” Ever wondered what happens to your body when you start walking….” !!

tulips.jpg

Here’s a minute-by-minute rundown of the amazing chain reaction walking and exercise has upon your body, it’s truly amazing!

Minutes 1 to 5

Your first few steps trigger the release of energy-producing chemicals in your cells to fuel your walk. Your heart rate revs-up from about 70 to 100 beats per minute (bpm), boosting blood-flow and warming muscles.

Any stiffness subsides as joints release lubricating fluid to help you move more easily. As you get moving, your body burns 5 calories per minute, compared with only 1 per minute at rest. Your body needs more fuel and starts pulling from its carbohydrates and fat stores.

Minutes 6 to 10

Heartbeat increases from 100 to about 140 bpm, and you’re burning up to 6 calories a minute as you pick up the pace. A slight rise in blood pressure is countered by the release of chemicals that expand blood vessels, bringing more blood and oxygen to working muscles.

Minutes 11 to 20

Your body temperature keeps rising, and you start to perspire as blood vessels near the skin expand to release heat. As your walk becomes brisker, you’ll be burning up to 7 calories a minute and breathing harder. Hormones such as epinephrine and glucagon rise to release fuel to the muscles.

Minutes 21 to 45

Feeling invigorated, you start to relax as your body releases tension, thanks in part to a dose of feel-good chemicals such as endorphins in your brain. As more fat is burned, insulin (which helps store fat) drops–excellent news for anyone battling excess weight or diabetes.

Minutes 46 to 60

Your muscles may feel fatigued as carbohydrates stores are reduced. As you cool down, your heart rate decreases and your breathing slows. You’ll be burning fewer calories but more than you were before you started. Your calorie burn will remain elevated for up to 1 hour.

All this happens without a single conscious thought from us – the human body is amazing.

Source………unknown………input from a friend of mine
Natarajan

Message for the Day…” When You Destroy Your Ego , All Troubles End , all Discontents Vanish and Bliss is Attained….”

The effulgence of your soul (Atma) is obscured by ego. Therefore, when ego is destroyed, all troubles end, all discontents vanish, and bliss is attained. Just as the sun is obscured by mist, so also, the feeling of ego hides eternal bliss. Even if the eyes are open, a piece of cloth or cardboard can prevent vision from functioning effectively and usefully. So too, the screen of selfishness prevents one from seeing God, who is in fact nearer than anything else. Develop the characteristics of truth, kindness, love, patience, forbearance and gratefulness. Ego (ahamkara) cannot subsist wherever these qualities reside, just as darkness disappears with sunrise. Many a spiritual aspirant (sadhaka), recluse, and renunciant (sanyasin) has allowed all excellences won by long years of struggle and sacrifice to slip away through this attachment to the self. Power without the bliss of God-realisation is a wall without a basement.

Sathya Sai Baba

Message for the Day…..” Selfless Service in a Spirit of total Surrender to the Will of God Will Develop Detachment and Confer Highest Rewards…”

Sathya Sai Baba

Creation or manifestation started, as the Upanishads say, when the One willed, Ekoham bahusyam – “I am One; let Me become Many. It is the integer (I) that fills the zeros after it with value and validity! The realisation of the function of the ‘I’ and the act of ignoring all zeros that come after it, is the end and goal of all human endeavour. When the mind is unruffled and the intelligence is sharpened, this realisation will take place naturally. Through the discipline of selfless service, you can easily recognise the One who appears as many. To attain that experience, service must be rendered either from a supreme sense of duty or as a humble dedicatory offering to the Highest, or in a spirit of total surrender to the will of God leaving all thought of the consequence to His grace. Any act of service done with these pure motives, will develop detachment and confer highest rewards.

Prithvi-II, India’s Indigenously Developed Missile, Successfully Test Fired in Odisha….India

Prithvi-II, India’s indigenously developed nuclear capable missile was successfully test fired on Thursday. The missile has a strike range of 350 km, and it is capable of carrying 500 kg to 1,000 kg of warheads.

The test was a part of a user trial by the Army and was conducted from a mobile launcher at launch complex-3 of the Integrated Test Range (ITR) located at Chandipur, in Baleswar District of Odisha.

Prithvi-II

Source: Wikimedia

Prithvi-II is surface to surface missile thrusted by liquid propulsion twine engines. It uses advanced inertial guidance system with manoeuvring trajectory to hit the target. The navigation aid, inertial navigation system (INS), uses a computer, motion sensors and rotation sensors to calculate the position and velocity of a moving target without any external references.

Prithvi-II is the first missile to be developed by Defence Research and Development Organization (DRDO) under India’s Integrated Guided Missile Development Program (IGMDP).

prithvi2

Source: Twitter

It can operate with both liquid and solid fuels and can carry both conventional as well as nuclear payloads.

The trial data was conducted by Strategic Forces Command (SFC), which is part of India’s Nuclear Command Authority (NCA). It is responsible for management of India’s strategic nuclear weapons stockpile.

“The missile was randomly chosen from the production stock and the entire launch activities were carried out by the specially formed SFC and monitored by the scientists of Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO) as part of training exercise…The missile trajectory was tracked by DRDO radars, electro-optical tracking systems and telemetry stations located along the coast of Odisha,” a defence scientist told PTI.

The teams on the other side were on board a ship near the designated impact point in the Bay of Bengal. They monitored the splashdown and the terminal events. The last user trial of Prithvi-II was successfully conducted on February 19, 2015 from the same test range.

The Indian government had launched the Integrated Guided Missile Development Program in 1983 with the view making the country self-sufficient in terms of development and production of wide range of Ballistic Missiles, Surface to Air Missiles and more.

Source………..Tanaya Singh….www.the betterindia.com

Natarajan

” I’m Going to Antarctica to Find How Climate Change, Penguins & Food Are Inter-Connected”…Says Tejaswi Subramanian

My first brush with environmental consciousness took place when I was 13. I came across the Fourth Assessment Report by IPCC (Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change) in 2007, which said that human actions could be held responsible for the climate degradation and change that was visible in various parts of the world. I started thinking about it, and that report affected me very deeply. That’s when and how I became interested in environmental activism. Right from school, I was an active environmentalist. I helped form the eco-club there and was always associated with different activities like selling handmade carry bags to the school cafeteria and nearby shops, organizing awareness events, observing environment day and more.

Growing up, I also gained interest in clean eating habits.

antarctica1

This was about three years ago – I was living alone, was working 8-10 hours a day, was cooking for myself – and amidst all this, I was hit by the realization that I always felt less energetic. I never seemed to have enough energy to do everything. But I was only 20, and I thought, ‘this cannot be right’.

“Let food be thy medicine, and let medicine be thy food.” – It was then that this quote by Hippocrates changed my life. I had started reading up on healthy eating and came to know about Primal Diet, which advises people to avoid grains and emphasizes on a protein-rich diet that contains healthy fats and is low in carbohydrates. It introduced me to the idea that eating fresh and organic food can heal the body and help us connect with nature. And I witnessed genuine change. I had been suffering with the problem of acne since my early teens, but with my new eating habits, it cleared up in just three months. It was like a miracle. I also witnessed an increase in my energy levels. This lifestyle change fit perfectly with my interest in environmental protection, which further encouraged me to carry on with it.

Additionally, I came across another body of research that motivated me to purchase sustainably-sourced food. It was about Antarctica, one of the last places in the world that remains untouched by rampant human urban settlement and industrialization.

antarctica3

Source: 2041 Foundation

But even in that beautiful place, traces of our irresponsible behaviour towards the environment are clearly visible – in the form of a pesticide. DDT, a chemical pesticide, was banned worldwide because of the harmful effects of the chemicals on the environment. This was done decades ago. However, its traces are found till today in the fatty tissues of Adelie penguins. This is due to the chemical pesticide being washed away and getting drained into the coastal waters, which then finds its way to the ocean. In this consumerist era, our choice to purchase reflects our voice in the systems that support societal norms. What is happening in Antarctica shows that a common thread runs through the universal fabric of our economy and society.

Thus, in the coming months, I plan to research about this issue at the grassroots. I will also be preparing for my expedition to Antarctica, which will host the ‘Leadership on the Edge’ program by Robert Swan, OBE (Order of the British Empire). Through this expedition, I intend to gather first-hand knowledge of the effect that we are having on the ecosystem of Antarctica, despite setting up shop several thousand miles away. Robert Swan is the first person to walk to both Poles. He will be our lead and Chief Guide and will be mentoring us on how we may be able to do our bit in spreading awareness and creating movements toward sustainability back in our homelands.

The idea is to work with like minds in order to spur a sustainable food movement that permeates our food chains and markets.

antarctica4

Source: 2041 Foundation

At a personal level, I am trying to work with sustainably sourced, organic as well as locally grown food. And this program will give me a good idea of how things are being done around the world.

Through this campaign, I am trying to raise funds for the expedition. I strongly believe that we can recreate the health of our bodies, the environment, and the Adelie penguins in Antarctica if we focus on the singular issue of how we source our food. Please support me in my journey. The tentative dates are March 13-25, 2016. Prospective itinerary can be found here. I hope to raise Rs. 12,30,000.

Here’s a break-up of the planned budget.

antarctica6

Source….– Tejaswi Subramanian  for http://www.the betterindia.com

Natarajan

” Meet the Faces Behind the Popular ‘Humans of Bombay’ Page….”

She doesn’t just share pictures – she shares the many stories of success, failure, hopes, dreams, desires and so much more behind the faces that make it to her well-known and loved Facebook page. Meet Karishma Mehta, the human behind Humans of Bombay.

In November 2010, a young man named Brandon Stanton started taking pictures of people in New York City and sharing little vignettes of their lives on a Facebook page called Humans of New York (HoNY).

Little did he know that his little hobby would take the world of social media by storm, garnering over 16 million “likes” and spawning a host of similar pages in virtually every country of the world.

humans of bombay

Brandon Stanton

Photo Credit: Niyantha Shekar/Flickr

India too sprouted several “Humans of ” pages overnight, but most of them have either vanished as quickly as they came or languished for lack of attention.

In sharp contrast is the Humans of Bombay page on Facebook, run by 23-year-old Karishma Mehta.

humans of bombay

Karishma Mehta

The following of this page has grown by leaps and bounds to reach four lakhs in a short period of time, entirely due to Karishma’s meticulous efforts in capturing poignant photographs and stories of the many Mumbaikars she meets every day.

“Tell me your story,” she often requests of the old and young and middle-aged she meets on a daily basis. But ask her the same question and she laughs – “That’s why I am behind the camera, and not in front of it. In all probability, if someone stops me on the road, says ‘can I take your photograph?’, and asks me to share my story, I would say ‘no’!”

Every day, Karishma goes out to meet and converse with five to ten strangers on the streets of the city.

Humans of Bombay

Website · 431,445 Likes

· 20 November at 15:23 ·

“I couldn’t conceive for a very long time, even though I was going through extensive treatments. Finally years later, something in my treatment ticked and I was pregnant. You know how it is with Indian families – everyone begins to guess the gender of the child before it’s even born, but I never took part in that – I was only concerned with the health of my baby.
When I delivered, everyone was excited to know the sex of the baby and my whole family was really happy to know that it was a baby girl. I remember hearing, ‘oh my god, it’s a girl!’ and I just kept thinking, ‘oh my god, it’s a healthy child.’ I thanked God with all my heart for blessing me with Motherhood that day and everyday of my life. She’s 22 years today, and still the best thing that ever happened to me.”

She listens to their stories, clicks their photographs, and finally shares her work on the Humans of Bombay page. These are stories of success and failure, hope and inspiration, dreams and heartbreaks – each one unique and memorable.

Karishma started the page in January 2014. “I was just out of college when I started it. At that time, I had been following HoNY closely, so I knew that something like this existed. But I also knew that something like this had not been done correctly in a city like Bombay, which has so many different worlds in it. Thus I started the page pretty much as an experiment to see how it would pan out. But as it grew, my passion towards this work kept growing,” she says.

Born and brought up in Bombay, she describes her life as “a very normal one.” After studying at Bombay Scottish School, she went on to a boarding school in Bangalore for two years. This was followed by three years of college in UK. “I would say I was on the sheltered side…” she remembers.

In the beginning, Karishma’s parents did not understand what she was doing. “They were a bit confused as there was no specific definition for what I was doing back then,” she says. But her friends had been following HoNY, so they knew. “They supported me, gave a lot of healthy criticism, and also encouraged me to not give up. That initial push was very important for me to continue for as long as I have.” She now has the complete support of her parents as well.

Ask her about the experience of collecting such personal stories from complete strangers and Karishma says – “It is not easy to talk to strangers on the road and engage with them in a conversation for five to six minutes…But when you do so, you will be surprised by the kind of things you hear in response to just a simple question! That’s because everybody has a story. Literally every person walking on a street has some story that they want to share. The important thing is to focus on the simple questions that can bring about these very powerful narrations.”

Karishma, a business and economics major, never took any lessons in photography. For her, it has all been about her passion; photography is something that she “learned on the job.” With two interns to assist her she goes out to shoot for about five hours every day and shares one story a day on Facebook, after writing about it and editing the picture. While most of her time goes in maintaining the page itself, she is also involved in some freelance projects that deal with writing.

Currently, she is also busy working on a Humans of Bombay book that will be out soon.

Humans of Bombay

Website · 431,445 Likes

· 17 hrs · Edited ·

“I was a chef in the Taj banquet kitchen when the gunshots started that night. Initially the news was that it was an internal gang war in a neighbourhood nearby and that it would die down soon. It was only at about 10:30 – 11PM that we understood the magnitude of what was going on. We were 7 chefs in total in the kitchen that night, not one of whom left the Taj despite knowing all exit points. By then the shootout had happened at the Wasabi restaurant and all those who had survived were pouring into the banquet hall and kitchen where we were working. As soon as we had heard about the shootout, we prepared sandwiches for our surviving guests which we then handed out. After this, we entered the corridor to escort our guests out of the hotel through the back entrance. We had successfully helped a few guests when I saw the left profile of a terrorist in a red cap, who began shooting.
I was standing next to a refrigerator, when my head chef and sous chef both got shot. There was chaos, panic and fear as our guests started running everywhere – but by then they had opened fire in all directions. I remember running towards the kitchen and looking around to see that no one else had made it. All of a sudden, everything went quiet and that silence was the worst. I tried looking around for survivors, but it was just me. I stayed there for a few hours, until I realised that no help was coming anytime soon. I walked out of the kitchen and saw all of my colleagues dead on the floor – the whole Taj was deserted. I looked at the refrigerator where I’d been only a while ago and it had 3 bullet holes in it – I’d narrowly escaped death, but it was horrifying to see that my guests and colleagues hadn’t been as lucky. I won’t look back on that day as just a terrorist attack, but a day when many brave individuals looked death in the eye to help others.”

What has been one of the most memorable moments of her life till now? She has an answer this time:

“It is a personal one. Very recently, my sister delivered a baby boy and it was like an I-can’t-describe kind of moment. I was very happy.”

The one thing she is looking forward to for Humans of Bombay?

“I am looking forward to seeing more people open up to share larger aspects of their lives. I have had a series of people who have given me their stories but as soon as they see the reach that the platform has they say they don’t want to share them further. I would love people to realise that sharing is not always a bad thing. You are not always judged. You are not always looked upon negatively. Sometimes, it could actually help you.”

Her advice to people?

“I am a business and economics major and I am doing something that is not directly based on that line. And I don’t think it matters. It is about what you want to do, what you feel will get you to a certain place in life…just go with it.”

Her favourite stories? “I am biased. I like them all,” laughs Karishma.

Recently, she shared the picture of a woman named Zaaria who has come out of a very abusive marriage after struggling for years.

Humans of Bombay

Website · 431,445 Likes

· 23 October · Edited ·

“His family and my family have lived in the same building for years but since his business was in Bombay and Dubai, I barely saw him. This one day, he asked my driver which college I was studying in, he came there, waited for me to finish class and asked me to coffee. We ended up chatting for an hour that day and I was completely enamoured by him — he was such a charmer! His parents wanted us to marry quickly because he was 7 years older – so at 19 I got married to someone who I thought was the man of my dreams…but he was an asshole.
It started at the honeymoon, where I wasn’t allowed to look anywhere but towards him, wasn’t allowed to enter shops which he didn’t like and was supposed to wear only what he wanted me to. We were to visit our relatives in London, so he asked me to wear a salwaar but no jacket…and I remember freezing. When we went back to Dubai, he didn’t allow me to turn on the AC and if I did in the middle of the night because it was so hot – he would smash my perfumes, candles and upturn my entire wardrobe. He would drive his convertible car at the maximum speed and threaten to throw me out if I ever disobeyed him. Once, in between abusing and screaming at me, he pinned me down, forced himself upon me and 6 months into my wedding I was pregnant. He hid my medicines saying I don’t need them — I was throwing up 30 times a day and all the minerals in my body had drained to the point that I couldn’t stand and that’s when he agreed to take me to the hospital. The nurse there saw me once and said ‘I’ve to take you to the emergency room – and had you come a day later you would return to Bombay in a coffin’. When I went home after those 3 days, he pushed me, I started bleeding and he waited 24 hours to take me back to the hospital. On the hospital slip it said ‘bled yesterday and brought to the hospital today.’
He only let me return home because my parents were at Hajj. When I came home, I asked him if I could stay for a night in my own home instead of his – which he flatly refused. I was talking to my mother on the phone for 15 minutes when he called me 40 times, sent his sister upstairs to snatch my phone and sent me a text saying,’If you return to Dubai, I will rip your ass apart’ in Hindi. That’s when I decided I had enough.
The next 6 years were hell for me. He sent me a legal notice saying he wanted custody of my unborn child, but I would never let that happen. So 30 days after I had delivered and my stitches hadn’t healed – I went to the family court to fight for my son. My son has been to more courtrooms in the first 5 years of his life than most people ever would. He bribed people from the court and the judges to prolong this case and if not for this one police man who understood me and helped me – God knows how much longer I would have to continue my fight. In 2012, my hell was finally over. I won all cases because of that one hospital slip and received nothing in compensation from him or his family. He seemed so normal, but he snatched my innocence away. Please, don’t rush into marriage because so often what people appear to be and who they are, is entirely different. 10 years later, I’ve put it behind me because I have my son and my life is for him. He’s all that matters.”

The hard-hitting story of how Zaaria successfully improved her life was widely shared. “It is a very, very powerful story. Zaaria was so strong while narrating it that I was literally shocked,” remembers Karishma. And the best part is that it did not just end there. People actually went ahead and expressed their support for Zaaria.

“She was overwhelmed. She told me that she has got messages from all over the world with people praising her for her courage and bravery…it is just amazing.”

Given that her page has had such an impact, it is not surprising that Karishma also chose to utilise it for a larger purpose.

Humans of Bombay with Ebonie Penado.

Website · 431,445 Likes

· 22 August ·

“My mother and I had to come to Bombay to support ourselves, once my father sold our family food business and didn’t support us. She got into the sex trade since that time and I always feel upset because she thinks its ‘dirty work’. Why is it considered dirty? My mother is a woman of strength and I want her and all like her to know that it’s okay.
Dirty are those men who force themselves on us, abuse us and walk away. I was raped as well, but for 7 years I kept it within me because I thought I was dirty. It was only after I came to Kranti and went through intense therapy that I finally found a voice. I will start volunteering with a sex workers’ rights group next month and give speeches and detailed information on the rights of sex workers. I was once blaming myself for being raped, but today I know better — It’s not my fault. I want to inspire the thousands like me, who have kept quite and felt dirty. We’re not dirty ones.”

A few months ago the young girls of Kranti were thrown out of their house, by a landlord who refused to pay them back their deposit. These are young girls who are the daughters of sex workers with big dreams. Kranti, nurtures their dreams, gives them a place to stay safe at night, teaches them and exposes them to a new world…one they’d never known before.
We’re starting a campaign to raise Rupees 5,00,000 for Kranti. This money will be used by Kranti to make a home for these girls in a space that’s currently unhygienic, dusty and in complete shambles. They all have to share one tiny bathroom which makes them late for school, there’s no proper construction — just bare, dilapidated walls with no beds.

Lets give these girls a place they can call home.

She conducted a Facebook campaign with the aim of raising funds for an organization called Kranti that helps the daughters of sex workers in Mumbai. While the aim was to collect Rs. 5 lakhs, Humans of Bombay ended up collecting Rs. 6.5 lakhs in just one day.

But what is it that keeps her going out to work on something that does not even pay? “I like listening to people’s stories. I like knowing that the next stranger on the block will have a story that people will appreciate. And I like to be the mediator of that story. The fact that I can bring those stories to the world is what pushes me,” she concludes.

Visit Humans of Bombay here.

Source……….Tanaya Singh……..www.the betterindia.com

Natarajan

” You Will be What You Want to be ….”

This is a story of two brothers. One was a drug addict and a drunkard who frequently beat up his family. The other one was a very successful businessman who was respected in society and had a wonderful family. Some people wanted to find out why two brothers from the same parents, brought
up in the same environment, could be so different.

The first one was asked, “How come you do what you do? You are a drug addict, a drunk, and you beat your family. What motivates you?”

He said, “My father.”
They asked, “What about your father?” The reply was, “My father was a drug addict, a drunk and he
beat his family. What do you expect me to be? That is what I am.”

They went to the brother who was doing everything right and asked him the same question. “How come you are doing everything right ? What is your source of motivation?”

And guess what he said? “My father. When I was a little boy, I used to see my dad drunk and doing all the wrong things. I made up my mind, that is not what I wanted to be.”

Both were deriving their strength and motivation from the same source, but one was using it negatively and the other positively….

Source………unknown……input from a friend of mine

Natarajan

வட்டமலை பாக்கியலட்சுமி பாட்டி…

.. தொன்னுாறு வயது ஏழை பாட்டி ஒருவர் எந்தவித எதர்பார்ப்பும் இல்லாமல் கடந்த பல வருடங்களாக வளர்த்த நுாற்றுக்கணக்கான மரங்களால் இன்று அரசும் மக்களும் பயன் அடைந்துவருகின்றனர்.

ஈரோட்டில் இருந்து 46 கிலோமீட்டர் பயணம் செய்தால் காங்கேயம் வரும்,காங்கேயத்தில் இருந்து பழனி போகும் பாதையில் எட்டாவது கிலோமீட்டரில் இருக்கிறது வட்டமலை முத்துக்குமாரசாமி கோவில்.
இங்கு சென்றால் அவசியம் தரிசிக்கவேண்டியவர்கள் இரண்டு பேர் ஒன்று முத்துக்குமாரசாமி என்ற பெயரில் அருள்புரியும் முருகன் இரண்டாவது பாக்கியலட்சுமி என்ற 90 வயது பாட்டி.

ஏழு வயதில் திக்கு தெரியாமல் எப்படியோ இங்கு வந்து சேர்ந்த இவருக்கு உலகமே இந்த வட்டமலைதான். கோவிலை கூட்டி சுத்தம் செய்து பக்தர்கள் மற்றும் ஆலய ஊழியர்கள் தரும் பணத்தில் சாப்பிட்டு வருகிறார்.கிட்டத்தட்ட பல ஆண்டுகளாக இதுதான் நடக்கிறது,யாரிடமும் போய் கேட்கமாட்டார் , தாமாகவே கொண்டுவந்து கொடுத்தால் மறுக்கமாட்டார்.
இந்த நிலையில்தான் ஐம்பது அறுபது வருடத்திற்கு முன் கோவில் பக்கத்தில் உள்ள ஒடையில் இருந்து தண்ணீர் எடுத்துவரும் போது கூடவே ஒரு செடியும் குடத்துடன் வர அதை அந்த கரையிலேயே நட்டுவிட்டுவந்தார்.

சில நாட்கள் கழித்து ஒடைப்பக்கம் வந்த போது,’ ஏ..பாக்யா என்னைப்பாரேன்’ என்பது போல அந்த செடி செழித்து வளர்ந்து அழைத்தது.அதுவரை சொந்த பந்தம் என்று எதுவும் இல்லாதிருந்த பாக்கியாவிற்கு அந்த செடி ஏதோ தான் பெற்ற பிள்ளை போல தெரிய அதன் பக்கத்தில் போய் உட்கார்ந்து தடவிக்கொடுத்தார்,சிறிது நேரம் கண்ணீர் விட்டார் பின்னர் தொடர்ந்து தண்ணீர் விட்டார்.
அந்த செடியின் ஒவ்வொரு அங்குல வளர்ச்சியும் பாக்கியாவிற்கு மகிழ்ச்சி தர அதைப்போலவே இன்னும் பல செடிகளை விதைகளை கொண்டுவந்து அந்த பகுதியெங்கும் வளர்த்தார்.

எப்படி வளர்க்கணும் எந்த மரத்திற்கு எவ்வளவு குழி வெட்டணும் எப்படி உரம் போடணும் என்று எதுவுமே தெரியாது அவ்வளவு ஏன் நட்டுவைத்த செடிகூட என்ன செடி என்று தெரியாது, கிடைச்ச இடத்தில் செடியை நடணும் விடாம தண்ணீர் ஊற்றணும் இது மட்டுமே பாக்கியாவிற்கு தெரிந்திருந்து, பாக்கியாவின் அன்பும் அந்த செடிகளுக்கு புரிந்திருந்ததாலோ என்னவோ ஒவ்வொரு செடியும் வேப்பமரம்,
இலுப்பைமரம்,புளியமரமாக நன்கு வளர்ந்தது.

இப்படி ஒன்றல்ல இரண்டல்ல நுாற்றுக்கும் அதிகமான மரங்கள் வனப்புடன் வளர்ந்துள்ளது. வட்டமலை பகுதியை பசுஞ்சோலையாக்கி வைத்துள்ள இந்த மரங்களின் நிழலில்தான் இப்போது கோவிலுக்கு வரக்கூடிய பக்தர்கள் இளைப்பாறி களைப்பு நீங்க பெறுகிறார்கள்.
புளியமரத்தில் இருந்து விழும் புளியங்காயை பாக்கிலட்சுமி பொறுக்கியெடுப்பதன் மூலம் சொற்ப வருமானம் கிடைத்து வந்தது பின்னர் அரசாங்கம் அந்த மரத்திற்கு எல்லாம் எண் போட்டு அரசுக்கு சொந்தமாக்கிவிட்டதால் இப்போது புளியமரத்து பலன் மட்டுமல்ல எந்த மரத்தின் பலனும் பாக்கியலட்சுமிக்கு கிடையாது.
ஆனால் அதைப்பற்றி இவருக்கு சிறிதும் கவலை இல்லை எம் பிள்ளை(மரம்) எனக்கு வருமானம் தந்திட்டு இருந்தான், இப்ப அரசாங்கத்திற்கே வருமானம் தர்ரான் சந்தோஷம்தான் என்கிறார் சிரிப்பு குறையாமல்.
பிள்ளை என்றதும் நினைவு வருகிறது குடும்பம் சொந்த பந்தம் என்று கேட்டபோது எல்லாமே இதுங்கதான் என்று கைகாட்டுகிறார், அவர் கைகாட்டிய திசையில் அவர் வளர்த்த மரங்கள் இவர் சொல்வதை ஆமோதிப்பது போல இலை கிளை அசைக்கின்றன.

தற்போது கோவில் நிர்வாகம் சாமான்கள் போட்டுவைக்கும் அறையில் சாமான்களோடு சாமான்களாக வாழ்ந்துவரும் இவர் மரங்களின் மீது கொண்ட பாசம் காரணமாக அவைகளுக்கு தண்ணீர் ஊற்ற வேண்டிய நேசம் காரணம் வட்டமலையைத்தாண்டி எங்கும் போனதில்லை இனி போகப்போவதும் இல்லை.
பொதுப்பார்வையில் இவர் ஒரு அப்பாவி பாட்டியாக தென்படலாம் ஆனால் உண்மையில் மரங்கள் வளர்ப்பு என்பதற்கான நாட்டின் உயர்ந்த விருதை எல்லாம் கொடுத்து இனியும் கையேந்தவிடாமல் கவுரமாக வாழ வழிசெய்யவேண்டும், அது அவருக்கு கவுரவத்தை சேர்க்கும் என்பதற்காக அல்ல நமக்கு புண்ணியத்தை தரும் என்பதால்.

போயிட்டு வர்ரேன் தாயி என்று மரங்களை பெற்ற அந்த மாதரசி மகராசியின் கால்களில் விழுந்து ஆசிபெற்று வரும்போது திரும்பி பார்க்கிறேன், வட்டமலையைவிட வட்டமலையின் மீதுள்ள முத்துக்குமாரசாமி கோபுரத்தைவிட உயரமாக பாக்கியலட்சுமி பாட்டி விசுவரூபமெடுத்து நிற்கிறார்.
(நன்றி:தணிகைச்செல்வி,காங்கேயம் நல்லதம்பி)

Source…..எல்.முருகராஜ்….in http://www.dinamalar.com

” உப்புமா 20 காசு; பில்டர் காபி 15 காசு : நம்புங்க இது உண்மை விலைதாங்க….” !!!

உணவுப்பொருட்களின் விலையுயர்வால், ஹோட்டல்களில் உணவு வகைகளின் விலைகள் விண்ணைத்தொடும் அளவிற்கு அதிகரித்துள்ள நிலையில், உப்புமா 20 காசு ; பில்டர் காபி 15 காசு என்ற விலை அனைவரையும் திரும்பிப் பார்க்க வைத்துள்ளது.

இந்தியாவின் வர்த்தக நகரமான மும்பை, சினிமா உள்ளிட்ட பல்வேறு துறைகளுக்கு தாய்வீடாக இயங்கி வருகிறது. அத்தகைய சிறப்புமிக்க மும்பை மாநகரில், தென்னிந்தியாவை சேர்ந்த ஹோட்டல் நிறுவனம், 1940ம் ஆண்டு மும்பையில் “கபே மெட்ராஸ்” என்ற பெயரில் ஹோட்டலை துவக்கி, தற்போதும் வெற்றிகரமாக நடத்தி வருகிறது.

தென்னிந்திய உணவுவகைகளை சிறப்பாக விநியோகித்து வந்த கபே மெட்ராஸ் ஹோட்டல் துவங்கி 75 ஆண்டுகள் நிறைவடைந்துள்ளதையொட்டி, நேற்று (24ம் தேதி) காலை சிலமணி நேரங்களுக்கு, ஹோட்டல் துவங்கப்பட்டபோது இருந்த விலையிலேயே உணவு வகைகளை விற்க திட்டமிட்டனர். அதன்படி..

ரச வடை – 50 காசு

உப்புமா – 20 காசு

பில்டர் காபி – 15 காசு என்ற அளவில் விற்கப்பட்டது.

நாட்டின் வடபகுதி மக்களுக்கு ஏற்கனவே தென்னிந்திய உணவு வகைகளின் மீது அலாதியான பிரியம் இருக்கும் நிலையில், 1940ம் ஆண்டு விலையிலேயே உணவுகள் விற்கப்பட்டது. கபே மெட்ராஸ் வாடிக்கையாளர்களை மேலும் உற்சாகத்திற்குள்ளாக்கியது.

தற்போது அனைவரது கைகளிலும் ஸ்மார்ட் போன் தவழ்ந்துவரும் நிலையில், நேற்று கபே மெட்ராஸ் ஹோட்டலில், உணவு சாப்பிட்டவர்கள், தாங்கள் சாப்பிட்ட உணவு வகைகள் மற்றும் பில்லை, தங்களது ஸ்மார்ட்போனில் போட்டோ எடுத்து உடனுக்குடன் சமூகவலை தளங்களிலும் பதிவேற்றினர்.

 

Source….www.dinamalar.com

Natarajan

Beautiful Statue of Swami…. A Blessed Experience …

November 20, 2015 :A sculptor by name Mr. Chinna from Rampachodavaram of Andhra Pradesh came to Puttaparthi with this beauitiful statue of Swami. He is a Shirdi baba devotee and had never been to Puttaparthi nor seen Swami physically. While he was making a statue of Shirdi, Swami came in his dream and said, ” It is the same Sai that you are worshipping. Do My statue too”. The very next day he took up this stupendous task of making the statue and in 3 months the beautiful statue was ready.


His intention was to give the statue of Swami to the Sri Sathya Sai Central Trust and leave it in the ashram’s hands to decide as what to do with the statue there after. By the time he reached Puttaparthi with the statue, it was 10.30 PM.
As it was too late to go any where, the only option that seemed possible for him was Prof. Anil Kumar’s house. He then went up to Prof. Anil Kumar and requested him if he can “keep” the statue for a night before he offers it to the ashram. The statue was too good and beautiful for Prof.Anil Kumar and Mrs.Vijaya Lakshmi Anil Kumar to think twice and there were so happy to provide the shelter. The next morning saw a sea of people thronging to see this statue in Prof.Anil Kumar’s home in Samadhi Road.
credit……saidevotees_worldnet <saidevotees_worldnet@yahoo.co.in>
Natarajan