Reaction times for movements of the foot are longer than for movements of the hand, in large part because the signals traveling to and from the brain have a longer distance to cover. This principle is readily demonstrated through reflexes (note, however, that reflexes are responses that occur without “thought” because they do not involve neurons that engaged in conscious thought). The key observation for the present purpose is that the same reflexes evoked in taller individuals tend to have longer response times than for shorter individuals. By way of analogy, if two couriers driving to New York leave at the same time and travel at exactly the same speed, a courier leaving from Washington, DC will always arrive before one leaving from Los Angeles.
  • Neuron characteristics – The width of the neuron is important. Signals are carried more quickly in neurons with larger diameters than those that are narrower – a courier will generally travel faster on wide multi-lane highways than on narrow country roads.
    • Neuron characteristics – The width of the neuron is important. Signals are carried more quickly in neurons with larger diameters than those that are narrower – a courier will generally travel faster on wide multi-lane highways than on narrow country roads.

      Nerve signals jump between the exposed areas between myelin sheathes. Image credit: Neuron image via www.shutterstock.com

      How much myelination a neuron has is also important. Some nerve cells have myelin cells that wrap around the neuron to provide a type of insulation sheath. The myelin sheath isn’t completely continuous along a neuron; there are small gaps in which the nerve cell is exposed. Nerve signals effectively jump from exposed section to exposed section instead of traveling the full extent of the neuronal surface. So signals move much faster in neurons that have myelin sheaths than in neurons that don’t. The message will get to New York sooner if it passes from cellphone tower to cellphone tower than if the courier drives the message along each and every inch of the road. In the human context, the signals carried by the large-diameter, myelinated neurons that link the spinal cord to the muscles can travel at speeds ranging from 70-120 miles per second (m/s) (156-270 miles per hour[mph]), while signals traveling along the same paths carried by the small-diameter, unmyelinated fibers of the pain receptors travel at speeds ranging from 0.5-2 m/s (1.1-4.4 mph). That’s quite a difference!

      • Complexity – Increasing the number of neurons involved in a thought means a greater absolute distance the signal needs to travel – which necessarily means more time. The courier from Washington, DC will take less time to get to New York with a direct route than if she travels to Chicago and Boston along the way. Further, more neurons mean more connections. Most neurons are not in physical contact with other neurons. Instead, most signals are passed via neurotransmitter molecules that travel across the small spaces between the nerve cells called synapses. This process takes more time (at least 0.5 ms per synapse) than if the signal was continually passed within the single neuron. The message carried from Washington, DC will take less time to get to New York if one single courier does the whole route than if multiple couriers are involved, stopping and handing over the message several times along the way. In truth, even the “simplest” thoughts involve multiple structures and hundreds of thousands of neurons.
      • And they’re off! Photo credit: Oscar Rethwill
      • How quickly it can happen

        It’s amazing to consider that a given thought can be generated and acted on in less than 150 ms. Consider the sprinter at a starting line. The reception and perception of the crack of the starter’s gun, the decision to begin running, issuing of the movement commands, and generating muscle force to start running involves a network that begins in the inner ear and travels through numerous structures of the nervous system before reaching the muscles of the legs. All that can happen in literally half the time of a blink of an eye.

        Although the time to initiate a sprint start is extremely short, a variety of factors can influence it. One is the loudness of the auditory “go” signal. Although reaction time tends to decrease as the loudness of the “go” increases, there appears to be a critical point in the range of 120-124 decibels where an additional decrease of approximately 18 ms can occur. That’s because sounds this loud can generate the “startle” response and trigger a pre-planned sprinting response.

        Researchers think this triggered response emerges through activation of neural centers in the brain stem. These startle-elicited responses may be quicker because they involve a relatively shorter and less complex neural system – one that does not necessarily require the signal to travel all the way up to the more complex structures of the cerebral cortex. A debate could be had here as to whether or not these triggered responses are “thoughts,” because it can be questioned whether or not a true decision to act was made; but the reaction time differences of these responses illustrate the effect of neural factors such as distance and complexity. Involuntary reflexes, too, involve shorter and simpler circuitry and tend to take less time to execute than voluntary responses.

      • How well can we gauge our own speed of thought? Image credit: William Brawley

Perceptions of our thoughts and actions

Considering how quickly they do happen, it’s little wonder we often feel our thoughts and actions are nearly instantaneous. But it turns out we’re also poor judges of when our actions actually occur.

Although we’re aware of our thoughts and the resulting movements, an interesting dissociationhas been observed between the time we think we initiate a movement and when that movement actually starts. In studies, researchers ask volunteers to watch a second hand rotate around a clock face and to complete a simple rapid finger or wrist movement, such as a key press, whenever they liked. After the clock hand had completed its rotation, the people were asked to identify where the hand was on the clock face when they started their own movement.

Surprisingly, people typically judge the onset of their movement to occur 75-100 ms prior to when it actually began. This difference cannot be accounted for simply by the time it takes for the movement commands to travel from the brain to the arm muscles (which is on the order of 16-25 ms). It’s unclear exactly why this misperception occurs, but it’s generally believed that people base their judgment of movement onset on the time of the decision to act and the prediction of the upcoming movement, instead of on the movement itself. These and other findings raise important questions about the planning and control of action and our sense of agency and control in the world – because our decision to act and our perception of when we act appear to be distinct from when we in fact do.

In sum, although quantifying a single “speed of thought” may never be possible, analyzing the time it takes to plan and complete actions provides important insights into how efficiently the nervous system completes these processes, and how changes associated with movement and cognitive disorders affect the efficiency of these mental activities.

The Conversation

Tim Welsh is Professor of Kinesiology and Physical Education at University of Toronto.

This article was originally published on The Conversation.
Read the original article.

Source….www.earthsky.org

Natarajan