Let us Appreciate the Magic of Nature …

Where the Sky Meets the Earth

We don’t always get to experience the view of heaven and earth because we often don’t bother to look. Sometimes, just opening your eyes is enough to experience the sheer beauty and magic of nature. Enjoy these spectacular photos and words of wisdom.

Nature is so powerful, so strong. Capturing its essence is not easy ~ your work becomes a dance with light and the weather. It takes you to a place within yourself.

~ Annie Leibovit 

When the Sky Meets the Earth

Mother Nature is the great equalizer. You can’t get away from it.

~ Christopher Heyerdahl

When the Sky Meets the Earth

When I admire the wonders of a sunset or the beauty of the moon, my soul expands in the worship of the creator.

~ Mahatma Gandhi

When the Sky Meets the Earth

Look deep into nature, and then you will understand everything better.

~ Albert Einstein

When the Sky Meets the Earth

Land really is the best art.

~ Andy Warhol

When the Sky Meets the Earth

Our knowledge is a little island in a great ocean of nonknowledge.

~ Isaac Bashevis Singer

When the Sky Meets the Earth

Nature is wont to hide herself.

~ Heraclitus

When the Sky Meets the Earth

I go to nature to be soothed and healed, and to have my senses put in order.

~ John Burroughs

When the Sky Meets the Earth

Men have looked upon the desert as barren land, the free holding of whoever chose; but in fact each hill and valley in it had a man who was its acknowledged owner and would quickly assert the right of his family or clan to it, against aggression.

~ T. E. Lawrence

When the Sky Meets the Earth

What is the good of your stars and trees, your sunrise and the wind, if they do not enter into our daily lives?

~ E. M. Forster

When the Sky Meets the Earth

Nature will bear the closest inspection. She invites us to lay our eye level with her smallest leaf, and take an insect view of its plain.

~ Henry David Thoreau

When the Sky Meets the Earth

In the depth of winter I finally learned that there was in me an invincible summer.

~ Albert Camus 

When the Sky Meets the Earth

Forget not that the earth delights to feel your bare feet and the winds long to play with your hair.

~ Khalil Gibran

When the Sky Meets the Earth

The woods are lovely, dark and deep. But I have promises to keep, and miles to go before I sleep.
~ Robert Frost
When the Sky Meets the Earth

Nature uses human imagination to lift her work of creation to even higher levels.

~ Luigi Pirandello

When the Sky Meets the Earth

Trees are the earth’s endless effort to speak to the listening heaven.

~ Rabindranath Tagore

When the Sky Meets the Earth

 

There are always flowers for those who want to see them.

~ Henri Matisse

When the Sky Meets the Earth

Water is the driving force of all nature.

~ Leonardo da Vinci

When the Sky Meets the Earth

Autumn arrives in early morning, but spring at the close of a winter day.

~ Elizabeth Bowen

When the Sky Meets the Earth

Just living is not enough… one must have sunshine, freedom, and a little flower.

~ Hans Christian Andersen

When the Sky Meets the Earth

For in the true nature of things, if we rightly consider, every green tree is far more glorious than if it were made of gold and silver.

~ Martin Luther

When the Sky Meets the Earth

Each blade of grass has its spot on earth whence it draws its life, its strength; and so is man rooted to the land from which he draws his faith together with his life.

~ Joseph Conrad

When the Sky Meets the Earth

Spring is nature’s way of saying, ‘Let’s party!’

~ Robin Williams

When the Sky Meets the Earth

I believe in God, only I spell it Nature.

~ Frank Lloyd Wright

When the Sky Meets the Earth

One touch of nature makes the whole world kin.

~ William Shakespeare

When the Sky Meets the Earth

Like music and art, love of nature is a common language that can transcend political or social boundaries.

~ Jimmy Carter

When the Sky Meets the Earth

When I have a terrible need of ~ shall I say the word ~ religion. Then I go out and paint the stars.

~ Vincent Van Gogh

When the Sky Meets the Earth

Earth and sky, woods and fields, lakes and rivers, the mountain and the sea, are excellent schoolmasters, and teach some of us more than we can ever learn from books.

~ John Lubbock

When the Sky Meets the Earth

In all things of nature there is something of the marvelous.

~ Aristotle

When the Sky Meets the Earth

What makes the desert beautiful is that somewhere it hides a well.

~ Antoine de Saint~ Exupery

When the Sky Meets the Earth

Wherever you go, no matter what the weather, always bring your own sunshine.

~ Anthony J. D’Angelo

When the Sky Meets the Earth

Someone asked me, if I were stranded on a desert island what book would I bring… ‘How to Build a Boat.’

~ Steven Wright

When the Sky Meets the Earth

Never measure the height of a mountain until you have reached the top. Then you will see how low it was.

~ Dag Hammarskjold

When the Sky Meets the Earth

The butterfly counts not months but moments, and has time enough.

~ Rabindranath Tagore

When the Sky Meets the Earth

In wilderness I sense the miracle of life, and behind it our scientific accomplishments fade to trivia.

~ Charles Lindbergh

When the Sky Meets the Earth

Source….www.ba-bamail.com

Natarajan

Seen a Tree Like This one Before….?

Trending on YouTube: Seen a Tree Like This Before?

Image Courtesy: Screengrab taken from YouTube video uploaded by AmazingVideos 24/7

Looks can be deceptive, whether it’s humans or nature; case and point, this video from 2014 that’s trending on YouTube today.

A gentleman who seemed to be recording just a simple tree in a backyard was in for a huge, unexpected surprise. Turns out this ordinary tree is unlike anything you’ve ever seen.

The video shows many birds flocking to it and settling in on the branches. Seconds later the big reveal takes place.

Watch the video to see what the surprise is. You’ll be left just amazed as we were.

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

Natarajan

Image of the Day…Rainbow over the Desert…

Photo taken July 6, 2015 by John Solvie near Las Vegas, Nevada.

John Solvie of Las Vegas, Nevada submitted this photo to EarthSky this week. He wrote:

Earlier than normal desert ‘monsoon’ flow in the Las Vegas Valley revealed that the pot of gold isn’t on the Las Vegas Strip, but rather in the northern foothills. 🙂

Source….www.earthsky.org

Natarajan

” Do You Know the Meaning of the Word ” Mortgage ” ?…..Read This !!!

The English language has roots in Ancient Greek, Latin, German, French and several more languages. Because of that, the meaning of certain words we use today have come a long way since their origins, tosometimes mean something else completely. This short list shows you some of the more bizarre origins of modern English words, many of which are quite surprising.

The Bizarre Origins of 12 Common Words

Bellwether” refers to a leader or a trendsetter, generally used for a products or stock that serves as an indicator of the state of the market. In old English dialect, “wether” was the name of a castrated ram, and the lead wether in a herd would usually have a bell hung around its neck, helping the herdsman could locate it.

The Bizarre Origins of 12 Common Words

“Arctic” comes from the Greek word “arktos”, meaning “bear”. It refers to the “Great Bear” (also known as the “Big Dipper” or Ursa Major), a constellation that remain in the same place year-round in the northern sky.

The Bizarre Origins of 12 Common Words

Canopy comes from the Greek word for mosquito – “konops”. The Greek referred to a bed or a couch fitted with mosquito netting as a “Kanopeion”, which eventually became “Canopy”.

The Bizarre Origins of 12 Common Words

The flower “Dandelion” got its name from the French “dent de lion” (the tooth of the lion), referring to the shape of the petals.

The Bizarre Origins of 12 Common Words

When you hear the word “Sturdy”, you think of something robust and solid, but in the 14th century, it actually meant “unruly” or “unmanageable.” It is believed to originate from the Latin name for thrush – “turdus”. Thrushes had a tendency to eat leftover fermented grapes in wineries, making them drunk and frenzied. To this day, the French use the term soûl comme une grive, meaning “as drunk as a thrush”…

The Bizarre Origins of 12 Common Words

These days, “Pedigree” is used to refer to lineage or heritage, but it originally was a genealogical diagram (A family tree). French scholars in medieval times thought the connecting lines resembled a stork’s leg – “pied de grue”.

The Bizarre Origins of 12 Common Words

When we hear the word “Henchman”, we often associate it with the nameless guards for the main villain in a Bond movie, but the origin of the word has noble roots. “Hench” comes from the old English word “hengest” (horse), and a henchman would be a knight or a servant who would ride along a nobleman on long journeys.

The Bizarre Origins of 12 Common Words

Not surprisingly, “Mortgage” comes from the French words “mort” (death), and “gage” (pledge) meaning you pledge to pay it until you’re dead…

The Bizarre Origins of 12 Common Words

“Schlong” comes from the Yiddish word for snake – “Shlang”…

The Bizarre Origins of 12 Common Words

In the 19th century, a “sniper” was a man who hunted snipe. Snipes were considered to be the hardest game bird due to their flight speed and constant alertness. This forced hunters to shoot them from a distance, and giving us the modern meaning of the word.

 

The Bizarre Origins of 12 Common Words

Tragedy is an interesting word. It comes from the Greek word “tragoedia” which literally means “goat song”. The exact reason for this peculiar origin is a mystery, but it likely comes from the Ancient Greek actors who wore animal hides during performances of drama and tragedy.

The Bizarre Origins of 12 Common Words

In the 17th century, “Fizzle” meant to break wind without making a noise. Originating from the old English word “fisting” (farting).

The Bizarre Origins of 12 Common Words

Cantaloupe comes from the name “Cantalupo”, a papal estate in Italy where the first melons in Europe were grown. Cantalupo itself comes from the Latin words “Cantare” (to sing) and “Lupo” (wolf) – it’s assumed that the residents Cantalupo would hear the howling of wolves regularly.

A “Sycophant” is a person who acts obsequiously toward someone important in order to gain advantage. Its origin is quite bizarre – it comes from the Greek “suko” (fig) and “phantes” (a person who shows or reveals something). In Ancient Greece, exporting figs was prohibited by law, and those who would report illegal exporters to the authorities were called “fig revealers”.
H/T: mentalfloss.com / buzzfeed.com

Source….www.ba-bamail.com

Natarajan

 

” Let us Learn From These Birds….”

Birds Can Teach Us a Lot About Perseverance…

 

There is much to learn from the world of nature. We often forget that many of the things we know come from that place. When we despair from our world’s hardships, it can be of immense comfort to look outside of it for some answers. I hope this beautiful presentation will prove that to you.

perseverance inspiring

perseverance inspiring

perseverance inspiring

perseverance inspiring

perseverance inspiring

perseverance inspiring

perseverance inspiring

perseverance inspiring

perseverance inspiring

perseverance inspiring

perseverance inspiring

perseverance inspiring

Source…..www.ba-bamail.com

Natarajan

Pictures of the Day…. Cheetahs on the Top of the World …!!!

 

The look on tourist Mickey McCaldin’s face says it all. Picture: Caters News

The look on tourist Mickey McCaldin’s face says it all. Picture: Caters News Source: Picture Media

All aboard! Picture: Caters News

All aboard! Picture: Caters News Source: Picture Media

Bigger than your average household cat, these cheetahs made themselves at home with these

Bigger than your average household cat, these cheetahs made themselves at home with these tourists. Picture: Caters News Source: Picture Media

There were many other tourists on board, but these cheetah’s took a special liking to Mic

There were many other tourists on board, but these cheetah’s took a special liking to Mickey McCaldin, seated in the back row. Picture: Caters News Source: Picture Media

Picture: Caters News Picture: Caters News

Picture: Caters News Source: Picture Media

These tourists were cautious of their new friends. Picture: Caters News

Source….www.news.com.au

Natarajan

 

Amazing …. Turtle’s Eye view of Great Barrier Reef…

 

The Great Barrier Reef is home to almost 6000 species. Thanks to GoPro, here’s what the journey through it looks like for one of them: a turtle’s eye view of the Reef.

To find out more about the level of pollution affecting turtles within the Great Barrier Reef, WWF is working on innovative project in Queensland with the support of our partners Banrock Station Wines Environmental Trust, James Cook University, The University of Queensland, the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority, State and Commonwealth government agencies, Indigenous rangers and local community groups.

As part of that project, the opportunity arose to very carefully fit a small GoPro camera to a turtle, to better understand the post-release behaviour of tagged green turtles. The result is this amazing video.

Source….www.you Tube.com and http://www.ba-bamail.com

Natarajan

” மஹா பெரியவா கையில் ஒரு வேல் …” ஒரு பக்தரின் அனுபவம் …

மகா பெரியவா சரணம்.
கடந்த சனி மற்றும் ஞாயிற்றுக்கிழமைகளில் பெங்களூர் பனஸ்வாடி ‘வேல் பூஜை அன்பர்கள்’ நடத்திய மூன்றாம் ஆண்டு விழா வைபவத்தில் கலந்து கொண்டு அவர்கள் ஏற்பாடு செய்த கூட்டத்தில் (பெங்களூர் அல்சூர் ஏரி அருகே உள்ள ஒடுக்கத்தூர் ஸ்வாமிகள் திருமடத்தில்) சொற்பொழிவாற்றினேன்.
இரு தினங்களும் திரளான பக்தர்கள் கூட்டம். இந்த நிகழ்வின் இரண்டாம் நாள் வைபவத்தை என் முகநூலில் பதிவிட்டேன். முருக பக்தர்களது உருக்கமான வரவேற்பும் உற்சாகமும் என்னை நெகிழ்வடைய வைத்து விட்டது.
திங்கள் காலை சென்னை திரும்பினேன். அன்று மதியம் திருச்சியில் உள்ள எனது நண்பர் (மங்கள் ஹோம் பில்டர்ஸ்) திரு முரளி அழைத்தார். அவரது ப்ராஜெக்ட் பூர்த்தி ஆகி, வீடுகள் ஒப்படைக்கும் விழாவில் கலந்து கொண்ட நண்பர் ஒருவர், வேல் ஒன்றை பரிசாக அளித்ததாகச் சொல்லி, எப்படி வழிபட வேண்டும் என்று என்னிடம் கேட்டார்.
அவராக அன்பளிப்பாக வந்த வேல் பற்றி என்னிடம் ஏன் கேட்க வேண்டும் என்று நான் யோசித்தேன்.
அடுத்த நாளான இன்று காலை பெரியவா அதிஷ்டானம் தரிசனத்துக்காக காஞ்சிபுரம் சென்றேன். அற்புதமான தரிசனம். அதன் பின் ஓரிக்கை சென்றேன்.
ஓரிக்கை பெரியவா திருச்சந்நிதியில் மூலவர் பெரியவா விக்கிரகத்துக்கு முன்னால் திருப்பாதுகைக்கு அருகில் ஒரு சிறிய பெரியவா விக்கிரமம் (இதுதான் அனுஷத்தின்போது தேரில் வலம் வருமாம்). அவர் தோளில் ஒரு சிறு வேல் சார்த்தி இருந்தார்கள். எனக்கு ஆச்சரியம். இதற்கு முன் இந்த விக்கிரகம் என் கண்ணில் பட்டதும் இல்லை. அதுவும் வித்தியாசமாக வேல்!
சனி மற்றும் ஞாயிறில் பெங்களூரில் வேல் பூஜை அன்பர்கள் வைபவம்.
அடுத்த நாள் திங்கட்கிழமை வேல் பற்றி நண்பர் முரளியின் விசாரிப்பு.
நான்காம் நாள் செவ்வாய்க்கிழமை ஓரிக்கை பெரியவாளிடம் ஒரு வேல்.
எனக்கு ஆச்சரியம். தொடர்ந்து வேல்!
ஓரிக்கையில் பெரியவாளுக்குக் கைங்கர்யம் செய்யும் திரு கணபதியிடம் ‘என்னது… பெரியவாளிடம் வேல் இருக்கு?’ என்று கேட்டதற்கு, ‘வாங்கோ… பிள்ளையார் சந்நிதிக்கு’ என்று கூட்டிச் சென்று பிள்ளையாரிடமும் ஒரு சிறு வேலைக் காண்பித்தார்.
ஆச்சரியம் விடவில்லை.
எனது வேல் அனுபவங்களை நெகிழ்வுடன் அவரிடம் பகிர்ந்து கொண்டேன்.
ஓரிக்கை கணபதி சொன்னார்: ‘‘பெரியவா கிட்ட வேல் இருக்கிறது பத்தி பலரும் கேக்கலை. உங்களைக் கேக்க வைக்கறார்.
நீங்க எப்படி வேல் அனுபவங்களைச் சொல்றேளோ, அதுபோல்தான் இங்கும். ஓரிக்கை அடிக்கடி வர்ற ஒரு பக்தர் பழநி செல்வதாகச் சொன்னார். அங்கே ஏதாவது வாங்கிண்டு வரணுமா என்று கேட்டார். பழநிலேர்ந்து வேல் வாங்கிண்டு வாங்கோ. பெரியவாளுக்கு சமர்ப்பிங்கோ’ என்று சொன்னேன்.
பழநியில் தரிசனம் முடிந்து அவருக்கு வேல் வாங்கி இருக்கிறார். வேல் வாங்கி வரும்போது (ஒன்றுக்கு இரண்டு வேல் வாங்கி இருக்கிறார்) அவர் ஓட்டி வந்த கார் மிகப் பெரிய விபத்தை சந்தித்து, காரில் இருந்தவர்களுக்கு எந்த வித சேதமும் இல்லாமல், கார் அப்பளம் ஆகியுள்ளது. ஆச்சரியத்திலும் ஆச்சரியம்.
விபத்தின் அதிர்ச்சியில் இருந்து கொஞ்சமும் விலகாமல், அந்த பக்தர் சிலிர்ப்புடன் வந்து இந்த இரண்டு வேலையும் இங்கே சமர்ப்பித்தார். ‘இந்த வேல்தான் என்னை காப்பாத்தி இருக்கு’ என்று உருகினார்.
அவர் வாங்கி வந்து சமர்ப்பித்த இரண்டு வேல்களில் ஒன்று பெரியவாளிடம்; இன்னொன்று விநாயகரிடம்.
உங்களையும் வேல் தொடர்ந்து கொண்டிருக்கிறது. ஏதேனும் முருகன் கோயிலுக்குச் சென்று தரிசிக்குமாறு பெரியவா சொல்றார் போலிருக்கு’’ என்று முடித்தார்.
தரிசனம் முடிந்து டிராவல்ஸ் காரில் தாம்பரம் திரும்பிக் கொண்டிருக்கும்போது வாலாஜாபாத் அருகே முன்னால் சென்ற லாரியின் பின்புறம் பெரிதாக எழுதி இருந்த வாசகம்:
சக்தி வேல். கூடவே, வேலின் படம் வேறு!
சுவாமிமலைக்குக் கூடிய விரைவில் பயணப்பட வேண்டும்.
எங்கூர் முருகன். எனக்கு ரொம்பவும் பிடித்த ஸ்வாமிநாதன்… குருஸ்வாமி…
ஜய ஜய சங்கர ஹர ஹர சங்கர.
அன்புடன்,
பி. சுவாமிநாதன்
Source…..Input from my friend Shri. Swaminathan thro mail
Natarajan

” Renu Raj…2nd Rank Holder in Civil Services Exam…Has Exploded Civil Services Myths…”

The popular belief is that unless they come from English speaking, sophisticated and affluent families, prepare at a young age, get educated in a first rate college, go to a coaching class in one of the metro cities, take the examination several times, the aspirants cannot make it to the civil services list, particularly its very top.’

Ambassador T P Sreenivasan — who serves in an honorary capacity at the NSS Academy where Renu coached for the IAS — on how she surprised even herself by topping the UPSC exam.

Renu Raj, 2nd rank-holder in UPSC exam, with her parents

Image: Dr Renu Raj, who stood 2nd in the UPSC exams, celebrates with her parents. Photograph: PTI.

By securing the second rank in the UPSC civil services examination this year, a 27-year-old married medical graduate, born in a Kerala village to a bus conductor father and educated, but unemployed mother, Renu Raj has exploded many civil services myths.

The popular belief is that unless they come from English speaking, sophisticated and affluent families, prepare at a young age, get educated in a first rate college, go to a coaching class in one of the metro cities, take the examination several times, the aspirants cannot make it to the civil services list, particularly its very top.

Renu Raj is not the first to explode some of these myths. Several other women have registered major successes. Two years ago, Haritha Kumar, from a similar background, an engineer, made it to the first rank.

Many years earlier, Nirupama Rao had secured the first rank. Last year, Divya Iyer, a doctor, did well and joined the coveted Kerala cadre. A rank holder throughout her academic life, a high achiever in many areas and a published author and editor, she was expected to be at the very top.

Renu is undoubtedly a product of the changing civil services scene across the country. The examination was always tough, as it followed the pattern of selection of the Indian civil service officers in the colonial era.

The change came first when the profile of the recruits changed from the urban to the rural. The rural rich landowners in several states lost their old wealth and power on account of land reforms and distribution of wealth. They discovered that the only way for them to recover their lost prestige was to get their children into the civil services, particularly IAS and IPS.

Hordes of young people migrated to Delhi to find short cuts to success in the civil services examination. A virtual IAS industry grew from the elite institutes like Rao’s Study Circle in Connaught Place to sweat shops on Mukherjee Street, where youngsters were spoon fed with readymade answers to old question papers and digested notes on every optional subject.

Aspirants from Bihar and UP began to qualify in large numbers.

Kerala had made a modest contribution to the civil services throughout, but it caught on to the new trend only in the beginning of the 21st century.

 

The first State Civil Services Academy came into being in 2004 and several other coaching centres came up all over the state.

A major facility offered by the government was the ‘adoption scheme’, which provides airfare and accommodation in the comfortable Kerala House in Delhi at the time of the UPSC interview.

The number of entrants from Kerala, which had reduced to a trickle in the 1980s and 1990s, picked up. The trend has continued and Kerala began to produce about 8 per cent of the recruits in the last ten years. This year, there are nearly 40 recruits, many of them with high ranks.

The increase in the age limit and the number of permissible chances changed the scene completely. The upper age limit rose from 23 to 32 and the chances increased from 2 to 6. This enabled doctors, engineers, IIT and IIM graduates and others to take the place of arts and humanities graduates to a great extent.

Instead of a few, who took the risk of not taking up professional studies, the brighter students went to professional courses, secured jobs, worked for a few years, raised families in some cases and then took the civil services examination.

Though the standard expected of the candidates is at the master’s level, graduates began to prepare full time in the academies instead of joining postgraduate courses. Introduction of Hindi and regional languages and literature also contributed to the change of the profile of the candidates further.

The lure of Mukherjee Road took some to Delhi and other metro cities. The theory of ‘catch them young’ was given the go by.

For Renu, who obtained the 4th rank in the Class 10 and 13th rank in plus two exams, it opened up immense possibilities because of the changed circumstances and nature of the examination.

She breezed into a government medical college, passed the MBBS examination in flying colours, married a doctor and began to practice medicine.

Her parents, who had seen her win prizes for elocution and do well in extra curricular activities, developed ambitions to get her into the IAS, shifted to a rented house in Thiruvananthapuram to support her, with the full encouragement of her husband, L S Bhagat, who pursued his own medical studies elsewhere and the backing of her sister, Ramya Raj, also a medical student.

Her mother, V S Latha, a Malayalam literature graduate, trained her for the optional paper. Renu rose to the occasion, prepared on her own, even while working and later joined the State Academy, went to the Pala Academy for her Malayalam literature optional paper and the NSS Academy for the international relations module and model interviews.

She said that the International Relations Module was enough for her to score well in the relevant part of the General Studies paper.

Most aspirants go to several institutions for selected courses, for which they are famous. For instance, Pala has specialised in Malayalam and the NSS Academy in international relations. Everyone signs up with the State Academy to avail of the adoption scheme.

Renu went through the three stages, becoming one of the 13,000 out of 450,000 at the preliminary level, one of 5,000 at the mains level and second out of the 5,000.

She could not believe that she had spectacular success even after she saw her name on the UPSC web site.

An evangelist of the civil services, particularly, the IFS, I have been teaching at the various academies for more than ten years. In the last two years, I have been directing, in an honorary capacity, the NSS Academy.

The UPSC springs surprises every year. Some aspirants, with great promise, do not make it, while others do better than expected. The dynamics of the examination have their own vagaries. But one thing is certain: No one makes it without talent and hard work, even if some of the best do fail.

I noticed Renu at an International Relations Module, a special offering of the NSS Academy. Though she was not showy, she impressed me because of her pleasant demeanour, eagerness to learn and command of the language. In the tests we conducted, she always stood first. I was not surprised when she was chosen for the third stage of the examination and after a couple of model interviews, I was convinced that she would do extremely well.

I chose her, together with another aspirant, Parvathi, for a model interview on television, which went extremely well. Sadly, Parvathi, an economist, did not make it and Renu went on to get the second rank.

Renu Raj with Ambassador T P Sreenivasan at the NSS Academy

Renu Raj with Ambassador T P Sreenivasan, to her right, and her family at the NSS Academy in Thiruvananthapuram. Photograph courtesy, Ambassador T P Sreenivasan.

The civil services examination is truly transformational for those who make it. They are like pupae, which turn into butterflies overnight.

Others begin to see a halo around them and themselves blossom into mature, responsible and sophisticated individuals, as they climb the bureaucratic hierarchy. The nightmare of the preparations for the examination turns into a dream come true.

Renu may not have fully realised the transformation as yet, but all her interviews and speeches are joyous, generous about sharing credit with family, teachers and friends and expressing her concern for the poorest, lowliest and lost.

She attributes her success to commitment and hard work, not to any exceptional ability. She says she had expected to do well, but never dreamt of the second rank, particularly because, as a first timer, she did not have a sense of her capabilities in comparison to the others.

She will realise the full extent of her accomplishment and blessing only when she reaches the Lal Bahadur Shastri National Academy of Administration in Mussourie and meets the many well-healed and talented youngsters, with greater opportunities, whom she overcame.

Kerala is agog with jubilation over the repeated successes of its men and women, who have been joining the civil services in recent years. Among the men who have done extremely well in recent years are V Sriram, Johny Tom Varghese, Alby John and Abhiram Shankar.

One consequence of these successes will be an exponential growth in aspirants and training centres. The nation needs the best civil servants and Kerala is ready to make its contribution with officers like Renu, bright, committed and full of idealism.

source….T.P.Sreenivasan in http://www.rediff.com

Natarajan