” Eat With it…and Then Eat it…” !!!

When Narayana Peesapati became aware of the harmful effects of plastic, not only to the environment but also to our health when used as cutlery, he was stunned. But he did not stop there. He came up with a solution that most of us wouldn’t have thought of, and actually made it happen!

“Whenever I travelled, I used to feel terribly guilty about using plastic cutlery because it created so much plastic waste. Why couldn’t we create an alternative?” asks 48-year-old Narayana Peesapati, the founder and Managing Director of Bakey’s Food Private Limited. Today, he has found a way to replace plastic cutlery with edible cutlery.

Ok, so plastic is bad for the environment. Everyone knows that. But what’s wrong with not washing plastic cutlery and putting it in one’s mouth? Narayana says it is because we “abuse and misuse plastic; plastic should not be applied to food.” He has said as much in this talk, where he gives many reasons as to why plastic, especially cutlery, should be taken out of our lives. Some of these reasons have to do with the manufacturing process for plastic cutlery (explained further down) and others with hygiene.

So does he have an alternative then? He does, and Narayana has been developing it since 2010. Bakey’s manufactures edible cutlery, including spoons in different shapes and chopsticks.

Edible spoons

Edible spoons

Bakey’s edible cutlery is made from a mix of jowar (sorghum), rice and wheat flour. The spoons and chopsticks do not get soggy if placed in water and food. They only soften after some time (10-15 minutes), and thus can be eaten easily at the end of the meal. Even if discarded, they decompose within five to six days, if not eaten by insects or rodents.

The idea about how to make the cutlery struck Narayana during a flight from Ahmedabad to Hyderabad, when he saw a passenger using a piece of Gujarati khakra as a spoon to eat dessert.

Why is plastic bad for your health?

Narayana Peesapaty at a Bakey's stall.

Narayana Peesapaty at a Bakey’s stall.

Plastic consists of many chemical components which are toxic and carcinogenic, and can leech into food. Narayana, who has been to several manufacturing units of plastic cutlery in the country, has observed that the way in which it is manufactured is not very safe for use with food.

“The irony is that there are very stringent food safety norms in India. But there are no norms when it comes to manufacturing the utensils in which we consume food,” he says.

In this very competitive market, he says, hygiene has become the first casualty of cost cutting. The process of cleaning the cutlery by manufacturing units in India that he visited, involved just a rag of cloth being used to wipe the final products that came out of the mould in which molten plastic was injected.

This, he feels, leaves consumers at the risk of plastic intake.

bakeys6

“Even after scraping the extra plastic, there are chances that some micro-granules of plastic get dislodged and can enter the body with our food if a spoon is not washed,” he says.

A thought even scarier than this struck Narayana when he noticed that in spite of such a huge consumption of plastic spoons, they are nowhere to be seen in the same numbers after disposal. This, he found, was because they were being reused, which makes plastic cutlery a source of bacterial contamination as well.

Why edible cutlery could be good for you

The spoons do not get soggy in food.

The spoons do not get soggy in food.

Prior to becoming a manufacturer of edible cutlery, Narayana was a researcher at the International Crop Research Institute for Semi Arid Tropics (ICRISAT), Hyderabad. Here, he undertook research on groundwater management, studying why groundwater levels were reducing. He concluded that producing less rice and more dryland crops like jowar would help stabilize the levels of groundwater. It was soon after this that he started thinking about creating a huge market for jowar, and this is one of the main reasons why jowar is the chief ingredients in edible cutlery.

With the product being widely acclaimed, Narayana has been able to communicate the ill effects of plastic to a wide audience.

Bakey’s cutlery has made a mark in the international market as well, with orders coming in from the US and UK.

Edible chopsticks

Being a new concept, working on the idea was a challenge initially, as there was no established technology. Everything had to be developed with learning and research. According to this report, it cost Narayana more than Rs. 60 lakhs to develop the prototype machines and moulds and get started (he had to sell two homes he owned to raise the money). But one of the bigger challenges now is to create an awareness about the harmful health effects of plastic. The use of plastic is also a behavioural issue according to Narayana—people accustomed to using plastic products will not find it easy to switch to edible cutlery.

Other than selling the cutlery directly from their website, Bakey’s also sets up stalls at places like organic bazaars and exhibitions. The company is only breaking even as of now and has not started making a profit, says Narayana.

Once it does, he hopes to develop an automatic machine for manufacturing the cutlery.

Edible dessert spoons

Based out of Hyderabad, the manufacturing unit is an all-women enterprise, which Narayana’s wife, who is currently working as a director in the company, will soon be taking over.

To know more about this initiative, you can write to Narayana at info@bakeys.com or visit their website here.

– See more at: http://www.thebetterindia.com/30465/edible-cutlery-in-india/#sthash.i0VEdVb7.dpuf

Source….www.thebetterindia.com

Natarajan

 

How an Artist is Changing Bengaluru Streets, One Pothole at a Time….

How an Artist is Changing Bengaluru Streets, One Pothole at a Time

Baadal Nanjundaswamy’s art work is incredible and delivers results. Image Courtesy: Facebook/Baadal Nanjundaswamy

As Bengaluru preps for the upcoming civic body polls on Saturday, it will be interesting to see how the scary crocodiles and gigantic anacondas that have appeared on the city’s water-logged and pothole-ridden roads recently will affect voters.

The city has been struggling with polluted lakes, garbage crisis, bad roads and crippling traffic management for a while now. Fed up with the state of affairs, local artists took it upon themselves to make sure the problems spoke for themselves, using imagination and art as their tools.

The charge has been led by Baadal Nanjundaswamy who shook up social media and local authorities (into making amends) by creating a life-size crocodile and swamp as an installation to highlight a pothole that hadn’t been fixed for days.

The crocodile did the trick and the pothole was filled. Since then, Mr Nanjundaswamy has been changing the face of Bengaluru pot holes, one brush stroke after another.

From transforming broken dividers into sutli bombs in one place and wrapped gifts in another, to painting huge faces around uncovered man holes, his art work is incredible and delivers results.

Check out some of his work below:

A little Diwali gift – major social media explosion in 3-2-1:

Photo Credit: Facebook/Baadal Nanjundaswamy

Bengaluru’s Secret Santa leaving them colorfully wrapped gifts for Christmas:

Photo Credit: Facebook/Baadal Nanjundaswamy

How about this Valentine’s Day proposal to civic body Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike (BBMP)?

Photo Credit: Facebook/Baadal Nanjundaswamy

Or these fearsome faces with gaping mouths?

Photo Credit: Facebook/Baadal Nanjundaswamy

They needed a zebra-crossing, so that’s what they got – a zebra crossing the road:

Photo Credit: Facebook/Baadal Nanjundaswamy

Would you like a game of Hopscotch on one of Bengaluru’s streets? It could be fun but also might be the only thing you do for a while:

Photo Credit: Facebook/Baadal Nanjundaswamy
source…..www.ndtv.com
natarajan

Gifts Everybody Deserves to Receive…

Everybody loves receiving gifts – For their birthday, for Christmas or randomly. There’s nothing more thrilling, but deep down the real treasured gifts are intangible. These gifts are priceless and everybody deserves receiving them at some point in their lives.

gifts

gifts

gifts

gifts

gifts

gifts

gifts

gifts

Source…www.ba-bamail.com

Natarajan

Message for the Day…” Every Single Unselfish Act is a Righteous Act…”

Sathya Sai Baba

Sacrifice ignorance (ajnana) and ego (ahamkara) at the altar of wisdom (Jnana), and install righteousness(Dharma) therein” – this is the message of the scriptures. Every single unselfish act, which prepares the ground for the merging of the Soul with the Over-Soul, which broadens the vision towards the Divinity immanent everywhere, is a righteous act. Each such act is a tiny stream that swells the river of holiness rushing towards the sea of knowledge of Divinity. Your acts and activities are all rituals in the worship of the Paramatmathat pervades the Universe. Whatever is done in an attitude of dedication and surrender is a component of the Dharma, which leads to Realisation. The strategy of the ancient Bharathiya (Indian) way of life is directed towards the sanctification of every moment and every word, thought and deed as a step towards realising the Divine.

Dashrath Manjhi Aka Mountain Man’s Story Is The Most Inspiring Thing You’ll Read Today…

Manjhi

Dashrath Manjhi, a poor landless labor moved a mountain in his lifetime, quiet literally! It took him 22 years but Manjhi shortened the travel between the Atri and Wazirganj of Gaya town from 55 km to 15 km. Not many are aware of this man’s greatness but thanks to Bollywood for converting his life story into a film. The film by Ketan Mehta is called Manjhi- The Mountain Man and is slated to release this Friday starring ace actors like Nawazuddin Siddiqui and Radhika Apte in lead roles. The story of a brave man who took the challenge of gifting accessibility to his remote village will inspire you beyond limit.

If you still haven’t heard of the man who fought with a mountain for more than two decades, his real story will move you!

1. Gehlour Ganj, Atri: A 300-foot tall mountain loomed between Atri block of Gaya, Bihar civilization in Wazirganj made commuting a difficult task for the locals

Dashrath Manjhi 1

2. Manjhi, a landless labourer worked in the fields on the other side of the mountain and lived with his wife, Falguni.

Manjhi 2

Manjhi belonged to a cast which was regarded the lowest of the low in a caste-ridden society. They were kept aloof from basic necessities like- water supply, electricity, a school and a medical centre.

3. Like everyday, Manjhi eagerly waited for his beloved wife Falguni who would bring lunch for him.  She did come to him that one eventful day, but her body had bruises and blood all over.

3

The treacherous trek up and around the mountain took hours. This led to frequent accidents and death of locals who lost their lives purely because reaching for medical facilities took hours. The nearest doctor was at Wazirganj, which was more than 70 kilometers over the mountain. Locals of the area cursed the inaccessibility but no one ever bothered to do anything about it. However, one man could wait no longer but that too alerted him after a tragedy. However, one day, Falguni tripped on loose rock, shattering her water pot. Not only she slid down several feet, she injured her leg. Manjhi could not save his wife and then he took a pledge.

4. “Jab Tak todenge nahi, tab tak chodenge nahi”- After losing his wife in 1959, Manjhi took up a challenge against the mountain and sold his goats to buy a hammer, chisel and crowbar.

Manjhi Story

“That mountain had shattered so many pots; claimed lives. I could not bear that it hurt my wife. If it took all my life now, I would carve us a road through the mountain.”- He said.

5. People called him a ‘lunatic’ but that did not deter him from his journey. After a struggle of 22 years (1960-1982), a tiny cleft across a rock wall opened up one day!

Mountain Man

He then went on to widen the cleft. Some several years later, he managed to carve out a passage 360 feet long and 30 feet wide.

Even though he lost his battle of life to cancer in 2007, thanks to Bollywood for converting his life into a film. Even when he was alive, people were totally awed by his will power and determination. Chief Minister Nitish Kumar agreed that once he had stood up and vacated his chair when Manjhi visited him in Janata Durbar in Patna.

Source…..Isha  Sharma… http://www.indiatimes.com

Natarajan

Two Indians Have Designed A Garbage Bin That Will Reward Users With Free WiFi…

Realising the need of the Internet in everyday life, two commerce graduates decided to give free WiFi to people in exchange of a cleaner surrounding with an unique initiative — a ‘WiFi Trash Bin’.

“When somebody dumps trash into a dustbin the bin flashes a unique code, which can be used to gain access to free WiFi, says Prateek Agarwal, one of the two founders of the initiative.

Mumbai-based Agarwal and his partner Raj Desai, a self taught programmer, travelled extensively to countries like Denmark, Finland, Singapore etc and realised that keeping surroundings clean needed apart from a difference in structure, a change in the attitude of people.

“We took a lot of help from countries like Finland, Denmark, Singapore etc and decided to build a system similar to that,” says Prateek Agarwal.

The duo hit upon the idea while visiting the NH7 Weekender a music festival which is spread around a large area and as music festivals go is home to music food drinks and of course a lot of garbage.

” …It took us six hours to find our friends. Since there was no network, we could not reach them through a phone call.

It was the trigger for the idea and we thought why not provide free WiFi to people using hotspots,” says Mr Agarwal.

Keeping the place clean and helping to connect with their friends were the driving force behind their innovative project.

The self-funded experiment with support from operator MTS proved to be a success at the various Weekender Festivals held in Bangalore, Kolkata and Delhi but is not operative at the moment.

The founders say they have received queries from GAIL and talks are in due process.

“We wanted to change the attitude of the people and how things are structured, thus affecting an individual’s behaviour,” says Raj Desai.

The venture, though not operative now aims to satisfy the need of Internet at every step in the modern day world.

“… We want to work more for it,” says Mr Agarwal.

The duo say they tend to setup a network of WiFi bins thus helping to bring about a behaviourial redesign among people.

The venture was recently showcased at “Networked India”, a unique initiative by Ericsson and CNN-IBN that aims to identify and facilitate clutter-breaking innovations in the field of connectivity and mobility.

Source…..www.huffingtonpost.com

Natarajan

 

” These Chennai Scientists Are Trying To Solve An Impending Agricultural Crisis…”

SALICORNIA BRACHIATA

VEDARANYAM, Tamil Nadu — On a sun-scorched wasteland near India’s southern tip, an unlikely garden filled with spiky shrubs and spindly greens is growing, seemingly against all odds.

The plants are living on saltwater, coping with drought and possibly offering viable farming alternatives for a future in which rising seas have inundated countless coastal farmlands.

Sea rise, one of the consequences of climate change, now threatens millions of poor subsistence farmers across Asia. As ocean water swamps low-lying plots, experts say many could be forced to flee inland.

“It’s hard to imagine how farmers will live,” said Tapas Paul, who as a World Bank official helped channel about $100,000 to help build the small garden a decade ago in a swampy, seaside town dominated by salt flats in southern Tamil Nadu state. “In the places subject to inundation and sea level rise, there are few options.”

A team of Indian scientists is searching for solutions to what they describe as a fast-approaching agricultural crisis. Their neatly plotted rows of naturally salt-tolerant plants, known as halophytes, could be a part of the answer. The scientists from the M.S. Swaminathan Research Foundation are also trying other approaches: tweaking genes and cross-breeding plants by conventional means to discover which might grow and even flourish.

“Sea level rise is inevitable, and we are not prepared,” said Swaminathan, who pioneered high-yield wheat and rice varieties for India in the 1960s. “The biggest problem in India is just the very large population. We can say people can relocate, but where could we even accommodate all those who need to move inland?”

Saltwater for a farmer long meant certain crop failure. Wartime foes sowed enemy fields with salt to ensure social collapse. Natural disasters such as the 2004 Asian tsunami left countless plots unproductive for years.

Asia’s coastal farmers, including millions impoverished in India, now face such problems. Climate change will bring stronger storms and warmer temperatures that expand ocean waters and melt ice caps and glaciers. As a result, seas are set to rise up to 1 meter (3.2 feet) in this century, according to the latest scientific forecasts.

Chellammal, a graceful, 65-year-old farming housewife in the Tamil Nadu village of Tetakudi, knows the nightmare of farming on salt-contaminated land too well.

“I struggled so long to get things to grow, but nothing worked,” said Chellammal, who goes by one name. “Every year just got worse until there was nothing left,” she said, crouched in a bright pink sari by her fields.

The land her family had saved for decades to buy went completely barren about five years ago, after a neighboring village took up shrimp farming when flooding from a nearby ocean canal salted their lands. The shrimp ponds were never lined properly, so their saltwater seeped into surrounding soils.

The farmland lost by Tetakudi’s 200 households now supports little more than a vast expanse of salt-tolerant shrubs called Suaeda maritime along with succulents called Salicornia brachiata, known to locals as “chicken feet.”

To the villagers, the bright green bushes are no better than weeds. Already, 12 families have boarded up their homes and left.

But scientists say suaeda is good for firewood. And salicornia species, which can tolerate nearly twice the salinity of seawater, have enormous potential as a biofuel crop, with seeds containing high concentrations of oil.

The problem, however, lies in realizing profits. For any crop to work on a large scale, inexpensive methods and machinery for harvesting will have to be developed. Then processing plants, production lines and markets would need to be built. As of now, none of that exists.

Chellammal is dubious, but interested.

“If we can make money from what we grow, we’ll try it. Why not?” she said. “Maybe all is not lost.”

 

salicornia brachiata

In this June 16, 2015 photo, a wild-growing Salicornia brachiata, a halophyte known to locals as ‘€chicken feet’, thrives on fields tainted by saltwater from a neighbouring shrimp farm near Velankanni, India.

The timing for an agricultural crisis due to sea rise couldn’t be worse. India’s poor farmers already struggle with frequent flooding, drought and soils degraded by agrochemical overuse. Those on the coast are also hit by storms, with at least 27 of the 35 deadliest cyclones in history barreling through the Bay of Bengal before slamming into either India or Bangladesh.

India’s freshwater sources are also in peril, with over-tapped groundwater reserves so low the country is expected to have only half the water it needs by 2030. Grain production, meanwhile, has stalled around 260 million tons in recent years, despite global pressure for India to boost yields, eliminate waste and eradicate widespread poverty and malnutrition.

To feed its growing 1.26 billion population, India must increase food production 45 percent by 2050, for which experts say it may need to cultivate more land. Instead, about 1.2 million hectares (3 million acres) of its coastal farmland has been degraded by salt, according to India’s Central Soil Salinity Research Institute.

Inland, India has lost another 5.5 million hectares of arable farmland, out of its nationwide total of 163 million hectares, though India’s soil salinity troubles are exacerbated by industrial salt flats, a growing number of shrimp farms and the depletion of groundwater reserves. The trend will only continue as seawater creeps onto low-lying lands along the 7,500-kilometer (4,700-mile) coast that outlines the country along the Bay of Bengal, Indian Ocean and Arabian Sea.

“Saltwater agriculture is considered a futuristic area. But it really shouldn’t be,” said marine biologist V. Selvam, the M.S. Swaminathan foundation’s mustachioed director of coastal research. “Very soon there won’t be enough land and water to meet our needs.”

And India is not alone. Countries including Egypt, Bangladesh and much of Southeast Asia also face heavy saltwater intrusion and loss of farmland. Already, 62 million hectares, or 20 percent, of the world’s total 300 million hectares of irrigated farmland has been salinized to some extent. Another 50 centimeters (1.6 feet) of sea rise, which is just half of what’s expected by 2100, would swamp up to 1.9 million more hectares, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change has said.

That will undermine the world’s ability to find the additional 120 million hectares of farmland it needs for a staggering 70 percent increase in food production to feed the world by 2050, according to the U.N. Food and Agricultural Organization.

Experts say there will be little choice but to grow some non-food crops along the coasts.

The world’s irrigated acreage could be increased by about 50 percent by reusing saline water and salinized crop fields for halophytes, said University of Arizona environmental sciences professor Edward Glenn.

“As with aquaculture replacing wild fisheries, it is inevitable that halophytes will have their day,” he said.

Sesuvium portulacastrum. Paspalum vaginatum. Prosopis juliflora.

These are just a few of the 350 known species of salt-tolerant plants that are candidates to become crops for the future. Saltwater plants are unlikely to become staple foods, because while often high in nutrients they’re also very salty and so should be eaten in moderation.

Species such as Salicornia europaea, also known as glasswort or samphire, are already sold in European markets as a fancy salad addition or side dish. The bright purple-and-white blossoms of Limonium are a florist’s delight, while another species called Atriplex or saltbush is eaten by sheep.

Supporters note a host of potential uses to make harvests profitable, including firewood, decorative flowers, kitty litter, nutritional supplements, cooking oil and biofuel. Cattle fodder is another possibility, and Indian herders already graze their cattle on thorny shrubbery by the sea.

Despite the potential, saltwater agriculture is still seen as a fringe topic, even after decades of research by universities worldwide along with studies and pilot projects in countries including Mexico, Pakistan, Jordan and Eritrea. The aviation company Boeing is also researching biofuels from saltwater plants.

India’s scientists aren’t waiting for markets to develop. Nor are they relying on just the halophyte garden to offer up new options.

They’re scouring coasts for wild grain species that might naturally tolerate some salinity, and using arduous breeding methods to create new salt-tolerant strains.

 

The foundation has also developed genetically modified rice using genes from mangrove trees. It says the resulting plant can tolerate salt concentrations of 12-15 grams per liter. Seawater is typically two to three times saltier, but that’s still a major improvement from currently cultivated rice varieties, which can handle only up to 3 grams per liter.

Genetic modification is considered the most difficult approach, because salt tolerance is a trait that involves numerous genes. But the molecular biologist leading the development of GM halophytic rice believes it’s essential.

“Conventional breeding just takes too long, and this problem is urgent,” said Ajay Parida, the foundation’s executive director. His work stalled in 2007 under an effective moratorium on field testing GMOs, but the Indian government is considering shifting its GM testing policy and Parida now expects his trials to start soon.

“We could eventually be cultivating wastelands and places considered entirely unsuitable,” he said. “But it’s only after crisis hits that people realize the magnitude of the problem and start pushing for an answer.”

Source….  |  Katy Daigle….www.huffingtonpost.com

Natarajn

 

No mission is impossible….Meet Mr. K.R.Pechimuthu of Trichy…

K.R. Pechimuthu with his self-published Thirukkural booklets. Photo: M. Srinath

THE HINDU

K.R. Pechimuthu with his self-published Thirukkural booklets. Photo: M. Srinath

From blood donation to tree-planting, vermicompost and Thirukkural dissemination, retiree K. R. Pechimuthu has espoused each cause with gusto

K.R. Pechimuthu has clearly never thought of retirement as an end. What else would push him (literally) to cycle from his home in Kumaresapuram, on the outskirts of Tiruchi, distributing free booklets of the Thirukkural to primary-level school students?

“Instead of expecting the Government to come and bail us out each time, why cannot we do something ourselves?” he replies with a question.

And so, motivated by the idea of inculcating good values in youngsters, Mr. Pechimuthu and a helper hop on to their bicycles, packed with at least four 25-kilo bundles of booklets at 7 a.m., and visit the schools. Mr. Pechimuthu holds a value-orientation class using the Tamil literary classic as a foundation, for an hour, and encourages children to learn how to recite the poetic lines precisely. To keep them engaged, he offers a prize of Rs. 10 per correct recitation.

“We used to have moral science in our education system earlier, now it’s gone,” says Mr. Pechimuthu. “I use the Thirukkural to unite young children in learning how to venerate their parents and teachers, who are our founts of knowledge.”

It is 17 years since Mr. Pechimuthu stopped working as a mechanical engineer in BHEL, Kailasapuram, and 15 years since he started the Thirukkural project through his Akarur Educational Trust.

Mr. Pechimuthu reckons that at least 10,000 copies are given away every one or two months. He has cycled up to Manachanallur, 15 km from Tiruchi, on this unique mission, eager to use his retirement benefits to fund his dreams.

Father’s lessons

And there has been no dearth in the dreams department either. “People often wonder why I do all this,” he says. “When you grow older, shouldn’t you be getting more careful about your money? But then, no matter how much you earn in this lifetime, are you going to take it all with you when you die? So I thought, ‘let me look for people who need help.’”

Mr. Pechimuthu, born in Mayiladuthurai, and brought up in Devakottai, names his father A. Karupaiyya, a farmer, who worked briefly in Burma before setting up a timber depot in Devakottai, as his chief source of inspiration. “My father was a spiritually-inclined person, and used to recite theThevaram Thiruvasagam (sacred poems written by Saivite saints known as Nayanmars). “I used to be entranced by the recitation, though I couldn’t really understand their full meaning until I was much older,” recalls Mr. Pechimuthu.

“In his advanced years, my father handed over his timber depot to Periyasami, a worker who had joined us at the age of 10, as a symbol of gratitude for his long years of service,” he says. “Besides, as both my brother and I had moved on in our education and career and my sisters had settled into married life, he felt it was the best thing to do. My father’s selfless gesture convinced me to become more socially conscious.”

Social concerns

Mr. Pechimuthu’s social work started with blood donation in 1966, when he was a foreman in BHEL’s design engineering department. He donated blood around 75-80 times until he was 58 years old. He then shifted his attention to raising awareness about eye donation. In the mid-1980s, he got interested in organic farming and vermicompost, and got guidance in the subject from Chennai-based soil biologist Dr. Sultan Ahmed Ismail and Dr. Kalai of Bangalore University.

Popularising the concept through All India Radio broadcasts and workshops for Tamil Nadu Women in Agriculture, Mr. Pechimuthu mastered vermicomposting enough to develop his own study material that was used in many institutions.

Approaching retirement, he decided to set up an industrial training unit for rural youth in Vaiyyampatti block. Its students were also roped into the voluntary tree-planting drive overseen by Mr. Pechimuthu. Some 10,000 neem and laurel saplings (given free by the Agriculture Department), had been planted throughout the block by 1996, with Mr. Pechimuthu paying Rs. 10 per month out of his own funds for the maintenance of each tree planted in a public place. Unable to sustain the institute due to land problems, Mr. Pechimuthu shifted to Kumaresapuram, still keen to be of some use to the youth of the area.

And a new cause soon suggested itself to him. Approached by a tearful mother for aid to pay her child’s school fees, Mr. Pechimuthu wondered why the poor couldn’t have an affordable savings programme that would help them to educate their children.

He decided to act on the advice of his insurance agent friend, and offered to enrol the mother in an endowment assurance scheme where a Rs. 300 premium would ensure a substantial payout at maturity. “I asked her to give half the premium, and I offered to pay the other half,” he says. “By the grace of God, some 568 children have been able to pay their school fees through this policy.” It was while interacting with the students that he realised the need to teach them good manners and ethical awareness through the Thirukkural.

The man who gets up at 4 a.m. to sweep the street outside his home and clean out the open ditches, then accompany his wife on their daily stroll through the neighbourhood and finally gets ready for his school visits, is an inspiring figure. He doesn’t accept (or expect) any kind of financial or ideological sponsorship for his work.

“I don’t want people to praise me, just to absorb the ideals and values I’m putting across,” he concludes.

Mr. K. R. Pechimuthu may be contacted on 9715426463.

Source….Nahla Nainar …www.the hindu.com

Natarajan

How to handle criticism at work….

Feedback is essential for the growth of any professional. But are you equipped to handle it well?

How to handle criticism at work

Dealing with criticism in a positive manner is extremely important.

At some point in your professional life you will be criticised.

It may seem unfair and difficult. But you can use it in a positive manner — as a means to better yourself, or in a negative manner — causing yourself stress, anger and lowered self-esteem.

Below are the ways in which one must handle criticism:

Is it really criticism?

Most people get their defence up the minute they feel somebody is giving them an opinion not necessarily aligned with their own.

It is important to understand if the opinion is criticism or constructive feedback.

Instead of being extra sensitive, it is essential to absorb the person’s outlook and analyse whether it can be incorporated in anyway.

Do not reject any idea by labelling it as criticism.

It might be a stepping stone to bettering yourself.

What is the intent?

You need to evaluate why are you being criticised.

Is it for the betterment of your task quality, behaviour, productivity, or is it simply done to ridicule you?

In case the feedback is in your best interest, utilise the opportunity to learn and outperform your previous efforts.

However, if the person’s intent is to simply pick on you, you must be assertive and stand up for yourself.

Accept that you are not perfect.

‘Nobody is perfect; neither are you.

If you are good, there is scope to become great.

If you are great, there still is scope to become outstanding.

Take feedback with a pinch of salt and do not get offended. Look at it as an opportunity to stretch your boundaries and explore further into your potential.

Do not get offended easily.

Do you find yourself getting hurt, crying at the drop of a hat or stressing out the minute anybody criticises your work?

The solution is not to cut the critics out of your life but to toughen up.

Do not be over sensitive. Listen intently to what the person is saying.

Weigh the significance before dismissing the person.

Is the feedback accurate?

Be completely objective and unbiased in assessing feedback.

Just because it is different from your line of thought, doesn’t necessarily mean that it is wrong.

Think of every piece of feedback/criticism as a means of improving your knowledge, skills, attitude and efficiency.

If it doesn’t help on any of these parameters, brainstorm your ideas with the person before putting your foot down and rejecting it.

Stop making excuses.

Do you display strong displeasure whenever someone is pointing out something to you?

This will lead to conflicting situations with the person or discourage the person from walking up to you and sharing his/her honest and possibly valid feedback next time.

Either way, your relationship will suffer, along with any future probability of getting fresh perspective on self-improvement.

Is the criticism destructive?

If you are sure that the intention behind the criticism is destructive, try to find the hidden motive and communicate with the person.

An open communication serves the purpose majority of the time. Be assertive and yet empathetic when you do so.

Trust yourself and be confident of what you bring on the table. Let the critics not succeed in pulling your morale down.

Remember: If you have received criticism that was delivered in a warm manner only to bring a positive shift in you, take the effort to display your gratitude and appreciation to the person.

Thanking people who give you honest criticism is a sign of maturity.

Lead image used for representational purposes only. Credit: Diego Rodriguez-Vila/Creative Commons

The author is co-founder and head of business development at Work Better Training.

Source….Ruchira Karnik…www.rediff.com

Natarajan

Message for the Day…” Time Wasted is Life Wasted…”

Sathya Sai Baba

You are wasting a lot of time in meaningless pursuits. Time wasted is life wasted. Our ancients never wasted even a minute. They considered God as the embodiment of time and extolled Him thus: Kalaya Namah, Kala Kalaaya Namah, Kalaateetaya Namah, Kalaniyamitaya Namah(Salutations to the Embodiment of Time, to the One who conquered time, to the One who transcends time and to the One who ordains time). Why have you forgotten the truth that time is verily God? You eagerly await a Sunday thinking that you can relax and enjoy. In fact, you should feel sad that you are wasting time without doing any work on a Sunday. You have to utilise your time in a proper way. If you do not have any work, undertake social service. Help your fellowmen. Life becomes meaningful only when you make proper use of time.