Special Message For The Day….HIS Legacy Lives ….

“We shall be judged  not by the creed  we  profess or the label  we wear, or the slogans  we shout , but by  the Work , the industry, the sacrifice, the honesty

and purity of character.. Realise the Heaven  within You  and all at once , all the desires are fulfilled , all the misery and suffering is put an end to .   Feel

yourself  above  the body and its environments, above  the mind and its motives , above  the thought of success or fear…

The great cause of suffering in the world is that poeple do not look    WITHIN  . They rely on outside  forces…

With Love,

Sri Sathya Sai Baba”                            Sai

30 -9-80

source:::: http://www.srisathyasai.org.in thro Press release in The Hindu …24 april 2013….on HIS Mahasamadhi Day …

Natarajan

,

Message For The Day….In Silence You Can Hear The Voice Of God !!!!

Unfurl in your heart, the flag of infinite peace(Prashanthi). It should remind you to overcome the urge of low desires, anger and hate when your plans are thwarted; it must exhort you to expand your heart, to embrace all humanity and creation; let it direct you to quieten your impulses and calmly meditate on your own inner reality. Gradually, the lotus of your heart will bloom, from its centre the flame of divine vision of infinite peace will arise. Practise the disciplines of silence, cleanliness and forbearance. In silence, you can hear the voice of God. Through cleanliness you earn purity. By forbearance, you cultivate love. Feel that each moment is a step towards Him. Do everything as dedicated to Him, directed by Him, as work for His adoration, for serving His children.

Sathya Sai Baba

“அ”கர ராமாயணம் !!!!! ஆனந்த பாராயணம் !!!!!

ராமாயணக் கதை முழுதும் ‘அ’ என்று ஆரம்பிக்கும் வார்த்தைகளால்
வடிவமைக்கப் பட்டுள்ளது.

அனந்தனே அசுரர்களை அழித்து,
அன்பர்களுக்கு அருள அயோத்தி
அரசனாக அவதரித்தான்.

அப்போது அரிக்கு அரணாக அரசனின்
அம்சமாக அனுமனும் அவதரித்ததாக
அறிகிறோம்.அன்று அஞ்சனை அவனிக்கு
அளித்த அன்பளிப்பு அல்லவா அனுமன் ?

அவனே அறிவழகன்,அன்பழகன்,அன்பர்களை
அரவ-ணைத்து அருளும் அருட்செல்வன்!

அயோத்தி அடலேறு, அம்மிதிலை அரசவையில்
அரசனின் அரியவில்லை அடக்கி, அன்பும்
அடக்கமும் அங்கங்களாக அமைந்த அழகியை
அடைந்தான்.

அரியணையில் அமரும் அருகதை அண்ணனாகிய
அனந்தராமனுக்கே! அப்படியிருக்க அந்தோ !
அக்கைகேயி அசூயையால் அயோத்தி அரசனுக்கும்
அடங்காமல் அநியாயமாக அவனை அரண்யத்துக்கு
அனுப்பினாள்.

அங்கேயும் அபாயம்!அரக்கர்களின் அரசன் ,
அன்னையின் அழகால் அறிவிழந்து அபலையை
அபகரித்தான்

அத்தசமுகனின் அக்கிரமங்களுக்கு, அட்டூழியங்களுக்கு
அளவேயில்லை. அயோத்தி அண்ணல், அன்னை
அங்கிருந்து அகன்றதால் அடைந்த அவதிக்கும்
அளவில்லை.

அத்தருணத்தில் அனுமனும், அனைவரும் அரியை
அடிபணிந்து, அவனையே அடைக்கலமாக அடைந்தனர்.

அந்த அடியார்களில் அருகதையுள்ள அன்பனை
அரசனாக அரியணையில் அமர்த்தினர்.

அடுத்து அன்னைக்காக அவ்வானரர் அனைவரும்
அவனியில் அங்குமிங்கும் அலைந்தனர், அலசினர்.
அனுமன், அலைகடலை அலட்சியமாக அடியெடுத்து
அளந்து அக்கரையை அடைந்தான்.

அசோகமரத்தின் அடியில், அரக்கிகள் அயர்ந்திருக்க
அன்னையை அடிபணிந்து அண்ணலின்
அடையாளமாகிய அக்கணையாழியை அவளிடம்
அளித்தான்

அன்னை அனுபவித்த அளவற்ற அவதிகள்
அநேகமாக அணைந்தன. அன்னையின் அன்பையும்
அருளாசியையும் அக்கணமே அடைந்தான் அனுமன்.

அடுத்து, அரக்கர்களை அலறடித்து , அவர்களின்
அரண்களை, அகந்தைகளை அடியோடு அக்கினியால்
அழித்த அனுமனின் அட்டகாசம், அசாத்தியமான
அதிசாகசம்.

அனந்தராமன் அலைகடலின் அதிபதியை
அடக்கி, அதிசயமான அணையை
அமைத்து, அக்கரையை அடைந்தான்.

அரக்கன் அத்தசமுகனை அமரில் அயனின்
அஸ்திரத்தால் அழித்தான்.

அக்கினியில் அயராமல் அர்ப்பணித்த அன்னை
அவள் அதி அற்புதமாய் அண்ணலை அடைந்தாள்.

அன்னையுடன் அயோத்தியை அடைந்து
அரியணையில் அமர்ந்து அருளினான்

அண்ணல், அனந்த ராமனின் அவதார
அருங்கதை அகரத்திலேயே அடுக்கடுக்காக
அமைந்ததும் அனுமனின் அருளாலே.

source::::input from a friend of mine..
Natarajan

Little Kids Teach Us !!!….Learn a Lot From them !!!!!

> 1. A four-year-old child, whose next door
> neighbor was an elderly gentleman, who had recently lost his
> wife. Upon seeing the man cry, the little boy went into the old
> Gentleman’s’ yard, climbed onto his lap, and just sat there.
> When his mother asked him what he had
> said to the neighbor, the little boy just said,
> ‘Nothing, I just helped him cry.’
>
> *********************************************
> 2. Teacher Debbie Moon’s first graders were
> discussing a picture of a family. One little boy in the picture
> had a different hair color than the other members. One of her
> students suggested that he was adopted.
> A little girl said, ‘I know all about
> adoption, I was adopted..’
>
> ‘What does it mean to be adopted?’, asked
> another child.
>
> ‘It means’, said the girl, ‘that you grew
> in your mommy’s heart instead of her tummy!’
>
> ************************ *********************
> 3. On my way home one day, I stopped to
> watch a Little League baseball game that was being played in a
> park near my home. As I sat down behind the bench on the first-
> base line, I asked one of the boys what the score was
> ‘We’re behind 14 to nothing,’ he answered
> With a smile.
>
> ‘Really,’ I said. ‘I have to say you
> don’t look very discouraged.’
>
> ‘Discouraged?’, the boy asked with a
> Puzzled look on his face.
>
> ‘Why should we be discouraged? We haven’t
> been up to bat yet.’
>
> *********************** **********************
> 4. Whenever I’m disappointed with my spot
> in life, I stop and think about little Jamie Scott.
>
> Jamie was trying out for a part in the
> school play. His mother told me that he’d set his heart on being
> in it, though she feared he would not be chosen..
>
> On the day the parts were awarded, I went
> with her to collect him after school. Jamie rushed up to her,
> eyes shining with pride and excitement.. ‘Guess what, Mom,’ he
> shouted, and then said those words that will remain a lesson to
> me….’I’ve been chosen to clap and cheer.’
>
> *********************************************
> 5. An eye witness account from New York
> City, on a cold day in December,
> some years ago: A little boy,
> about 10-years-old, was standing before a shoe store on the
> roadway, barefooted, peering through the window,
> and shivering with cold.
>
> A lady approached the young boy and said,
> ‘My child , but you’re in such deep thought staring in that window!’
>
> ‘I was asking God to give me a pair of
> shoes,’ was the boy’s reply.
>
> The lady took him by the hand, went into
> the store, and asked the clerk to get half a dozen pairs of socks
> for the boy. She then asked if he could give her a basin of water
> and a towel. He quickly brought them to her.
>
> She took the little fellow to the back
> part of the store and, removing her gloves, knelt down, washed
> his little feet, and dried them with the towel.
>
> By this time, the clerk had returned with
> the socks. Placing a pair upon the boy’s feet,
> she purchased him a pair of shoes..
>
> She tied up the remaining pairs of socks
> and gave them to him. She patted him on the head and said,
> ‘No doubt, you will be more comfortable now.’
>
> As she turned to go, the astonished kid
> caught her by the hand, and looking up into her face,
> with tears in his eyes, asked her:
> ‘Are you God’s wife?’
>
source:::::input from my friend..
Natarajan

Message For The Day…God is In Your Heart !!!

Brindavan is not a specific place on the map; it’s the Universe! All human beings are cowherds; all animals are cows. Every heart is filled with the longing for the Lord; the flute is the call of the Lord; the sport Raasakreeda (the sportive dance of little Krishna and the Gopees), is the symbol of the yearning and the travail to merge in God. The Lord manifests such Grace that each one of you has the Lord all for yourself; you need not be sad that you won’t have Him; nor need you be proud that you have Him and no one else can have Him! The Lord is installed in the altar of each and every one of your hearts. Revere the gift of this body, the senses, the intelligence, the Will and all the instruments of knowledge, action and feeling as essential for His work.

 Sathya Sai Baba

“No Frills ” Hospitals In India !!!!….A Mix Of Wal-Mart and Low Cost Airline !!!!

What if hospitals were run like a mix of Wal-Mart and a low-cost airline? The result might be something like the chain of “no-frills” Narayana Hrudayalaya clinics in southern India.

Budget Hospital India

In this picture taken on February 7, 2013 hospital staff work at one of the post-operative pediatrics observation and care units of the Narayana Hrudayalaya cardiac-care hospital in Bangalore. A group of Indian doctors believe they can cut the cost of heart surgery to an astonishing 800 USD at their “no thrills” low-cost hospital.

Using pre-fabricated buildings, stripping out air-conditioning and even training visitors to help with post-operative care, the group believess it can cut the cost of heart surgery to an astonishing 800 dollars.

“Today healthcare has got phenomenal services to offer. Almost every disease can be cured and if you can’t cure patients, you can give them meaningful life,” says company founder Devi Shetty, one of the world’s most famous heart surgeons.

“But what percentage of the people of this planet can afford it? A hundred years after the first heart surgery, less than 10 percent of the world’s population can,” he told AFP from his office in hi-tech hub Bangalore.

Already famous for his “heart factory” in Bangalore, which does the highest number of cardiac operations in the world, the latest Narayana Hrudayalaya (“Temple of the Heart”) projects are ultra low-cost facilities.

The first is a single-storey hospital in Mysore, two hours drive from Bangalore, which was built for about 400 million rupees (7.4 million dollars) in only 10 months and recently opened its doors.

Set amid palm trees and with five operating theatres for cardiac, brain and kidney procedures, Shetty boasts how it was built at a fraction of the cost of equivalents in the rich world.

“Near Stanford (in the US), they are building a 200-300 bed hospital. They are likely to spend over 600 million dollars,” he said.

“There is a hospital coming up in London. They are likely to spend over a billion pounds,” added the father of four, who has a large print of mother Teresa on his wall — one of his most famous patients.

“Our target is to build and equip a hospital for six million dollars and build it in six months.”

The Mysore facility represents his vision for the future of healthcare in India — and a model likely to burnish India’s reputation as a centre for low-cost innovation in the developing world.

Air-conditioning is restricted to operating theatres and intensive care units. Ventilation comes from large windows on the wards.

 

Budget Hospital India

A group of Indian doctors believe they can cut the cost of heart surgery to an astonishing 800 USD at their “no thrills” low-cost hospital.

Relatives or friends visiting in-patients undergo a four-hour nursing course and are expected to change bandages and do other simple tasks.

 

In its architecture, Shetty rejected the generic multi-storey model, which requires costly foundations and steel reinforcements as well as lifts and complex fire safety equipment.

Much of the building was pre-fabricated off site and then quickly assembled.

The Mysore facility will be followed by others in the cities of Bhubaneswar and Siliguri.

Each will owe its existence to Shetty’s original success story, his pioneering cardiac hospital in Bangalore which opened in 2001.

About 30 heart surgeries are performed there daily, the highest in the world, at a break-even cost of 1,800 dollars. Most patients are charged more than this, but some of the poorest are treated for free.

Its success has made Shetty a wealthy man and earned him international renown. Al-Jazeera recently broadcast a six-part series on the hospital whose wards are packed with low-income farmers and labourers.

In the crammed waiting room, families from across South Asia wait for appointments with the boss who juggles them between stints in theatre.

“We saw him on TV recently and we could see his commitment to poor people and middle class people like us,” said Ranjan Bhattacharya, a civil servant, who had brought his ill wife 2,000 kilometres (1,200 miles) by train from northeast India.

In its dealings with suppliers, the hospital group works like a large supermarket, buying expensive items such as heart valves in bulk.

By running the operating theatres from early morning to late at night, six days a week, it is inspired by low-cost airlines which keep their planes in the air as much as possible.

The British-trained surgeon sniffs at the output of Western counterparts who might do a handful of operations a week. Each of his surgeons does up to four a day on a fraction of the wages of those in the West.

“Essentially we realised that as you do more numbers, your results get better and your cost goes down,” he said.

Public spending on health in India amounts to just four percent of GDP, less than Afghanistan, according to the World Health Organization.

A lack of private insurance and a public system that has “collapsed” according to the country’s rural development minister means an estimated 70 percent of healthcare spending is borne by Indians out of their own pockets.

So is Shetty a sharp-witted businessman who has spotted a gap in the market or a philanthropist?

“We believe that charity is not scalable. If you give anything free of cost, it is a matter of time before you run out of money, and people are not asking for anything free,” he said.

His first foreign venture is a hospital on the Cayman Islands, targeting locals who would normally travel to the US for expensive treatment, and he says he would love to expand into Africa.

From 6,000 beds now in 17 clinics, he aims to expand privately-run Narayana Hrudayalaya Hospitals to a group with 30,000 beds in the next five years.

“The current regulatory structures, the current policies and business strategies (for healthcare) that we have are wrong. If they were right, we should have reached 90 percent of the world’s population,” he said.

source::::businessinsider.com

Natarajan

Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/inside-indias-no-frills-hospitals-where-heart-surgery-costs-just-800-2013-4#ixzz2RAscwJhp

Now A Smartphone for Visual Impaired Persons ….An indian Invention !!!!

 

Here s another example of technological excellence for a social cause- a smartphone for visual impaired persons and that too invented by an Indian.

It is no more just taking calls and answering them but whole lot of functions including the one that enable the blinds to read and send the texts based on Braille system developed long time back. But its digital version is something that can revolutionize this pattern.

The device developed by Sumit Dagar whose company located in IIM Ahmedabad campus has a touch screen which can elevate and depress the contents allowing such persons to read and send texts.

Dagar who is post-graduate from the National institute of Design has joined hands with IIT Delhi to come out with the first Braille version of smartphone which could be a boon to millions of blinds. Given the fact that a mobile phone has become a necessity, Dagar is sanguine about immense response it would get.

Interestingly, it has come on the heels of the Chrome OS which supports a high-quality text-to-speech voice (starting with U.S. English) which could be immense benefit to the visually impaired people.

The latest stable version of Chrome, released recently, includes support for the Web Search API, which developers can use to integrate speech recognition capabilities into their apps. At CSUN, our friends from Bookshare demonstrated how they use this new functionality to deliver ReadNow,  a fully integrated ebook reader for users with print disabilities.

Google has also released a new Help Center Guide specifically for blind and low-vision users to ease the transition to using Google Apps.

It added Braille support to Android 4.1; since then, Braille support has been expanded on Google Drive for Android, making it easier to read and edit your documents. You can also use Talkback with Docs and Sheets to edit on the go.

With Gesture Mode in Android 4.1, one can reliably navigate the UI using touch and swipe gestures in combination with speech output.

 

source:::: Telecom Tiger

Natarajan

Message For The Day….Service To God Alone Matters…..

Today, the typhoon of hatred and falsehood is scattering the clouds of Virtue, Justice and Truth to the far corners of the sky. So long as man is capable of prema (love), dharma(righteousness) will exist, do not doubt it. When you direct thatprema to the Lord, your mental make-up will slowly and steadily undergo a revolutionary change. You will share in the sorrows and joys of your fellow-beings and experience bliss that is beyond the temporary gains and losses of this world. Your devotion to the Lord will undergo several changes. An important stage is one where service to the Lord alone matters and service alone is the reward – one does not seek anything more than just the opportunity of doing service Unto Him, to the best of one’s capacity.

 Sathya Sai Baba

Message For The Day…Follow and Practice Truthfulness and Righteousness ….

Ravana sought wealth and gratification of desire by utterly violating the principle of Right Conduct (dharma). He was a scholar par excellence who had mastered the sixty four disciplines of learning; whereas Rama had mastered only thirty two. However Rama put them into practice and thereby digested what he learnt, whereas Ravana failed to digest them. The indigestion arose in the form of desire (kama), which ultimately destroyed him. While Rama was the Embodiment of Dharma, Ravana remained as the embodiment of kama. Thus, there arose a conflict between Righteousness and the unrighteousness. Rama transformed Himself into the embodiment of Sathya, following the principle of dharma. This eternal warfare between righteousness and unrighteousness, truth and untruth, exists in the minds of every person. It is your primary duty to follow and practice the twin principles of truth and righteousness and win the game of life.

 Sathya Sai Baba

Dicky Bird ….@ 80 and Well set For a Splendid Century !!!!!

 

Dickie Bird turned 80 on Friday 19 april . And cricket’s favourite umpire remains as enagingly passionate as ever about life and the sport he loves.

 ‘cricketers used to have a laugh back in my day. Not any more’!!!

 

Cricket's favourite umpire is as passionate as ever about the game as he hits 80 not out

A life in sport: Dickie Bird at his home in Barnsley, which is cluttered with all his cricket memorabilia..

 

 

Some of the best stories about Harold “Dickie” Bird involve his pathological fear of lateness. There was one occasion when he arrived at Buckingham Palace at 5am for one of his 29 meetings with the Queen.

And another when he felt a policeman’s hand on his collar as he tried to climb over the front gates of the Oval, some six hours before play was due to start.

So it was a surprise to arrive at his 17th-century cottage in Barnsley, around 10am last Tuesday, and find Bird frantically fiddling with his shirt buttons. “Alarm clock ran out of batteries,” he spluttered.

Keith Lodge, his old friend from the Barnsley Chronicle and the co-author of his latest book, hovered indulgently like a favourite nanny. “Good thing I rang you, Dickie,” he said. “We would have been standing outside in the cold all morning.”

It was a humorous moment, and Bird saw the funny side. But there was an element of pathos too.

As he approaches his 80th birthday on Friday, his health is not as robust as it was. Four years ago, he suffered a stroke that robbed him of his morning bounce.

“It struck at 3am,” he said. “I had a severe pain in my neck and then it worked down my body. I stuck it out until the morning and managed to dial 999.

“The ambulance came and got me away pretty quickly to the hospital, and then they kept me in for five or six weeks.

“I gradually got my strength back, but I have to speak slowly, because if I speak quickly then I can’t get my words out. It’s also left me very emotional – I was always emotional, but not like I am now.

“And you’ve got to make yourself go in the morning every day, because you don’t want to get out of bed, you just want to lie there. You get depressed at times.

“But you just have to fight against it. I can drive now. I have all my movements but I find buttons and shoelaces difficult. But I can’t grumble because some of the cases that I saw in hospital – dear me.”

The carers have left and Bird is independent again, still living in the house that he bought as Yorkshire’s opening batsman in the 1960s.

Today, it has become a shrine to the persona he inhabited for another three decades after that. “Dickie Bird here, Test match umpire,” he still likes to say, when he rings up to discuss the latest local prospect – or, more likely, the evils of the TV review.

The walls are covered with photographs of Bird himself, standing in his white cap behind the stumps as Richard Hadlee, or Kapil Dev, or Imran Khan roars in to bowl.

The desk carries a miniature version of the statue erected to him in the centre of Barnsley. “It stands on the exact spot where I was born, 100 yards from the town hall – trips come from all over to see my statue and go around the market.”

Neither would you want to put a dirty mug down on the living-room coffee table, so crammed is it with memorabilia. Pride of place goes to two books with gilt-edged pages.

One is a commemorative copy of his autobiography, which sold a mind-boggling 750,000 copies. The other is bound in red leather and was presented to him by Eamonn Andrews when he appeared on a 1992 edition of This Is Your Life.

So how did the umpire’s book come to outsell those of the men whom he invigilated? “People have took to me, haven’t they? I don’t know what it is. I talk to everybody and I think that’s why.

“The characters have gone out of all sports haven’t they? There’s no Lambs, Bothams or Dennis Lillees any more. We used to have a laugh in Test matches, which they don’t today – they don’t even smile.”

There is a very British charm to Bird, a Norman Wisdom-style twinkle. A man with a wide variety of nervy mannerisms, he occasionally forgot to laugh at himself – as when the water-pipes burst at Headingley, and he was left wagging his finger at an irate crowd.

But he would banter with the players as if he was still one of them, and they loved him for it.

On the field, Bird was known for being a not-outer. Our own cricket correspondent, Derek Pringle, has never quite forgiven him for turning down an lbw against Gordon Greenidge; the wicket would have completed a hat-trick.

But then Bird, so cautious by nature, could hardly help taking refuge in the “benefit of the doubt”. As a batsman who made only two hundreds in 93 first-class appearances, anxiety was his Achilles’ heel.

“If you’d seen me in one net batting and Geoffrey Boycott in the other, and I’d said to you ‘Which is the England player?’ you’d have said me,” Bird explained, while tapping a finger to his forehead. “But Boycott had it, something up here, more mental strength.

“If I got a series of low scores I worried. A lot thought that I would never make it as an umpire because of that. But it was amazing. I told myself once I crossed that line I were going to enjoy it, have a smile and a laugh.

“I used to have a joke with the crowd, but I never let it interfere with my decision making. And that took all of the pressure off me.”

Inevitably, Bird laments the passing of the glory days, when decisions went unchallenged by ball-tracking technology and Ian Botham could smash spectacular sixes after a night on the tiles.

It is hard to see Steven Finn stopping in his delivery stride to sneak a rubber snake into the umpire’s pocket, as Lillee once did. And nor do relationships achieve the same depth when there is always a plane to catch the morning after a game.

“You can’t buy respect, you have to earn it,” Bird said. “And I can honestly tell you I had not one problem with any professional cricketer.

“If I went to Pakistan, Imran Khan and Javed Miandad invite me round for a meal at their place. If I go to Australia the first man to ring me is Dennis Lillee.

“If I go to est Indies, the first man on the phone will be Garfield Sobers, the greatest that’s ever lived. You’ll never see another like him, not in your lifetime.”

Yet Bird still loves the modern game, even if his passion may not burn as bright as it once did. He remains an ever-present in the stands, both at Yorkshire’s home matches and those of Barnsley FC.

“It’s still the greatest game in the world, cricket,” he said. “I think young Joe Root is one to watch, because mentally I have never met anyone like him.” He leaned forward and tapped his forehead again. “Played up here, is cricket.”

And now it was time to go, because Bird’s solicitor was at the door. “I want to go back over my will,” he said, with a slightly unnerving grin. “My plan is for my ashes to be buried under my statue. What do you think?”

  • Dickie Bird – 80 Not Out, written with Keith Lodge, is published by Hodder & Stoughton, priced £20.

source::::Simon Briggs in THE TELEGRAPH UK

Natarajan