” Hello Uncle….Hello Aunty …” !!!


Illustration by Satwik Gade
The HinduIllustration by Satwik Gade

On being pushed up in the seniority stakes after marriage, no matter what your age.

We all know that age carries clout in India. As the website indianchild.com says, “Respect for elders is a major component in Indian culture”. In ancient times, this meant that youngsters would touch the feet of elders in greeting, talk to them deferentially and fetch things for them. But the modern guideline for respecting elders in India is crisper: simply address them ‘uncle’ and ‘aunty’.

I discovered this truth early in my marriage, at the tender age of 24. An older couple and their three-year-old daughter were staying in the ground floor of our apartment building. On our first visit to their house, the girl smiled sweetly at us and said, “Hello uncle; hello aunty’. My wife and I found it endearing to be addressed like this by the little one. Two days later, we were trudging up the stairs to our flat when the door of the apartment on the second floor opened and a man walked out. He politely moved out of the way to let us pass and said, “Hullo uncle; hullo aunty.” I looked at him closely. He had a thick moustache and a three-day stubble that made him look older than me. Yet he was calling me ‘uncle’ and his only excuse was that I was married!

“Hullo,” I said coldly and offered my hand. “I’m Paddy. And you?”

As he shook hands with me, his smile became friendlier. I thought he had recognised his error and would now address me by my name. “I’m Ajit, uncle,” he said. “I just finished my B. Com and am looking for a job.” Maybe he needed a broader hint. “I’m a graduate engineering trainee at Telco,” I said, subtly conveying that I had an engineering degree and had just got a job, and was, therefore, not more than two years older than him. “That’s great, uncle,” he said. “My dad works there too, at the forge.” After that initiation, my wife and I became reconciled to being addressed as ‘uncle’ and ‘aunty’ by men and women who did not look much younger than us. We would return their greetings graciously and later, in the privacy of our bedroom, have a quiet laugh together. A few years later, on another staircase to another flat in another city, we met another young man.

At six feet five inches, he towered over us and, in the dimly lit corridor, looked a shade dangerous. I remember thinking that if I had met him in a dark, lonely alley, I’d have handed him my wallet and watch without waiting to be asked. But, as he greeted us, it was obvious that he had met my wife, “Hello akka(elder sister),” he said, “nice to see you again.” I smiled with pleasure at his ability to impart respect without making my wife feel ancient. As I beamed at him, I noticed how pleasant and gentle he was and wondered how I could have thought he looked dangerous.

“And is this your husband?” the fine fellow continued. As my wife nodded, he turned to me and offered his hand. “Hullo uncle! So nice to meet you at last.”

“Nasty specimen,” I said to my wife when we entered our flat. “Doesn’t he look like a villain.?”

“No!” she said. “I think he looks sweet and innocent.”

I realised that as long as we had shared the rewards of seniority equally and had been able to laugh together at the foibles of youth, things had been bearable. But now it appeared that I might overtake my wife on the path to seniority. I felt a shiver go down my spine. What if, over the years, I got promoted from ‘uncle’ to thatha (grandfather) while she remained akka? Luckily, that didn’t happen. Apart from the occasional akka thrown her way, we’ve collected an equal quota of ‘uncles’ and ‘aunties’ from an array of fellow Indians in different places and at different times. Just last week, returning from an outing, we saw a couple in their late forties struggling with their shopping at the entrance to our apartment. The man was balding and, among the few hairs left on his head, the colour grey dominated. My wife and I helped them by picking up a few bags and carrying them to the lift. “Thank you so much,” the man said as the lift came to a stop. I began to smile to imply ‘it was no trouble’ when he continued, “It’s so kind of you, uncle.”

“I think I have more hair on my head than you,” I wanted to say but he had left the lift. Two days after this I was talking to my 26-year-old son in Mumbai. “You won’t believe this, appa,” he said. “In the lift today, I met a man in his thirties and his three-year-old son. The boy called me ‘uncle’! I felt very old.”

“Don’t worry,” I told him. “Once you marry, the boy’s father will also call you ‘uncle’!”

Paddy Rangappa is a freelance writer.

E-mail: Paddy.Rangappa@apmea.mcd.com

Keywords: After marriage lifeseniorityhuman Interest

SOURCE:::: Paddy Rangappa in http://www.thehindu.com

Natarajan

” Silence is the Thing, amid the Din…”

The noise and confusion that reigns in the world around us.
The noise and confusion that reigns in the world around us.

A French black-and-white silent movie, The Artist, won top honours at the Academy Awards in 2012. It had to happen. There is so much eloquence in silence. Remember the Charlie Chaplin genre of films? Are they coming back? I am no movie buff. But violence and noise are things humankind should shun. And silence being golden is a good break, and we are in dire need of it. The cacophony all around is killing.

We watch on television the noise and confusion that reigns in the world around us. Everybody has something to say but nobody wants to listen. There is zero tolerance.

We watch programmes on TV where the anchor and a panel of experts discuss and analyse issues. They begin nicely enough, but when the debate gets heated, sparks fly and everyone begins to talk simultaneously. Even the anchor has a problem controlling them. The one with most lung power out-speaks others. We are left numb.

Thank god we have the option of switching off the TV to get instant relief. Today’s music is also all noise. Where are the lyrics and the soft and soothing voices? Thank god for classical music — we still can listen to them and derive soul satisfaction.

I admire the silence of the West. Their neighbourhoods are so quiet. One can drink deep of such silence, especially when one is on a walk absorbing a lot of things. I love my India alright, but our strong point is not silence. We may well be one of the noisiest countries on the planet. In the bus, or in queues, in movies theatres, restaurants or even when they go for walks, people talk so loudly that they will wake up entire neighbourhoods — especially early in the morning. Now with dogs abounding on every street, if one dog starts barking, others follow it up with a chorus.

Even children don’t lag behind. I remember watching kids at play in a neighbourhood, abroad. There, like the adults the kids hardly ever scream or shout. Only Indian children scream their throats out.

This happened when I was once holidaying in the U.S. in Silicon Valley. A Japanese lady complained to the office of an apartment complex about an Indian family. The parents were off to work, and the grandparents had come for a holiday and they were teaching the kids slokas. Everytime the kids recited back what had been taught, the grandparents and the kids clapped with all their might, creating a ruckus.

The Japanese lady said: “That is the time my baby is fast asleep and my neighbours are yelling their heads off. The baby is startled into waking up and I am unable to finish my house work.” Being in the adjoining building, I too had heard the kids reciting the slokas and thought it to be laudable. The grandparents, I thought, were spending quality time with them, but they could have kept the decibel level low.

Once upon a time fire-crackers were lighted only during Deepavali. Now they are set off on birthdays, weddings, elections and what have you. Accompanying them on such occasions is loud film music. The world, as Wordsworth wrote, ‘is too much with us’. We are drowning in a welter of noise and other negative factors like road rage, violence, fisticuffs and streetfights. We see so much pent-up anger in people on a number of issues waiting to explode. The word ‘kolaveri’ said it all.

Remember the ‘Tower of Babel’ where people were shouting themselves hoarse in a diversity of tongues and nobody wanted to hear the other? We thought it was mythical, but no, it was real enough. All the chaos is back, it seems. As they say there is nothing new under the sun and history has a way of repeating itself. Things have to come full circle.

Keywords: Silencenoise pollutionnoise tolerance

SOURCE::::: Prema Ramakrishnan in http://www.thehindu.com

Natarajan

Meet Tao Porchon Lynch … 96 Years Old Yoga Teacher !!!

 

A 96-year-old woman , who has been teaching yoga for 56 years, has claimed that she “likes to dance and do yoga”.

The teacher Tao Porchon Lynch, who currently lives in Westchester County, New York, keeps a positive attitude and said that nothing was impossible, since one could do whatever one wanted to, the Daily Express reported.

Lynch, who was born at the end of the First World War in 1918 and was forbidden from practicing yoga through her early years due to male dominance, added that she loved to dance, to do the Argentinian tango, to do the Paso Doble, all Latin dancing, and all smooth waltzes and fox trot.

Brenda Boulas, a 70-year-old retired nurse, who is a student of the oldest yoga teacher, said that Lynch, who stays active despite having a full hip replacement and had recently suffering a broken wrist, was the “epitome of strength”

Pl click the following links too for identical Stories of Two other Ladies who practice Yoga and teach Yoga at the age 90 plus !!!

https://natarajank.com/2013/01/18/worlds-oldest-yoga-teacher-98-yrs/

 

https://natarajank.com/2014/08/25/%E0%AE%B5%E0%AE%AF%E0%AE%A4%E0%AF%81-94-%E0%AE%AF%E0%AF%8B%E0%AE%95%E0%AE%BE-100-%E0%AE%AF%E0%AF%82-%E0%AE%9F%E0%AF%8D%E0%AE%AF%E0%AF%82%E0%AE%AA%E0%AF%8D-%E0%AE%AF%E0%AF%8B%E0%AE%95/

 

SOURCE::::You Tube

Natarajan

Laughter The Best Medicine …With Positive Side Effects only !!!

One day a man goes to a pet shop to buy a parrot. The assistant takes the man to the parrot section and asks the man to choose one. The man asks, ”How much is the yellow one?”

The assistant says, ”$2000.” The man is shocked and asks the assistant why it’s so expensive. The assistant explains, ”This parrot is a very special one. He knows typewriting and can type really fast.”

”What about the green one?” the man asks.

The assistant says, ”He costs $5000 because he knows typewriting and can answer incoming telephone calls and takes notes.”

”What about the red one?” the man asks.

The assistant says, ”That one’s $10,000.”

The man says, ”What does HE do?”

The assistant says, ”I don’t know, but the other two call him boss.”

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To surprise her husband, an executive’s wife stopped by his office.

When she opened the door, she found him with his secretary sitting in his lap.

Without hesitating, he dictated, “And in conclusion, gentlemen, budget cuts or no budget cuts, I cannot continue to operate this office with just one chair.”

::::::::::::::::::::::::

 

Bill Gates goes to purgatory.

St. Peter says, “Now Bill, you have done some good things, and you have done some bad things. Now I am going to let you decide where you want to go”.

First, St. Peter shows Bill an image of Hell with beautiful women running on beaches. Then, St Peter shows Bill an image of Heaven with robed angels playing harps on clouds.

Bill chooses Hell.

About a week later, St. Peter checks in on Bill in Hell and finds him being whipped by demons.

Bill says to St. Peter, “What happened to all the beautiful women and the beaches?”

St. Peter replies, “That was just the screen saver.”

:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;

 

Manager: Do you know anything about this fax-machine?

Staff: A little. What’s wrong sir?

Manager: Well, I sent a fax, and the recipient called back to say all she received was a blank page. I tried it again, and the same thing happened.

Staff: How did you load the sheet?

Manager: I didn’t want anyone else to read it by accident, so I folded it so only the recipient would open it and read it.

 

SOURCE:::: http://www.siliconindia.com

Natarajan

 

See This Man”s Creativity …Hats off To this Gentleman …

 
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=svzPm8lT36o  
 
An extraordinary man with a severe disability creates incredible works of art using a typewriter….
 
Paul Smith suffers from cerebral palsy. It’s a terrible degenrative disease that cuts him away from the world in so many ways. But in the next few minutes, Paul will prove to you how much deeper the human soul goes. There is a whole world inside Paul, and he is still able to share it with others, to let them see its beauty and express himself creatively. It’s a beautiful example of how much we have inside us. 
 
SOURCE:::: You Tube and ba-ba mail site
 
Natarajan

The Flying Centenarian …. Fred !!!

Fred the sulphur-crested cockatoo has celebrated his 100th birthday at Bonorong Wildlife Sanctuary outside Hobart 

Fred the sulphur-crested cockatoo has celebrated his 100th birthday at Bonorong Wildlife Sanctuary outside Hobart

A sulphur-crested cockatoo has apparently made it to his 100th year, surpassing most birds of his kind by 60 years.

Keeping to tradition, Fred – the flying-centenarian, was sent a letter from The Queen at Buckingham Palace to mark his special milestone.

The talking-bird was also thrown a huge birthday-bash by his carers at the Bonorong Wildlife Sanctuary outside Hobart on Sunday.

Greg Irons, Director of Bonorong Wildlife Sanctuary told Daily Mail Australia that Fred could in fact be even older than 100.

‘We aren’t 100 per cent sure but we think that he is well past,’ he said.

‘He was 95-years-old when I started working, which was 10 years ago – we just waited a bit longer to make sure he is past 100’.

If Fred’s age is in fact correct, the senior bird would have been born around World War 1 in 1915, flying his way through a hundred years of memories.

‘He is in really good nick and even though he isn’t as active as the younger ones he is still remarkable for the way he carries on.

‘He doesn’t do a lot of flying, still dances, sings and talks a lot.

 Bonorong Wildlife Sanctuary manager, Petra Harris, gave Fred his special birthday cake. Fred apparently has a HUGE crush on her - it made his day

Bonorong Wildlife Sanctuary manager, Petra Harris, gave Fred his special birthday cake. Fred apparently has a HUGE crush on her – it made his day…

‘He behaves like a two-year-old,’ Mr Irons said.

Other than a few sprains, Fred has had no health issues and has not visited a vet in 10 years.

‘He is a resilient little character – we all love him here.’

Mr Irons said Fred came to the Sanctuary 20-years ago through a woman’s will.

‘He [Fred] was originally owned for decades by a lady who passed away,’ he said. ‘Fred was then looked after by her family who had to move.

‘The lady actually requested in her will to give Fred to us, so they gave him to us.’

The talking-bird was thrown a huge birthday-bash by his carers at the Bonorong Wildlife Sanctuary outside Hobart on Sunday

The talking-bird was thrown a huge birthday-bash by his carers at the Bonorong Wildlife Sanctuary outside Hobart on Sunday

Source:::: http://www.dailymail.co.uk

Natarajan

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2817452/The-flying-centenarian-Fred-cockatoo-receives-letter-Queen-mark-100th-year.html#ixzz3I0iXzgTe

Dialysis @ Rs 100…? ….He Made it Happen !!!

Indian American Harvard Medical School student Sachin Jain looks beyond boundaries of direct service.

Sachin Jain comes from a family of philanthropists.

His India-born father, Subhash, and others funded Jain’s paternal aunt Shanti, who had committed her life to rural health care in Phalodi, Rajasthan.

The family runs the HBS Trust, which, among other things, runs a non-profit hospital (Kalapurnam General Hospital) and a school (Bal Academy).

He watched as his father and brother, Roopam, worked their own magic, once sending to India supplies from a hospital in Kansas that went bankrupt.

Sachin had done his share in organising things for his parents in the United States.

He spent some time at the hospital, even living there awhile.

But if he was to help, he saw that he could not make the same kind of headway his father perhaps did.

He realised there were cultural nuances to India, one that essentially made for a foreign context for him, he says:

“As someone who grew up in America, I don’t have that. People there know to get things done… There’s a different work culture in India.”

Sachin, who went to Harvard Medical School, taking a break to do his MBA first, and then to work awhile in the Obama administration, says, “As I got older, (I saw) the special sweet spot I could be at (would be one where I could) build partnerships that create novel programmes.”

He spoke to Kent Theiry, chief executive officer, Davita, the largest dialysis material supplier in the US, and worked out a deal to do collaborative work on dialysis services in India.

Thanks to Davita and other sources of funding, the HBS Trust has two dialysis centres — in Jodhpur and Phalodi.

Already 17,000 patients have used the facilities in Jodhpur, 3500 in Phalodi.

The charges are on the ability to pay, amounting to about Rs 100 ($1.63) and Rs 200 ($3.27) per session.

That well-nurtured partnership has been on for almost six years.

Sachin also worked out a deal with the Medical Mission for Children (Boston), which worked on cleft lips and palates.

“They were interested in going to India,” Jain says, adding that he “didn’t think there was need for this.”

But a few advertisements in the local papers there unleashed an overwhelming response.

He now realises how important the seven-year partnership has been in helping people living with that social stigma get jobs or even get married.

Sachin goes there every year, to meet family and see how the hospitals are doing.

In the US, he practices at the Boston Veterans Hospital, is editor-in-chief of Healthcare, an academic publication, and the chief innovation officer at Merck.

On the side he organises trips for doctors to India.

The role of Indian Americans has been to go back and give frontline service, he says, adding, “My job is understanding what is going there.”

He says he spends a lot of time maintaining relationships, failing to fix a deal 80 percent of the time.

He speaks of another dialysis company he has been wooing, which has coyly refused to play nice yet.

Something might happen next month or next fall. The important thing is not to get discouraged, Jain says.

He adds that right now people think of doing direct service. But, just as he did, there is also the option for young people to learn to use the options they have here.

SOURCE::::: P.Rajendran in http://www.rediff.com

Natarajan

Message For the Day…” Youth Must Hold Fast to God …”

Adi Shankara remarked to his disciples that young people were more keen on sensuous pleasures than enquire about the Soul (Atma). It is piteous that people are more attached to the body, which is a container of many filthy objects. They are carried away by the external physical attractions of the body, without understanding its impermanence. How long can youth last? His message is a strong warning to the young to be very careful in the life they lead and encourages them to shed body-consciousness. You must practice recognising the Divine Principle present in all beings, even though they may be called by different names and appear different. Youth must hold fast to God as their only true Friend and Supporter. Once you have firm faith, the Divine will Himself manifest and reveal Himself to you.

Sathya Sai Baba

“Ebola Has been the Biggest Challenge I Faced as a Doctor ….”

Gomathinayagam, part of Doctors Without Borders who served Ebola victims in Liberia, speaks about her experiences

Vidya Krishnan in http://www.livemint.com

Ebola has been the biggest challenge I faced as a doctor: Kalyani Gomathinayagam

Gomathinayagam says they had to win the trust of the community first—they suddenly see foreigners giving them instructions. Photo: Ramesh Pathania/Mint

Kalyani Gomathinayagam is a general physician based in Madurai, Tamil Nadu, who has just returned from Liberia, the epicentre of the Ebola outbreak, after spending six weeks caring for patients in the West African nation. She is already talking about going back.

Gomathinayagam, 46, joined Médecins Sans Frontières, or MSF (Doctors Without Borders) after the Haiti earthquake in 2010. She has served as an emergency doctor in the Ivory Coast, Chad and the Democratic Republic of Congo before her stint in Liberia, from where she returned to Delhi on 20 October after being quarantined for 21 days in Geneva, Switzerland.

Working in Foya district of Lofa county in Liberia, the doctors operated in small hutments, plastic-sheeted from inside to prevent infections—much like the ‘kill room’ in the popular television series Dexter. The doctors worked in temperatures touching 40 degrees Celsius, swathed in protective gear including face shields, goggles and boots, that made even simple tasks like placing an intravenous (IV) line or giving an injection seem like hard labour.

Health workers have been the most critical resource at the frontline of the battle against the latest outbreak of Ebola, which has so far claimed 4,919 lives—2,413 in Liberia alone, according to the World Health Organization.

Gomathinayagam spoke about her experiences in Liberia and other disaster-struck regions in an interview during a visit to New Delhi. Edited excerpts:

You have seen people suffer earthquakes, civil wars and medical emergencies. Which one has been the most challenging?

Ebola. Without a doubt. This outbreak is unprecedented in so many ways. The disease threatens doctors and health workers, severely limiting our capacity to treat patients. And this is happening in countries where the health infrastructure is not robust to begin with. Additionally, we had a few scares with some of our colleagues falling sick, but thankfully, it was not Ebola.

We had to win the trust of the community first—they suddenly see foreigners giving them instructions. The families see their loved ones taken to the hospital and coming back dead. Even burial is not under their control. So, it was a very challenging experience.

Working with the nurses was the trickiest bit. The nursing staff was given clinical information without passing over pieces of paper from inside the quarantine zone. So everything was dictated. This takes a lot of time when you have over 100 patients and just four doctors. It was a tremendous amount of work to get the data collected.

How difficult is it to care for an Ebola victim with basic health infrastructure?

The most difficult part was to administer any kind of treatment without coming in physical contact with the patient. (In treating) this disease, everything is complicated. The patients can only see my eyes and recognize my voice, and I have to shout through a perimeter to be heard. Everything has to be done from across the ‘perimeter fencing’. It was challenging to gain the community’s trust because all they (see) is a hazmat suit (protective gear).

In this setting, I had little or no access to the patient. I had to figure out how to put the IV fluid, but my goggles were getting foggy and I was no longer able to properly place an IV. If I cannot see, there are chances of me pricking myself with the injection instead. I was sweating a lot because of the protective gear. And somehow you manage everything and within minutes the patient is lying in a pool of faeces or vomit—and you have to do this all over again.

Do you choose these assignments for an adrenaline rush? Because this must have been difficult for your family.

Their first reaction was “Are you crazy?” But they know I work for a humanitarian aid agency, which responds to acute medical emergencies for the most vulnerable population—civil wars, epidemics, natural disasters.

Ebola has had a huge impact on me as a person. One cannot imagine the magnitude of this epidemic unless you go there. I have never seen or felt such helplessness. I could also, like normal doctors, set up a regular practice. My patients would have a choice of going to another doctor if they didn’t like me. But I serve in places where people cannot go to another doctor. There is no other doctor.

It is stressful moving from one suffering to another, but we also have a rest period in between. I don’t know about the adrenaline rush, but this gives me tremendous satisfaction. I do what is needed. My family and friends understand I chose this profession. They have adapted so I can keep going back.

Is there a ‘good day at the office’ in situations like these?

Well, not often. I had one which made me very happy. I had skipped the morning rounds one day and when I went in the evening, a patient came up to me and asked me why I didn’t turn up in the morning. And I realized he knew me. By my voice. He could still identify me despite the hazmat suit and face shield, and it was heartening.

Source:::: http://www.livemint.com
Natarajan