Message for the Day…” Faith in God Should never Waver…”

Sathya Sai Baba

You may have immense faith in God. But from time to time, the power of Maya may undermine this faith. So be vigilant. In Mahabharata even staunch devotees of Krishna like Dharmaraja and Arjuna displayed hesitancy in following the advice of Krishna and had to be reminded of their duty through Bhishma and Draupadi respectively. Faith in God should never waver. In no circumstance should anyone go against the injunctions of the Divine. Whatever worship one may offer, however intensely one may meditate, if one transgresses the commands of the Lord, these devotional practices become futile. The reason is that the Lord has no selfish objectives or goals. It is out of small-minded, narrow and selfish motives that people choose to act against the sacred and noble commandments of the Lord. Even small acts of transgression may in due course assume dangerous proportions.

Hats off to this Lady …A Mumbai Baker Made A 35 Kg Ganesha Idol From Pure Chocolate To Feed Underprivileged Kids….

Festivals indeed occupy an important place in our lives and they bring our family and friends together. But aren’t we supposed to spread happiness and share our joy with the world too?

This year, from Spiderman to Bahubali, we stumbled upon some of the most innovative designs of Ganesha idols.

But, this wonder woman, Rintu Kalyani Rathod, chose to celebrate Ganesh Chaturthi in a totally different way.

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She has her own bakery, ‘Rini Bakes – Bake my Dreams’ in Mumbai. Apparently, this wonder woman made a 38 inches tall chocolate Ganesha with 35 kg of chocolate in 50 hours.

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After 5 days, she has planned to immerse Ganesha in milk, feed the chocolate Ganesha to hundreds of underprivileged kids and spread happiness in the lives of those kids.

This is what this amazing lady said on her Facebook post:

“It pains me tremendously to see the way our environment is exploited in the name of devotion. I just couldn’t bare the sight on the beach after the visarjan. Drunk people dancing on the streets on vulgar film songs blaring from loud speakers is not devotion.

I am a commercial designer turned designer baker. I decided to make my idol from chocolate last year. We immersed the idol in milk and distributed the chocolate milk among the underprivileged kids prasad. 1100 people took the prasad last year. It was a 28 kg, 32 inches tall idol. Real visarjan is done by bringing smiles on the faces of little kids not by polluting our waters.

This year my idol is 35 kg and 38 inches tall. It took me 50 hours to make it. Hope to distribute prasad to many more people this time, so bappa can stay in them forever. After all, bappa’s favourite place to reside is inside us, nowhere else.”

 

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Isn’t this the perfect way to celebrate Ganesh Chaturthi? After all, happiness doesn’t result from what we get, but from what we give.

If you really believe in God, then do your bit. Be a better person and celebrate the spirit of mankind.

News Source: Facebook andShuvro Ghoshal in  www.storypick.com

Natarajan

How a farm labourer became a CEO of a Company …. An Inspiring Story…

From earning Rs 5 a day as a farm labourer to starting an IT services company that is worth Rs 1.5 crore (Rs 15 million), Jyoti Reddy’s story of success is nothing short of an inspiring movie plot.

That night she decided to break the rules.

With a few friends, whom she referred as akka, she did not return to the orphanage till way past midnight.

It was Sivaratri, the great night of Shiva, when the planets are potently aligned to embrace his cosmic dance.

After visiting the Shiva temple in their village, they decided to do something really daring — go for a movie, a blockbuster love story.

She laughs, a deep throaty laugh, which betrays a teenager’s giggles at the memory of forbidden pleasure.

Anila Jyothi Reddy has travelled very far from that night and her obscure village in Warangal in Telangana.

Her memories though are as fresh as it were yesterday.

“When we returned late in the night, we got a good thrashing from the warden. But I was so enamoured by the movie that I did not much care for the repercussion. I thought I should also marry for love,” she tells me.

Jyoti Reddy

Not all dreams come true

But fate — the eternal party spoiler — intervened.

Jyothi was married off exactly a year later at the age of 16 to a man 10 years her senior.

Love did not figure in the arrangement that her parents made for her future.

All her hopes of a better life seemed to recede like the bullock cart in the rear view mirror of a speeding highway truck.

He was a farmer who had not even passed the intermediate.

She was thus doomed to a fate of a daily farm labourer slogging the whole day in the paddy field under the blazing hot Telangana sun.

For all her efforts, Jyothi earned a meagre Rs 5 a day. She did this for five years from 1985 to 1990.

“I became a mother at 17. I had to do all the household chores and then head straight to the fields.

“I would return home at dusk and get down to making dinner.

“We did not have any stove, so I had to cook on a wood fire chulha,” she tells me over the phone from Hyderabad, where she visits at this time of the year from her home in the US.

Today, Jyothi is the CEO of a $15 million IT company, Key Software Solutions, based in Phoenix, Arizona, US.

Her incredible story seems to be the stuff of fiction conjured up by a shrewd novelist inflicting numerous sufferings on his protagonist to eventually make her a winner.

Except here, Jyothi herself altered her destiny.

Unwilling to live a life that was preordained for her, she beat all odds to emerge a winner.

A forced orphan

Jyothi’s aspirations were slowly growing wings.

“I could not stand being poor. I was born poor and was wed into another poor family,” she says.

Those days her dream was to have four plastic boxes full of daal (lentils) and rice.

“I would dream of having more than enough food to feed my children. I did not want to give them the life I was leading.”

Having been married off at the age of 16, Jyothi became a mother at 17 with her first daughter, followed by another girl a year later.

“At 18, I was a mother to two girls. There was never enough money for either medicine or to buy them toys.”

When the time came to admit them in school, she opted for Telugu medium because the fees was Rs 25 a month, while for an English medium school it was Rs 50 per month.

I could educate both my girls at Rs 50 hence I chose to send them to a Telugu medium school.”

Jyothi is the second among her four siblings.

Because of abject poverty at home, her father admitted his two daughters into an orphanage saying that they were motherless.

“I lived in an orphanage for five years from class five to class 10. Life there was tougher. My sister could not manage and would cry the whole time. My father had to take her back home.”

But Jyothi stuck on.

Even though she missed her mother and needed her the most, she finally adjusted to remaining in the orphanage.

“I remember a wealthy man would visit the orphanage every year to distribute sweets and blankets.

“I was a very sickly child then, and I would imagine myself being rich one day and carry a suitcase with 10 new saris in it,” she laughs re-imagining her dreams those days, which she was afraid to share with her hostel mates lest they made fun of her.

Nobody’s children

Jyothi makes it a point to come to India every year on August 29.

It is her birthday and she celebrates it with children in different orphanages in Warangal.

She also sponsors a mentally challenged kids’ home where there are 220 children.

She says passionately, “Two percent of India’s population comprises orphans. They do not have any identification. They are uncared for and unwanted. The people who work in orphanages only work there for the money, and not to give care and love to the orphans.”

She has been pursuing the cause of orphan children for many years now and has met ministers in power to bring the plight of these children to their notice.

She is concerned that though the state government has released data for orphan boys till class 10 who are in child remand homes, there is no data for girl orphans.

Where are the girls? Why are they missing?” she asks and replies to her own question.

“Because they are trafficked; they are forced into prostitution. I visited one home in Hyderabad where six girls in their 10th class had given birth. In the same home, these mother orphans were living with their orphan children.”

Being in a position of power today, Jyothi is voicing her concerns at every forum and making sure that the plight of the orphans does not go unheard.

But there was a time when she had to be a mute spectator to the injustices meted out to her by her own husband and in-laws.

With many mouths to feed and little or no income, life was hard.

“My concern was my children. I had a lot of restrictions. I could not talk to any other men, could not go out besides going to work in the fields.”

But as they say where there’s a will, there’s a way.

Jyothi heard an opportunity knock on her door when she started teaching the other farm hands at a night school.

From a labourer, she became a government teacher.

“I would motivate them to learn the basics. That was my job. I soon got a promotion, and would visit every village in Warangal to train women and youth to learn to stitch clothes.”

She was now earning Rs 120 a month.

“It was as if I had got one lakh rupees. I could now spend on my children’s medicine. It was a lot of money for me.”

The American dream

She completed a vocational course from Ambedkar Open University and wanted to enroll for MA in English at Kakatiya University in Warangal.

“I had often dreamt of having a name plate outside my house with the words ‘Dr Anila Jyothi Reddy.'”

However, she could not pass her course and all her dreams of doing a PhD in English came to an end.

But a chance meeting with a cousin from the US fired her imagination and she knew it in her heart that if she had to escape this vortex of poverty she had to go to the US.

“This is too much, right? This is crazy,” she laughs again with joy in reply to my question on how she managed to go to the US.

Talking about her NRI cousin who inspired her, she says, “She had style. It was so different from my ‘teacher look’. I did not leave my hair loose, I did not wear goggles or drive a car. I asked her can I come to America.”

Her cousin told her, “An aggressive woman like you can easily manage in America.”

Jyothi did not waste any time and enrolled for computer software classes.

She would commute to Hyderabad daily because her husband did not like the idea of her living away from home.

She was determined to go to the US. But it was hard to convince her husband.

“I was really greedy to go to the US. That was the only way I thought I could give my children a good life.”

She took the help of relatives and friends to apply for a US visa.

“I make use of every resource and time that I can manage. I never wasted time even while teaching.

“I used to run a chit fund for the other teachers. My salary in 1994-95 was Rs 5,000, I used to earn Rs 25,000 from the chit fund — all this when I was only 23-24 years old.

“I tried to save as much as I could so that I could go to the US.”

Jyothi’s biggest desire was to drive a car, and she knew only if she went to the US, she could drive one.

“There were too many restrictions at home. But one good thing my husband has done is given me two children to fight my life,” she says with a chuckle.

“My girls are like me. They are hard workers and do not waste time.”

Her daughters are software engineers. They are both married now and live in the US.

From poverty to abundance

The American dream is not an easy one.

Though Jyothi fought her fate and reached the land of opportunities, it was a rough ride.

“There was no support for me there. I did not know English very well, and it was a struggle each day.”

She found a PG accommodation with a Gujarati family in New Jersey at $350 per month.

“I did not have a cell phone. I used to walk three miles daily to work.”

She worked as a sales girl, then as a room service person in a motel in South Carolina, as a baby sitter in Phoenix, Arizona, as a gas station attendant, and software recruiter in Virginia.

Finally, she started her own business.

“When I returned to my village after two years, I went to the village temple for Shiv puja and the priest told me, ‘You will not get a job in the US, but if you do business you will become a millionaire.’

She took the help of relatives and friends to apply for a US visa.

“I make use of every resource and time that I can manage. I never wasted time even while teaching.

“I used to run a chit fund for the other teachers. My salary in 1994-95 was Rs 5,000, I used to earn Rs 25,000 from the chit fund — all this when I was only 23-24 years old.

“I tried to save as much as I could so that I could go to the US.”

Jyothi’s biggest desire was to drive a car, and she knew only if she went to the US, she could drive one.

“There were too many restrictions at home. But one good thing my husband has done is given me two children to fight my life,” she says with a chuckle.

“My girls are like me. They are hard workers and do not waste time.”

Her daughters are software engineers. They are both married now and live in the US.

From poverty to abundance

The American dream is not an easy one.

Though Jyothi fought her fate and reached the land of opportunities, it was a rough ride.

“There was no support for me there. I did not know English very well, and it was a struggle each day.”

She found a PG accommodation with a Gujarati family in New Jersey at $350 per month.

“I did not have a cell phone. I used to walk three miles daily to work.”

She worked as a sales girl, then as a room service person in a motel in South Carolina, as a baby sitter in Phoenix, Arizona, as a gas station attendant, and software recruiter in Virginia.

Finally, she started her own business.

“When I returned to my village after two years, I went to the village temple for Shiv puja and the priest told me, ‘You will not get a job in the US, but if you do business you will become a millionaire.’

Jyoti Reddy with young kids

yothi recalls how she would walk bare feet even during the harsh summer months.

Curious, I ask her how many shoes she owns today?

“I now have 200 pairs. It takes me 10 to 15 minutes to find a matching pair with my clothes.”

And why shouldn’t she indulge.

The first time she bought herself anything was when she was working as a teacher.

“I had only two saris. I badly needed a third one. I bought a sari for myself for Rs 135 and believe it or not, I still have that sari.”

I had to ask her which is the most expensive sari in her wardrobe.

“I spent Rs 1 lakh, 60,000 on a blue and silver sari for my younger daughter’s wedding,” she tells me with a nervous laugh.

She owns six houses in the US and two in India. And yes, she finally made her dream of driving a car come true.

She drives a Mercedes-Benz, sports dark glasses and keeps her hair loose.

Drive to succeed

Such has been her journey that Kakatiya University’s second degree English lesson has a chapter on her.

“Believe me, once I had begged the same university to give me a job and they had refused. Today, a lot of village children read about me and want to know who this living person is.”

She has been speaking to me for more than an hour while she is on her way to a meeting in Hyderabad.

She is going to Delhi the next day to take her case about missing orphan girls to the ruling party.

Life for her is no longer looking into the rear view mirror and following rules made by other people. She is stepping up the accelerator at full speed ahead.

All photographs: Kind courtesy   jyothireddy.com

Source…Dipti Nair…www.rediff.com

Natarajan

Message for the Day…” HE is Omnipresent…You are an embodiment of Divinity…”

God is infinite. It is impossible to measure Him or compare Him with anything, for there is no ‘other’ to compare. He is omnipresent. The Vedas declare, “He is One alone without a second“ (Ekam eva Advitiyam). The Divine willed: “I am One; I shall become many”(Ekoham Bahusyaam). By His Will God manifested Himself in the many. All religions have accepted this truth. The Bible declares: “God created man in His own image.” Thus from the One, the manifold cosmos emerged. With the growth of knowledge, the animal nature in man has diminished and he has been able to develop and refine his culture. As the saying goes, Divine appears in human form (Daivam maanusha rupena). Hence do not consider yourself as a mere product of Nature, a creature of the senses and the physical elements. You are an embodiment of Divinity.

Sathya Sai Baba

” Fixing Taps to Save Water In India”…

Author and painter Aabid Surti may have won awards for his writing and art, but he has also made a mark in another field: water conservation. For the last seven years, the 77-year-old has spent his Sundays going to apartments in Mumbai, and volunteering to fix leaking taps.

The Alternative, a Bangalore-based website seeking to chronicle and support social development in India, is currently running a campaign on sustainable water conservation called Catch Every Drop (#catcheverydrop). At The Alternative, Kirti introduces us to Aabid Surti’s work:

The 77-year-old celebrates Sunday like none else, picking a building in Mumbai’s far-flung suburb Mira Road and, with his plumber and a volunteer in tow, searching it for leaking taps to plug. Free of charge. His reward? “A lot of water saved. And sometimes, an offer for lunch,” he says simply. Surti’s non-governmental organisation, Drop Dead, has just one employee – him.

Aabid Surti, by Aalif Surti (CC BY-NC 3.0).

Aabid Surti, from Aalif Surti’s blog (CC BY-NC 3.0).

Aabid Surti’s son Aalif Surti (@SuperAalif) has told the story of how it all began:

“I read an interview of the former UN chief Boutros Boutros Ghali,” Aabid recalls, “who said that by 2025 more than 40 countries are expected to experience water crisis. I remembered my childhood in a ghetto fighting for each bucket of water. I knew that shortage of water is the end of civilized life.” Around the same time, in 2007, he was sitting in a friend’s house and noticed a leaky tap. It bothered him. When he pointed it out, his friend, like others, dismissed it casually: it was too expensive and inconvenient to call a plumber for such a minor job – even plumbers resisted coming to only replace old gaskets. A few days later, he came across a statistic in the newspaper: a tap that drips once every second wastes a thousand litres of water in a month. That triggered an idea. He would take a plumber from door to door and fix taps for free – one apartment complex every weekend.

Of course there was the issue of covering costs:

As a creative artist, he had earned more goodwill than money and the first challenge was funding. “But,” he says, “if you have a noble thought, nature takes care of it.” Within a few days, he got a message that he was unexpectedly being awarded Rs.1,00,000 ($2,000) by the Hindi Sahitya Sansthan for his contribution to Hindi literature [an award from the government of Uttar Pradesh]. And one Sunday morning in 2007, the International Year of Water, he set out with a plumber to fix the problem for his neighbors. He began by simply replacing old O-ring rubber gaskets with new ones, buying new fixtures from the wholesale market. He named his one-man NGO ‘Drop Dead’ and created a tagline: save every drop… or drop dead. Every Sunday, the Drop Dead team – which consisted of Aabid himself, Riyaaz the plumber and a female volunteer Tejal – picked the apartment blocks, got permission from the housing societies, and got to work. A day before, Tejal would hand out pamphlets explaining their mission and paste posters in elevators and apartment lobbies spreading awareness on the looming water crisis. And by Sunday afternoon, they would ensure the buildings were drip-dry. By the end of the first year, they had visited 1533 homes and fixed around 400 taps. Slowly, the news began to spread.

Not only does the project help save water, it empowers the community:

As Aabid rings another door-bell on yet another Sunday in Mira Road, seven years into his one-man mission, he says: “Anyone can launch a water conservation project in his or her area. That’s the beauty of this concept. It doesn’t require much funding or even an office. And most importantly, it puts the power back in our own hands.”

Now Aabid Surti would like similar initiatives to be started in others parts of India, so that as much water as possible is saved.

” An Adorable Chase …”

One day while out for a swim, one man’s dedicated pack of dogs decided that where he goes, they go. And the result is the most darling school of swimmers we’ve ever seen. When he jumped in the water, this man’s 12 (yes, 12) golden retrievers seemed alarmed: what was their human doing splashing about in the water? Well, they seemed to collectively decide that they’d better go in after him and make sure he was not, in fact, drowning.

“Human? Human?! Is that a good idea?”

"Human? Human?! Is that a good idea?"

YouTube / ViralHog

"Human, wait for us!"

YouTube / ViralHog

Watch this overprotective pack here:

 

“Human, head back to land! These waters are treacherous!”

"Human, head back to land! These waters are treacherous!"

(via The Dodo)

The human in such obvious peril here naturally made it back to land, where his devoted pack followed. The man in the video remains anonymous for now, but we are curious…how does one end up with 12 golden retrievers, and are there any more videos of their adorable antics?

Source…..www.viralnova.com and http://www.you tube.com

Natarajan

” உழைக்காத நேரமே ராகு காலம் …”

ஓர் அழகான கதை. உழைப்பின் உன்னதத்தை உணர்த்துகின்ற கதை-
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கடற்கரை ஓரமாக பெரிய மரம் ஒன்று வளர்ந்திருந்தது. அதன் கிளை ஒன்று மிக நீண்டு கடல் நீருக்கு மேலாக நீட்டிக் கொண்டிருந்தது. அதன் உச்சியில் கடற்குருவி ஒன்று கூடு கட்டியது. அதனுள் நாலைந்து முட்டைகளை இட்டு அடைகாத்து வந்தது. ஆண் குருவியும் பெண் குருவியும் அதே கூட்டில் வசித்தபடி தங்கள் குஞ்சுகள் வெளிவரும் நாளை ஆவலுடன் எதிர்பார்த்துக் கொண்டிருந்தன.

ஒரு நாள் பெரும் காற்று வீசியது. பெரிய அலைகள் பொங்கி எழுந்தன. கிளையில் இருந்த கூடு நழுவி காற்றின் வேகத்தில் கடலில் விழுந்து மூழ்கியது. குருவிகள் மனம் பதறிக் கதறின. கடல் நீரில் விழுந்து கூடு மூழ்கிய இடத்திற்கு மேலாக கீச், கீச் என்று கத்தியபடியே சுற்றிச் சுற்றி வந்தன.

பெண் குருவி மனம் உடைந்து சொல்லியது. எப்படியாவது முட்டைகளை மீண்டும் நான் காண வேண்டும். இல்லையேல் நான் உயிர் வாழ மாட்டேன் என்றது .

ஆண் குருவி சொன்னது. அவசரப்படாதே ஒரு வழி இருக்கிறது. நமது கூடு கரையின் ஓரமாகத் தான் விழுந்துள்ளது. கூட்டுடன் சேர்ந்து முட்டைகள் விழுந்ததால் நிச்சயம் உடைந்திருக்காது. அதனால் இந்த கடலிலுள்ள தண்ணீரை வற்றவைத்து விட்டால் போதும். முட்டைகளை நாம் மீட்டுவிடலாம்.என்று பெண் குருவிக்கு தன்னம்பிக்கை ஊட்டியது .

கடலை எப்படி வற்றவைப்பது?

முட்டைகள் பொரிந்து குஞ்சுகள் வெளிவர இன்னும் பல நாட்கள் ஆகலாம். எனவே நாம் இடைவிடாமல் சில நாட்கள் முயல வேண்டும். நம் வாயில் கொள்ளும் மட்டும் தண்ணீரை எடுத்துக் கொண்டு பறந்து சென்று தொலைவில் கொட்டுவோம். மறுபடியும் திரும்பி வந்து மீண்டும் நீரை நிரப்பிக் கொண்டு போய் தொலைவில் உமிழ்வோம். இப்படியே இடைவிடாமல் செய்து கடல் நீரை வேறு இடத்தில் ஊற்றினால் கடல் நீர் மட்டம் குறைந்து தரை தெரியும். நமது முட்டைகள் வெளிப்படும்.

இதையடுத்து இரண்டு குருவிகளும் தன்னம்பிக்கையுடன் ஊக்கத்துடன் செயலில் இறங்கின. விர்ரென்று பறந்து போய் தங்களது சிறிய அலகில் இரண்டு விழுங்கு நீரை நிரப்பிக் கொண்டன. பறந்து சென்று தொலைவில் போய் உமிழ்ந்தன. மீண்டும் பறந்து வந்து இரண்டு வாய் தண்ணீரை அள்ளின. கொண்டுபோய் தொலைவில் கக்கின.

இப்படியே இரவு பகல் நாள் முழுவதும் இடைவிடாமல் நடந்து கொண்டிருந்தது, இவற்றின் நீர் அகற்றும் படலம்.

அப்போது அந்தக் கடற்கரை ஓரமாக முனிவர் ஒருவர் நடந்து வந்து கொண்டிருந்தார். மகா சக்திகள் நிறைந்த மகான் அவர். ஆளில்லாத அந்தப் பகுதியில் கீச் கீச் என்ற சப்தம் கேட்கவும் அவர் திரும்பிப் பார்த்தார். இரண்டு குருவிகள் பறந்து போவது கண்டு சிரித்தபடி மேலே நடந்தார்.

மீண்டும் கீச் கீச் என்ற சப்தம். குருவிகள் கடலுக்கு மேல் பறந்தன. எதையோ அள்ளின. மீண்டும் பறந்தன. இப்படி பலமுறை நடைபெறவும், முனிவருக்கு வியப்பு. கடலில் இருக்கும் எதைக் கொத்துகின்றன இவை? அங்கு இரை ஏதும் இல்லையே என்று நினைத்தார் அவர்.

உடனே அந்த மகான் கண்களை மூடினார். உள்ளுக்குள் அமிழ்ந்தார். மறுகணம் அவர் மனதில் எல்லா நிகழ்ச்சிகளும் படம்போல் ஓடின. அவர் மனம் உருகியது. முட்டைகளை இழந்த தாயின் தவிப்பும் கடலையே வற்ற வைத்தாவது முட்டைகளை மீட்க வேண்டும் என்ற அதன் துடிப்பும் அவரது உள்ளத்தை நெகிழச் செய்தன.

உடனே தனது தவ பலத்தை ஒன்று திரட்டிய முனிவர் கையை உயர்த்தினார். மறுகணம் கடல் சில அடிகள் பின் வாங்கியது. அங்கே கூட்டுடன் இருந்த முட்டைகள் தென்பட்டன. குருவிகள் அதைப் பார்த்து குதூகலத்துடன் கீச்சிட்டன. ஆளுக்கொன்றாக முட்டைகளை பற்றிக் கொண்டு போய் வேறிடத்தில் சேர்த்தன.

நான் அப்போதே சொன்னேன் பார்த்தாயா? நமது ஒரு நாள் உழைப்பில் கடல் நீரை குறைத்து முட்டைகளை மீட்டு விட்டோம் பார்த்தாயா? என்றது ஆண் குருவி பெருமிதமாக.

முனிவர் சிரித்தபடி தொடர்ந்து நடந்தார். இங்கே குருவிகள் முட்டைகளை மீட்டது அவற்றின் உழைப்பாலா? இல்லை. முனிவரின் அருளால். ஆனால் அந்தக் குருவிகளுக்கு முனிவர் என்ற ஒருவரைப் பற்றியோ தவ வலிமை என்றால் என்ன என்பது பற்றியோ, எதுவுமே தெரியாது.ஆனால் தன்னம்பிக்கையுடன் கடல் நீரை அள்ளின .

அதே சமயம் குருவிகள் மட்டுமே கடல் நீரை மொண்டு சென்று ஊற்றிக் கொண்டிருக்காவிட்டால் முனிவர் தம் வழியே போயிருப்பார்.
அவரை மனம் நெகிழ வைத்தது எது? அவற்றின் உழைப்பும் முயற்சியும்தான். ஆக இங்கே முட்டைகள் மீட்கப்பட்டது, குருவிகளாலும் தான். முனிவராலும் தான். முனிவரின் ஆற்றல் அவற்றுக்குப் பக்க பலமாக வந்து சேர்ந்தது. குருவிகளின் உழைப்புத்தான் அதற்கு அடிப்படையாக அமைந்தது.

அன்பு நண்பர்களே .

எல்லையில்லா ஆற்றல் பெற்றவர்களே இளமைப் பருவம் வாழ்வின் இன்றியமையாப் பருவம்.
பருவத்தே பயிர் செய் என்பார்களே. இளமையில் வியர்வை சிந்தாவிட்டால் முதுமையில் கண்ணீர் சிந்த வேண்டி இருக்கும்.

எனவே விழித்திருக்கும் நேரமெல்லாம் உழைத்துக் கொண்டிருங்கள். வாழ்வில் எல்லா நேரமும் நல்ல நேரம்தான். உழைக்காத நேரம்தான் ராகு காலம். திட்டமிடுங்கள். ஒவ்வொன்றையும் திட்டமிடுங்கள். உழைத்துடுங்கள்

source…..unknown…input from a friend  of mine

Natarajan

Japan’s Atlantis? The unsolved underwater mystery….

The Yonaguna monument. Picture: Robert Schoch

WHEN scuba diving instructor Kihachiro Aratake plunged into the water off the coast of the Japanese island of Yonaguni in 1986, he discovered an incredible sight.

Six metres below the surface lay a series of monoliths that he described as appearing to be “terraced into the side of a mountain”. The huge rectangular formations had strikingly perfect 90 degree angles, including straight walls, steps and columns.

Over the following years experts descended upon the site in a bid to determine whether the structure was natural or man-made. Yet to this day, it remains a great unsolved mystery.

Initially it was proposed that the Yonaguni Monument was built when the area was above sea level some 10,000 years ago. So could ‘Japan’s Atlantis’ be a remnant of a preglacial civilisation that was eventually inundated?

Or could it be the result of an earthquake, putting it at 2000-3000 years old? Experts disagree.

As the structure was mapped out over the following years, more details came to light. Divers found what appeared to be a huge arch, as well as temples, carvings, paved streets and a large pyramid-like structure measuring 76 metres long at its base.

Masaaki Kimura, a marine geologist at the University of the Ryukyus in Japan who has dived at the site more than 100 times over the past 20 years to measure its formations, is convinced they are the remains of a city that sunk due to seismic events.

He has identified 10 structures off Yonaguni and a further five related structures off the main island of Okinawa, with the ruins spanning an area of 300 metres x 150 metres.

“I think it’s very difficult to explain away their origin as being purely natural, because of the vast amount of evidence of man’s influence on the structures,” he said.

The monoliths. Picture: Robert Schoch

The monoliths. Picture: Robert SchochSource:

“The largest structure looks like a complicated, monolithic, stepped pyramid that rises from a depth of 25 meters.

“The characters and animal monuments in the water, which I have been able to partially recover in my laboratory, suggest the culture comes from the Asian continent. One example I have described as an underwater sphinx resembles a Chinese or ancient Okinawan king.”

Other evidence that experts believe confirms it’s man-made include two round holes and a row of straight, smaller holes, which are interpreted as an attempt to split off a section of the rock.

However, the Morien Institute, an archaeological non-profit research group, conducted an expedition there in 1997 led by Dr Robert M. Schoch, a professor of science and mathematics from Boston University.

Dr Schoch, who has also conducted field research at sites in Pakistan, Egypt and the Canadian High Arctic, argues that it’s primarily a natural rock formation.

“I’m not convinced that any of the major features or structures are man-made steps or terraces, but that they’re all natural,” he wrote in his book Voices of the Rocks.

“It’s basic geology and classic stratigraphy for sandstones, which tend to break along planes and give you these very straight edges, particularly in an area with lots of faults and tectonic activity.

‘The Turtle’ formation at Yonagumi. Picture: Masahiro Kaji, Wikicommons
‘The Turtle’ formation at Yonagumi. Picture: Masahiro Kaji, WikicommonsSource:

“…The structure is, as far as I could determine, composed entirely of solid ‘living’ bedrock. No part of the monument is constructed of separate blocks of rock that have been placed into position.

“This is an important point, for carved and arranged rock blocks would definitively indicate a man-made origin for the structure — yet I could find no such evidence.”

He said it was possible that humans had since made modifications to the formations.

“We should also consider the possibility that the Yonaguni Monument is fundamentally a natural structure that was used, enhanced, and modified by humans in ancient times.”

Patrick D. Nunn, Professor of Oceanic Geoscience at the University of the South Pacific, has studied these structures extensively and also believed they were natural, saying: “There seems no reason to suppose that they are artificial.”

This was backed up by archeologist Richard J. Pearson, who argued that while stone tools and small camps were found at Yonaguni possibly from the 2500 BCE, they were small communities who were “not likely to have had extra energy for building stone monuments”.

Will we ever know for sure?

Source….www.news.com.au

Natarajan

From Software Engineer to Beekeeper…

“When I decided to quit, I knew my parents would not understand. That was in the year 2009, when many IT professionals were being laid off their jobs. I used this as an excuse to lie to my parents that I too had lost my job. My father offered to get me a job at the Karur Vysya Bank in Karur, but I refused.”

For someone with a will to succeed, the possibilities are endless. All it takes is hard work and perseverance.

30-year-old Krishnamurthy, founder, Honey Kart, quit his job as a technical programmer at Wipro, and borrowed money from friends to become a beekeeper. Today he is not only debt-free but also processes 500 kilograms of honey every month that sells for Rs 716 per kg.

This, at a time, when he was offered a promotion with an option to travel to the United States for an onsite project.

It was a bold decision for someone with no clear idea of what he wanted to do.

But his determination has paid off, and today this scientific beekeeper has over 800 regular customers and processes half a ton of pure honey every month.

No joy in working in the city

I was born in a small village in Karur district of Tamil Nadu. My father is a farmer. When I was in Std II, he decided that I was not doing well at the village school. He sent me to Fairlawns Home School in Yercaud. Since then, I have always been away from home in hostels. Later I joined the Kongu Engineering College, Perundurai, Erode, and graduated in Communications.

Krishnamurthy

There was no particular reason for this choice. I guess I just chose the course that was trending that year.

I did quite well in college. A campus interview got me placed at Wipro. I completed my training in Bangalore and moved to Wipro, Chennai. Everything was exciting at first, a new job in a new city and plenty of friends. But life soon settled into a machine-like existence. I woke up in the morning, took the bus to my office, where I spent the entire day and at times worked well into the night. It was not that I did not enjoy my work, but slowly a sense of dissatisfaction crept in. I felt no sense of accomplishment. City life lost its appeal. The novelty and excitement of the early days had worn off.

About two years into my job, I was offered a promotion. I was given an opportunity to move to United States for a project.

But by then, I was seriously thinking about quitting.

I felt that this was the right time to make a decision.

Do I take the onsite project and see where life takes me, or pursue something that would make me happy. After much thought, I decided to quit.

Finding myself a new career

It took me almost two years to decide, what I eventually wanted to do with my life. I would not call this a period of struggle, it was a period of learning, understanding myself, and understanding society.

When I decided to quit, I knew my parents would not understand. That was in the year 2009, when many IT professionals were being laid off their jobs. I used this as an excuse to lie to my parents that I too had lost my job. My father offered to get me a job at the Karur Vysya Bank in Karur, but I refused.

I moved in with some friends at Tiruppur. I was looking for some low-investment ventures. I first entered into share trading. Within a year, I lost one lakh and decided to quit.

Export was the next option. I stayed for a few weeks with another friend near Ernakulam in Kerala studying cuttlefish bone export; then researched turmeric, coir fibre and even some handicrafts.

I was looking into the export of honey, when I realised there is huge market for honey in our country. The more I learned about it, the more intrigued I became. I knew this was something I would enjoy doing.

The scientific beekeeper

By then, however, I had exhausted all my savings. I borrowed RS 300,000 from my friends and moved to Aravakuruchi, about 30 km from my village.

I purchased all the equipment I needed. There was plenty of bee flora in the area and farmers in the district were more than happy to let me place my hives in their farms. Pollination of bees actually helps boost crop yield by about 30 per cent with no additional labour or cost.

Unfortunately, within weeks I encountered my first major problem. My bees were struck by some disease and this was slowly destroying the entire hive and spreading to other colonies.

I contacted many professional beekeepers, both traditional and those using the latest technology. All of them suggested the use of antibiotics.

I believe that natural honey should not contain any antibiotics. Prolonged use of antibiotics for controlling or preventing the spread of disease in bees often results in accumulation of antibiotic residue in the honey produced.

I was looking for a solution without the use of antibiotics. I started a more comprehensive study on beekeeping. I researched on the problems faced by the beekeepers in our country, the pests and diseases that affect the bees and the reasons behind it.

I understood that natural beehives are never infected by disease. It was only when man started to control it that these problems cropped up. We now needed to go back to the fundamentals; we needed to reverse everything that man did and mimic the natural environment that bees thrived in.

I slowly began to create the ideal environment for my bees — well-aerated pollution free surroundings with a good water source. It took nearly a year for me to understand all the finer nuances of beekeeping. I had lost more than 65 per cent of my bees to disease, but steadily the numbers improved and I recovered them all.

Today, I have disease free colonies producing high quality honey without the use of any antibiotics. If stored in glass bottles at room temperature, my honey has a shelf life of five years.

Over a period, I began to specialise in uni-floral honey. During the flowering season, I direct my bees to a particular flora, namely coriander, drumstick, glory lily, mango, jamun or sunflower. The honey thus collected retains the special flavours and qualities of that particular flora. The taste, smell and colour of every uni-floral honey are unique. Mango honey will be sweeter while coriander is better known for its health benefits.

We have recently introduced a special honey for babies and pregnant women. This is processed from the season’s first harvest ensuring that there are no allergies.

A lot of research went into picking the right flora, identifying its medicinal properties and learning how it can enhance the goodness of honey. This earned me the title of a scientific beekeeper.

Perseverance: The key to success

The local market did not understand the quality of my honey or the efforts I put in. So I started my own website and a Facebook page. I do most of my business online. Initially it was all about trying to survive, but today, I have more than 800 regular customers, mostly from the Southern States. I process about half a ton of honey every month, selling it at Rs 716 per kg.

A year ago, I repaid all my loans. Now I have plans to expand. With the diverse flora available in our country, the possibilities are limitless. Though I have done well for myself, I still feel that my parents don’t approve. They would rather have their son in a white-collar job in the city.

But I did not want to live my life as an IT engineer. I wanted to prove that I could be just as successful in my hometown.

I do not regret any of my decisions. The four years of my education, two years at Wipro and the subsequent years of uncertainty, everything has moulded me to what I am today. We have but one life to live and I don’t believe in living a life of regrets.

In the end, success is all about making the best use of your resources and perseverance. Instead of waiting until your old age to grieve about all that could have been, be bold enough to follow your heart. Find out what makes you happy and never give up.

Photographs: HoneyKart/Facebook

source….S Saraswathi in http://www.rediff.com

Natarajan

Message for the Day…. ” Don’t Forget the Truth that there is a Higher Power which is Driving You…”

Sathya Sai Baba

In the twilight of dusk, one mistakes a thick rope for a snake. When the place is lit, only rope remains – the snake was never there. A momentary delusion caused the appearance of the snake and the absence of the rope. This phenomenon is called Maya. Maya makes you imagine the presence of what is not there and believe in the existence of that which is nonexistent. The combined power ofPrakriti, Avidya and Maya (Phenomenal world, Ignorance and Delusion) makes people forget their true nature. People often imagine that they accomplished many things, and believe that all their achievements are entirely due to their own efforts and capabilities. They forget the truth that there is a higher power which is the driving force for action as well as the results thereof! This is the effect of delusion (bhrama). To help get rid of this delusion and enable one to comprehend the inherent divine nature, the ancients suggested prayers.