Message for the Day…” Be a Light ,radiating Virtue and Self -Control Wherever You are…’

Sathya Sai Baba

You have had the valuable opportunity to listen to Divine discourses and directions, they have been printed upon your hearts; many of your conversations is centered on Me or on My divine play (leelas) and glory (mahima). My advice to you is: Apply this adoration in your life. Let your companions see how disciplined you are, how sincerely you obey your parents, and how deeply you revere your teachers. Be a light, radiating virtue and self-control wherever you live, just as commendably as you did when in My divine presence. Do not slide back into indiscipline, bad manners, irresponsibility and evil habits. Do not complain against food; eat with pleasure whatever you get. Do not protest against any errand that your parents may assign you. Run gladly and fulfil it. When they want you to nurse them, do it happily, intelligently, and feeling glad that you got the chance. Live anywhere but such that I can pour My Grace on you, more and more.

There’s a hidden message written on the back of this family portrait that an Apollo astronaut left on the moon…

On April 20, 1972, Apollo 16 astronaut Charles Duke took his first steps on the moon. He was 36 at the time and is the youngest human in history to ever walk on the lunar surface.

But that’s not the only achievement of Duke’s that lives on in American history.

NASA John W. Young    Astronaut Charles M. Duke Jr., Lunar Module pilot of the Apollo 16 mission, is photographed collecting lunar samples at Station no. 1 during the first Apollo 16 extravehicular activity at the Descartes landing site.

While he was on the moon, he snapped this family portrait of him, his two sons, and his wife, which remains on the moon to this day.

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On the back of the photo Duke wrote:

“This is the family of astronaut Charlie Duke from planet Earth who landed on the moon on April 20, 1972.”

Here’s a clearer copy of the photo Duke gave us. On the far left is his oldest son Charles Duke III who had just turned seven. In the front in red is his youngest son, Thomas Duke, who was five. Duke and his wife, Dorothy Meade Claiborne, are in the background:

Portrait

Courtesy of Charles Duke

“I’d always planned to leave it on the moon,” Duke told Business Insider. “So when I dropped it, it was just to show the kids that I really did leave it on the moon.”

The photo has since been featured in numerous popular photo books and is a great example of the “human side of space exploration,” Duke said.

When Duke was training to be an Apollo astronaut, he spent most of his time in Florida. But his family was stationed in Houston. As a result, the children didn’t get to see much of their father during that time.

“So, just to get the kids excited about what dad was going to do, I said ‘Would y’all like to go to the moon with me?’” Duke said. “We can take a picture of the family and so the whole family can go to the moon.”

More than 43 years have passed since Duke walked on the moon. And while the footprints that he made in the lunar soil are relatively unchanged, Duke suspects the photo is not in very good shape at this point.

“After 43 years, the temperature of the moon every month goes up to 400 degrees [Fahrenheit] in our landing area and at night it drops almost absolute zero,” Duke said. “Shrink wrap doesn’t turn out too well in those temperatures. It looked OK when I dropped it, but I never looked at it again and I would imagine it’s all faded out by now.”

Unfortunately, there is no way to determine just how faded the photo is because it’s too small for lunar satellites to spot.

Regardless, the photos “was very meaningful for the family,” Duke said. In the end, that’s all that matters, right?

Source…..JESSICA ORWIG……..www.businessinsider.com.au

Natarajan

 

Message for the Day…” When Honour is offered to undeserving it is tantamount to insult…”

Some might question, “Women who have swallowed all the compunctions of modesty are being honoured today! They strut about with heads erect, and the world honours them not a whit less. How is that so, if modesty is all important?” I have no need to acquaint Myself with these activities of the present-day world. I do not concern Myself with them. They may receive honour and respect of a sort, but the respect is not authorized or deserved. When honour is offered to the undeserving, it is tantamount to insult; to accept it when offered is to demean the very gift. It is not honour but flattery that is cast on the immodest by the selfish and the greedy. A modest woman will never crave honour or praise. Her attention will always be on the limits that she should not transgress. Honour and praise come to her unasked and unnoticed. The honey in the flower or lotus does not crave for bees; so too is the relationship with a cultured woman who knows her limits and the respect she evokes and deserves.

Sathya Sai Baba

தமிழருக்குப் பெருமை: ஆஸ்திரேலியாவின் உயரிய விருதை வென்ற தமிழர்….

விருதுடன் டாக்டர் ராமமூர்த்தி

தமிழகத்தைப் பூர்வீகமாகக் கொண்டு, ஆஸ்திரேலியாவில் மருத்துவராகப் பணியாற்றி வரும் டாக்டர் ராமமூர்த்தி ஜெயராஜ், ஆஸ்திரேலியாவின் உயரிய ‘பிரைடு ஆஃப் ஆஸ்திரேலியா’ (Pride of Australia) என்ற விருதைப் பெற்று தமிழருக்குப் பெருமை சேர்த்துள்ளார்.

புற்றுநோய் ஆராய்ச்சிக்காகவும், மருத்துவ மாணவர்கள் மற்றும் செவிலியருக்கான கல்வித் தொண்டுக்காகவும், ஆஸ்திரேலிய பழங்குடியினர் பற்றி ஆராய்ச்சிக்காகவும், டாக்டர் ராமமூர்த்திக்கு இந்த உயரிய விருது வழங்கப்பட்டுள்ளது. இந்தியாவில் வழங்கப்படும் பத்மஸ்ரீக்கு விருதுக்கு இணையானது இந்த பிரைடு ஆஃப் ஆஸ்திரேலியா விருது என்பது குறிப்பிடத்தக்கது.

டார்வினில் உள்ள நாடாளுமன்ற அலுவலகத்தில் அக்டோபர் 7-ம் தேதி நடைபெற்ற விழாவில், மாகாண முதல்வர் ஆடம் கில்ஸ் அவர்கள் இந்த விருதை டாக்டர் ராமமூர்த்திக்கு வழங்கினார்.

மாகாண முதல்வர் மற்றும் குடும்பத்தினருடன்

தமிழகத்தில், நாமக்கல் மாவட்டம் சேந்தமங்கலத்தைச் சேர்ந்த டாக்டர் ராமமூர்த்தி, சென்னை கால்நடை மருத்துவக் கல்லூரியில் இளநிலை மற்றும் முதுநிலைப் பட்டம் பெற்ற இவர், தற்போது ஆஸ்திரேலியாவின் வடக்கு மாகாணத்தில் உள்ள சார்லஸ் டார்வின் பல்கலைக் கழகத்தில் மூத்த விரிவுரையாளராகவும் புற்றுநோய் ஆராய்ச்சியாளராகவும் பணியாற்றி வருகிறார்.

கடந்த ஒன்பது ஆண்டுகளாக, ஆஸ்திரேலியாவின் வடக்கு மாகாணத்தில் வாழும் ஆஸ்திரேலிய பழங்குடியினர் குறித்து ஆராய்ச்சிகளை டாக்டர் ராமமூர்த்தி மேற்கொண்டு வருகிறார்.

ஆஸ்திரேலியாவின் பெருமை மிகு இவ் விருதைப் பெற்ற முதல் தமிழர் என்ற பெருமைக்குச் சொந்தக்காரராகத் திகழ்கிறார் டாக்டர் ராமமூர்த்தி. கடந்த 13 ஆண்டுகளாக ஆஸ்திரேலியாவில் வசித்து வரும் இவர், 2009 முதல் 2013-ம் ஆண்டு வரை வடக்கு மாகாண தமிழ்ச் சங்கத்தின் துணைத் தலைவராகப் பொறுப்பு வகித்துள்ளார். அத்துடன், ஆஸ்திரேலியாவில் உள்ள தமிழ்ச் சங்கங்களுடன் நெருங்கிய தொடர்பும் வைத்துள்ளார்.

Source….www.dinamani.com

Natarajan

Know this Word ….”novel”……..

What is ‘novel’ ?
1.Not only new but also unusual. Novel implies ‘imaginative’ but (unlike ‘new’) not necessarily ‘unused’ and (unlike ‘original‘) not necessarily ‘genuine.’
2.Relatively longer fictional story with characters, dialogues, action, and events, and a ‘plot‘ that ties them all together into a coherent whole.

Use novel in a sentence

With Jeff’s new position as a business analyst, he worked to come up with novel approaches for solving long-term issues in the operations department.

The San Francisco entrepreneurs found a novel solution for the difficult problem of finding comfortable temporary lodgings at a reasonable price.

The other day I finished a very interesting novel by Nicholas Sparks, he does such a great job in captivating his readers.

Source….www.thebusinessdictionary.com

Natarajan

 

When Thousands of Indians and Pakistanis Changed Their Profile Pictures for a Special Reason …

Check out any social media page related to India or Pakistan today, and chances are that you will find many comments that do nothing but spread hatred between the two nations.

In a time like this, it is up to the users to realise the power of social media, and understand how it can be used for a better purpose instead. Fortunately, there are some people who are already doing so. Among the thousands of those who spread hatred on such pages, there are also a few who are out there to spread love and bridge the gap between the two countries.

Mumbai-based artist, Ram Subramanian, is one of those people. He started a social media campaign called #ProfileforPeace to show the world that he is not alone in being an Indian who does not hate Pakistan.

The man behind the campaign.

The simple campaign required people from India and Pakistan to change their profile pictures on social media to one in which they have a little note that informs where they are from, and says that they don’t hate the other country, but are only being divided because of hate politics.

Soon after the launch of this campaign, hundreds of citizens from India and Pakistan took to Facebook, Twitter and Instagram to extend their support through their love notes and new display pictures. The campaign went viral and even Indians and Pakistanis living in the US, UK and UAE, became a part of it.

The 36-year-old artist started the campaign after the recent incidents when Shiv Sena tried to ban Pakistani artists and writers in Mumbai.

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Earlier this month, organisers of a concert by Pakistani singer Ghulam Ali had to cancel the event after Shiv Sena threatened them saying that they would face poor consequences if they went ahead with the performance. The next day, organisers in Pune had to cancel his event too.

The hatred did not just end there. A few days later, Sena members tried to stop the launch of a book written by ex-Pakistan foreign minister, Khurshid Mahmud Kasuri. For this, they threw black ink on the face of the organiser, Sudheendra Kulkarni. However, the attack did not stop Kulkarni from going ahead, and he continued with the launch as planned.

Thus on Dussehra night, Ram Subramanian decided to express his views through a selfie with a note which read, “I am an Indian. I am from Mumbai. I don’t hate Pakistan. I am not alone. There are many people like me!

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This is the idea. Do join in if you believe in peace being the way forward. write this message on a post it note, take a selfie and make it your profile picture#ProfileForPeace. No more artists being banned. This is my voice. This is our voice for our Mumbai, our India. Enough of hate politics. #SpeakUp,” he posted on Facebook.

As citizens of both the countries joined hands for a better cause, there was no looking back. Here are some amazing pictures from the campaign-

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All photos: Facebook

Source….. Shreya  Pareek   ………www.thebetterindia.com

Natarajan

 

An Indian Artist’s Journey to Challenge Borders….

Akram Feroze travels by camel as part of his mission to travel along India's border

Mr Feroze, who does not believe in borders, carries a world passport

Theatre actor-director Mohammad Akram Feroze recently set off on foot to travel along India’s 10,000km-long border, stopping to perform plays at villages with – and for – their inhabitants.

Mr Feroze, who does not believe in borders, carries a world passport – as part of a global movement established under Article 13(2) of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights which says “everyone has the right to leave any country, including his own, and to return to his country”.

His journey, however, was cut short just a little over a month after he set off – at the India-Pakistan border, local police accused him of “breach of peace” and arrested him.

After spending two weeks in prison, he was freed on bail, but he says the time he spent travelling has taught him some invaluable lessons.

These are some of the highlights of his journey, as told to BBC Hindi’s Divya Arya:

Invisible Theatre

Akram Feroze with some residents from a border village in India

‘In one village, the residents only warmed up to me when I told them that my family was originally from Pakistan’

The whole idea of my journey was to understand, engage and plant new ideas in the minds of people living in border villages.

Invisible theatre was a very effective – though risky – tool for this. It meant taking on a completely different identity to my own, when interacting with people.

I did this because I wanted villagers to interact with me as a random traveller, rather than as an artist on a project.

In one village, the residents only warmed up to me when I told them that my family was originally from Pakistan who lost everything they owned during partition when they migrated to India.

The villagers immediately grew sympathetic and, in fact, opened up about their opinions on partition and how the border had altered their lives.

One old man said, “Border tension is all hype, created and sustained by governments. On the ground, it is us ordinary people who continue to suffer.”

But such insights would more often than not be quickly swept away by passionate rhetoric about security. I would be told, “things have changed now, you shouldn’t go to the border, people on the other side have bad intentions, and there are terrorists”.

No shades of grey

A profile of an Indian villager

Attitudes towards borders changed depending on proximity to it’

The attitudes towards borders also changed depending on how close or far people lived from them.

It seemed to me that when it came to borders at least, people in the rest of the country understood grey, whereas those who lived on the border were more black-and-white.

One Hindu truck driver from the northern state of Uttar Pradesh who I hitched a ride with told me: “The terror across the border doesn’t worry me, my only worry is feeding my family.”

This was in sharp contrast with most border residents.

One man told me, “The threat of the enemy on the other side is real, our elders have seen violence, we fear those across the border and we have to defend ourselves.” A world passport according to him was “stupidity”.


Border children

Children from a border village act out a play

For children in the villages, the border was a physical end, not a political line’

I found the children a different experience altogether.

Wherever I met them, I would try to develop a play, to challenge their concept of borders and introduce the concept of a border-less world. But the dilemma was that they didn’t understand borders as political lines.

When I asked the first set of children, “what is a border?”, pat came the reply, “it’s the end”. Like the boundaries of boxes.

So first I had to show them a world map to explain country borders, and then ask them to imagine a world without them.

These were rural students who had only ever crossed the border of their village to go to a neighbouring Indian village. Life ended at the village and beyond that – their parents had explained – lay danger.

“Why? Were the people any different?” I asked. “No,” they replied in unison. Their own answer must have triggered some thought, because then a child stood up and asked, “What if I was born on the other side of the border?”


Beyond borders

Sharing a meal with residents from border villages

‘Explaining a border-less world to people who live along one is a challenging concept’

Talking about a border-less world to border villagers is challenging, to say the least, given that even the children have barriers built in their subconscious minds.

I would have to take a circuitous route. One play, titled ‘The educated ghost will scare away the ghost of superstition’, was to educate the villagers about the efficacy of medical treatment for epilepsy instead of prayers by local priests.

While developing the script, a child said there were no doctors in the village.

So, they had to be called from across the border from another village. It automatically drove home the point that people from outside or across the border, in this case a doctor, had good intentions.

What I was doing with them wasn’t really about what happened while I was there, but I hope that a lot of the impact will come later and these new thoughts begin to influence their actions.

Source…www.bbc.com

Natarajan

Message for the Day…”Discipline is the soil on which Virtue Grows …”

Sathya Sai Baba

These days virtue is becoming rare at all levels – in the individual, family, society and community, and also in all fields of life – economic, political and even ‘spiritual’. Life must be spent in accumulating and safeguarding virtue, not riches. Listen and ruminate over the stories of the great moral heroes of the past, so that their ideals may be imprinted on your hearts. There is also a decline in discipline, which is the soil on which virtue grows. Each one must be respected, whatever be their status, economic condition or spiritual development; else there will be no peace and happiness in life. This respect can be aroused only by the conviction that the same Real Self (Atma) that is in you is playing the role of the other person. See that Divinity (Atma) in others; feel that they too have hunger, thirst, yearning and desires as you have, develop sympathy and the anxiety to serve and be useful to everyone.

40 years on, victim of Vietnam napalm attack, Kim Phuc, finally gets burns treatment……

Kim Phuc shows the burn scars on her back and arms after laser treatments in Miami. Phuc was burned by a napalm bomb in Vietnam more than 40 years ago. Picture: AP Photo/Nick Ut

IN the photograph that made Kim Phuc a living symbol of the Vietnam War, her burns aren’t visible — only her agony as she runs wailing toward the camera, her arms flung away from her body, naked because she has ripped off her burning clothes.

More than 40 years later she can hide the scars beneath long sleeves, but a single tear down her otherwise radiant face betrays the pain she has endured since that errant napalm strike in 1972.

Now she has a new chance to heal — a prospect she once thought possible only in a life after death.

“So many years I thought that I have no more scars, no more pain when I’m in heaven. But now — heaven on earth for me!” Phuc says upon her arrival in Miami to see a dermatologist who specialises in laser treatments for burn patients.

Late last month, Phuc, 52, began a series of laser treatments that her doctor, Jill Waibel of the Miami Dermatology and Laser Institute, says will smooth and soften the pale, thick scar tissue that ripples from her left hand up her arm, up her neck to her hairline and down almost all of her back.

Even more important to Phuc, Waibel says the treatments also will relieve the deep aches and pains that plague her to this day.

With Phuc are her husband, Bui Huy Toan, and another man who has been part of her life since she was 9 years old: Los Angeles-based Associated Press photojournalist Nick Ut.

“He’s the beginning and the end,” Phuc says of the man she calls “Uncle Ut.” ‘‘He took my picture and now he’ll be here with me with this new journey, new chapter.”

A 9-year-old Kim Phuc, centre, runs with her brothers and cousins after a South Vietnamese plane accidentally dropped its flaming napalm on its own troops and civilians. Picture: AP Photo/Nick Ut

A 9-year-old Kim Phuc, centre, runs with her brothers and cousins after a South Vietnamese plane accidentally dropped its flaming napalm on its own troops and civilians. Picture: AP Photo/Nick UtSource:AP

It was Ut, now 65, who captured Phuc’s agony on June 8, 1972, after the South Vietnamese military accidentally dropped napalm on civilians in Phuc’s village, Trang Bang, outside Saigon.

Ut remembers the girl screaming in Vietnamese, “Too hot! Too hot!” He put her in the AP van where she crouched on the floor, her burnt skin raw and peeling off her body as she sobbed, “I think I’m dying, too hot, too hot, I’m dying.”

He took her to a hospital. Only then did he return to the Saigon bureau to file his photographs, including the one of Phuc on fire that would win the Pulitzer Prize.

Phuc suffered serious burns over a third of her body; at that time, most people who sustained such injuries over 10 per cent of their bodies died, Waibel says.

Napalm sticks like a jelly, so there was no way for victims like Phuc to outrun the heat, as they could in a regular fire. “The fire was stuck on her for a very long time,” Waibel says, and destroyed her skin down through the layer of collagen, leaving her with scars almost four times as thick as normal skin.

While she spent years doing painful exercises to preserve her range of motion, her left arm still doesn’t extend as far as her right arm, and her desire to learn how to play the piano has been thwarted by stiffness in her left hand. Tasks as simple as carrying her purse on her left side are too difficult.

“As a child, I loved to climb on the tree, like a monkey,” picking the best guavas, tossing them down to her friends, Phuc says. “After I got burned, I never climbed on the tree anymore and I never played the game like before with my friends. It’s really difficult. I was really, really disabled.”

Kim Phuc now lives in Canada. Picture: Nick Ut

Kim Phuc now lives in Canada. Picture: Nick UtSource:AP

Triggered by scarred nerve endings that misfire at random, her pain is especially acute when the seasons change in Canada, where Phuc defected with her husband in the early 1990s. The couple live outside Toronto, and they have two sons, ages 21 and 18.

Phuc says her Christian faith brought her physical and emotional peace “in the midst of hatred, bitterness, pain, loss, hopelessness,” when the pain seemed insurmountable.

“No operation, no medication, no doctor can help to heal my heart. The only one is a miracle, (that) God love me,” she says. “I just wish one day I am free from pain.”

Ut thinks of Phuc as a daughter, and he worried when, during their regular phone calls, she described her pain. When he travels now in Vietnam, he sees how the war lingers in hospitals there, in children born with defects attributed to Agent Orange and in others like Phuc, who were caught in napalm strikes. If their pain continues, he wonders, how much hope is there for Phuc?

Ut says he’s worried about the treatments. “Forty-three years later, how is laser doing this? I hope the doctor can help her. … When she was 18 or 20, but now she’s over 50! That’s a long time.”

Waibel has been using lasers to treat burn scars, including napalm scars, for about a decade. Each treatment typically costs $2000 to $2700, but Waibel offered to donate her services when Phuc contacted her for a consultation. Waibel’s father-in-law had heard Phuc speak at a church several years ago, and he approached her after hearing her describe her pain.

At the first treatment in Waibel’s office, a scented candle lends a comforting air to the procedure room, and Phuc’s husband holds her hand in prayer.

Phuc tells Waibel her pain is “10 out of 10” — the worst of the worst.

The type of lasers being used on Phuc’s scars originally were developed to smooth out wrinkles around the eyes, Waibel says. The lasers heat skin to the boiling point to vaporise scar tissue. Once sedatives have been administered and numbing cream spread thickly over Phuc’s skin, Waibel dons safety glasses and aims the laser. Again and again, a red square appears on Phuc’s skin, the laser fires with a beep and a nurse aims a vacuum-like hose at the area to catch the vapour.

The procedure creates microscopic holes in the skin, which allows topical, collagen-building medicines to be absorbed deep through the layers of tissue.

Waibel expects Phuc to need up to seven treatments over the next eight or nine months.

Wrapped in blankets, drowsy from painkillers, her scarred skin a little red from the procedure, Phuc made a little fist pump. Compared to the other surgeries and skin grafts when she was younger, the lasers were easier to take.

“This was so light, just so easy,” she says.

A couple weeks later, home in Canada, Phuc says her scars have reddened and feel tight and itchy as they heal — but she’s eager to continue the treatments.

“Maybe it takes a year,” she says. “But I am really excited — and thankful.”

Source…..www.news.com.au

Natarajan

Joke of the Day….” Who Washes his Face …” ?

Bill, a fresh computer graduate from a world-class University, goes for an interview in a software company.

The interviewer is Steve, a grubby old man. And the first question he asks Bill is, `Are you good at logic?’

`Of course,’ replies Bill.

`Let me test you,’ replies Steve. `Two men come down a chimney. One comes with a clean face and the other comes out with a dirty face. Which one would wash his face?’

Bill stares at Steve. `Is that a test in Logic?’ Steve nods.

`The one with the dirty face washes his face’, Bill answers wearily.

`Wrong. The one with the clean face washes his face. Examine the simple logic. The one with the dirty face looks at the one with the clean face and thinks his face is clean. The one with the clean face looks at the one with the dirty face and thinks his face is dirty. So, the one with the clean face washes his face.’

`Hmm. I never thought of that,” says Bill. `Give me another test.’

Steve holds up two fingers, `Two men come down a chimney. One comes out with a clean face and the other comes out with a dirty face. Which one washes his face?’

`We have already established that. The one with the clean face washes his face.’

`Wrong. Each one washes one’s face. Examine the simple logic. The one with the dirty face looks at the one with the clean face and thinks his face is clean. The one with the clean face looks at the one with the dirty face and thinks his face is dirty. So, the one with the clean face washes his face. When the one with the dirty face sees the one with the clean face washing his face, he also washes his face. So each one washes one’s face.’

`I didn’t think of that!’ says Bill. `It’s shocking to me that I could make an error in logic. Test me again!’

Steve holds up two fingers, `Two men come down a chimney. One comes out with a clean face and the other comes out with a dirty face. Which one washes his face?’

`Each one washes his face.’

`Wrong. Neither one washes his face. Examine the simple logic. The one with the dirty face looks at the one with the clean face and thinks his face is clean too. The one with the clean face looks at the one with the dirty face and thinks his face is dirty too. But when the one with clean face sees that the one with the dirty face doesn’t wash his face, he assumes it is because the dirty face guy is seeing his clean face so he doesn’t wash his face either. So neither one washes his face.’

Bill is desperate. `I am qualified for this job. Please give me one more test!’

He groans when Steve lifts his two fingers, `Two men come down a chimney. One comes out with a clean face and the other comes out with a dirty face. Which one washes his face?’

`Neither one washes his face’, Bill replies, `I have learnt this logic.’

`Wrong, again. Do you now see, Bill, why programming knowledge is insufficient for this job? Tell me, how is it possible for two men to come down the same chimney at the same time, and for one to come out with a clean face and the other with a dirty face? Don’t you see the flaw in the premise?'”

Source…unknown….input from a friend of mine

Natarajan