THE TIMELY DEATH OF KODAK FOUNDER GEORGE EASTMAN…

 

It was March 14, 1932 when George Eastman, famed inventor, philanthropist, and founder of Eastman Kodak, invited a few loyal friends over to witness the rewriting of his will. He had made the decision to give a good portion of his money and prized possessions, including his enormous mansion, to the city he called home for his whole life- Rochester. To this end, he bequeathed his house and a $2 million endowment (about $34 million today) to the University of Rochester. Eastman also donated a large sum of money to dental dispensaries across the city, attempting to ensure that no child in Rochester would go without proper dental work. Finally, he left $200,000 (about $3.4 million today) to his beloved niece, Ellen.

Cheerfully signing the will, he assured his friends this was just a matter of ensuring his wishes. Later, it was thought that he also wanted his friends to see him mentally alert so the credibility of the will wouldn’t be questioned. After all the t’s were crossed and i’s were dotted, he asked if everyone could excuse themselves for a moment. When they did, George took out paper and pen and wrote a note, which read,

To my friends,
My work is done.
Why wait?
GE

Then, he took a pistol out from his nightstand and shot himself in the heart, ending his life at the age of 74.

So who was this captain of industry and why did he, quite cheerfully, suddenly choose to take his own life?

George Eastman, and his company, turned photography from a complicated, expensive, unwieldy, and potentially dangerous hobby (due the chemicals needed to develop the film) into one that, quite literally, a child could do. He was not only a genius inventor, but a brilliant marketer.

His story begins as it ended, in Rochester. The Eastmans always put a priority on education. In fact, George Eastman Senior founded Eastman’s Commercial College in 1854, the same year George Junior was born. The family was middle-class and living pretty comfortably, but this was short-lived. In 1862, when George was only eight, his father passed away from a “brain disorder.” His mother, Maria, was a now a widow with three small children, one of them (George’s youngest sister Katy) suffered from polio and other illnesses. Life was hard for the Eastman family after George Senior’s death and self-reliance became a necessary trait.

At age of 14, George dropped out of high school to support his family. He worked at a local insurance company and as a clerk at Rochester Savings Bank. Then, in 1870, tragedy struck again when his sister, Katy, passed away from complications related to polio. She was buried next to her father.

George, even at an early age, was meticulous, detailed, and controlling of every aspect of his own business. Starting when he got his first job at 14, he began keeping ledgers to detail his finances. Due to his careful planning and earning enough working at the bank, Eastman was able to afford certain luxuries. It was in one of these ledgers, under January 27, 1869 to be exact, that “photography” was first mentioned. As the months passed, besides helping to support his mother, George spent more and more money on “photos” or “photograph materials.”

In 1878, Eastman learned an important lesson – photography (at least at the time) was hard. The legend goes that he wanted to treat his mother to a vacation in Santa Domingo in the Dominican Republic (other sources say he was looking to buy land in the newly independent nation). Either way, to document his trip, he bought a photographic outfit. Cameras then are not what we think of cameras are today. An outfit included the camera (constructed from several parts that must be put together before taking pictures), a stand, a light, and wet glass plates (with chemicals) in order to preserve the picture. As Eastman later put it,

In those days, one did not ‘take’ a camera; one accompanied the outfit in which the camera was only a part. I bought an outfit and learned that it took not only a strong, but also a dauntless man to be an outdoor photographer.

Eastman, so fed up with everything he had to bring, not only didn’t take a camera, he didn’t take the trip at all. At this point, Eastman thought to himself that there had to be a better way.

For the next several years, while still working at the bank, Eastman developed a new kind of dry plate, one made out of gelatin (the same ingredient used in Jello, which would be invented twenty years later in a small town thirty miles from Rochester), not glass. Glass was heavy, fragile, and expensive. Gelatin was an improvement on all of these things. By 1880, he had patented a dry-plate coating machine made out of gelatin, making the process of preserving film negatives simpler, cheaper, and less dangerous.

While developing this process, he came across another innovation that would allow photography and, eventually, cameras to become something that wasn’t just for the professional. As described by Eastman,

I also made experiments by using paper as a temporary support and coating the Cellulose immediately upon the paper, and afterwards coating with the emulsion. I had no difficulty stripping the Cellulose from the paper, the cellulose adhered to the emulsion and separated from the paper.

He patented this film on March 4, 1884. That same year, Eastman and his associate William Walker developed a roll holder to hold the film. The invention of this revolutionary film wasn’t enough, though. What he really wanted to do was, “to popularize photography to an extent as yet scarcely dreamed of.”

In 1888, the name “Kodak” was thought up while playing with an anagram set with his mother. Eastman loved the word because it was simple, easy to pronounce and it started with a “K.” Said Eastman, “It became a question of trying out a great number of combinations of letters that made words starting and ending with ‘K.”

Kodak was officially incorporated as a company in 1890 and quickly rocketed to the top of the industry. Also that same year, Eastman introduced the first Kodak camera, equipped with his film. It cost $25 (about $640 today), but the most important thing was that the customer didn’t do the developing of film themselves- Kodak did. The customer would send the camera back (film and all) to the company for developing and processing. Their motto aptly illustrated this: “You press the button, we do the rest.”

He had now made it easy for anyone to take and have pictures developed. The next step was to change the camera from a luxury item or expensive hobby to something just about anyone could afford.

In 1900, the revolutionary Brownie camera, versions of which were so popular through the mid-20th century, was born. It cost only one dollar ($28 today) and was even marketed to children. For the next hundred years, George Eastman and Kodak would be synonymous with cameras and film.

For his entire 40+ years of heading up his own company, George Eastman was used to being in control. So, when he was diagnosed with a spinal condition in the late 1920s, forcing him to be confined to a wheelchair, it depressed him greatly. His mother, who lived with him until her death in 1907, was also in a wheelchair for the last years of her life. His baby sister was in a wheelchair until she died. He saw them suffer and Eastman did not want to go through the same long drawn out process. He also didn’t like that he felt this gave off an image of weakness. Eastman was used to being a man respected the world over, not an “invalid.” He mused greatly about death and illness, writing a friend,

God keep me from being like them (referring to family and friends who he had seen succumb to illness). Doesn’t it seem strange that the clearest minds I have ever known should be taken this way? That is the sad thing about illness.

So, by March 1932, he had enough. George Eastman wanted to go by his own hand, rather than the hand of illness and fate. So he tidied up all the loose ends of his life and, once complete, ended it immediately on his own terms.

Source…www.today i foundout.com

Natarajan

What happens if You accidentally damage a Precious Work of Art in a Museum …?

 

What Happens if You Accidentally Damage a Priceless Work of Art in a Museum?

destroyed-ancient-potteryIf you’ve ever walked through a museum or an art gallery you may have noticed that a lot of the art and historical treasure on display is completely exposed. In fact, with the exception of some of the world’s more famous pieces of art, you could easily fall over and damage much of the artwork on display worldwide, right now. So, what would happen if you did trip and accidentally damage an irreplaceable priceless piece of art? As it turns out, not all that much.

This is mainly because of two things- first, museums and galleries will almost always have insurance to cover any such damage. Second, accidents happen and the people running the museums understand that.

In fact, in nearly every case we could find of a piece of artwork accidentally being damaged, no charges were pressed by either the museum or, in some cases, the owner of the art in question. In fact, it appears that the worst that might happen in such a scenario is that you’ll get banned from the museum.

For example, consider the case of Nick Flynn, a man who in 2006 tripped over his shoelace while walking around the Fitzwilliam Museum in Cambridge and knocked over three 17th century vases worth about £175,000 (~$225,000). Flynn noted of the experience,

“I snagged my shoelace, missed the step and crash, bang, wallop. There were a million pieces of high quality Qing ceramics lying around underneath me… Although [I knew] the vase would break I didn’t imagine it would be loose and crash into the other two.  I’m sure I only hit the first one and that must have flown across the windowsill and hit the next one, which then hit the other, like a set of dominos. I can say with my hand on my heart that it was not deliberate … it was just my Norman Wisdom moment, just one of those unbelievably unlucky things that can sometimes happen.”

The museum official’s response was to merely send him a letter advising Flynn “not to visit the museum again in the near future.” Yes, he didn’t even technically get banned; just politely asked to abstain from visiting for a while.

In fact, the museum didn’t even identify Flynn to the public to spare him the embarrassment of being known as the guy who tripped and knocked over three vases that, before encountering Mr. Flynn, had managed to survive about four centuries and a full six decades sitting on those very windowsills. (We only know his name because British tabloids tracked him down after the fact.)

In another example, this one in 2015, a 12 year old boy tripped while visiting a Taiwanese art exhibition. During his fall forward, he managed to punch a hole through a 350 year old painting, Flowers, by Paola Porpora, valued at about $1,500,000… (You can watch the video of this happening here.) The organisers of the exhibition went out of their way to assure the boy and his family that they wouldn’t be liable to pay any damages nor in any trouble legally. In fact, one of the organisers, Sun Chi-hsuan, publicly insisted that the boy wasn’t to blame.

In yet another case, in 2010, a young woman, who as per usual with these sorts of things went unnamed publicly, damaged a $130,000,000 Picasso painting called The Actor by falling into it during an art class. The result was a six inch tear in the lower right-hand corner. In this specific case, the museum officials were more concerned with reporting that the woman was uninjured than the fact that her accident had potentially wiped away half the painting’s value.

So those are pure accidents. What about more negligent cases? All evidence would seem to indicate that museums and galleries similarly seem hesitant to do anything to the patron in question.  Beyond countless selfie-related accidental destruction of art that has become something of a frequent occurrence in recent years, there is the case of a clock made by artist James Borden that hung in Columbia Pennsylvania’s National Watch and Clock Museum for over two decades before being destroyed. How did it meet its end? An elderly couple began touching and pulling on its various bits, seemingly trying to see what the clock looked like when working; this ultimately caused the clock to come crashing down. (You can watch a video of this here.) The museum chose not to press any charges nor seek compensation for the damages. In fact, as in other examples, they didn’t even berate the individuals in the press, choosing not even to name them at all.

That said, we did find one exception to this “no fault” negligent destruction of art general rule. This happened when a tourist scaled the facade of a Portuguese train station to take a selfie with an 1890 statue of Dom Sebastiao, resulting in the statue’s destruction when said tourist accidentally knocked the statue over and it shattered on the ground below. The unnamed man was later charged with destruction of public property.

As for the non-public, even in cases where museum or gallery staff damage or destroy the art, the individual usually gets off with only a slap on the wrist if it truly was an honest accident. For example, in 2000, some porters at the Bond Street auction house accidentally put a painting by artist Lucian Freud, valued at £100,000 (about $130,000), into a crushing machine…

The painting was stored in a large wooden box, which the porters assumed was empty and put out with the rest of the trash. The auction house assured papers that the porters wouldn’t lose their jobs over the matter, and that it was an honest mistake.

In another case, an unnamed cleaning lady tossed a bunch of modern art valued at about $15,000 into the garbage in 2014. To be fair to the cleaning lady, the “art” in question, created by modernist Paul Branca, was a bunch of cardboard boxes haphazardly strewn across the floor of a section of the gallery (modern art everybody). Again, no action was taken against the cleaner. (We can only hope Mr. Branca was on his game that day, and he simply took the opportunity to go full meta-on it, displaying his former cardboard box art now in the garbage bin, perhaps even increasing its value in that case…)

All this said, while it appears most museums, galleries and even artists will take the destruction or damage of their work in good humor if done accidentally (even if there was a fair bit of negligence involved), the same can’t be said if the damage is malicious. In these cases, the museum can and will press charges, and one might expect a bit of jail time.

For instance, in the aforementioned vase-smashing story, sometime later there was some thought that Flynn had smashed the vases on purpose for the publicity of it (given his going out of his way to give interviews about it and some of his comments therein, despite that the museum had so carefully avoided assigning any blame or mentioning his name). As a result, he was eventually detained for a night, though noted he was treated very well while under arrest, with the police simply trying to determine if he’d done it on purpose. Once they decided it had indeed been an accident, he was let go with no further consequences.

In another instance, one Andrew Shannon punched a Monet painting, Argenteuil Basin with a Single Sail Boat, then worth about £7m (about $9 million). He later claimed he tripped and fell and it was an accident, but security footage clearly showed him intentionally punching the painting.  When he was detained by security guards, a can of paint stripper was also found in his pocket.  He was given a five year prison sentence.

This brings us to perhaps the most obvious question that arises from all this- why is such valuable, and often irreplaceable, art stored in such a way that people can just walk up to it and damage it (whether accidentally or not).

Well one reason is cost- placing every painting, sculpture and fresco behind protective glass or under the careful watch of a burly guard is expensive. Contrary to the value of the pieces they sometimes contain, museums and art galleries often aren’t swimming in money.

A second, perhaps more important reason, is that it would disrupt the experience of viewing the art in question; ensuring the art can be properly appreciated is of tantamount importance to those running various museums and galleries. It’s noted that said institutions have to constantly strike a balance between “keeping works of art accessible to the public, and protecting them at the same time”. Such a balance necessitates a degree of trust be placed in the public to not paw at the priceless works of art on display and to otherwise be careful around them.

Source…www.today i foundout.com

Natarajan

வாரம் ஒரு கவிதை …” மேகம் போடும் தாளம் “

 

மேகம்  போடும்  தாளம்
__———————
நீல வானம் இசைக்கும் மழை இசைக் கச்சேரிக்கு
வான் மேகம்  தவறாமல் போட்டிடும்  சரியான தாளம் !
கரு மேகத்  தாளம் இல்லாமல் மழை  இசைக் கச்சேரி ஏது ?
மனிதன் போட்ட தப்பு தாளத்தால் இன்று நீல
வானம் இசைக்க மறந்ததே தன் இன்னிசை மழையை !
மழையின்றி மனிதன் தவித்து ஒரு வாய் குடிநீருக்கு
போடுகிறான்  தாளம் இன்று ! மேள தாள வாத்தியம்
சகிதம் காத்திருக்கிறான் அவன்   வான் மழை இசைக்கு !
வான் மழை இசைக்கு சரியான தாளம் போடும்
மேகமே இன்று போடுதே தாளம் அதன் முகத்தை
தொலைத்து விட்டு !
தொலைத்த முகத்தை தேடி எடுத்து வான் மேகம்
போட வேண்டும் மீண்டும் ஒரு தாளம் வான் மழை
இசைக்கு கட்டியம் கூறி !  இசைக்க மறந்த  வானமும்
மேகம் போடும் தாளத்தில் தன்னை மறந்து இசைக்க
வேண்டும் ஒரு இனிய மழை  கீதம் இந்த மண் குளிர!
Natarajan … in http://www.dinamani.com datec 5th June 2017

வாரம் ஒரு கவிதை ….” கல் வீச்சு “

 

கல் வீச்சு
———-
கல் எறிய கற்றுக் கொடுக்கவில்லை உன் கல்வி
கற்றது மறந்து கல் எடுத்து நீ வீசி உடைப்பது
ஒரு பேருந்தின் கண்ணாடியை மட்டும் அல்ல
உன்னைப் பெற்றவரின் இதயத்தையும்தான் !
பேசி தீர்த்துக்கொள்ளும்  பிரச்சனையை கல்
வீசி தீர்க்க முடியுமா சொல்லு …தம்பி ?
நீ கற்ற கல்வி உனக்கு காட்டாத  வழியை
ஒரு கல் காட்டி விடுமா உனக்கு ?
சற்றே யோசி நீ தம்பி … உன் வாழ்வின்
வெற்றிக்கு உன் கல்வி மட்டுமே அடித்தளம் !
அது மறந்து ஒரு கல் நீ கையில் எடுத்தால்
அந்த ஒரு கல் உருமாறும் ஒரு தடைக்கல்லாக
உன் வெற்றிப் பயணத்தை சீர் குலைக்க !
கல் வீச்சில் வீரன் என்னும் பெயர் உனக்கு
வேண்டாம் … கல்வியில் அசகாய சூரன்
என்னும் பட்டம் மட்டுமே வேண்டும் உனக்கு !
My Tamil kavithai  in http://www.dinamani.com dated 29th May 2017
Natarajan

வாரம் ஒரு கவிதை …” சூரிய தாகம் “

 

சூரிய தாகம்
————–
சுள்ளென்று எரிக்கும் சூரியனின் தாக்கம் தெரியும்
அது என்ன சூரிய தாகம் ? சூரியனுக்கே  தாகமா !
இல்லை  தாகம்,  சூரிய வெப்பம் தாக்கும் பூமிக்கா ?
தாகம் பூமிக்கு மட்டும் அல்ல …  சூரியனுக்கும் இருக்கு !
மண்ணில் உள்ள நீர் மனிதனுக்கு மட்டுமல்ல சொந்தம் !
விண்ணில் உள்ள மேகத்துக்கும் அதுதானே நீராகாரம் !
மண்ணிலிருந்து நீர் உறிஞ்சி வெண் மேகம் நெய்து
கொடுக்கும் கரு மழை மேக புத்தாடை  சூரியனுக்கு
ஒரு பட்டாடை ! கதிரவன் அவன் தாகம் தீர்க்கும்
தண்ணீர் பந்தலும் அதுவே !
விண்ணின் தண்ணீர் பந்தல் அள்ளி வழங்கும்
கொடையே இந்த மண்ணுக்கு துள்ளி வரும் மழை !
மண்ணுக்கு துள்ளி வரும் மழை நீரை வரவேற்க
ஏரி குளம் ஒன்றும் இல்லையே நம் மண்ணில் இன்று !
மண்ணுக்கு குடை பிடித்து கருமேக மழைப்
பொழிவை வழி காட்டி வரவேற்கும் மரம்,
கானகமும் கண்ணில் படவில்லையே இன்று !
வரிசை கட்டி வானம் தொடும் கட்டிடங்கள்தான்
தெரியுது கண்ணுக்கு எட்டும் தூரம் மட்டும் !
வீட்டுக்கு ஒரு மரம் வளர்ப்போம் ! ஏரி குளம்
அருமை புரிந்து நம்  மண்ணின் நீர் வளம்
காப்போம் !
மரம் வளர்த்து நீர் வளம் பெருக்கினால்
தீரும் அந்த சூரிய தாகம் !
சூரிய தாகம் தணிந்தால்  தீரும் இந்த மண்ணின்
தண்ணீர் தாகம்  தன்னால் !
Natarajan  in http://www.dinamani.com  dated 17th April 2017
Natarajan

CAN HONEY GO BAD OR MAKE YOU SICK?

 

Barefootangel asks: “I read your report on honey and have a question. Yesterday (June 21, 2012) I went to a farmer’s market and while there I tried a teaspoon of raw honey. It left an awful taste and certainly did not taste like good honey. I helped my grandfather with his hives and know how honey should taste. After leaving the market I went to the drugstore to pick up some meds and while in the store, I got very dizzy, confused and sick. This was about 25 to 30 minutes after tasting the honey. I felt like the life had been let out of me. My daughter in law got me home and it was not until hours later that I remembered about the honey.

Could the honey have been bad or make me sick?”

Now You KnowIt is very unlikely the honey was bad.  Properly stored, honey can last many years without even any degradation of flavor, let alone spoiling. In the extreme, honey can last centuries, though the flavor and color will be affected the longer it is stored.  That being said, it is possible for honey to go “bad” if improperly stored, though that depends somewhat on what you mean by “bad”.

Honey is hygroscopic, meaning that it will absorb water from things, even from the air.  As mentioned in the previous article on this site that you referenced (Honey can be Used for a Variety of Medicinal Purposes), this has the effect of providing almost no free water for microbes and molds to use. Honey also has a low pH value, making an environment that is usually too acidic for most microbes.  Honey also naturally produces hydrogen peroxide when it absorbs moisture, which further makes it hard for bacteria to take hold and “spoil” the honey, even if it’s improperly stored.  However, if the water content of the honey gets high enough, certain types of yeast can survive and ferment the honey somewhat, creating alcohol and in that sense “spoiling” the honey. Although, with the correct type of yeast, lovers of mead might argue with the “spoiling” part.  With the wrong type of yeast, it will become unpalatable and thus “go bad”.

It is extremely unlikely that anything of the sort was going on with the honey you tasted.  It was no doubt fairly new/fresh, packaged, and stored properly.  However, although it’s rare, even unspoiled, fresh honey can make you sick, particularly with raw honey where pollen and other particles are not filtered out.

So how can honey make you sick?  It’s possible that the honey may have been made from nectar containing something you are allergic to or that the honey was made from nectar that contains something toxic to humans, such as nectar from rhododendrons or other plants from the family Ericaceae (including blueberries, huckleberries, cranberries, and azaleas, among others).

Honey made from nectar of things like rhododendrons can cause a variety of problems which will usually show up within a few minutes to a few hours of eating it, depending on the dosage. In this case, the symptoms are caused by a toxin known as grayanotoxin.  These symptoms include sweating, nausea/vomiting, dizziness, weakness, paresthesia (numbness/prickling sensation) in your arms, legs, and around your mouth, low blood pressure, and excessive salivation.  In extreme cases, when the dose gets high enough, you can experience loss of coordination, severe muscle weakness, lower or erratic heart rhythms, and even first, second, and third degree heart blocks.  Despite how bad this all sounds, even in relatively high doses, this will rarely be fatal and symptoms and the effects of the grayanotoxin tend to dissipate within 24 hours.

All that being said, given the very small amount of the honey it sounds like you consumed, the grayanotoxin content would have had to be very high to affect you so severely, so you getting sick may have had nothing to do with the honey, or it could have just contained something you were highly allergic to unrelated to grayanotoxin.  Particularly with raw honey that contains various particles and pollen, this is very possible.

As for the flavor, what nectar(s) honey is made from and weather conditions when it was made can also pretty drastically affect the flavor and color of the honey.  As a general rule, the darker honey is, the stronger it will taste; the lighter it is, the milder it will taste.   It should also be noted that doing things like overheating honey can cause it to turn darker and negatively affect the flavor.  As it ages, particularly when not stored properly, it will also tend to darken and, of course, crystallize.

On another somewhat related note, honey that won’t make you sick can make babies sick, possibly fatally so.  This is because the honey may contain Clostridium botulinum spores. These won’t usually effect people over 12 months old or so as microbes in most people’s intestinal tracts will inhibit the Clostridium botulinum spores from multiplying, but can germinate inside a baby’s less cultured digestive system and cause infant botulism.  Specifically, these spores will produce botulinum toxin in the baby’s large intestine.  This toxin will cause nerve problems, such as blocking their nerve endings’ ability to signal a muscle to contract.

It’s OK for a breastfeeding mother to eat honey though as Clostridium botulinum cannot be transmitted via breast milk to the baby.  However, babies like to put everything in their mouths, so if you eat a lot of honey, best to make sure nothing with honey on it gets near the baby.

Bonus Honey Facts:

  • When honey crystallizes, all you have to do to return it to its former state is place it in a glass jar (if it’s  not already in one), then put the jar in a container of water, which you’ll then heat.  If it’s raw honey and you want to retain most of the nutritional and medicinal benefits, make sure you don’t heat it to over 120 degrees Fahrenheit.  In either case, never boil honey.  This will negatively affect the flavor.
  • You can also microwave crystallized honey.  In this case, to make sure you don’t overheat it, microwave it in 20-30 second increments, stirring and waiting about a minute in between sessions.
  • Similar to how refrigerating bread will make it go stale faster, putting honey in a refrigerator will make it crystallize faster.
  • There are over 300 unique types of honey produced in the United States alone.  Given that it’s not the easiest thing in the world to keep track of what plants one’s bees are getting nectar from, you’ll usually just see honey classified based on color, rather than from nectar from a distinct variety of plant.

Source….www.today i found out.com

Natarajan

வாரம் ஒரு கவிதை…” ஆறோடும் நீரோடும் “

 

ஆறோடும்  நீரோடும் …
——————-
நீரோட்டம் இல்லையென்றால் ஆறோட்டம் ஏது ?
நீரில்லா ஆற்றில்  மணல் நிரம்பி  இருக்க ..இன்று
மணல் அள்ள ஓடும் வண்டிகள்  ஓட்டம் எந்த
ஒரு ஆற்றின் நீர் ஓட்டத்தையும் தள்ளும் பின்னுக்கு !
நீரோடும் ஆறே  ஒரு பாலைவனம் ஆகும் நேரம்
சோலைவனம் எங்கே இருக்கும் நாட்டுக்குள் ?
இன்று நிழல் தேடி ஓடும் நாம்   குடி நீர் தேடி
அலையவும் வேண்டுமா ? சிந்திக்க வேண்டும் நாம் !
இணைய தளம் மூலம் உலகத்தின் ஒரு ஒரு
மூலையையும் இணைத்து விட்டோம் !
இணைய தளம் மூலம் இதயங்கள் பல
இணையவும் வழி காட்டி  விட்டோம் !
கணினி அறிவியல் கையில் எடுத்து
விண்வெளியிலும்  நம் வெற்றிக் கணக்கை
துவக்கி விட்டோம் !  நதி நீர்
இணைப்பை மட்டும் நமக்கு எட்டாக் கனி
என்று விட்டு விடுவது என்ன நியாயம் ?
மண்ணையும்  விண்ணையும் இணைத்த
நாம் நம் நாட்டு நதி நீரை இணைக்க
முடியாதா என்ன ?  “உன்னால் முடியும் தம்பி “
என்ற சொல்லின் பின்னால் இருக்கும்
நம்பிக்கை ஒரு வேத வாக்கு அல்லவா !
வெற்று வாக்கு இல்லையே அந்த மந்திர வாக்கு !
மாய மந்திரம் எதுவும் செய்ய வேண்டாம் நாம் ! ஒரு வழி
வகுப்போம் நதி நீர் இணைப்புக்கு இன்றே
இப்பொழுதே ! இமயம் முதல் குமரி வரை
சாலைகளை  இணைத்த நமக்கு சாலையோரம்
சீறிப்பாயும் நதிகளையும் இணைப்பது  ஏன்
முடியாத இலக்கு இன்று வரை ?
சற்றே சிந்தித்து எதிர்கொள்ள வேண்டும்
இந்த சவாலையும் ! முயன்றால் முடியாதது
என்று ஒன்று உண்டா ?
இணைவோம் நாம் ஒன்றாக …இணைப்போம்
நம் நதி யாவும்  ! இணையப்போவது நதிகள்
மட்டும் அல்ல ! இந்திய மக்களின் தேசிய ஒருமைப்பாட்டின்
 நீரோட்டமும் சேர்ந்துதான்! வற்றாமல்  தொடரட்டும் நீரோட்டம் ஒரு ஒரு
ஆற்றிலும் ! இது ஜீவ நதி அது ஜீவ நதி என்னும்
பேதம் இல்லாமல் நீரோடும் ஒரு ஒரு ஆறும்
ஒரு ஜீவ நதியாக மாறட்டும் ! ஆறு செல்லும்
வழி எல்லாம் பூமி செழிக்கட்டும் ! நதி இணைப்பு
நம் நாட்டு மக்கள் அனைவரையும் ஓர் அணியில்
இணைக்கும் அன்பு  பாலமாகவும்  அமையட்டும் !
Natarajan.. in http://www.dinamani.com dated 27th March 2017

” How to develop your personality …” See what Sri Sri Ravishankarji says

 

 Superb Message-Sri Sri RaviShankar
-Interesting-Highly Enlightening-Useful in Life 
Thought Provoking-Action Oriented-
Please read the entire message…
 
Someone asked Sri Sri Ravi Shankar 
How to develop our personality?
 
Sri Sri Ravi Shankarji:

To develop your personality, you have to spend five days to have these five experiences to really blossom in your life.
You can develop your personality with these five experiences.
You have to sincerely play these five roles:
 
1. The first role which I would recommend to you 
    is to be a School Teacher.

To teach lessons to children who are not learning,
 you need a lot of patience.
Being a nursery or primary school teacher,
 even for one day, you will see how you have
 to increase your patience.
 
2. Be a Gardener or spend a day with a Farmer.

If you are sowing the seeds,
if you are watering the plants,
you will know how you must care for water, 
earth and the environment.
You will have a feeling for the environment.
You will value food and you will not waste food.
You know, what we do?
We bring so much food, and we put it in the fridge
 and after a few days in the refrigerator, we throw the food.


We are wasting millions and millions of tons of food every day.
We should not waste food.
This we will learn if we spend one day being 
a farmer or a gardener.
 
3. You should spend a day in the mental hospital.

Whatever people talk in the mental hospital, you don’t mind.
If they scold you,
if they blame you,
if they curse you,
will you mind?
You don’t mind because you are aware that this person is mentally sick.
You know that many people are outside the hospital, but that does not mean they are mentally well.

So, in life, you come across people who blame you for nothing, who are jealous or angry, who say things that make no sense. Then, you know, you will have the patience to deal with them with a smile. You will not take the garbage inside and spoil your mind.
So one day if you spend in a mental hospital, you will know how to save your mind.
You will stop being a football of others’ opinions.
 
4. One day you must go to a prison.
Maybe it is shocking to you.
You don’t have to do a wrong thing to go to a prison.
Just go visit a prison, spend a little time with the prisoners.
You will understand what compassion is.
What helplessness is.
Those people did a mistake without awareness.
So you will know how you must have a say on your emotions.
 
5. There are terminally ill people in the hospital.

One day with them, and you will realize how precious life is.
And you will start valuing health.
You will eat better,
you will exercise.
You will do all that is needed to be more vibrant in your life.
 
With these five days what would be the outcome?

I guess from these five days you will become
More Vibrant,
More Alive,
More Loving,
Compassionate
and Active
Enjoy your Life
Source….Input from one of my friends
Natarajan

First Recorded public version in Gramophone Plate….First Sloga of Rig Veda in Sanskrit

 

‘His Masters Voice’ (HMV) had once published a pamphlet giving the history of gramophone record.

Gramophone was invented by Thomas Alva Edison in the 19th century.

Edison, who had invented many other gadgets like electric light and the motion picture camera, had become a legend even in his own time.

When he invented the gramophone record, which could record human voice for posterity, he wanted to record the voice of an eminent scholar on his first piece.

For that he chose Prof. Max Muller of England (a German by ethnicity), another great personality of the 19th century.

He wrote to Max Muller saying,

“I want to meet you and record your voice. When should I come?”

Max Muller who had great respect for Edison asked him to come on a suitable time when most of the scholars of the Europe would be gathering in England.

Accordingly, Edison took a ship and went to England. He was introduced to the audience. All cheered Edison’s presence.

Later at the request of Edison, Max Muller came on the stage and spoke in front of the instrument.

Then Edison went back to his laboratory and by afternoon came back with a disc & played it on the gramophone.

The audience was thrilled to hear the voice of Max Muller from the instrument.

They were glad that voices of great persons like Max Muller could be stored for the benefit of posterity.

After several rounds of applause and congratulations to Thomas Edison, Max Muller came to the stage and addressed the scholars and asked them,

“You heard my original voice in the morning. Then you heard the same voice coming out from this instrument in the afternoon. Do you understand what I said in the morning or what you heard in the afternoon?”

The audience fell silent because they could not understand the language in which Max Muller had spoken.

It was ‘Greek and Latin’ to them as they say.

But had it been Greek or Latin, they would have definitely understood because they were from various parts of Europe.

It was in a language which the European scholars had never heard.

Max Muller then explained what he had spoken.

He said that the language he spoke was Sanskrit and it was the first sloka of Rig Veda, which says “Agni Meele Purohitam”

This was the first recorded public version on the gramophone plate.

अग्निमीळे पुरोहितं यज्ञस्य देवं रत्वीजम।
होतारं रत्नधातमम।।
(Rig Veda 1.001.01)

Why did Max Muller choose this?

Addressing the audience he said,

“Vedas are the oldest text of the human race. And “Agni Meele Purohitam” is the first verse of Rig Veda.

In the most primordial time, when the people did not know how even to cover their bodies and lived by hunting and housed in caves, Indians had attained high civilization and they gave the world universal philosophies in the form of the Vedas.”

When “Agni Meele Purohitam” was replayed, the entire audience stood up in silence as a mark of respect.

The verse means :

“Oh Agni, You who gleam in the darkness, to You we come day by day, with devotion and bearing homage. So be of easy access to us, Agni, as a father to his son, abide with us for our well being.”

Source….Input from a friend of mine
Natarajan

Do You Know that Glass takes one million years to decompose …? !!!

 

Do You Know ….?

Glass takes one million years to decompose, which means it never wears out and can be recycled an infinite amount of times!

Gold is the only metal that doesn’t rust, even if it’s buried in the ground for thousands of years.

Your tongue is the only muscle in your body that is attached at only one end.

If you stop getting thirstyyou need to drink more water.
When a human body is dehydrated, its thirst mechanism shuts off.

Zero is the only number that cannot be represented by Roman numerals.

Kites were used in the American Civil War to deliver letters and newspapers.

The song Auld Lang Syne is sung at the stroke of midnight in almost every English-speaking country in the world to bring in the new year.

Drinking water after eating
reduces the acid in your mouth by 61 percent. Drinking a glass of water before you eat may help digestion and curb appetite.

Peanut oil is used for cooking in submarines because it doesn’t smoke unless it’s heated above 450F.

The roar that we hear when we place a seashell next to our ear is not the ocean, but rather the sound of blood surging through the veins in the ear.

Nine out of every 10living things live in the ocean.

The banana cannot reproduce itself. It can be propagated only by the hand of man.

Airports at higher altitudes require a longer airstrip due to lower air density.

The University of Alaska spans four time zones.

The tooth is the only part of the human body that cannot heal itself.

In ancient Greece ,tossing an apple to a girl was a traditional proposal of marriage.
Catching it meant she accepted.

Warner Communications paid 28 million for the copyright to the song Happy Birthday, which was written in 1935!

Intelligent peoplehave more zinc and copper in their hair.

A comet’s tail always points away from the sun.

The Swine Fluvaccine in 1976 caused more death and illness than the disease it was intended to prevent.

Caffeine increases the power of aspirin and other painkillers, that is why it is found in some medicines.

The military salute is a motion that evolved from medieval times, when knights in armor raised their visors to reveal their identity.

If you get into the bottom of a well or a tall chimney and look up,
you can see stars, even in the middle of the day.

When a person dies,hearing is the last sense to go. The first sense lost is sight.

In ancient timesstrangers shook hands to show that they were unarmed.

Strawberries and cashews are the only fruits whose seeds grow on the outside.

Avocados have the highest calories of any fruit at 167 calories per hundred grams.

The moon moves about two inches away from the Earth each year.

The Earth gets 100 tons heavier every day due to falling space dust.

Due to earth’s gravity it is impossible for mountains to be higher than 15,000 meters.

Mickey Mouse is known as “Topolino” in Italy.

Soldiers do not march in step when going across bridges because they could set up a vibration which could be sufficient to knock the bridge down.

Everything weighs one percent less at the equator.

For every extra kilogram carried on a space flight, 530 kg of excess fuel are needed at lift-off.

The letter J does not appear anywhere on the periodic table of the elements.

Source….Input from one of my friends…

Natarajan