Image of the Day…” Fairy Tale” Castle !!!

3.) Luiz Pires.

Photograph by :

Luiz Pires.

“I was living in Munich a couple of years ago and had my mother and sister visiting me for a few days. We decided to brave the winter conditions and icy roads to drive to Neuschwanstein castle a couple of hours away. When we got there, the weather had completely cleared and we were REWARDED with amazing ‘winter wonderland’ scenes everywhere we looked. Not only that, but the town was about as empty as I’d ever seen it – it is typically overrun with tourists.

This particular photo is one of my favorites from that trip as it seemed to capture the ‘fairy tale’ atmosphere of the place that day”.    

source:::: viralnova trending

Natarajan

 

” Advice From Horse”s Mouth ” !!!

Advice From a 101 Old Doctor

Dr. Shigeaki Hinohara, Japan, turned 101 last year.
As a 97 year old Doctor, he was interviewed, and gave his advice for a long and healthy life.
 
Shigeaki Hinohara is one of the world’s longest-serving physicians and educators. Hinohara’s magic touch is legendary: Since 1941 he has been healing patients at St. Luke’s International Hospital in Tokyo and teaching at St. Luke’s College of Nursing.
He has published around 15 books since his 75th birthday, including one “Living Long, Living Good” that has sold more than 1.2 million copies. As the founder of the New Elderly Movement, Hinohara encourages others to live a long and happy life, a quest in which no role model is better than the doctor himself.
Doctor Shigeaki Hinohara’s main points for a long and happy life: 
* Energy comes from feeling good, not from eating well or sleeping a lot. We all remember how as children, when we were having fun, we often forgot to eat or sleep. I believe that we can keep that attitude as adults, too. It’s best not to tire the body with too many rules such as lunchtime and bedtime.
All people who live long regardless of nationality, race or gender share one thing in common: None are overweight. For breakfast I drink coffee, a glass of milk and some orange juice with a tablespoon of olive oil in it. Olive oil is great for the arteries and keeps my skin healthy. Lunch is milk and a few cookies, or nothing when I am too busy to eat. I never get hungry because I focus on my work. Dinner is veggies, a bit of fish and rice, and, twice a week, 100 grams of lean meat.
Always plan ahead. My schedule book is already full until 2014, with lectures and my usual hospital work. In 2016 I’ll have some fun, though: I plan to attend the Tokyo Olympics!
There is no need to ever retire, but if one must, it should be a lot later than 65. The current retirement age was set at 65 half a century ago, when the average life-expectancy in Japan was 68 years and only 125 Japanese were over 100 years old. Today, Japanese women live to be around 86 and men 80, and we have 36,000 centenarians in our country. In 20 years we will have about 50,000 people over the age of 100…
Share what you know. I give 150 lectures a year, some for 100 elementary-school children, others for 4,500 business people. I usually speak for 60 to 90 minutes, standing, to stay strong.
When a doctor recommends you take a test or have some surgery, ask whether the doctor would suggest that his or her spouse or children go through such a procedure. Contrary to popular belief, doctors can’t cure everyone. So why cause unnecessary pain with surgery I think music and animal therapy can help more than most doctors imagine.
To stay healthy, always take the stairs and carry your own stuff. I take two stairs at a time, to get my muscles moving.
My inspiration is Robert Browning’s poem “Abt Vogler.” My father used to read it to me. It encourages us to make big art, not small scribbles. It says to try to draw a circle so huge that there is no way we can finish it while we are alive. All we see is an arch; the rest is beyond our vision but it is there in the distance.
Pain is mysterious, and having fun is the best way to forget it. If a child has a toothache, and you start playing a game together, he or she immediately forgets the pain. Hospitals must cater to the basic need of patients: We all want to have fun. At St. Luke’s we have music and animal therapies, and art classes.
* Don’t be crazy about amassing material things. Remember: You don’t know when your number is up, and you can’t take it with you to the next place.
Hospitals must be designed and prepared for major disasters, and they must accept every patient who appears at their doors. We designed St. Luke’s so we can operate anywhere: in the basement, in the corridors, in the chapel. Most people thought I was crazy to prepare for a catastrophe, but on March 20, 1995, I was unfortunately proven right when members of the Aum Shinrikyu religious cult launched a terrorist attack in the Tokyo subway. We accepted 740 victims and in two hours figured out that it was sarin gas that had hit them. Sadly we lost one person, but we saved 739 lives.
Science alone can’t cure or help people. Science lumps us all together, but illness is individual. Each person is unique, and diseases are connected to their hearts. To know the illness and help people, we need liberal and visual arts, not just medical ones.
Life is filled with incidents. On March 31, 1970, when I was 59 years old, I boarded the Yodogo, a flight from Tokyo to Fukuoka. It was a beautiful sunny morning, and as Mount Fuji came into sight, the plane was hijacked by the Japanese Communist League-Red Army Faction. I spent the next four days handcuffed to my seat in 40-degree heat. As a doctor, I looked at it all as an experiment and was amazed at how the body slowed down in a crisis.
Find a role model and aim to achieve even more than they could ever do. My father went to the United States in 1900 to study at Duke University in North Carolina. He was a pioneer and one of my heroes. Later I found a few more life guides, and when I am stuck, I ask myself how they would deal with the problem.
It’s wonderful to live long. Until one is 60 years old, it is easy to work for one’s family and to achieve one’s goals. But in our later years, we should strive to contribute to society. Since the age of 65, I have worked as a volunteer. I still put in 18 hours seven days a week and love every minute of it.

Source:::: venkatachalam p in ba-ba mail site

Natarajan

Image of the Day…Rosetta spacecraft selfie with comet..!!!

An otherworldly take take on an earthly trend, as Rosetta poses with its comet, 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko.

Via ESA/Rosetta/Philae/CIVA.

Here is a Rosetta ‘selfie’ with comet 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko in background. It was taken by the CIVA camera – short for Comet Infrared and Visible Analyser – onboard the Philae Lander. This is the same camera that will be acquiring images from the surface of the comet itself, when the Philae lander sets down on the comet in November.

Comet 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko was 50 kilometers / 31 miles away at the time of this image.

Two frames were taken and merged due to the high contrast.

Rosetta isn’t the first otherworldly object to get in on the earthly trend of selfies. NASA’s Mars Curiosity rover caught one, too, earlier this year.

Source:::Earth sky news

Natarajan

Message For the Day…” Your Actions Reflect Your Inner Being …”

All aspirants must have internal purity, as all actions arise from internal impulses and not external forces. Your actions reflect your inner being. When pure feelings arise within you, your actions will naturally be pure. To cleanse the internal impulses, you must be pure in your mind, speech and the body. Of these three, purity in speech is the most important. Gita reveals, “Every word you utter should be free from causing excitement or agitation (Anudhvegakaram Vakyam Satyam Priyahitam cha yat)”. Your speech must be true and pleasing. Four factors account for the pollution of speech; they are – uttering falsehood, excessive talking, carrying tales against others, and abuse or criticism of others. Make sure your tongue does not indulge in these offences. Only when you get rid of these four evil tendencies from within, your speech will become pure and unpolluted.

Sathya Sai Baba

Notes From the Diary of the Spouse of a Software Techie !!!

My family moves a lot. Not the one I was born into — they stay put: same street, same house, since 1968. We move because of the husband. You could call him a nomad. He thrives on change; in six months, he’s restless and raring to move; and his itchy foot is infectious. I say this as someone who had lived in the same house until I got hitched. I had loved it — the stability, the security of knowing everybody in the colony; of never needing to throw out anything, not even my fat 12th standard science records …

And then, the Nomad walked into my life. I fell for his sharp nose, and his voice, when he asked me “where’s the rest room” (referring to what we called the ‘toilet’). So we got married, and moved.

House No. 1 was in a sleepy street in a sleepy town — Tiruchi. It had coconut trees and friendly cats. Oh, and bossy neighbours. But when you’re newly married, as if you care. Why, we even came back and visited them after we had moved. To another sleepy street, in the same town. And that time, with the baggage, we took along a sleepy bundle. The daughter had arrived.

“Now that you have a child, you must settle down,” friends and family advised us. They meant well. So I went around asking people for good school options — the daughter was almost nine months old! Then the husband’s feet began to itch. In a few months, we moved to Chennai.

The apartment was perfect. If I looked out of the window, I could wave to my daughter, in her playschool sand pit. But usually, it was her teacher who waved back. She scolded me for waving. “How will she ever settle down, if you keep doing that?”

The waving stopped when we moved to another apartment. This time, though, the bank had lent us a lot of MONEY and we bugged a lot of carpenters and it became our ‘dream house’. We took visitors on ‘the house tour’. We pointed out the carved beading and the big mirrors and the textured wall finish and looked all modest when our ‘fine taste’ came in for praise.

We lived there for six months. By now, the nomad had external help — he had joined an IT company. They transferred him all over Europe.

In the beginning, to their credit, they didn’t quite say that: they just said ‘go here’ and threw a dart on the map. And when he had settled down nicely, and had found the Indian store, they asked him (nicely, of course) if he’d like to move. He always obliged.

When the daughter was small, we only made ‘recce’ visits. (Recce is a fancy word for sitting in an apart HOTEL, and watching TV with a toddler in a language neither of you understand, until the husband comes back when he’s very hungry, and very tired and the park is closed). But when she was five, we moved with eight cardboard boxes and enough sambar powder to last a siege, to London.

The London house was a ‘split-level maisonette’. The real estate man had highlighted all the good points — and there were many — and the husband was sold! He signed the rental agreement, and moved in. We joined him in summer. The split-levels were hard work — lots of stairs to vacuum. When winter came, we realised what was so beautiful in summer and autumn — the very high ceiling, very wide glass windows and terrific views from the 10th floor — was impossible to heat. The heating bills soared, but my feet and fingers cracked from the cold.

We were actually relieved when we had to move. Back to Chennai. But we were only there until we got out visas stamped. To go to Holland.

We flew to Amsterdam when the daughter was in Class 2. A veteran at making new friends, she made Dutch, Japanese and English ones. She spoke many languages, ate many cuisines, and loved it. I hated it. I was ‘possibly the only Indian woman who can’t cook well’ (not my words!). It was a blessing when we moved to Edinburgh.

Scotland took my breath away. It was all so beautiful, I often cried happy tears. But then winter came and froze everything. ‘Cold’ took on a new meaning. It stayed well below freezing. I slipped and fell on the ice; my knees seized up on especially chilly days; and yet, I didn’t want to leave. The daughter loved her school, the husband his job, and we all loved the city, the country…

So, of course, we moved. The last time, we told ourselves and everybody. Nobody believed us. But we came back to Chennai anyway. We refurbished the apartment. It took a little over two years for it to become home. And the husband began asking, “Aren’t you a little bored?”

My heart skipped a beat. “But why ever would you want to leave this lovely city? Everybody here understands me, I speak the language, I belong here,” I argued. The husband would back down. For a week. And he would ask again, “Aren’t you a little bored?”

Bored again

A few weeks later, the daughter said yes, she was, indeed bored; and that she’d like a change, thank you very much. “I like new experiences, meeting new people, making new friends …” she said, her eyes shining with excitement. The husband scratched his itchy feet and picked Mumbai. Because there they speak not one, but two languages I do not know at all.

And that’s why I’m sorting and sifting and chucking, for the tenth time in 19 years.

“There’s going to be so much stability in your life! I promise you, we will stay in the same house, in the same street, for two years,” the husband told me when the truck left with our goods.

“How come?” I asked suspiciously.

“I’ve signed a lease with a lock-in period of two years. The penalty to break it is just too stiff …”

aparna.m.karthikeyan@gmail.com  ….The Hindu.com

Keywords: IT industry, software engineer

Natarajan

“இயற்கையை ரசியுங்கள்” – பாரதியார் நினைவு நாள்… செப்.11

 

சுப்பிரமணிய பாரதி

சுப்பிரமணிய பாரதி

கரிய நிறமான காகம் கா… கா… என்று கத்தும்.

மரக்கிளைகளில், வானவெளியில், அதிகாலைப் பொழுதினில்

காகம் தன் கூட்டத்தாரோடு சேர்ந்தே திரியும்.

நாலாபுறமும் சுதந்திரமாய் பறந்து செல்லும்.

தேவி பராசக்தி விண்ணில் செம்மையான கிரணங்களை

காட்டி சூரியனாய் வந்து உதிப்பாள்.

தென்னை மரக்கிளையில் அமர்ந்திருக்கும் பச்சைக்கிளி

கீச்சுக் குரலில் பாடித் திரியும்.

சின்னஞ்சிறு குருவி விண்ணில் வட்டமடித்திடும்.

பருந்து மெல்ல வட்டமிட்டவாறே நெடுந்தொலைவு சென்று பறக்கும்.

தெருவில் இரை தேடித் திரியும் சேவல் ‘சக்திவேல்’ என்று கூவித் திரியும்.

செம்மை ஒளி வீசிப் பகலை வெளிச்சமாக்கிய கதிரவன்

மாலையில் மறைந்துவிடும்.

மயக்கும் மாலை வேளையில் நிலவு தன்

அமுதக் கிரணங்களைப் பொழிய ஆரம்பிக்கும்.

இந்த ரம்மியமான மாலை நேரத்தில், என் அன்பிற்குரியவளும்

உச்சி மாடத்தின் மீது ஏறி வந்து கண்ணுக்கு இனிமை சேர்த்திடுவாள்.

மனமே! வானில் திகழும் மணித்திரளான நட்சத்திரக் கூட்டத்தைக்

கண்டு இன்பம் கொள்வாய்.

நிலவையும், வான் நட்சத்திரங்களையும் கண்ணால் கண்டு மனதால்

உண்டு களிப்பதைவிடவும் வேறொரு செல்வம் உலகினில் உண்டோ?

தென்னை மரக்கீற்றில் ‘சலசல’ என்று சத்தமிடும் பூங்காற்றின்

மீது குதிரைச் சவாரி போல ஏறிக்கொண்டு

உலகம் சுற்றி வந்து இயற்கையின் இன்பம் காணுங்கள்.

பண்ணோடு இசைத்துப் பாடிக் களித்திருங்கள்.

Source:::The Hindu….Tamil
Natarajan

Dubai’s AL Maktoum International Airport …Will be the World’s Biggest Airport…

 

Dubai announced this week that the emirate’sAl Maktoum International Airport is about to get a massive $32 billion expansion.

Since opening in 2010, the four year-old airport has been mainly used for cargo operations. Passenger service commenced last year.

With this announcement, the seaside emirate will have a second major international airport, in addition to the already palatial Dubai International – home to Emirates Airlines.

The Al Maktoum Airport will serve as the focal point for Dubai World Central, a purpose-built “airport city” located 23 miles outside of Dubai. The 54 square mile airport metropolis will feature everything from commercial, residential, and leisure developments to state-of-the art cargo and air passenger facilities.

Dubai Airports expects Al Maktoum to be able to handle more than 120 million passengers a year, making it the busiest airport in the world. The expansion, which is expected to take six to eight years to complete, will enable the facility to accomodate up to 100 Airbus A380 Superjumbos simultaneously.

If that’s not enough, Al Maktoum International Airport can be further expanded to handle up to 200 million passengers per year. By 2020, the airport is expected to support more than 322,000 jobs and account for as much as 28% of Dubai’s GDP.

According to Paul Griffiths, CEO of Dubai Airports:

Our future lies at Dubai World Central (DWC). The announcement of this $32 billion development of DWC is both timely and a strong endorsement of Dubai’s aviation industry. With limited options for further growth at Dubai International, we are taking that next step to securing our future by building a brand new airport that will not only create the capacity we will need in the coming decades but also provide state of the art facilities that revolutionize the airport experience on an unprecedented scale.

SOURCE:::: BENJAMIN ZHANG  in Business Insider India

Natarajan