Message for the Day…” When the indications are that dharma is in danger, The Lord will come to protect dharma from harm.”

The Lord descends now and then to uplift the downtrodden and to reestablish righteousness (dharma). Clearly grasp this truth. Many who read the Bhagavad Gita take it that the Lord incarnates when dharmais ‘destroyed’ and when the forces of unrighteousness (adharma)begin to prevail. This is incorrect; The Gita does not say nor is there any basis to draw the conclusion that dharma gets destroyed. The word used is ‘diminish’ (glaani); that is to say, when the indications are that dharma is in danger, “The Lord will come to protect dharma from harm.” Lord Krishna did not say that He will come down to protect and preserve it after dharma has been destroyed! Of what use is a doctor after life has left? So too, the Lord will rush when the practice is declining or weakening. The protection of dharma is the task of the Lord, for dharma is the very breath of every soul (jivi).

Sathya Sai Baba

8 things everyone should do before 8 a.m…” You are the Designer of Your Own Destiny…”!!!

Life is busy. It can feel impossible to move toward your dreams. If you have a full-time job and kids, it’s even harder.

How do you move forward?

If you don’t purposefully carve time out every day to progress and improve ,  without question your time will get lost in the vacuum of our increasingly crowded lives.

Before you know it, you’ll be old and withered  —  wondering where all that time went.

As Harold Hill has said —  ”You pile up enough tomorrows, and you’ll find you are left with nothing but a lot of empty yesterdays.”

Rethinking Your Life and Getting Out of Survival Mode

This article is intended to challenge you to rethink your entire approach to life. The purpose is to help you simplify and get back to the fundamentals.

Sadly, most people’s lives are filled to the brim with the nonessential and trivial. They don’t have time to build toward anything meaningful.

They are in survival mode. Areyou in survival mode?

Like Bilbo Baggins, most of us are like butter scraped over too much bread. Unfortunately, the bread is not even our own, but someone else’s. Few have taken the time to take their lives into their own hands.

It was social and cultural to live our lives on other people’s terms just one generation ago. And many millennials are perpetuating this process simply because it’s the only worldview we’ve been taught.

But there is a growing, collective consciousness that with a lot of work and intention  you can live every moment of your life on your own terms.

You are the designer of your destiny.

You are responsible.

You get to decide. You must decide  —  because if you don’t, someone else will. Indecision is a bad decision.

With this short morning routine, your life will quickly change.

It may seem like a long list, but in short it’s really quite simple:

  • Wake up
  • Get in the zone
  • Get moving
  • Put the right food in your body
  • Get ready
  • Get inspired
  • Get perspective
  • Do something to move you forward

Let’s begin:

1. Get a Healthy, 7-Plus Hours of Sleep

Let’s face it :  Sleep is just as important as eating and drinking water. Despite this, millions of people do not sleep enough and experience insane problems as a result.

The National Sleep Foundation conducted surveys revealing that at least 40 million Americans suffer from more than 70 different sleep disorders. Additionally, 60% of adults and 69% of children experience one or more sleep problems a few nights or more during a week.

In addition, “more than 40 percent of adults experience daytime sleepiness severe enough to interfere with their daily activities at least a few days each month — with 20 percent reporting problem sleepiness a few days a week or more.”

On the flip side, getting a healthy amount of sleep is linked to:

  • Increased memory
  • Longer life
  • Decreased inflammation
  • Increased creativity
    • Increased attention and focus
    • Decreased fat and increased muscle mass with exercise
    • Lower stress
    • Decreased dependence on stimulants like caffeine
    • Decreased risk of getting into accidents
    • Decreased risk of depression
    • And tons more — Google it

    The rest of this blog post is worthless if you don’t make sleep a priority. Who cares if you wake up at 5 a.m. if you went to bed three hours earlier?

    You won’t last long.

  • You may use stimulants to compensate, but that isn’t sustainable. In the long run, your health will fall apart. The goal needs to be long-term sustainability.

    2. Prayer and Meditation Facilitate Clarity and Abundance

    After waking from a healthy and restful sleep session, prayer and meditation can help you orient yourself toward the positive. What you focus on expands.

    Prayer and meditation help facilitate intense gratitude for all that you have. Gratitude is having an abundance mindset. When you think abundantly, the world is your oyster. There is limitless opportunity and possibility for you.

    People are magnets. When you’re grateful for what you have, you will attract more of the positive and good. Gratitude is contagious.

    Gratitude may be the most important key to success. It has been called the mother of all virtues.

    If you start every morning putting yourself in a space of gratitude and clarity, you will attract the best the world has to offer and not get distracted

  • 3. Hard Physical Activity

    If you want to be among the healthy, happy, and productive people in the world, get in the habit of regular exercise. Many people go immediately to the gym to get their body moving. I have lately found that doing yard work in the wee hours of the morning generates an intense inflow of inspiration and clarity.

    Whatever your preference, get your body moving.

    If you don’t care about your body, every other aspect of your life will suffer. Humans are holistic beings.

    4. Consume 30 Grams of Protein

    Donald Layman, professor emeritus of nutrition at the University of Illinois, recommends consuming at least 30 grams of protein for breakfast. Similarly, Tim Ferris, in his book “The 4-Hour Body,” also recommends 30 grams of protein 30 minutes after waking up.

    According to Tim, his father did this and lost 19 pounds in one month.

    Protein-rich foods keep you full longer than other foods because they take longer to leave the stomach. Also, protein keeps blood-sugar levels steady, which prevents spikes in hunger.

  • Eating protein first decreases your white carbohydrate cravings. These are the types of carbs that get you fat — think bagels, toast, and donuts.

    Tim makes four recommendations for getting adequate protein in the morning:

    • Eat at least 40% of your breakfast calories as protein.
    • Do it with two or three whole eggs — each egg has about 6 grams of protein.
    • If you don’t like eggs, use something like turkey bacon, organic pork bacon or sausage, or cottage cheese.
    • Or you could always do a protein shake with water.

    5. Take a Cold Shower

    Tony Robbins starts every morning by jumping into a 57-degree Fahrenheit pool.

    Why would he do such a thing?

  • Cold water immersion radically facilitates physical and mental wellness. When practiced regularly, it provides long-lasting changes to your body’s immune, lymphatic, circulatory, and digestive systems that improve the quality of your life. It can also increase weight-loss because it boosts your metabolism.

    There is, of course, an initial fear of stepping into a cold shower. Without a doubt, if you’ve tried this before, you have found yourself standing outside the shower dreading the thought of going in.

    You may have even talked yourself out of it and said, “Maybe tomorrow.” And turned the hot water handle before getting in.

    Or maybe you jumped in but quickly turned the hot water on?

    What has helped me is thinking about it like a swimming pool. It’s a slow, painful death to get into a cold pool slowly. You just need to jump in. After 20 seconds, you’re fine.

    It’s the same way with taking a cold shower. You get in, you heart starts beating like crazy. Then, after 20 seconds, you feel fine.

  • To me, it increases my willpower and boosts my creativity and inspiration. While standing with the cold water hitting my back, I practice slowing my breathing and calming down. After I’ve chilled out, I feel super happy and inspired. Lots of ideas start flowing and I become way motivated to achieve my goals.
  • 6. Listen to or Read Uplifting Content

    Ordinary people seek entertainment. Extraordinary people seek education and learning. It is common for the world’s most successful people to read at least one book per week. They are constantly learning.

    I can easily get through one audiobook per week by just listening during my commute to school and while walking on campus.

    Taking even 15 to 30 minutes every morning to read uplifting and instructive information changes you. It puts you in the zone to perform at your highest.

    Over a long enough period of time, you will have read hundreds of books. You’ll be knowledgeable on several topics. You’ll think and see the world differently. You’ll be able to make more connections between different topics.

    7. Review Your Life Vision

If you read your long-term goals every day, you will think about them every day. If you think about them every day and spend your days working toward them, they’ll manifest.

Achieving goals is a science. There’s no confusion or ambiguity to it. If you follow a simple pattern, you can accomplish all of your goals, no matter how big they are.

A fundamental aspect of that is writing them down and reviewing them every day.

8. Do at Least One Thing Toward Long-Term Goals

Willpower is like a muscle that depletes when it is exercised. Similarly, our ability to make high-quality decisions becomes fatigued over time. The more decisions you make, the lower quality they become  —  the weaker your willpower.

Consequently, you need to do the hard stuff first thing in the morning — the important stuff.

If you don’t, it simply will not get done. By the end of your day, you’ll be exhausted. You’ll be fried. There will be a million reasons to just start tomorrow. And you will start tomorrow  —  which is never.

So your mantra becomes: The worst comes first. Do that thing you’ve been needing to do. Then do it again tomorrow.

If you take just one step toward you big goals every day, you’ll realize those goals weren’t really far away.

Conclusion

After you’ve done this, no matter what you have for the rest of your day, you’ll have done the important stuff first. You’ll have put yourself in a place to succeed. You’ll have inched toward your dreams.

Because you’ll have done all these things, you’ll show up better in life. You’ll be better at your job. You’ll be better in your relationships. You’ll be happier. You’ll be more confident. You’ll be more bold and daring. You’ll have more clarity and vision.

Your life will shortly change.

You can’t have mornings like this consistently without waking up to all that is incongruent in your life. Those things you despise will meet their demise. They’ll disappear and never return.

You’ll quickly find you’re doing the work you’re passionate about.

Your relationships will be passionate, meaningful, deep, and fun.

You will have freedom and abundance.

The world, and the universe, will respond to you in beautiful ways.

Benjamin Hardy is the foster parent of three children and the author of “Slipstream Time Hacking.” He’s pursuing his Ph.D. in organizational psychology. To learn more about him, visit BenjaminHardy.com or connect with him on Twitter.

Read the original article on Medium. Copyright 2015. Follow Medium on Twitter.

Source…..

Natarajan

Message for the Day….” Joy and peace do not reside in external objects; they are within you….”

The body is the temple of the individual (jiva), so whatever happens in that temple is the concern of that individual. So too the world is the body of the Lord, and all that happens in it, good or bad, is His concern. From the observed fact of the relationship between the individual and the body, know the truth of the unobservable relationship of the Lord and creation. The relationship of the individual (jiva) and the Lord, the kinship between the two, can be grasped by everyone who acquires three chief instruments: (1) a mind unsullied by attachment and hatred, (2) a speech unsullied by falsehood and (3) a body unsullied by violence. Joy and peace do not reside in external objects; they are within you. But in your foolishness, you search for them outside yourself, in a world from which, today or tomorrow, you are bound to depart. Therefore, wake up now! Try to know the essence of the eternal truth. Try to experience the love that is God Himself.

Sathya Sai Baba

” WHAT IS A KUDO, AS IN “KUDOS TO YOU”….?

First, it should be noted that “kudos” is not the plural form of “kudo”, so a “kudo” was once technically nothing. However, because so many people in the last century, mainly in the United States, have thought kudos was plural, in some dictionaries today “kudo” is considered a valid word meaning the same thing as kudos (yet another word created via back-formation).

To answer your question, kudos in English means:

1) Praise / Accolades

2) Credit for one’s achievements

The word “kudos” comes from the Greek κῦδος (kudos), meaning “glory” or “fame”.  The “-os” ending in Greek typically indicates a singular noun and is supposed to be pronounced like “-ose”, rather than “-oze”, as many Americans usually pronounce it, “koo-doze”, or as a lot of British people tend to pronounce it “-oss”, “cue-doss”.

The word made its way into English around the late 18th century / early 19th century, meaning pretty much the same thing as it means today.  The first documented instance of the “singular” word “kudo” didn’t pop up until 1926.

Source….www.today i foundout.com

Natarajan

Jiuzhai Valley National Park May Be The Most Amazing Park You Ever Set Eyes On…

America’s national parks are all beautiful in their own right. We’ve got The Grand Canyon, Yellowstone, Glacier Park…our list of incredible natural wonders is endless. But take a trip across the Pacific Ocean and you’ll come to China, where one national park in particular might steal your heart.

Deep in the Sichuan region of the country, Jiuzhai Valley National Park is home to some of the most spectacular sights…let’s take a quick tour.

Welcome to Jiuzhai Valley National Park.

 

Welcome to Jiuzhai Valley National Park.

Yes, this is a real place.

Yes, this is a real place.

While one of the best times to visit is during the spring, you can’t beat that fall foliage.

While one of the best times to visit is during the spring, you can't beat that fall foliage.

And winter isn’t bad, either.

And winter isn't bad, either.

The park is known for its colorful lakes and striking, multilevel waterfalls.

The park is known for its colorful lakes and striking, multilevel waterfalls.

This one is called Arrow Bamboo Lake Waterfall.

This one is called Arrow Bamboo Lake Waterfall.

Even the most subtle streams are beautiful.

Even the most subtle streams are beautiful.

This is Nuorilang Falls. The massive beauty is the widest highland waterfall in China.

This is Nuorilang Falls. The massive beauty is the widest highland waterfall in China.

They are 65 feet high and over 1,000 feet wide.

Five Flower Lake is one of the park’s main attractions.

Five Flower Lake is one of the park's main attractions.

The multicolored waters are home to countless ancient tree trunks.

The multicolored waters are home to countless ancient tree trunks.

Long Lake is a crescent-shaped body of water high up in the mountains

Long Lake is a crescent-shaped body of water high up in the mountains.

At nearly 10,000 feet above sea level, the lake is also the deepest in the park.

Ice and snow melt contributes to the lakes, but also creates rapids like this one.

Ice and snow melt contributes to the lakes, but also creates rapids like this one.

So…who’s coming with me?! This seems like something straight out of the movies, but it’s entirely real. Isn’t nature incredible?

Source….Amanda  Black in http://www.viralnova.com

Amanda hails from the great state of Maine. In the past, she’s written for sites like TheKnot.com, ShermansTravel.com, and Thrillist.com. On ViralNova, you can catch her covering animal cuteness, travel, DIY tricks, and everything in between!

Natarajan

 

” They Said his Life was Over. He Became India’s First Paraplegic in the Aviation Industry Instead…”

Sandeep Kumar was just seven when doctors gave him an expired penicillin injection. It left him in a coma for a year followed by paralysis in the lower half of his body. Today, this 24-year-old man, who is the first paraplegic to be employed in the aviation industry, glides around on a wheelchair at Delhi airport – helping other people with disabilities.

Sandeep Kumar woke up from a year-long coma at the age of seven and found that he could not move the limbs in the lower half of his body. The incident changed his entire life. Confined to a wheelchair, he began to struggle to do everyday things. There were no access ramps in his school, children and teachers there would treat him differently, and his condition restricted him from doing many activities that he wanted to do.

“In small towns, people tend to believe that once you are disabled your life is over. They told my father to discontinue my studies and open a small shop for me. When I joined the school again, many people told him not to waste his money on me. It was disheartening but I did not let this affect me. I had my family’s support and a positive mind. I continued my life with the same enthusiasm,” says Sandeep.

Most people would be demotivated with this sudden setback in life, but Sandeep dealt with the situation with a great attitude and determination.

Sandeep became paraplegic at a young age of seven.

Sandeep became paraplegic at a young age of seven.

“I had no other choice but to accept it and deal with it. Nothing would have changed my situation. So I thought I should channelize my energy into something else and not think about what I was missing,” he says.

He did not blame the doctor, nor did he question his fate. Sandeep continued his life with the same passion and will that he had always exhibited. He completed his engineering degree in computer science and was selected for a job by an MNC during campus placements.

But this was not his goal. Not willing to restrict himself to a cubicle, Sandeep wanted to explore the world, meet new people, and do much more.

He gave up the opportunity of working at the MNC and decided instead to work in customer service to help people in need. He joined one of India’s leading aviation groups, IndiGo Airlines. And today, this 24-year-old enthusiastic man is India’s first paraplegic to be employed with the aviation industry.

“Working in an MNC would have restricted me to one location. Here, I am a wheelchair-bound person helping others. I find this empowering at so many levels,” he says.

Powered by a wheelchair, Sandeep glides across the Delhi airport terminal to assist people in need. His job requires him to be always active.

He completed his engineering and then joined the aviation industry.

He completed his engineering and then joined the aviation industry.

He helps people with special needs with their boarding passes and gets them through security check. He also addresses other queries by passengers and helps them get resolved.

“Up until now, the aviation industry did not hire people with disabilities. When I applied for the job I did not expect to get selected. I just thought I’d give it a try anyway. After three-four months I got a call from the airline that I had been selected and I joined them in October 2014,” says Sandeep.

Originally from Jhansi, Sandeep has been living alone for several years now and is completely independent.

He recalls an incident when a friend in school told him that he would not be able to become an engineer. “I got bad grades in my 10th class. That was the first time I heard of IIT and felt that I would like to get admission in this prestigious institute. My friend told me that I would not be able to do so because of my disability. That incident triggered in me a desire to pursue engineering. Though I could not get into any of the IITs, I managed to get admission in a government college in Kanpur. What is amusing though is that the friend who told me I could not do it failed to become an engineer while I went on to become one,” chuckles Sandeep.

Having faced various challenges in his life, Sandeep now understands the plight of people with disabilities. He trains the loaders at the airport to treat the disabled and the elderly with care and respect.

“The transfer from a chair to the aircraft seat is a painful process for someone who is old and/or disabled but it can be minimised with proper training,” he says.

In just a year’s time, Sandeep has become an inspiration to many at his workplace. “They always praise me for the way I dress up and behave in the office. It feels good when my efforts are recognised,” says Sandeep.

Having faced discrimination for most of his life, Sandeep feels a sense of normalcy now.

“I go to office like a regular person. I don’t feel that I am missing my legs. There are so many things that I can do. People have started treating me normally too. They don’t stare at me or give me special attention. This is what I want – a regular life,” he says.

Sandeep is also a good singer – he was part of a band during his college days and still performs occasionally. “My job keeps me occupied these days and music has taken a back seat but I still enjoy singing whenever I am free,” says Sandeep.

Sandeep now wants to set an example for people with special needs so that other companies in the aviation industry hire people with disabilities too. He runs an NGO called Ally Foundation, which focuses on empowering the disabled.

In addition to this, he has also set his eye on participating in the national Paralympics in powerlifting. “I want to write a book too,” he quickly adds, before signing off.

 

Source…..Shreya Pareek …www.the betterindia .com

Natarajan

Message for the Day… “Love knows no fear, it promotes truth, it finds peace, it builds faith, and it promotes concord…”

Sathya Sai Baba

The individual ‘I’ believes it is limited; but that is an illusion. It is the same Universal Spirit, imagining itself to be limited. This awareness can come to you either through a flash of intellectual analysis or a flash of Universal Love. The awareness is an act of identification which requires Love. Love is God; Love is the means and end. That is why there are no atheists for there is no being without love of some kind or other. And love of any kind, of any measure, is but a spark of Divinity. Love knows no fear, it promotes truth, it finds peace, it builds faith, and it promotes concord. To develop love, the easiest, highest and the most fruitful sacrifice is that of the ego. Crucify it and be free. Dedicate it to God, and be rich and happy beyond all your imagination.

” போதும் மழையே.. பொறுத்தருள்வாய்…!!!

காஞ்சிபுரம் மாவட்டம் நீஞ்சல் மடுவில் ஏற்பட்ட வெள்ளப் பெருக்கினால் செங்கல்பட்டு மகாலட்சுமி நகர் பகுதியில் முற்றிலும் மூழ்கிப்போன குடியிருப்புகள். | படங்கள்: காஞ்சி கோ.கார்த்திக்

செங்கல்பட்டு நீஞ்சல் மடுவில் ஏற்பட்ட வெள்ளப் பெருக்கினால் மகாலட்சுமி நகர் பகுதியில் முதல்மாடியை நெருங்கி வரும் வெள்ளநீர்.

காஞ்சிபுரம் மாவட்டம் மதுராந்தகம் அடுத்த தச்சூர்-தேவாதூர் கிராமத்தில் விவசாய நிலங்களை மூழ்கடித்த வெள்ளம்.

கொளவாய் ஏரியின் வெள்ளப் பெருக்கால் செங்கல்பட்டு ஜேசிகே நகர் குடியிருப்புப் பகுதிகளை தண்ணீர் சூழ்ந்துள்ளது.

 

மதுராந்தகம் அடுத்த அருங்குனம் கிராமத்தில் தண்ணீரில் முழ்கியுள்ள நாற்றங்கால்.

பேசின் பாலம் அருகே தண்டவாளத்தில் மழைநீர் தேங்கியுள்ள நிலையில், மெதுவாக இயக்கப்பட்ட எக்ஸ்பிரஸ் ரயில். | படம்: ச.கார்த்திகேயன்

சென்னையின் நுழைவு வாயிலாக கருதப்படும் சைதாபேட்டை பாலத்தின் தடுப்பைத் தாண்டி குடியிருப்புகளை மூழ்கடித்து பாய்கிறது அடையாறு வெள்ளம்

மோசமான பாதிப்பை சந்தித்துள்ள கோட்டூர்புரத்தின் பிரதான சாலையை ஆக்கிரமித்து காட்டாற்று வெள்ளம் போல செல்லும் மழைநீர்

அசோக் பில்லரின் நான்கு திசைகளிலும் நீர் சூழ்ந்ததால் அசோக்நகர், கே.கே நகர் உள்ளிட்ட பகுதிகள் முற்றிலும் பாதிக்கப்பட்டுள்ளன.

தி.நகர் தெற்கு போக் சாலையில் வெள்ளத்தில் சிக்கியவர் தெர்மாகூல் மீது டிஷ் ஆண்டானா பலகையை வைத்து அதன்மீது அமர்ந்தபடி பாதுகாப்பாக வெள்ளத்தை கடந்து வருகிறார் | படங்கள்: க. ஸ்ரீபரத்

சென்னை அருகே சிங்கபெருமாள் கோயில் விஞ்சூர் ஏரியில் உடைப்பு ஏற்பட்டதால் தேசிய நெடுஞ்சாலையில் ஏற்பட்டுள்ள வெள்ளப்பெருக்கில் நீந்தி செல்லும் பேருந்து | படம்: காஞ்சி கோ.கார்த்திக்

ஆவடி ரயில் நிலையத்தில் தண்டவாளத்தில் தேங்கியுள்ள மழை நீர். இதனால் ரயில் சேவை முற்றிலும் பாதிக்கப்பட்டுள்ளது.

கூவம் ஆற்றில் கரை புரண்டு ஓடும் வெள்ளம்

அண்ணாசாலை மின்வாரிய அலுவலகத்துக்குள் வெள்ள நீர் புகுந்ததால் அண்ணாசாலையின் முக்கிய பகுதிகள் இருளில் மூழ்கின. மின்வாரிய அலுவலகத்துக்குள் புகுந்த நீரை வெளியேற்ற முடியாமல் தவிக்கும் மின்துறை ஊழியர்கள்.

பூந்தமல்லி நெடுஞ்சாலையையும் எழும்பூரையும் இணைக்கும் கெங்குசாமி நாயுடு சுரங்கப்பாதையில் நீச்சல் குளம்போல நீர் தேங்கியிருக்கிறது.

சென்னை அருகே செங்குன்றம் பகுதியில் ரெட்டேரி முழுக் கொள்ளளவை எட்டியுள்ளது. ஏரியை ஒட்டிய பகுதிகளில் உள்ள குடியிருப்புகளில் தண்ணீர் புகுந்துள்ளது.

செம்பரம்பாக்கம் ஏரியின் உபரிநீர் அதிகளவில் திறக்கப்பட்டதால் அடையாற்றை ஒட்டியுள்ள தாழ்வான பகுதிகள் நீரில் மூழ்கின. வீட்டுக்குள் தண்ணீர் புகுந்ததால் கட்டிடத்தின் மேற்கூரையில் ஏறி உதவியை எதிர்பார்த்து காத்திருக்கும் மக்கள்.

அனகாபுத்தூர் தரைப்பாலம் மூழ்கியுள்ள நிலையில் அருகிலுள்ள குடியிருப்புகளின் மேற்கூரையில் தஞ்சமடைந்த மக்கள்.

அடையாற்றின் மத்தியில் உள்ள மரத்தில் சிலர் சிக்கியிருப்பதாக பொதுமக்கள் கூறியதால், தேடும் பணியில் ஈடுபட்ட பேரிடர் மீட்புக் குழுவினர்.

அனகாபுத்தூர் பகுதியில் வெள்ளத்தில் சிக்கியுள்ள மக்களுக்கு உணவுப் பொட்டலங்களை அனுப்பி உதவும் தன்னார்வ இளைஞர்கள்.

மதுரவாயல்-தாம்பரம் பை-பாஸ் சாலையில் தண்ணீரில் மிதக்கும் வாகனங்கள். அப்பகுதியில் போக்குவரத்து முற்றிலும் துண்டிக்கப்பட்டது. | படங்கள்: ம.பிரபு

Source….’தி இந்து’ புகைப்பட நிருபர்கள்… http://www.tamil.thehindu.com

Natarajan

This Video of People Forming a Human Chain to Save a Drowning Man Shows the Spirit of Chennai…

The nonstop rains since Monday night in Chennai have flooded several roads in many parts of the city, creating havoc everywhere. In such devastating conditions, residents are showing boundless strength and courage, and are leaving no stone unturned when it comes to helping those who are stranded in a crisis.

Chennaites displayed immense selflessness once again this Tuesday, when many of them got together to save a drowning man on a flooded road. The entire incident was recorded from inside a car and shared by Raghavan Chakravarthi, who was driving towards Tambaram when flood waters suddenly hit a road near Padappai. It shows how a bike rider lost his balance and got trapped in a gush of water that could have washed him away.

But bystanders did not think twice before abandoning their vehicles and running towards him in knee-deep water to form a human chain and pull him to safety.

Featured Image Credit: Twitter

Source…. Tanaya Singh in http://www.the betterindia.com and http://www.you tube.com

Natarajan

” These are the 51 words and phrases we commonly misuse….”

WE’RE all guilty of misusing words and using certain phrases in the wrong context.

Now a linguistics expert from Harvard, Steven Pinker, has written a book designed to help us all out.

In The Sense of Style, Pinker breaks down the 51 most common words and phrases people stuff up, and explains how we should be using them.

Here is the full list, as republished in The Telegraph UK:

1. Adverse means detrimental and does not mean averse or disinclined.

Correct use: “There were adverse effects.” / “I’m not averse to doing that.”

2. Appraise means to ascertain the value of and does not mean to apprise or to inform.

Correct use: “I appraised the jewels.” / “I apprised him of the situation.”

3. As far as means the same as but cannot be used the same way as as for.

Correct use: “As far as the money is concerned …” / “As for the money …”

4. Begs the question means assumes what it should be proving and does not mean raises the question.

5. Bemused means bewildered and does not mean amused.

Correct: “The unnecessarily complex plot left me bemused.” / “The silly comedy amused me.”

6. Cliché is a noun and is not an adjective.

Correct use: “Shakespeare used a lot of clichés.” / “The plot was so clichéd.”

7. Credible means believable and does not mean credulous or gullible.

Correct use: “His sales pitch was not credible.” / “The con man took advantage of credulous people.”

8. Criteria is the plural, not the singular of criterion.

Correct: “These are important criteria.”

9. Data is a plural count noun not a mass noun. Note: “Data is rarely used as a plural today, just as candelabra and agenda long ago ceased to be plurals,” Pinker writes. “But I still like it.”

Correct use: “This datum supports the theory, but many of the other data refute it.”

10. Depreciate means to decrease in value and does not mean to deprecate or to disparage. Correct use: “My car has depreciated a lot over the years.” / “She deprecated his efforts.”

11. Dichotomy means two mutually exclusive alternatives and does not mean difference or discrepancy.

Correct use: “There is a dichotomy between even and odd numbers.” / “There is a discrepancy between what we see and what is really there.”

12. Disinterested means unbiased and does not mean uninterested.

Correct use: “The dispute should be resolved by a disinterested judge.” / “Why are you so uninterested in my story?”

13. Enervate means to sap or to weaken and does not mean to energise.

Correct use: “That was an enervating rush hour commute.” / “That was an energising cappuccino.”

14. Enormity means extreme evil and does not mean enormousness. [Note: It is acceptable to use it to mean a deplorable enormousness.]

15. Flaunt means to show off and does not mean to flout.

Correct use: “She flaunted her abs.” / “She flouted the rules.”

16. Flounder means to flop around ineffectually and does not mean to founder or to sink to the bottom.

17. Fortuitous means coincidental or unplanned and does not mean fortunate.

Correct use: “Running into my old friend was fortuitous.” / “It was fortunate that I had a good amount of savings after losing my job.”

18. Fulsome means unctuous, excessively or insincerely complimentary and does not mean full or copious.

Correct use: “She didn’t believe his fulsome love letter.” / “The bass guitar had a full sound.”

19. Homogeneous is pronounced as homo-genius and “homogenous” is not a word but a corruption of homogenised.

Correct use: “The population was not homogeneous; it was a melting pot.”

20. Hone means to sharpen and does not mean to home in on or to converge upon.

Correct use: “She honed her writing skills.” / “We’re homing in on a solution.”

21. Hotbutton means an emotional, divisive controversy and does not mean a hot topic.

Correct use: “She tried to stay away from the hot button of abortion.” / “Drones are a hot topic in the tech world.”

22. Hung means suspended and does not mean suspended from the neck until dead.

Correct use: “I hung the picture on my wall.” / “The prisoner was hanged.”

23. Intern (verb) means to detain or to imprison and does not mean to inter or to bury.

 

Correct use: “The rebels were interned in the military jail.” / “The king was interred with his jewels.”

24. Ironic means uncannily incongruent and does not mean inconvenient or unfortunate.

Correct use: “It was ironic that I forgot my textbook on human memory.” / “It was unfortunate that I forgot my textbook the night before the quiz.”

25. Irregardless is not a word but a portmanteau of regardless and irrespective. [Note: Pinker acknowledges that certain schools of thought regard “irregardless” as simply non-standard, but he insists it should not even be granted that.]

26. Literally means in actual fact and does not mean figuratively.

Correct use: “I didn’t mean for you to literally run over here.” / “I’d rather die than listen to another one of his lectures — figuratively speaking, of course!”

27. Luxuriant means abundant or florid and does not mean luxurious.

Correct use: “The poet has a luxuriant imagination.” / “The car’s fine leather seats were luxurious.”

28. Meretricious means tawdry or offensively insincere and does not mean meritorious.

Correct use: “We rolled our eyes at the meretricious speech.” / “The city applauded the meritorious mayor.”

29. Mitigate means to alleviate and does not mean to militate or to provide reasons for.

Correct use: “The spray should mitigate the bug problem.” / “Their inconceivable differences will militate against the treaty.”

30. New Age means spiritualistic, holistic and does not mean modern, futuristic.

Correct use: “He is a fan of New Age mindfulness techniques.” / “That TV screen is made from a high-end modern glass.”

31. Noisome means smelly and does not mean noisy.

Correct use: “I covered my nose when I walked past the noisome dump.” / “I covered my ears when I heard the noisy motorcycle speed by.”

32. Nonplussed means stunned, bewildered and does not mean bored, unimpressed.

Correct use: “The market crash left the experts nonplussed.” / “His market pitch left the investors unimpressed.”

33. Opportunism means seizing or exploiting opportunities and does not mean creating or promoting opportunities.

Correct use: “His opportunism brought him to the head of the company.” / “The party ran on promoting economic opportunities for the middle class.”

34. Parameter means a variable and does not mean a boundary condition, a limit.

Correct use: “The forecast is based on parameters like inflation and interest rates.” / “We need to work within budgetary limits.”

35. Phenomena is a plural count noun, not a mass noun.

Correct use: “The phenomenon was intriguing, but it was only one of many phenomena gathered by the telescope.”

36. Politically correct means dogmatically left-liberal and does not mean fashionable, trendy. [Note: Pinker considers its contemporary roots as a pejorative term by American and British conservatives, not its more casual use as meaning inoffensive.]

37. Practicable means easily put into practice and does not mean practical.

Correct use: “His French was practicable in his job, which required frequent trips to Paris.” / “Learning French before taking the job was a practical decision.”

38. Proscribe means to condemn, to forbid and does not mean to prescribe, to recommend, to direct.

Correct use: “The policy proscribed employees from drinking at work.” / “The doctor prescribed an antibiotic.”

39. Protagonist means active character and does not mean proponent.

Correct use: “Vito Corleone was the protagonist in The Godfather.” / “He is a proponent of solar energy.”

40. Refute means to prove to be false and does not mean to allege to be false, to try to refute. [Note: That is, it must be used only in factual cases.]

Correct use: “His work refuted the theory that the Earth was flat.”

41. Reticent means shy, restrained and does not mean reluctant.

Correct use: “He was too reticent to ask her out.” / “When rain threatens, fans are reluctant to buy tickets to the ball game.”

42. Shrunk, sprung, stunk, and sunk are used in the past participle, not the past tense.

Correct use: “I’ve shrunk my shirt.” / “I shrank my shirt.”

43. Simplistic means naively or overly simple and does not mean simple or pleasingly simple.

Correct use: “His simplistic answer suggested he wasn’t familiar with the material.” / “She liked the chair’s simple look.”

44. Staunch means loyal, sturdy and does not mean to stanch a flow.

Correct use: “Her staunch supporters defended her in the press.” / “The nurse was able to stanch the bleeding.”

45. Tortuous means twisting and does not mean torturous.

Correct use: “The road through the forest was tortuous.” / “Watching their terrible acting for two hours was a torturous experience.”

46. Unexceptionable means not worthy of objection and does not mean unexceptional, ordinary.

Correct use: “No one protested her getting the prize, because she was an unexceptionable choice.” / “They protested her getting the prize, because she was an unexceptional choice.”

47. Untenable means indefensible or unsustainable and does not mean painful or unbearable.

Correct use: “Now that all the facts have been revealed, that theory is untenable.” / “Her death brought him unbearable sadness.”

48. Urban legend means an intriguing and widely circulated but false story and does not mean someone who is legendary in a city.

Correct use: “Alligators in the sewers is an urban legend.” / “Al Capone was a legendary gangster in Chicago.”

49. Verbal means in linguistic form and does not mean oral, spoken.

Correct use: “Visual memories last longer than verbal ones.”

50. An effect means an influence. While to effect means to put into effect, to affect means either to influence or to fake.

Correct use: “They had a big effect on my style.” / “The law effected changes at the school.” / “They affected my style.” / “He affected an air of sophistication to impress her parents.”

51. To lie (intransitive: lies, lay, has lain) means to recline; to lay (transitive: lays, laid, has laid) means to set down; to lie (intransitive: lies, lied, has lied) means to fib.

Correct use: “He lies on the couch all day.” / “He lays a book upon the table.” / “He lies about what he does.”

Source…………www. news.com.au

natarajan