” Kids with Big Hearts… Truly inspiring …”

Kids Who Give You Faith in Humanity

Everybody is born with a heart, but these kids are born with extra big ones. Their optimism and generous natures don’t let circumstances stop them from showing kindness to people and animals. These are the people who are going to change the world, one act at a time. Their stories are truly inspiring.

big hearted kids

This girl got proactive to raise money for animal care.

The card reads: “I sold my stuffed animals. So real animals can get better care. I got $40 bucks for you! from: Kiaha.”

This rescue shelter has a program called “Book Buddies”. Kids can come read to the rescued cats to comfort them.

big hearted kids

big hearted kids

The letter reads: “I’m going to shave my head in honor of all of the children fighting cancer especially my sister Natalie. And I DO NOT CARE if someone makes fun of me because I am beautiful no matter what! – Hannah Gorsegar.”

big hearted kids

big hearted kids

big hearted kids

Eleven-year-old Jonah from Tennessee donated all his Halloween candy to kids affected by Hurricane Sandy, who couldn’t go trick-or-treating.

big hearted kids

Eight-year-old Tyler’s home caught on fire and he helped 6 family members escape. Sadly, he was killed after he ran back in to help his grandfather and disabled uncle.

big hearted kids

The fire brigade gave him a fireman’s funeral.

big hearted kids

When Emma decided to have a birthday party she asked that instead of receiving gifts that her friends give food and toys to the local animal shelter.

big hearted kids

Her friends listened. She was able to donate all these goodies to the shelter.

 

big hearted kids

Belal, a boy in Bangladesh, risked his life to save a fawn from drowning in the overflowing local river.

big hearted kids

Onlookers thought the boy might drown too. He emerged and returned the baby deer to its family.

big hearted kids

A  wildlife photographer who was passing by caught the incident on camera

big hearted kids

This boy saw that other children in his school didn’t have lunch and asked his mom if he could give them his. The next day he took this box with him to school. He also helped pack it.

big hearted kids

big hearted kids

When he broke his arm in October, this boy asked the doctor for a pink cast in honor of Breast Cancer Awareness Month.

big hearted kids

This teen volunteered to be a guide runner so that this blind cross country runner could participate in the race.

big hearted kids

big hearted kids

big hearted kids

Six-year-old Lucas has Lissencephaly, a brain malformation confining him to a wheelchair.

big hearted kids

His eight-year-old brother Noah wanted to participate in the local triathlon with Lucas.

big hearted kids

He spent 3 months training to be strong enough to be able to push and pull Lucas through all three stages.

big hearted kids

big hearted kids

Source: Mickey R.  in http://www.ba-bamail.com

Natarajan

 

 

Message for the Day…” How to Experience Divine Love or Bliss …” ?

Sathya Sai Baba

Embodiments of Love! The hallmark of love is thyaga (selfless sacrifice). Love seeks nothing from anyone. It bears no ill-will towards anyone. It is utterly selfless and pure. Failing to understand the true nature of love, people yearn for it in various ways. You must cherish love with the feelings of selflessness and sacrifice. In what is deemed as love in the world – whether it is maternal love, brotherly love, or friendship – there is an element of selfishness. Only God’s love is totally free from the taint of selfishness. Divine love reaches out even to the remotest being. It brings together those who are separate. It raises a person from animality to Divinity. It transforms gradually all forms of worldly love to Divine love. To experience this Divine love, you must be prepared to give up selfishness and self-interest and develop purity and steadfastness. With firm faith in the Divine, foster love for God regardless of all obstacles and ordeals.

Things Money Can’t buy…

For everything else you have your credit card!

Money could buy you a vacation, a day to the spa, a good education and a fancy home but what it can’t buy you is a break, relaxation, will to study and a family. While we look out for various ways to earn money and stress out all the time, we are losing out on our health and our energy.

We seek happiness in all avenues possible but one does not have to search oceans and travel through vast lands to be satisfied. Satisfaction comes from within and having knowledge that it always originates from the way we really look at the world.

Stop running after money because money could give you temporary happiness but it won’t be permanent!

Here are 9 things money can’t buy; for everything else you have your credit card!

1. Love

Love that comes from your family, friends, pets and the world cannot be bought. No matter how rich you are or how poor, love cannot be bought; it has to be earned! How do you earn love? By being kind and understanding.

You help people in need and you show your loyalty to the people who are really important to you and that is how you earn respect.

2. Respect

While someone like Steve Jobs earned immense amount of money, he also earned immense amount of respect. You are nothing without respect. It is an established fact that when people respect you, they believe in you and that is why they invest in your ideas and your ideals.

They invest their time in listening to you and following your advice.

If you want to go far in your life, you have to be respected till the day you die.

3. Friends

Turning into a workaholic may get you all the shoes, clothes and cars you like but who would you share your adventures with?

Friends are stepping stones to success and no one likes to be alone all the time. Money cannot buy you true, good friends and you must always remember that!

4. Trust

Trust is just like respect and love. If you’re trusted, you will be given money and not the other way round. Maintain a good reputation, have good habits and be a good, disciplined person in life and trust will follow you.

5. Patience

To earn more money or ever achieve any important goal in your life patience is the number one thing you must remember. Patient people invest in long term goals and long terms ventures ending up earning a lot of money.

Money can’t buy patience but patience can get you money!

6. Luck

Luck is a challenge; one minute it is right there and the next it’s on to help someone else.

Everybody needs just a little bit of luck, even the rich!

If luck is on your side you just need to work hard but if luck is not on your side you definitely cannot buy it with happiness!

7. Wisdom

Knowledge only enhances a human being’s personality, never destroys it. Knowledge is gold and is the best way to gain success however it cannot be bought.

It entirely depends on the person’s power to absorb information and the willingness to apply it to her/his life that brings wisdom.

8. Missed opportunities

A missed opportunity is a goal lost. Always embrace opportunities as they come and never take advantage of them as sometimes opportunities once lost will never return. Not even Bill Gates can buy opportunities. A person can make use of them as they come and sometimes s/he can even create opportunities for others and help him grow but s/he cannot buy opportunities for herself/himself.

9. Time

Time is money! A saying everybody lives by. If you waste time you’re wasting money. Bill Gates earns $250 a second and that is the perfect example of how important time is. Time is limited but money couldn’t be endless. Don’t waste your time doing something that isn’t productive if you want to get rich sooner. Use it for projects that make sense and can help you grow!

Source….Rajiv Raj in http://www.rediff.com

Natarajan

A Simple Guide to meditation at Home ….

A Beginners’ Guide to Meditation at Home

Meditation has many known health benefits, such as increasing longevity and reducing stress. People have been practicing meditation for over two millennia, with Hindu texts describing meditative forms as early as the 6th-century BCE. In my youth, if I heard the word ‘meditation’, all I could think about was a person in the Far East, sitting with his legs crossed and humming to himself. A couple of years ago I was introduced to real meditation and discovered the calming and healing properties it has, and now I’d love to share them with you.

A Beginners’ Guide to Meditation at Home

What is meditation

The Webster dictionary defines meditation as “the act or process of spending time in quiet thought: the act or process of meditating”. Many people meditate without even knowing that they’re doing it. A person sitting and fishing for a few hours in silence is performing a type of meditation, the same as another who might be jogging with their headphones on. It involves dedicating 100% of your attention to one subject. Meditation has also been a key factor in Eastern religions such as Buddhism and Hinduism, as well as Western religions like Christianity and Judaism

A Beginners’ Guide to Meditation at Home

Health benefits of meditating

Meditation has many proven health benefits, such as silencing your internal chatter, calming and grounding one’s self, and getting in touch with yourself, to name a few. A recent Harvard University study discovered that daily meditation can rebuild the brain’s gray matter in as little as eight weeks. Participants also reported a reduction in stress – a prime factor in the decrease in gray matter density.

Who can meditate

From young children to elderly people, everyone can meditate. There are many forms of meditation, some more suitable for people of different ages, so don’t be daunted if one form doesn’t work for you. Finding the meditation that suits you best is very gratifying.

A Beginners’ Guide to Meditation at Home

Before you start meditating

The first thing you need to do, is decide on the purpose of your meditation: You may want to calm down, get to know yourself better, or even make an important business decision. Knowing why you’re meditating is the first step to a useful meditation. You don’t need special clothes (but comfortable ones make it easier) or equipment. All you need a quiet spot and to reserve some time for it.

A Beginners’ Guide to Meditation at Home

When you begin your meditation, don’t lay down or sit in a slumped position – these positions do not help you stay alert and focused. Sit up straight, either on a chair, on your heels or cross-legged. Find the position that is comfortable for you, sitting in the lotus position is not mandatory in meditation.

Don’t meditate after eating, digestion can be very distracting during a session. If you just had a meal, wait for 2 hours and let your stomach calm down. You should avoid smoking for at least 30 minutes before the meditation.

A Beginners’ Guide to Meditation at Home

Find a quiet spot that you will be comfortable in, this is essential for the first few times you meditate. Once you are comfortable with meditation, you’ll be able to do it in noisier places. Remember to switch off your cell phone – it’s a distraction. Consider lighting a scented candle or some incense to help your meditation and switch off or dim the lights – bright lights may also be a distraction.

A Beginners’ Guide to Meditation at Home

How to meditate

Do some basic stretching before you start, it will loosen up your muscles and help you be more attentive to your body later on.

A Beginners’ Guide to Meditation at Home

Breathing is the most important factor in meditation, we use each breath as a focal point. Close your eyes and deeply inhale through your nose, then slowly exhale through your mouth. Feel how your chest expands and contracts with each breath. Listen to the silence between breaths – notice how everything becomes still and quiet. You may even notice your heartbeat slowing down. If your thoughts begin to scatter, concentrate on your breathing.

As a beginner, focusing might not come naturally. Give it time and be patient with yourself. Some people find that focusing on their breathing won’t quiet their minds, and may need to try other methods:

A Beginners’ Guide to Meditation at Home

  • Counting your breaths may help – count each breath and when you reach ten, start over. However, if you become focused on the numbers and not on the breathing, stop.
  • Another alternative is repeating a mantra – there’s a reason some people say “Om” when they meditate – it helps drown the outside world and focus on the sound. You can repeat any other word that helps you calm down if Om is not for you.
  • Try visualizing a calm place – it can be anything: the beach, a forest, your childhood home, etc. as long as it’s your sanctuary. When you find your sanctuary, don’t be afraid to explore it – there’s no need to try and “create” your surroundings, they’re already there.

A Beginners’ Guide to Meditation at Home

Set aside at least fifteen minutes a day for meditation (more is welcome). Remember: short daily repetitions are better than one long weekly session because they form a habit. Eventually, the practice of meditation will find its way into your everyday life. You’ll find yourself considering your food choices more carefully, making decisions more consciously and focusing on things you read, watch or listen to with greater attention.

One last thing

Learning to silence your inner thoughts takes practice, but managing to attain inner peace is a huge reward. Remember – “practice makes perfect”, so keep meditating regularly. It may take you a few weeks or even a couple of months to learn to properly focus, so don’t get frustrated or disheartened it you’re not a meditation guru overnight.

Source….www.ba-bamail.com

Natarajan

Joke For the Day….A Business Advice …!!!

 

Joke: Solid Business Advice

A boat docked in a tiny seaside village. An businessman tourist complimented the local fisherman on the quality of his fish and asked how long it took him to catch them.
“Not very long,” answered the fisherman.
“But then, why didn’t you stay out longer and catch more?” asked the businessman. The fisherman explained that his small catch was sufficient to meet his needs and those of his family.
The businessman asked, “But what do you do with the rest of your time?”
“I sleep late, fish a little, play with my children, and take a siesta with my wife. In the evenings, I go into the village to see my friends, play the guitar, and sing a few songs… I have a full life.”
The businessman interrupted, “I have an MBA from Harvard, and I can help you! You should start by fishing longer every day. You can then sell the extra fish you catch. With the extra revenue, you can buy a bigger boat.”
“And after that?” asked the fisherman.
businessman
With the extra money the larger boat will bring, you can buy a second one and a third one and so on until you have an entire fleet of trawlers. Instead of selling your fish to a middle man, you can then negotiate directly with the processing plants and maybe even open your own plant. You can then leave this little village and move to the city, Los Angeles, or even New York City! From there you can direct your huge new enterprise.”
“How long would that take?” asked the fisherman.
“Twenty, perhaps twenty-five years,” replied the businessman.
“And after that?”
“Afterwards? Well my Friend, That’s when it gets really interesting,” answered the businessman, laughing. “When your business gets really big, you can start selling stocks and make millions!”
“Millions? Really? And after that?” said the fisherman.
After that you’ll be able to retire, live in a tiny village near the coast, sleep late, play with your children, catch a few fish, take a siesta with your wife and spend your evenings doing what you like and enjoying your friends.”
Source…..www.ba-bamail.com
Natarajan

A Pilot”s Story…Flying High , @ Home and @ Work…

(Credit: Justin Jinn/Panos)

Credit: Justin Jinn/Panos)

Priti Kohal’s love of flying began when she was a 16-year-old living in Mumbai. But her passion for planes started sitting in the driving seat on the open road, not wide-open skies.

As a teenager, Kohal, now age 45, would take her parents’ car, unbeknownst to them, for joy rides around town. She loved being in control of the vehicle and the freedom that came with it.

“I just loved the thought of getting away,” she said.

When Kohal turned 18 and officially received her driver’s license, her passion for driving intensified. “It was great to be able to do things on my own without having anyone ferry me around,” she said. “After the car I moved on to faster modes of transportation.”

Kohal earned her pilot’s license in 1994 and since 1996 has been a pilot with India’s Jet Airways — she’s one of 600 female pilots in India — and she’s been a captain since 2009.

There are only 4,000 female pilots worldwide, versus 130,000 male pilots, according to the International Society of Women Airline Pilots. Kohal’s doctor mother and engineer father taught her and her sister that they weren’t any different from men and could do anything they wanted as long as they had fun doing it.

This family support has helped her excel, but many women entering traditionally male-dominated professions in India encounter more obstacles. Kohal says she hasn’t run into sexism, but other females in the airline industry have and continue to face hurdles simply because of their gender. In 2009, Air India fired ten female flight attendants for being overweight. GoAir, a budget airline in India, said in 2013 that it only wanted to hire small, young females to be flight attendants in order to save money on fuel by keeping the weight of the plane down. And there are stories in the media and social media of notes being left on flights, or complaints being made, by passengers upset that they’ve flown with a female pilot.

However, Kohal never thought twice about being in the airline business. “I never considered being a pilot different from being an engineer or a teacher,” she said. “There were no limits for what we could do.”

Short flights, long days

When her children were younger, Kohal only flew one- or two-hour flights. She woke at 03:30, fed her baby, put him back to sleep and then headed off to the airport by 04:00. She’d work her flight and usually be home by 10:30, having the remainder of the day to spend with her children. By sticking with this system and meticulous planning, Kohal said she has never missed an important milestone or a school meeting for her children, now ages 14 and 11.

When her children were young, Kohal flew early morning. (Credit: Courtesy of Priti Kohal)

When her children were young, Kohal flew early in the morning and was home by 10:30. (Credit: Courtesy of Priti Kohal)

Contrary to how it might appear, being a pilot is a “very good career” for managing home and work life, Kohal believes, but it takes strategic planning. She decided to choose her flights so that she could spend time at home with her children. As long as someone doesn’t mind getting up in the wee hours of the morning, they can be home for long stretches of the day, she said.

As Kohal’s children have gotten older, her schedule has changed a bit, too. She’ll now captain long-haul flights, but tries to be away from home no more than four nights each month. The sacrifice: Kohal doesn’t get to see her husband, who is also a pilot and captains Boeing 777 planes for Air India, as often as she used to. He’s typically away for four days at a time, and then he’s off for six days. When he’s home, she spends her evenings with him — “all six nights are booked for my husband,” she said — but when he’s away, she can do as she pleases.

“It’s freedom for me,” when he’s in the air, she said, with a laugh. “I can do what I want for those 16 hours and he can’t reach me.”

When both are away, Kohal’s parents, who are retired, look after the children. Indian families tend to have strong support systems, she said. When grandkids are young, grandparents are happy to help, but when they are older there’s an expectation that children, in turn, will help their ageing parents.

Having that (wider family) support is important because it eases up an entire part of your life that you would have to constantly monitor,” she said.

Priti Kohal balances her schedule with her husband's. (Credit: Courtesy of Priti Kohal)

Priti Kohal balances her flight schedule with that of her husband, who is also a pilot. He travels more than she does. (Credit: Courtesy of Priti Kohal)

A disciplined approach

These days, Kohal’s typical routine goes something like this: She wakes up at 05:30 and gets ready for work, arriving at 09:00 where she receives her flying assignment. She typically flies for a few hours a day — unless she’s taking an overnight flight. That means she can be home by 14:30. After an hour nap, Kohal is wide-awake to greet her kids when they get home from school.

The family has dinner by 20:30 and bedtime for the children is at 21:30, without exception.

“One aspect of being a pilot is that rules can’t be broken,” Kohal said. “You can’t mess up when you have to be stabilised at 1,000 feet. So I have some hard rules at home. They have it tougher than I did when I was younger.”

She’s usually in bed by midnight, but when her husband is away and she doesn’t have to fly the next day, Kohal will stay up reading until 02:30. “That’s my time,” she said.

Hard work pays off

Kohal attributes her success to one thing: hard work. For instance, only 0.1% of people pass the pilot’s entrance exam — and it’s given only twice a year. She was the only one to pass in her class.

Kohal has accomplished nearly everything she’s set out to do, but looking at her situation, she doesn’t think that she’s done anything extraordinary. Many educated women in India have successful careers, she added.

“Anything you set your mind to do, you just do it,” she said. “Tomorrow it will be something else.”

Source….Bryan Borzykowski in www. bbc.com

Natarajan

“அரைக்காசு அம்மன்….”

ஆடி மாதம் என்றாலே சக்தி வழிபாடுதான். நடைபாதை அம்மன் என்றாலும், பெரும் கோயில்களில் உள்ள அம்மன் என்றாலும் கோலாகலமாகக் கொண்டாடப்படுவது இந்த ஆடி மாதத்தில்தான். இது பெண்களுக்கான மாதம்

என்றே சொல்லலாம். புற்றுள்ள அம்மன் கோயில்களில், பெண்கள் புற்றுக்குப் பால் வார்ப்பதும், அம்மனை ஆராதிக்கும் வண்ணம் குலவை இடுவதும் வழக்கம்.

வீதிதோறும் உள்ள அம்மன்களுக்குக் கூழ் காய்ச்சுதலும், நைவேத்தியத்திற்குப் பின் அவற்றை ஏழை, எளியோருக்கு வழங்குதலும் வாடிக்கை. இவ்விழாக்களில் வாண வேடிக்கையும் உண்டு. பிரமாதமான அலங்காரங்களில் வீதி உலா வரும் அம்மன், விடிய, விடிய ஊர்க்காவலில் இருப்பவள் என்கிறார்கள்.

சின்னஞ்சிறிய கிராமங்களில்கூட விநாயகர் சன்னிதியும், மாரியம்மன் கோயிலும் இருப்பது சர்வ சகஜம். அருகம்புல் விநாயகருக்கு உரியது என்றால், வேப்பம் தழை அம்மனுக்கு உரியது. அம்மை நோய் கண்டால் வேப்ப இலைகளையே அம்மனின் பிரசாதமாகக் கருதித் தலையில் சூட்டிக்கொள்வர். இல்லத்தின் வாயிலில் கட்டித் தொங்க விடுவதன் மூலம் மேலும் நோய்க் கிருமிகள் இல்லத்தில் அண்ட விடாமலும், வெளியே பரவி விடாமலும் காப்பது வழக்கம். இல்லத்தில் வேப்ப மரம் இருந்தால் ஆடி மாதத்தில் அதனையே தெய்வமாகப் பூஜிப்பதும் உண்டு.

அரைக்காசு அம்மன்

புதுக்கோட்டை மன்னர்களில் சிலர் திருக்கோகர்ணம் திருக்கோயிலில் உள்ள அன்னை பிரகதாம்பாளைக் குலதெய்வமாகவும், பலர் இஷ்ட தெய்வமாகவும் வணங்கிவந்தனர். அந்நாளில் இந்த அன்னைக்கு நவராத்திரி விழாவினை மன்னர்கள் விமரிசையாகக் கொண்டாடுவார்கள். அப்போது அன்றைய தினத்திற்கு மட்டுமல்லாமல் பல நாட்களுக்கும் அன்னம் கிடைக்க வேண்டும் என்பதற்காக அரிசி, வெல்லம் போன்ற பொருட்களையும், அம்மன் பொறிக்கப்பட்ட அக்காலத்தில் புழக்கத்தில் இருந்த அரைக்காசு ஒன்றையும் சேர்த்து மக்களுக்கு அவர்கள் தானம் செய்து வந்தனர்.

இந்த நிலையில்தான் மன்னர் ஒருவரின் முக்கியமான பொருள் ஒன்று தொலைந்துவிட்டது. எங்கு தேடியும் கிடைக்காத அந்தப் பொருள் கிடைக்க வேண்டும் என்று திருக்கோகர்ணம் பிரகதாம்பாளிடம் பிரார்த்தனை செய்தாராம் மன்னர். தான் வணங்கும் இந்த அரைக்காசு அம்மனே அதனை மீட்டுத் தர வேண்டும் என்று கூறி பிரார்த்தனையை தீவிரப்படுத்தினார். அவர் பிரார்த்தனை பலித்து, தேடிய பொருள் கைக்கு வந்தது என்பது நம்பிக்கை.

அதற்கு நன்றி தெரிவிக்கும் விதமாக, வெல்லத்தைப் பிடித்து வைத்து பூஜை செய்துள்ளார். பின்னர் அந்த வெல்லப் பிரசாதத்தைத் தானும் உண்டு, பக்தர்களுக்கும் வழங்கினார். அதனால் அரைக்காசு அம்மனை வேண்டினால் தொலைந்த பொருள் கிடைக்கும் என்ற செய்தி நாடு முழுவதும் பரவியது. அந்த பழக்கம் இன்றும் நடைமுறையில் உள்ளது.

Source….www.tamil.thehindu.com

Natarajan

“All Human Beings Carry Divinity Inside Themselves….” Says A P J Abdul Kalam …

‘This can lift us out of confusion, misery, melancholy and failure, and indeed guide us when it is contacted.’

‘For us to ignite our spirituality, we need to look inward and transcend our egos. We need to recognize, connect with and integrate the eternal spirit within,’ says A P J Abdul Kalam in his latest book, Transcendence.

President A P J Abdul Kalam, right, with Pramukh Swami Maharaj.

I have vivid memories of my childhood in Rameswaram, but one memory particularly stands out, and comes to mind occasionally. As a ten-year-old boy, I recall seeing three contrasting personalities meet from time to time in our home: Pakshi Lakshmana Shastrigal, the Vedic scholar and head priest of the famous Rameswaram temple; Rev Father Bodal, who built the first church on Rameswaram Island; and my father, who was an imam in the mosque. These three would sit in our courtyard, each with a cup of tea; and they would discuss and find solutions to the various problems facing our community.

Reflecting on this, I can see that my father and his religious counterparts in Rameswaram were expressing a long-standing cultural trait. India has shown a healthy propensity for integrating diverse ideas and reaching a consensus, for thousands of years. And I cannot help but feel that the example of those inter-religious meetings at my family home is most worthy of emulation. Because now, throughout the nation and the world, the need for such frank and genial dialogue among cultures, religions and civilizations is more urgent than ever.

Starting with my father, Jainulabdeen, I have been blessed with some great teachers, who appeared at different stages of my life. My father taught me to view one’s role in life as that of an instrument or vessel, through which one takes with one hand and gives with the other. “There is only one light, and you and I are holes in the lampshade,” he would say.

My father lived a simple life as it unfolded before him but never lost sight of the underlying divinity. Throughout my life, I have tried to emulate my father in this regard. My experiences of eight decades have validated the teaching I received from him.

I do believe that all human beings carry divinity inside themselves, and that this can lift us out of confusion, misery, melancholy and failure, and indeed guide us when it is contacted.

As a young engineer, I worked with Dr Brahma Prakash. He taught me how tolerance of others’ views and opinions is essential in building teams and accomplishing tasks that are beyond the individuals’ capacities.

He taught me that life is a precious gift, but it comes with responsibility. With this gift, we are expected to use our talents to make the world a better place, to live an ethical and well-balanced life, and to prepare for the spiritual life, which is eternal.

Dr Brahma Prakash changed the way I saw the world. He once told me, “Kalam, if you see this world as mean and rude, it will interfere with your concentration. Negative thinking is similar to carrying twenty bags of luggage on a trip. This baggage will make your trip miserable, and progress will be slow.”

As a project director, I worked with Professor Satish Dhawan, who taught me that a good leader takes the responsibility for the failures of his team, but gives the credit of his success to his colleagues.

His academic accomplishments were awesome. He had a Bachelor of Arts in mathematics and a Bachelor of Science in physics, followed by a Master of Arts in mathematics. These were augmented with a Bachelor of Engineering in mechanical engineering, a Master of Science in aerospace engineering.

When I asked him the secret of his brilliance, he told me: “Academic brilliance is no different than the brilliance of a mirror. Once dust is removed, the mirror shines and the reflection is clear. We can remove impurities by living pure and ethical lives and serving humanity, and God will shine through us.”

Later, I met Jain muni Acharya Mahapragya, who made me realize the affirmation of a divine life upon earth and an immortal sense in mortal existence. He taught me that our consciousness is the birthplace of our ethics. He said, “We know something is right when our consciences are clear. Our consciences are our true friends.”

Together we wrote Family and Nation and articulated two steps to the process of listening to our conscience — to become self-aware so that we can connect to our conscience, and to act on what our conscience says.

A P J Abdul Kalam with Pramukh Swami Maharaj.

I met Pramukh Swamiji, my ultimate teacher, unwittingly. Fate and my curiosity had drawn me to him. Earlier, as principal scientific advisor to the Government of India, I had visited Bhuj to review the rehabilitation work in the aftermath of the earthquake.

There, on 15 March 2001, I met Sadhu Brahmaviharidas, a disciple of Pramukh Swamiji. He asked me a startling question which elicited a spiritual response. He asked: “After the detonation of the first atomic bomb, Robert Oppenheimer remembered the Gita: ‘Time I am the shatterer of the world.’ What came to your mind after you detonated India’s first atomic bomb?”

I was puzzled by this question, and said, “The energy of God does not shatter, it unifies,” to which he replied, “Our spiritual leader, Pramukh Swami Maharaj, is a great unifier. He has unified all our energies to regenerate and restore life from the rubble of damage.”

I was moved and expressed my desire to meet such a swami. What began as a chance introduction became a divine destiny.

Over several years and multiple meetings with Pramukh Swamiji, I realized that a divine life can have no base unless we recognize the eternal spirit as the inhabitant of this bodily mansion, and integrate all of which the eternal spirit is comprised.

That all those living on this planet Earth — around me, away from me, in my country, in other countries; even other species and vegetation and minerals — are all different forms of a great unity.

At the most elementary level, all nature is one. Only one noble material weaves constantly different garbs. The nascent convergence of Nano-Bio-Info-Cogno technologies is testimony to this. How can we ensure that this convergence leads to human good and not harm; to the benefit of the marginalized and poor and not to merely an influential few?

With these thoughts on my mind, I travelled to Sarangpur, Gujarat, on 11 March 2014 to see Pramukh Swamiji. This was our latest meeting. We met in a garden inhabited by peacocks, surrounded by beautiful flowers.

In an emotionally and spiritually charged atmosphere, Swamiji held my hand for ten minutes. No words were spoken. We looked into each other’s eyes in a profound communication of consciousness. It was a great spiritual experience.

I have had a few spiritual experiences even earlier. On 30 September 2001, I survived a helicopter mishap. That night, I had a very vivid dream. I saw myself in a desert on a moonlit night, surrounded by miles of sand. Five great men, namely Emperor Ashoka, Mahatma Gandhi Albert Einstein, Abraham Lincoln and Caliph Umar, communicated a mission to me for igniting the minds of the young with hope.

On 28 April 2007, in the cave on Philopappos Hill — the place of imprisonment and self-sacrifice of the great soul Socrates — I saw in my mind’s eye a powerful streak of lighting.

Out of the dark corners of the cave came four apparitions, walking towards me in white robes. Foremost among them was Socrates, who said in a soft voice, ‘Thinking is freedom.’ Next came Abraham Lincoln who said, ‘No human being can be a slave of another.’ Then I saw Mahatma Gandhi, who said, ‘Eliminate violence in all human missions, let peace prevail.’ Finally, I saw Galileo Galilei, who said, ‘Truth is beyond human laws.’

President A P J Abdul Kalam with Pramukh Swami Maharaj. Also seen: Then Gujarat chief minister Narendra Modi.

But at the garden in Sarangpur with Pramukh Swamiji, there was a difference. On the earlier two occasions, I felt that perhaps my own imagination was at play. This time, Pramukh Swamiji was holding my hand. I became oblivious to the people around us, and was drawn into a kind of timeless silence.

I felt that his was the hand of transformation that could bring a change that the world needed today. In these moments, a world vision based on Mother Earth was intuitively communicated to me.

Pramukh Swamiji is Gunatit Satpurush, a spiritual person. He has transcended the ephemeral and the modes of nature. I felt as if through Pramukh Swamiji a divine message was transferred to me about something endowed to mankind by God almighty, but forgotten by humanity.

In a revelatory flash, I realized that the struggle between happiness and unhappiness that had so far been the story of human existence — and the struggle between peace and war that had been the history of the human race — must change.

I heard in the silence of his grip on my hand, “Kalam, go and tell everyone that the power that would lead us to eternal victory amid these struggles is the power of good within us. Communicate to mankind the vision of a harmonious world. This vision would be greater than any other goal ever aspired to by humanity.”

A harmonious world may seem an impossibly utopian vision. But with the guidance of the Divine, and in acknowledging the unity of all creation — and with the helping hand of such transcendent souls as Pramukh Swamiji — the impossible may be achievable. And a harmonious world begins with a harmonious inner world — an unavoidably spiritual quest.

For us to ignite our spirituality, we need to look inward and transcend our egos. We need to recognize, connect with and integrate the eternal spirit within.

There are four steps for this: Search in the right place, Remove the dust, Open your inner eye and See your destiny waiting for your effort to be realized.

Accordingly, I have written this book in four parts. The book starts with my spiritual experiences in the presence of Pramukh Swamiji. The second part reflects on the social work undertaken by the Bochasanwasi Shri Akshar Purushottam Swaminarayan Sanstha (BAPS) under the stewardship of Pramukh Swamiji. The third part shows the way ahead for humanity, with a vision of the fusion of science and spirituality. The fourth part calls for creative leadership, which is essential for the realization of this vision.

The spirit of inclusiveness of BAPS offers a seed to build a glorious crystal of a peaceful and prosperous world, where all civilizations coexist harmoniously and accommodate each other.

Pramukh Swamiji has already made an example, by creating a reflective society living through its cultural heritage. He has taken the glory of India to Africa, Europe, America and the Far East in the form of magnificent Swaminarayan temples, strong fellowship of devotees and well-wishers that encompasses millions world wide.

Let it now expand into public dealings — transparent governance and ethical business — based on truth. Driven by the convergence of Bio-Nano-Info-Eco-Cogno technologies, human beings will have unprecedented power.

A vision is required to ensure that living conditions at the bottom of the social pyramid will improve across social, political and economic boundaries.

A P J Abdul Kalam with Pramukh Swami Maharaj.

When this book was almost complete, my elder brother A P J Muhammad Muthu Meera Lebbai Maracayer called me from Rameswaram one morning after fajr prayers. Such a call so early in the morning initially worried me, but I was relieved upon hearing his cheerful voice. He asked me, “Tell me, brother, what is the most important thing you are doing these days?” I had told him about this book. I expressed my doubt to him: Whether it is appropriate for me as a Muslim to write about the leader of another religion.

I have much respect for my brother Maracayer’s judgement. He is fourteen years my senior and had lived a very pious life, grounded in Islamic religion and service. He said, “Kalam, when Prophet Muhammad, sallallahu alayhi wa sallam, arrived in Medina, there were Jewish and Christian tribes living there. He entered into a treaty with them within a larger framework dealing with inter-Muslim relationships. One of the clauses laid down in the treaty required that each party hold counsel with the other. Mutual relations shall be founded on righteousness; sin is totally excluded.”

My brother concluded by asking me to go ahead with the book, and share with everyone details of the pious and virtuous life of Pramukh Swamiji. Thus, the book was finally completed.

I dedicate this book to all the righteous people of the world wherever they are. The Swaminarayan temples and Akshardhams are indeed the sanctuaries of pious and virtuous living. They are abodes of peace and beacons of hope, rescuing people from the bottomless pit of self-indulgence, and, through service, reminding them of their true selves and allowing them to become wholesome human beings.

An increasing number of people, particularly in the developed world, are finding freedom from superficial relationships, trivial communications and the constant noise that pervade the modern world, in the counsel and guidance of BAPS saints.

May this divine presence increase!

Excerpted from Transcendence, by A P J Abdul Kalam and Arun Tiwari, with the kind permission of publishers, Harper Element, an imprint of HarperCollins Publishers.

IMAGES: President A P J Abdul Kalam with Pramukh Swami Maharaj. Kind courtesy: Trancendence.

Source…..www.rediff.com

Natarajan

 

Do You Know These Facts …?

High & Low

The hottest place in the world….Death Valley National Park, U.S.A. – The highest recorded temperature, was taken on July 10, 1913, and it reached 134°f (56°c).

High & Low

The coldest place in the world….Antarctica – In August 2010, the lowest recorded temperature was recorded in the East Antarctic Plateau. The record temperature was -135.8°f (-93°c).

 

The most populated city in the world

High & Low

Shanghai, China – With a population of over 24 million residents.

The least populated city in the world

High & Low

Vatican City – With a population of 842 residents, Vatican City also boasts the title of smallest state in the world.

 

The wealthiest city in the world

High & Low

Tokyo, Japan – The city of Tokyo has the highest GDP ($1,520 billion) of any other city in the world.

The poorest city in the world

High & Low

Kinshasa, D.R.C. – The Democratic Republic of Congo is the poorest state in the world, and its capital, Kinshasa, is the poorest city. It has a GDP of $55 billion, and most of its residents live on less than $1 a day.

The most photographed place in the world

High & Low

Guggenheim Museum, New York, U.S.A. – By running an algorithm that scanned through the internet’s immense collection of photos, the Guggenheim was found to be the most photographed place on earth.

The wettest place in the world

High & Low

Mawsynram, India – This region in the Indian subcontinent enjoys an average of 467.35 inches (1187cm) of rain per year. (In 1985, it had an amazing 1000 inches, or 25.4 meters of rain!)

The driest place in the world

High & Low

Atacama Desert, South America – It may be hard to believe, but the Atacama Desert gets about 4 inches (10cm) of rain every 1000 years. (Yes, 1000 years!)

The most expensive city in the world

High & Low

Singapore – In 2014, Singapore dethroned Tokyo and earned the title “world’s most expensive city”. An American travelling to Singapore will be shocked to see that the prices of cars are 4-6 times more expensive than in the U.S.

The least expensive city in the world

High & Low

Mumbai, India – A stark contrast to Singapore, Mumbai is 2014’s cheapest city. On average, a person would need to spend 4 times as much in Singapore, compared to Mumbai.

The Oldest city in the world (still exists)

High & Low

Damascus, Syria – While there are many older cities that no longer stand, the city of Damascus has evidence of civilization going back 11,000 years, and is the oldest city that still stands.

The newest country in the world

High & Low

South Sudan – Following a bloody genocide, the southern part of Sudan, which consists mainly of Christians, split from the northern part (Muslim majority) in 2011, making it the youngest country in the world.

The most visited city in the world

High & Low

London, England – London sees 18.69 million international visitors every year, making it the most visited city in the world.

The country that drinks the most coffee in the world

High & Low

Sweden – If you thought it would be the U.S.A. then you’d be wrong. The average Swede consumes 388mg of coffee per day.

The country that drinks the most alcohol in the world

High & Low

Belarus – On average, every person above the age of 15 drinks 4.62 gallons (17 liters) per year, earning Belarus this dubious title.

The most bicycle-friendly city in the world

High & Low

Groningen, Netherlands – Around 50% of the population of Groningen commutes on bicycles every day, making it the city with the most bicycles per capita.

The most energy efficient city in the world

High & Low

Reykjavik, Iceland – All of the energy in the capital of Iceland comes from geothermal power plants and hydropower. The city aims to be completely free of fossil-fuel by 2050.

The country with the highest longevity in the world

High & Low

Monaco – The World Health Organization (WHO) found that the average life expectancy in Monaco is 87.2 years.

The country with the lowest longevity in the world

High & Low

Sierra Leone – Sadly, with an average life expectancy of 47 years, Sierra Leone is the country with the shortest life expectancy in 2014.

The country with the highest IQ in the world

High & Low

Honk Kong – The average IQ score in Hong Kong is 107 points.

The country with the lowest IQ in the world

High & Low

Equatorial Guinea – The average IQ score in Equatorial Guinea is 59 points.

The city with the best internet connectivity in the world

High & Low

Seoul, South Korea – South Korea has been enjoying some of the most advanced technology when it comes to internet connectivity, and with 10,000 government-sponsored free Wi-Fi spots in the city, it easily earns its title.

Sources….www.ba-bamail.com

Natarajan

July 29…” Mohun Bagan Day”….Read this story to know the Reason…

Imagine India in 1911.

Lord Curzon had recently announced the partition of Bengal between East and West Bengal along Hindu and Muslim lines. When the whole country was fighting against the British and the movement was at its peak…

…THE SUCCESS OF MOHUN BAGAN in IFA SHIELD in 1911 is remembered as an eventful event in the social history of Indian sports.

Mohun Bagan’s barefooted Bengalis defeated the British Army’s East Yorkshire Regiment to win the Indian Football Association Shield. This IFA Shield victory of 1911 is one of the most commented upon events in Indian histories. This victory was much more than just the greatest day in the history of Indian football. It provided an inspiration to a movement which was gathering pace in India then.

1911-2

Mohun Bagan, considered the national club of India, became the first Asian football club when it was set up in 1889 in Calcutta. On 29th July 1911, Mohun Bagan was up against the East Yorkshire Regiment, a major British team. Over 80,000 Indians had gathered in and around the stadium to witness the real-life Lagaan moment.

After drubbing St. Xavier’s College 3-0 in the first round, they defeated Rangers Football Club in the second round. A 1-0 win over Rifle Brigade secured a semi-final berth for Mohun Bagan, under the leadership of inspirational Shibdas Bhaduri.

The final was as exciting as any game played today by players who cost their clubs millions. Perhaps more, because Mohun Bagan played that day with one thing on their mind – FREEDOM.

1911-1

Mohun Bagan captain Shibdas Bhaduri scored an equalizer after the British team drew first blood. Then with just two minutes to go from the final whistle, Abhilash Ghosh received a pass from the captain and scored the winner with a thunderous strike.

The ground erupted in celebration. It started to rain in shirts and shoes within the ground. Mohun Bagan became the first Indian team to lift the IFA Shield. Indian football was born on 29 July 1911, and at the same time it pumped the freedom movement with much-needed enthusiasm.

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29th July came to be known as Mohun Bagan Day.

This victory was highly praised not only by the Indian media. The British media wrote,“What the Congress failed to achieve, Mohun Bagan has”.

This day is remembered, for the bare-footed warriors who gave direction to a freedom movement. Not only that, it also has a nationalist, social, cultural and economic significance in historical perspective.

Source….www.storypick,com

natarajan