Cheerful People Are Like Sunlight !!!!

source:::: message from one of the devotees of SAI….

Natarajan

Mother Nature

When you have a Passion and a Reason to do something,
You’ll surely have what you want… It may seem hard or even impossible, but if you have a Strong Enough Reason to do Something, You’ll be able to tap in your Inner God-given Potential!

Cheerful people are like Sunlight.
They shine in to the corners of the heart &
offer bright mornings & fresh hopes.
Good Morning to one such person!!!

Never let life’s hardships disturb you.
After all, no one can avoid problems, not even saints or gods.”

If it stops with you, then the blessing will disappear. The blessing will only keep working if it is continuously passed around. If you are a recipient of a blessing, keeps the blessing working by being the source of blessing to other people.

Never be sad for missing
Whatever you expected… but be happy
Because God has planned to give another one
Better than what you expected
Think.

No one is born happy…
But all of us are born with the ability to create happiness…
So today, make others happy…
Flash your sweetest smile…

No Fast Food at Our Times !!!… Only Slow Food !!!!

source:::: input from my brother who is younger to me ….a true reflection of good old days !!!!!
Natarajan

If you grew up in a generation before there was fast food, you may want to share some of these memories with your children or grandchildren. Just don’t blame me if they bust a gut laughing.

Growing up isn’t what it used to be, is it?

Someone asked the other day, ‘What was your favourite ‘fast food’ when you were growing up?’
‘We didn’t have fast food when I was growing up,’ I informed him.
‘All the food was slow.’
‘C’mon, seriously.. Where did you eat?’
‘It was a place called ‘home,” I explained. !
‘Mum cooked every day and when Dad got home from work, we sat down together at the dining room table, and if I didn’t like what she put on my plate, I was allowed to sit there until I did like it.’

By this time, the lad was laughing so hard I was afraid he was going to suffer serious internal damage, so I didn’t tell him the part about how I had to have permission to leave the table.

But here are some other things I would have told him about my childhood if I’d figured his system could have handled it:

Some parents NEVER owned their own house, wore jeans, set foot on a golf course, travelled out of the country or had a credit card.

My parents never drove me to school… I had a bicycle that weighed probably 50 pounds, and only had one speed (slow)..

We didn’t have a television in our house until I was 15!!!!
It was, of course, black and white, and the station went off the air at 10 PM, after playing the national anthem and epilogue; it came back on the air at about 6 am. And there was usually a locally produced news and farm show on, featuring local people….

Pizzas were not delivered to our home… But milk was.

How many do you remember?
Headlight dip-switches on the floor of the car.
Ignition switches on the dashboard.
Trouser leg clips for bicycles without chain guards.
Soldering irons you heated on a gas burner.
Using hand signals for cars without turn indicators.

Older Than Dirt Quiz:
Count all the ones that you remember, not the ones you were told about.. Ratings at the bottom

1. Sweet cigarettes
2. Coffee shops with juke boxes
3 . Home milk delivery in glass bottles
4. Party lines on the telephone
5. Newsreels before the movie
6. TV test patterns that came on at night after the last show and were there until TV shows started again in the morning.
(There were only 2 channels [if you were fortunate])
7. Peashooters
8. 33 rpm records
9. 45 RPM records
10. Hi-fi’s
11. Metal ice trays with levers
12. Blue flashbulb
13. Cork popguns
14. Wash tub wringers

If you remembered 0-3 = You’re still young
If you remembered 3-6 = You are getting older
If you remembered 7-10 = Don’t tell your age
If you remembered 11-14 = You’re positively ancient!

I must be ‘positively ancient’ but those memories are some of the best parts of my life. I am sure People of my age group will tend to agree with my views …

Natarajan

Green Man of Gaya…..

The green man of Gaya

SARITA BRARA   in THE HINDU

Natarajan

  • Preserving trees and the environment for the coming generation. Photo: AP
    Preserving trees and the environment for the coming generation.
  • THE MAN BEHIND THE FORESTS: Sikander. Photo: Ranjit Ranjan
    The HinduTHE MAN BEHIND THE FORESTS: Sikander.

Sikander cycles to Brahmyoni hill every morning to tend to the thousands of trees he has grown single handedly

Sikander lives in a small, one-room house in Gaya, does odd jobs as a part time electrician or an extra hand at a shop to earn a living. But his heart, soul and mind lie in the lofty mission to spread greenery in this town, near Bodh Gaya, where Buddha attained enlightenment. He had single handedly planted countless saplings and today more than ten thousand trees stand tall in Brahmyoni hill and other places.

This is the result of his tireless efforts since he began his mission in 1982, 30 years ago. He is so devoted to the cause that notwithstanding the heat, the cold or the rain, Sikander without fail cycles his way to the hills every morning and starts either planting new samplings or tending to the fresh ones and watering the old and new plants .

“I have three children at home,” he says and “thousands on the Gaya hills to care for, nurture and protect”

He gets really hurt when some of samplings die or are uprooted by miscreants or encroachers, “and this happens constantly”, he laments.

How did it all begin? Sikander recalls that as a child, whenever he came to this area for a picnic with his family or other boys, he found that the place was barren with no trees and he decided to turn the hillock green. What began as a pastime became an obsession and now his lifelong mission. His family has suffered economically, because he refuses to be bogged down either by a full time job or accept employment outside Gaya that could take him away from his mission.

Sikander has grown plants and trees of hundreds of varieties – medicinal, fruits trees and trees that provide shade. There are guava, mango, pomegranate, tamarind, cashew nut, lemon, amla, sheesham, ashoka, neem trees and many other varieties.

“I have planted trees to attract birds,” he says, but regrets that children pluck them while they are still raw.

He also creates parks to beautify the city where he thinks there is a scope. People ask him whether it is for an institute, or an ashram or a spot. Sikander has done his bit to harvest rain water and dug several pits around Brahmayoni hills.

Sikander’s latest fad is naming trees after freedom fighters and other famous personalities. There are trees named after Mahatma Gandhi, Pandit Nehru, Subhas Chandra Bose, Khudiram Bose, Bhagat Singh, Chander Shekhar Azad, Maharana Pratap, Lala Lajpat Rai, Shivaji and others. Sikander says that he is trying to find the names of other freedom fighters so that he can name more trees after them. He is making a special corner for plants named after Kargil martyrs.

Though Gaya’s greenman has earned a lot of appreciation from many quarters and has many admirers, he has not received any help from the state government, irrespective of which party has been in power. His biggest concern today is to protect the green areas that he has created, away from encroachers and ensure that the saplings he plants with so much of hard work are not uprooted or die for want of care. He has applied for assistance many times to the local authorities and even petitioned the current chief minister, but so far has got nothing except assurances. He is keen on starting an organisation or a Trust so that he gets support for his rare mission, but says he does not have the means for it.

“My dream is to see Gaya as an international tourist city with greenery everywhere and also make people aware of the environment and the need to preserve it for coming generation,” he says.

Let All My Friends Be Happy Forever !!!

source:::: unknown….input from one of my friends….a nice one to be shared with you all thro my site..

Natarajan..

I told GOD :: Let all my friends be healthy and happy forever..

GOD said::::: OK..But for 4 days only…

I said::::::: Let them be Spring Day , Summer Day , Autumn Day, and WinterDay…

GOD said….. 3 Days

I said……. Yes…Yesterday, Today , and Tomorrow!!!

GOD said….. NO.. 2 Days …..

I said…… Yes.. A Bright Day..Day Time…and A Dark day..Night!!!!

GOD Said…. NO….Just One Day…

I Said …… YES

GOD Asked ….Which Day ?

I Said……. EVERY DAY in the living years !!!

GOD Laughed and said …All you friends will be healthy and happy EVERY DAY!!!!!!

Indian Student Entrepreneur wins Intel Global Challenge !!!

 source::::: silicon india net…

 Natarajan

 It came as a pleasant shock, when Neha Juneja heard that her company Greenway Grameen Infra won the 2012 Intel Global Challenge at Haas School of Business, University of California, Berkeley, receiving $50,000 on November 9 amongst more than 150,000 students from more than 50 countries.

The Intel Global Challenge is a joint project of Intel and the UC Berkeley Lester Center for Entrepreneurship. Started in 2005, it rewards student entrepreneurs a total of $100,000 for innovative ideas that can make a positive impact on society.

Founded in 2010, the firm’s biomass-based stove with single-burner uses 65 per cent less fuel and produces 80 per cent less smoke than traditional stoves. The company targets consumers in rural areas.
Juneja, 27, co-founder and chief executive officer who had also won the Businessworld Young Entrepreneur Award in 2011 said, “I was surprised because the other participants were very good.

All of them had unique ideas, so I was a little nervous. It’s like getting a dream award. This award is very important. .

Juneja came up with this idea after a visit to a village in Wardha, Maharashtra, where she saw a small home with a television, refrigerator, mobile phones, and motorbike. Yet the lady of the house was cooking on a mud stove.

To develop the product, Juneja travelled to 22 states in India, understanding cooking habits across the country for a year. In this one year, she tested nine different designs before finalizing the Greenway stove that costs $23 and consumes one-third of the fuel a mud stove consumes. Also, unlike mud stoves, it does not produce carbon monoxide in the smoke.

Juneja says she and her five member team never thought of this as a social venture. They always considered it a business opportunity.

Coffee and Google …Strategies for Escaping from Alzheimer”s and Dementia!!!!

USEFUL INFO FOR BOTH YOUNG AND OLD
UCLA Research on Alzheimer’s

Coffee drinkers will love this!!

This a very useful article. Please save it for your reference.

“The idea that Alzheimer’s is entirely genetic and unpreventable is perhaps the greatest misconception about the disease,” says Gary Small, M.D., director of the UCLA Center on Aging. Researchers now know that Alzheimer’s, like heart disease and cancer, develops over decades and can be influenced by lifestyle factors including cholesterol, blood pressure, obesity, depression, education, nutrition, sleep and mental, physical and social activity.

The big news: Mountains of research reveals that simple things you do every day might cut your odds of losing your mind to Alzheimer’s.

In search of scientific ways to delay and outlive Alzheimer’s and other dementias, I tracked down thousands of studies and interviewed dozens of experts. The results in a new book: 100 Simple Things You Can Do to Prevent Alzheimer’s and Age-Related Memory Loss (Little, Brown; $19.99).

Here are 10 strategies I found most surprising.

1. Have coffee. In an amazing flip-flop, coffee is the new brain tonic. A large European study showed that drinking three to five cups of coffee a day in midlife cut Alzheimer’s risk 65% in late life. University of South Florida researcher Gary Arendash credits caffeine: He says it reduces dementia-causing amyloid in animal brains. Others credit coffee’s antioxidants. So drink up, Arendash advises, unless your doctor says you shouldn’t.

2. Floss. Oddly, the health of your teeth and gums can help predict dementia. University of Southern California research found that having periodontal disease before age 35 quadrupled the odds of dementia years later. Older people with tooth and gum disease score lower on memory and cognition tests, other studies show. Experts speculate that inflammation in diseased mouths migrates to the brain.

3. Google. Doing an online search can stimulate your aging brain even more than reading a book, says UCLA’s Gary Small, who used brain MRIs to prove it. The biggest surprise: Novice Internet surfers, ages 55 to 78, activated key memory and learning centers in the brain after only a week of Web surfing for an hour a day.

4. Grow new brain cells. Impossible, scientists used to say. Now it’s believed that thousands of brain cells are born daily. The trick is to keep the newborns alive. What works: aerobic exercise (such as a brisk 30-minute walk every day), strenuous mental activity, eating salmon and other fatty fish, and avoiding obesity, chronic stress, sleep deprivation, heavy drinking and vitamin B deficiency.

5. Drink apple juice. Apple juice can push production of the “memory chemical” acetylcholine; that’s the way the popular Alzheimer’s drug Aricept works, says Thomas Shea, Ph.D., of the University of Massachusetts. He was surprised that old mice given apple juice did better on learning and memory tests than mice that received water. A dose for humans: 16 ounces, or two to three apples a day.

6. Protect your head. Blows to the head, even mild ones early in life, increase odds of dementia years later. Pro football players have 19 times the typical rate of memory-related diseases. Alzheimer’s is four times more common in elderly who suffer a head injury, Columbia University finds. Accidental falls doubled an older person’s odds of dementia five years later in another study. Wear seat belts and helmets, fall-proof your house, and don’t take risks.

7. Meditate. Brain scans show that people who meditate regularly have less cognitive decline and brain shrinkage – a classic sign of Alzheimer’s – as they age. Andrew Newberg of the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine says yoga meditation of 12 minutes a day for two months improved blood flow and cognitive functioning in seniors with memory problems.

8. Take D. A “severe deficiency” of vitamin D boosts older Americans’ risk of cognitive impairment 394%, an alarming study by England’s University of Exeter finds. And most Americans lack vitamin D. Experts recommend a daily dose of 800 IU to 2,000 IU of vitamin D3.

9. Fill your brain. It ‘s called “cognitive reserve.” A rich accumulation of life experiences – education, marriage, socializing, a stimulating job, language skills, having a purpose in life, physical activity and mentally demanding leisure activities – makes your brain better able to tolerate plaques and tangles. You can even have significant Alzheimer’s pathology and no symptoms of dementia if you have high cognitive reserve, says David Bennett, M.D., of Chicago’s Rush University Medical Center.

10. Avoid infection. Astonishing new evidence ties Alzheimer’s to cold sores, gastric ulcers, Lyme disease, pneumonia and the flu. Ruth Itzhaki, Ph.D., of the University of Manchester in England estimates the cold-sore herpes simplex virus is incriminated in 60% of Alzheimer’s cases. The theory: Infections trigger excessive beta amyloid “gunk” that kills brain cells. Proof is still lacking, but why not avoid common infections and take appropriate vaccines, antibiotics and antiviral agents?

What to Drink for Good Memory

A great way to keep your aging memory sharp and avoid Alzheimer’s is to drink the right stuff.

a. Tops: Juice. A glass of any fruit or vegetable juice three times a week slashed Alzheimer’s odds 76% in Vanderbilt University research. Especially protective: blueberry, grape and apple juice, say other studies.

b. Tea: Only a cup of black or green tea a week cut rates of cognitive decline in older people by 37%, reports the Alzheimer’s Association. Only brewed tea works. Skip bottled tea, which is devoid of antioxidants.

c. Caffeine beverages. Surprisingly, caffeine fights memory loss and Alzheimer’s, suggest dozens of studies. Best sources: coffee (one Alzheimer’s researcher drinks five cups a day), tea and chocolate. Beware caffeine if you are pregnant, have high blood pressure, insomnia or anxiety.

d. Red wine: If you drink alcohol, a little red wine is most apt to benefit your aging brain. It’s high in antioxidants. Limit it to one daily glass for women, two for men. Excessive alcohol, notably binge drinking, brings on Alzheimer’s.

e. Two to avoid: Sugary soft drinks, especially those sweetened with high fructose corn syrup. They make lab animals dumb. Water with high copper content also can up your odds of Alzheimer’s. Use a water filter that removes excess minerals.

5 Ways to Save Your Kids from Alzheimer’s Now

Alzheimer’s isn’t just a disease that starts in old age. What happens to your child’s brain seems to have a dramatic impact on his or her likelihood of Alzheimer’s many decades later.

Here are five things you can do now to help save your child from Alzheimer’s and memory loss later in life, according to the latest research.

1. Prevent head blows: Insist your child wear a helmet during biking, skating, skiing, baseball, football, hockey, and all contact sports. A major blow as well as tiny repetitive unnoticed concussions can cause damage, leading to memory loss and Alzheimer’s years later.

2 Encourage language skills: A teenage girl who is a superior writer is eight times more likely to escape Alzheimer’s in late life than a teen with poor linguistic skills. Teaching young children to be fluent in two or more languages makes them less vulnerable to Alzheimer’s.

3. Insist your child go to college: Education is a powerful Alzheimer’s deterrent. The more years of formal schooling, the lower the odds. Most Alzheimer’s prone: teenage drop outs. For each year of education, your risk of dementia drops 11%, says a recent University of Cambridge study.

4. Provide stimulation: Keep your child’s brain busy with physical, mental and social activities and novel experiences. All these contribute to a bigger, better functioning brain with more so-called ‘cognitive reserve.’ High cognitive reserve protects against memory decline and Alzheimer’s.

5. Spare the junk food: Lab animals raised on berries, spinach and high omega-3 fish have great memories in old age. Those overfed sugar, especially high fructose in soft drinks, saturated fat and trans fats become overweight and diabetic, with smaller brains and impaired memories as they age, a prelude to Alzheimer’s.

Excerpted from Jean Carper’s newest book: “100 Simple Things You Can Do to Prevent Alzheimer’s”

If you think your friend will benefit from above information, share it with them.

Natarajan

Road to Happiness!!!!!

source:::
An excerpt from Book
“The Road to Happiness”
by Mac Anderson and BJ Gallagher

When I travel on business, I like to talk to the taxi drivers who take me from the airport to my hotel, or to a convention center, or to a restaurant. Taxi drivers are often immigrants with interesting personal histories and unusual cultural backgrounds. I ask them how long they’ve been in America, how they chose which city to live in, and what they like best about where they live. Of course, I also ask them for advice on good local restaurants and any special attractions they’d recommend to a visitor. I’ve had some great experiences on my travels, thanks to the advice of taxi drivers!

On one trip about ten years ago, I was making conversation with the taxi driver, asking him my usual questions about how he came to live where he lived. Then I asked him a hypothetical question: “If you could live anywhere in the world-and if money was no object-where would you live?”

Without hesitating even for a second, he replied, “I live in my heart. So it really doesn’t matter where my body lives. If I am happy inside, then I live in paradise, no matter where my residence is.”

I felt humbled and a little foolish for my question. Of course he was right-happiness is an inside job. He had reminded me of something I already knew, but had forgotten. If you can’t find happiness inside yourself, you’ll never find it in the outside world, no matter where you move. Wherever you go, there you are. You take yourself with you.

I am grateful for the wisdom of that taxi driver. And I’m grateful for all the wisdom others have shared with me about how to be happy.

Kind words can be short and easy to speak, but their echoes are truly endless.”Learn how to be happy with what you have while you pursue all that you want.”

Natarajan

A to Z Tips for an Achiever !!!

TO Achieve your dreams , remember A to Z TIPS …..

Avoid negative thoughts, sources, people, places, things and habits.

Believe in yourself

Consider things from all angles

Don”t give up and don”t give in so easily

Enjoy life today…yesterday is gone…tomorrow may never come.

Family and friends are hidden treasures…seek them and enjoy their riches.

Give more than you planned to do

Hang on to your dreams

Ignore those who try to discourage you

Just do it !

Keep trying…no matter how hard it seems…it will get easier

Love yourself!

Make it happen

Never lie, cheat or steal…always strike a fair deal

Open your eyes and see things as they really are.

Practice makes you perfect

Quitters never win….and winners never quit

Read , study, and learn about everything important in your life

Stop gossiping

Take control of your own destiny

Understand yourself to understand others better

Visualise a goal or target

Want it more than anything.

Xcelllerate your efforts

You are unique of all God “s creations…nothing can replace you !

Zero in on your target and go for it !!!

This is not the end!!!!…Let this one be a good beginning for you!!!!!!!!!!!!!

NATARAJAN

Beach Walk…A Luxury Money Can”t Buy !!!!

source:::: article by Bishwanath Ghosh…The Hindu.

Natarajan

Many of us don’t consider exercise beneficial unless we shell out a lot of money.

Boat Club Road is one of the posh neighbourhoods in Chennai, if not the most posh; and such is its snob value that many people who don’t live there drive all the way to Boat Club Road for their morning walks — either in the hope of rubbing shoulders with the who’s-who of the city (when they are alone and without the trappings of their exalted status) or just for the kicks. Morning walk on Boat Club Road: it can’t get any more fashionable.

I don’t know if the story, about people driving all the way to Boat Club Road just to walk, is entirely true, but I would like to believe there is some substance to it. I have a friend who once upon a time went there for morning walks and who, at the drop of a hat, still likes to quote her “Boat Club Road friends.”

Sadly, even though I will soon complete 12 years in Chennai, I’ve been to that road only twice, perhaps thrice, that too in the evenings. I have no idea how it looks early in the morning, though I would like to know.

I walk in a much humbler location called Jeeva Park, a stone’s throw from my flat in T. Nagar. I’ve known Jeeva Park longer than any other place in Chennai: in its lap I find sweet memories of younger days (I’ve been walking there since I was 30) and also the assurance of good health even as I touch middle-age. The park, like most parks in the city, is well-maintained and extremely user-friendly.

One has to hand it to them: Chennai’s administrators, even though they often lack planning and imagination when it comes to basic infrastructure, they understand the importance of parks in a city dweller’s life. If only more people flocked these pretty neighbourhood parks: that way there would be less people flocking hospitals. But many of us don’t consider exercise beneficial unless we shell out a lot of money. In fact, people often sign up with expensive gyms or fancy yoga classes only so they stick to their regimen, the rationale being: “Since I’ve paid through my nose, I might as well be regular.”

What they don’t realise is that the best gyms, where birds sing for you from the trees and where you see greenery instead of mirrors, come free. And recently, I discovered a gym where they have the sea! A few years ago, I heard about the Marina being beautified and even noticed some cosmetic changes on the beach from a distance, but considering it was a government initiative, one didn’t expect a fantastic transformation. After all, you tend to take all government promises with a sack of salt.

But one lovely evening a few weeks ago, I happened to be at the Marina and I was amazed by what I saw: a broad jogging track, flanked by places to sit and skate, running for a length of 2 km northwards from Gandhi statue. Which means, to and fro, you cover 4 km — more than sufficient for your heart to be happy. All you will need is a pair of decent shoes and an iPod.

Needless to say, I have been hitting the Marina at least thrice a week ever since. On one side, you have the sea running with you, and on the other, the rich heritage of Madras. And the fresh breeze. It’s a luxury money can’t buy.

Keywords: morning walks, Chennai walkers, Bishwanath Ghosh column

How to Accept Criticism with Grace and Appreciation !!!


 Most people take criticism as a disheartening or demoralizing comment. They tend to react to it either by being defensive or lashing back. But there are positive ways of dealing with criticism which can work wonders for your career and help you lead a stress free life.

 

Here is a list of constructive ways for dealing with criticism in your respective life.

 

 

 

1. Hold Your Reactions and Control Your Anger:

 


Usually the first reaction of humans in response to criticism is anger or rage. It is advisable to hold your reaction and give it some time before riding the emotional way. Allow the sense of logic to sink in and guide you past the anger. By doing so, you would understand the true meaning and intention behind the criticism, and this will in turn help you to reach greater heights in personal and professional life.    

 

 

 

 

2. Think Positive:

 

Seeing a positive in a negative situation can work wonders on your life. Hence it is always advisable to take in criticism as a constructive feedback and thank the critic for pointing out your mistake. Try to address the issues pointed out by the critic and avoid repeating the mistake for the betterment of your future.

 

 

 

3. Be a Better Person:

 

Do not consider criticism as personal attack and react violently. Consider it as a scrutiny of your action, not you as a person. This will help you to detach from criticism emotionally and helps you to see the positive side of it. Even if an individual behaves in an inhuman way, you don’t have to do the same and stoop to a low level. It is always advisable to maintain a high moral ground and try to become a better person.

 

    

 

 

 

 

4. Learn From Criticism:

 

Every criticism, irrespective of its true intention, gives you an opportunity to educate yourself. It allows you to look for errors in your action, correct them immediately and create a future course of action. Having a positive frame of mind allows you to sail through any situation and lead a better life.     

 

 

 

5. Avoid Competitiveness:

 

You should avoid being competitive about criticism and refrain from being revengeful. The fact is that criticizing someone or something is not part of a competition and it is essential for an individual to uphold high moral values. You can humor the situation or be positively sarcastic about meaningless criticism. By doing so and displaying such immense maturity, you are bound to become a self-assured and confident individual.    

 


Accepting criticism in a positive and graceful way is not an impossible task. All you need is a bit of effort and the right frame of mind.    

 

 source:::::: siliconindia net…  

Natarajan