Joke of the Day…” It is also designed to fly …” !!!

A helicopter carrying passengers suddenly looses engine power and the aircraft begins to decent. The pilot safely performs an emergency landing in water, and tells the passengers to remain seated and to keep the doors closed, stating that in emergency situations, the aircraft is designed to stay afloat for 30 minutes, giving rescuers time to get to them. Just then a man gets out if his seat and runs over to open the door. The pilots screams at him, “Didn’t you hear what I said, the aircraft is designed to stay afloat as long as the doors remain closed?!”.

“Of course I heard you”, the man replied, “but it’s also designed to fly, and look how good that one worked out!!” 

SOURCE:::: http://www.joke a day.com

Natarajan

The Art Of Simply Being… or ” சும்மா இருத்தல்…” !!!

“Summa Iruttal” or the Art of Simply Being

by V.S. Krishnan
I told my friend that I was planning to visit US. His response was quick. “If you want a happy living in US, you should possess the three ‘C’s: car; credit card; and cell phone”, he said. “Make sure that you possess at least some of these ‘essential ingredients’; otherwise, you would find your stay there very miserable,” he added.

I could not afford any of these, but still I decided to go ahead with my visit. On a fine evening, I landed at Dallas Airport without any of these ‘essentials’. What I carried was some personal belongings, a packet of ‘Nenthran chips’ for my son and family and a book of verses.

It is the book that I carry wherever I go. It is the book that keeps me engaged wherever I am, gives me joy at no extra cost, serves as a guide, as a set of prayer and as a source of immense inspiration. It is the Kandar Anubhuti, the immortal verses composed by Arunagirinathar some 600 years ago, relevant at all time and at all places.

Tiruppugazh are songs addressed to Muruga as prayers for the fulfillment of various aspirations of devotees. They hail the glory of Muruga and highlight His various infinite qualities in beautiful poems. They show the way to reach the Lotus Feet of Muruga. They show how we can free ourselves from various bonds and attachments and reach a state beyond all opposites like attachment and aversions, like and dislike, knowledge and ignorance.

The Vel Virutham underlines the importance of Muruga’s weapon, Vel. Kandar Alangaram adores Muruga in magnificent verses and describes the Lord’s power, valour and beauty. The Vel Vakuppu and Seerpadha Vakuppu uplift us from the consequence of karma. But Kandar Anubhuti is different from all these.

Kandar Anubhutispeaks of Arunagiri’s own experience of having felt the presence of Muruga and having received the advice direct from Muruga. ThroughKandar Anubhuti, Arunagirinathar shares his experience of having received the advice from Muruga. (summa iru sol ara enralume ammaporulonrum arinthilane). He says “Having heard the words of advice, summa iru, I kept wondering what eternal words of truth they are”.
Arunagirinathar says that as a result of this advice, he was elevated to the state of enlightenment. “Oh Muruga, because of your grace, I went through a new experience of speechlessness.” (Nesa Muruga ninathu anbu arulal… pesa anubhuti piranthathuve — 28).

The expression summa iru (‘simply be!’) is not to be interpreted to convey a state of idleness or inactivity. It does not mean that one has to cease all his activities and remain quiet. In the modern world, one has to shoulder many responsibilities at different levels and carry out various duties. In the midst of various activities one performs, one should set apart some time to remain quiet, without allowing the mind to wander all over. He would then experience almost the same kind of happiness that he experienced during the deep sleep (sushupti) state.

During the deep-sleep state, the mind is still and quiet but the level of consciousness is low whereas during the state of ‘summa iru’, the mind is still and quiet and the level of consciousness is also high. This is the state of ‘Turiya’ which Arunagirinathar explained in his song Suruti Mudi Monam rendered at Palani. No effort is need to attain this state. What you need to do is to remain silent, free from the influence of body or mind. No effort is needed to undertake this simple sadhana because you are only trying to be what you naturally are, free from thoughts, free from senses and free from ego.

Almost three hundred years later, another great saint appeared in this holy land to emphasize the importance of remaining quiet and still by ceasing all mental activities. He was Thayumanavar who occupied a great position in the royal court of King Vijaya Ranga Chokkanatha but renounced it all just to fulfill his spiritual quest.

Thayumanavar spent most of the time in the company of a great saint, Arul Nandi Sivachariar who came in the lineage of Thirumular. As Sivachariyar remained silent most of the time, he came to be known as Mauna Guru. Thayumanavar sought the blessings of Mauna Guru and asked to be his disciple. The saint then told him that the time for his initiation had not come and he should wait for an opportune moment. However, when the guru, preparing for a long pilgrimage, was about to depart, Thayumanavar could not bear his separation. The guru then advised him that the essence of all sadhanas is to ‘remain still’ (summa iru).

Thayumanavar adhered to this advice sincerely and he experienced a state of peace and happiness. He always remembered the words of his guru: “As you remain quiet, without thoughts, you are transcended to a state where, without the difference of ‘you’ and ‘me’, the ‘I-I’ (Self) alone remains.”

Thayumanavar expressed his experience thus: It is my ardent wish to remain quiet without any word being spoken. (“Sollum porulum atru summa irupatharkke, allum pakalum enakku asai, paraparame”) In another song he said: You made me sit quiet. Can there be a greater happiness than this?” (“Soothu onrum inri ennai summa irukkavaithai, ithu onrum pothatho inbam paraparme.”)

Ramana MaharshiThen, almost three hundred years later, another divine sage appeared before us to underline the importance of silence. He was Sri Ramana Maharshi, who was considered as the manifestation of divine guru Dakshinamurti. Most of the time, Maharshi observed silence.

According to Maharshi, speech is only the function of the mind, whereas silence is the source and origin of all thoughts and speeches. If speech is effective, silence which is the origin and source of all thoughts must be more powerful. “Silence speaks volumes. It is unceasing eloquence,” he said.

Words that give expression to thoughts arising from mind are always coloured by ego. Truth can never be explained in words. The truth is beyond words and beyond expression. It can only be experienced through silence. Silence has the power to silence the mind. When the mind is still, it stops generating thoughts and creates the ideal ground for communication.

When a person remains thoughtless and speechless, he understands the other by means of the universal language of silence. Emerson said that the “soul understands another soul by its own power without the need of any word”. Silence conveys a message eloquently and is understood by one who too knows the value of silence. It is the words which obstruct the silent communication.

Paul BruntonPaul Brunton, a British national, was highly successful in his journalistic career. Yet, he could not find peace within. He went on a searching mission to find the right saint who could answer his questions. Ultimately he found himself sitting cross-legged before Sri Ramana Maharshi. In fact, he had prepared a list of questions to be raised. He never knew that this meeting could change the course of his life.

As Maharshi intensely looked at his eyes, Brunton felt total silence pervading all over and they conversed without any word, without any language or expression. Later, Brunton himself explained the meeting of the two souls thus: “One by one, the questions I prepared dropped away and I knew that a steady river of quietness flowing near me and a great peace penetrating the inner reaches of me.”

In his book A Search in Secret India, he said: “There is a materialistic serenity and a spiritual serenity. The first comes from the possession of money, property, position, or affection. The other comes from no outward possessions but from inward ones. The first can be shattered at a single blow; the other remains solid forever.”

True to his conviction, Bhagavan, who was also known as Mauna Swamigal, mostly remained in silence and communicated in silence. Aspirants came to Bhagavan with various doubts in their mind but sitting before the saint in silence, all their doubts got cleared. Sitting before Bhagavan, the questions that bothered them lost their relevance. It was evident that the state of silence has transcended them from the mundane world of materialism to the divine world of spiritualism. Remaining in silence, it seemed that the whole world became still or non-existent.

When the world itself has disappeared, there were no issues, no problems and no solutions. Remaining in silence, they got their message loud and clear that there was nothing to know other than the ‘Self’. Having received the grace of Maharshi, they returned with a sense of fulfillment. Maharshi said, “When we abide in the stillness of silence and remain in the present (now), all thoughts go away and the mind subsides in its source. With the mind ceasing to function, the image of the world also disappears. By practicing this sadhana, frequently and consistently, the awareness of the Self (aham sphurti) alone remains.”

In his immortal verses, Aksharamana Malai, Bhagavan says: “Oh, Arunachala! You wanted to convey to me the message of silence and you wanted to convey it in the language of silence. Is it to emphasize the importance of silence, that you too remained quiet, without uttering any word? (Sollathu soli nee sollara nillenru summa irunthai arunachala….36).

Ramalinga AdigalarThere were many saints like Sri Ramalinga Adigalar who said that remaining quiet and still (summa iruttal) is the simplest method by which one can achieve the highest end of realisation. We thus find that sages appeared in this land continuously to remind us to practice this simple sadhana which ensures peace of mind and happiness.

So long as I hold the key to eternal happiness, I realise that there is no point in going after ‘c’ objects which provide momentary happiness. So, whenever I get spare time, I either open the Kandar Anubhuti orAkshara Mana Malai, remain quiet and find peace and bliss within.

SOURCE ::: murugan bhakthi.org

Natarajan

 

Joke of the Day… ” No Physical Fitness Program needed…”

Sign on company bulleting board: “This firm requires no physical-fitness program. Everyone gets enough exercise jumping to conclusions, flying of the handle, running down the boss, flogging dead horses, knifing friend in the back, dodging responsibility, and pushing their luck.”
Source::::: http://www.joke a day.com

Natarajan

Fireworks Around the World Light Up the Night on New Year Eve …

Australia prides itself on having some of the best fireworks in the world, but Dubai was aiming to break a Guniness world record with its spectacular display.

Dubai had an impressive fireworks display on the world’s tallest tower, the Burj Khalifa.

The Gulf Arab emirate of Dubai was aiming to break the world record for the largest LED-illuminated facade with its spectacular display centred on the world’s tallest building.

Who has the best fireworks in the world? 

Australia, have you seen what Dubai did?

Going for a world record … Dubai celebrates the New Year with a light and sound extravaganza. Source: AFP

Some 70,000 LED panels around the 2,722-foot Burj Khalifa flashed coloured lights and projected images of the country’s leaders when clocks there struck midnight as a massive fireworks display erupted.

Big bang ... people watch as Dubai celebrates the New Year.

Big bang … people watch as Dubai celebrates the New Year. Source: AFP

The celebration draws throngs of thousands of spectators every New Year’s Eve.

Emaar Properties said a team from Guinness World Records monitored the preparations. Last year, Dubai won the title for the world’s largest firework display, according to Guinness.

People watch ... Dubai celebrates the New Year at the Burj Khalifa, the world's tallest t

Innovative … Dubai celebrates the New Year at the Burj Khalifa, the world’s tallest tower. Source: AFP

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Party time … people watch the fireworks display in Dubai. Source: AFP

Celebrations ... Dubai celebrates the New Year.

Celebrations … Dubai celebrates the New Year. Source: AFP

Dubai’s world record attempt comes as countries including the UK, Italy, France, Germany, Russia, Turkey, Greece, New Zealand, Asia and the Ivory Coast among others welcomed the New Year in spectacular style.

New York joined the celebrations with a bang — the combination of the Times Square Ball Drop, an electrifying fireworks display and Taylor Swift’s rendition of “Shake it Off” resulted in a spectacular beginning of 2015.

Fireworks erupt after midnight in Times Square, New York. Thousands braved the cold to wa

Fireworks erupt after midnight in Times Square, New York. Thousands braved the cold to watch the annual ball drop and ring in the new year. Picture: AP. Source: AP

 

Other US cities yet to follow.

People cheer .. in front of Rome's ancient Colosseum as fireworks explode to celebrate th

People cheer in front of Rome’s ancient Colosseum as fireworks explode to celebrate the new year on January 1, 2015.Source: AFP

Lots of colours ... fireworks illuminate the night sky over the Ebrie Lagoon in Abidjan.

Lots of colours … fireworks illuminate the night sky over the Ebrie Lagoon in Abidjan. Source: AFP

Fireworks explode ... over the Archaeological Museum building in Skopje, Macedonia.

Fireworks explode … over the Archaeological Museum building in Skopje, Macedonia. Source: AP

Welcome 2015 ... fireworks above the city centre of Ljubljana, Slovenia.

Welcome 2015 … fireworks above the city centre of Ljubljana, Slovenia. Source: AFP

Captivating ... fireworks over the Naples skyline in southern Italy.

Captivating … fireworks over the Naples skyline in southern Italy. Source: AFP

Fireworks light up the London skyline and Big Ben just after midnight on January 1, 2015.

Fireworks light up the London skyline and Big Ben just after midnight on January 1, 2015. Picture: Peter Macdiarmid/Getty Images Source: Getty Images

Fireworks explode around the Houses of Parliament and the London Eye during the New Year

Fireworks explode around the Houses of Parliament and the London Eye during the New Year celebrations. Source:AFP

Fireworks explode ... behind Berlin's landmark Brandenburg Gate to usher in the new year.

Fireworks explode … behind Berlin’s landmark Brandenburg Gate to usher in the new year. Source: AFP

New Year's fireworks erupt ... over the Arc de Triomphe on the Champs-Elysees.

New Year’s fireworks erupt … over the Arc de Triomphe on the. Source: AFP

 

Dubai aims for world fireworks record

A new year … in Red Square in Moscow, Russia. Source: AP

Fireworks explode over St Basil's Cathedral as people celebrate the New Year at the Red S

Fireworks explode over St Basil’s Cathedral as people celebrate the New Year at the Red Square in Moscow, Russia.Source: AP

The projection of Spassky (Saviour) tower is seen over the scaffold covering the tower, a

The projection of Spassky (Saviour) tower is seen over the scaffold covering the tower, as fireworks explode over the Red Square in Moscow, Russia. Source: AP

 

 

The Kiwis were among the first to kick off festivities, and if their fireworks display is any indication of the year ahead, then 2015 looks set to be much brighter and resplendent than 2014.

Resplendent ... fireworks explode from the top of Sky Tower in Auckland, New Zealand. Pic

Resplendent … fireworks explode from the top of Sky Tower in Auckland, New Zealand. Picture: Getty Images Source:Getty Images

Across the ocean, incredible fireworks exploded over Victoria Harbour in Hong Kong.

Thousands of partygoers flocked to the waterfront to watch the eight-minute pyrotechnic display.

Bright sparks ... fireworks explode over Victoria Harbour in Hong Kong. Picture: AFP

Bright sparks … fireworks explode over Victoria Harbour in Hong Kong. Picture: AFP Source: AFP

In Malaysia, celebrations were more subdued as a show of respect for the thousands of people affected by the deadly floods battering the country’s northeast.

While some regions cancelled celebrations and street parties, a beautiful firework display over Petronas Twin Towers in Kuala Lumpur went ahead.

Subdued ... people watch fireworks explode over Malaysia's landmark Petronas Twin Towers

Subdued … people watch fireworks explode over Malaysia’s landmark Petronas Twin Towers in Kuala Lumpur. Picture: AP Source: AP

Around Asia, thousands gathered to enjoy cultural festivities and extravagant light shows — including in North Korea.

Party time ... North Koreans gather at the Kim Il Sung Square to watch a fireworks displa

Party time … North Koreans gather at the Kim Il Sung Square to watch a fireworks display in Pyongyang. Picture: APSource: AP

Celebrations ... fireworks explode over the Yokohama port during new year celebrations ne

Celebrations … fireworks explode over the Yokohama port during new year celebrations near Tokyo, Japan. Picture: APSource: AP

Light show ... revellers watch a laser show being projected on buildings as the countdown

Light show … revellers watch a laser show being projected on buildings as the countdown for the New Year begins in Manila, Philippines. Picture: AP Source: AP

Explosions ... fireworks light up the sky as Filipinos welcome the New Year. Picture: AP

Explosions … fireworks light up the sky as Filipinos welcome the New Year. Picture: AP Source: AP

Back home, Australian cities from Hobart to Melbourne, Sydney to Brisbane greeted 2015 in their trademark glittery fashion.

Sydney parties ... the midnight fireworks display to herald in the new year. Picture: Tob

Sydney parties … the midnight fireworks display to herald in the new year. Picture: Toby Zerna Source: News Corp Australia

Let your colours burst ... On the waterfront in Hobart

Let your colours burst … on the waterfront in Hobart. Picture: News Corp Australia Source: News Corp Australia

Those Down Under will have to wait a few hours however to see how their fireworks displays compare with the likes of London, Paris and New York.

A heart on the bridge during the 9PM fireworks. NYE 2014 . Sydney New years Eve celebrati

A heart on the Sydney Harbour Bridge during the 9pm fireworks. Picture: John Appleyard Source: News Corp Australia 

SOURCE:::: http://www.news.com.au

Natarajan

Image of the Day… New Year’s Comet Love Joy !!!

New Year’s Comet Lovejoy

Wow! Comet Lovejoy is really living up to its name! A wonderful December 29 photo from Justin Ng of Singapore and a link below to how you can see the comet.

Comet Lovejoy on December 29, 2014 by Justin Ng from Singapore.   Visit Justin Ng's website.

Have you seen Comet Lovejoy yet? Although telescopes and binoculars are still the best way to find and view the comet, it’s now barely within the limit for visibility with the unaided eye under exceptional viewing conditions. Justin Ng of Singapore took this fine photo. He wrote:

I would like to suggest an image of Comet Lovejoy that I’ve just taken on 29 December 2014 at around 12.30 AM SGT. This is a LRGB image with a total exposure time of 12 minutes. A spiral galaxy, NGC1886, is also visible in the image, located on the left of the comet’s coma.

SOURCE::: http://www.earthsky.org

Natarajan

Image of the day….Late December night sky over the Irish island of Achill.

Conor Ledwith took this photo. He wrote:

Photo credit: Conor Ledwith

Photo credit: Conor Ledwith Photography

 

Hi folks, a selfie taken last night at Achill Island, Mayo. Slievemore is the mountain in front of me.

Achill Island in County Mayo is the largest island off the coast of Ireland. It’s situated off Ireland’s west coast. The mountain Slievemore is at the north end of the island.

Thanks for sharing, Conor! See more photos by Conor Ledwith Photography

SOURCE:::: http://www.earthsky.org

Natarajan

Long Distance Conveyor Belts….

Employed in nearly all kinds of industries, conveyor belts provide an excellent mean for moving cargo and materials from one place to another. In the mining industry, they are particularly useful because they allow mineral ores to be transported over rough terrain or difficult-to-access areas, and offer a cost-effective and reliable way of moving a constant stream of material that would otherwise have to be trucked from one location to the next. The high levels of productivity and low operating costs involved have led to a widespread adoption of belt conveyor systems. And because mines are typically located in remote areas, these conveyor belts stretches tens of kilometers. In fact, the mining industry owns some of the longest conveyor belts in the world designed to transport mineral ores from the mines to the refineries or ports or stockpile centers.

longest conveyor-belt-4

The world’s longest conveyor belt at 98km. Photo credit

The world’s longest conveyor belt is located in the Western Sahara. It is 98 km long and transports phosphate rocks from the mines of Bou Craa to the port city of El-Aaiun. From there, cargo vessels transport the phosphates to various countries, where they are utilized in fertilizer production. The belt is visible as a straight line in satellite photos, and at some places, easily recognizable by a white strip of phosphates that lay strewn across the dusty brown desert by the action of strong Saharan winds. This conveyor belt that connects Bou Craa with El Aaiún, can carry 2,000 metric tons of rock per hour.

longest conveyor-belt-1

Photo credit

longest conveyor-belt-2

A fair amount of phosphate is lost to the wind. Photo credit

longest conveyor-belt-5

Photo credit

In the state of Meghalaya in India lies the world’s longest single-belt international conveyor. It is about 17 km long and conveys limestone and shale at 960 tons/hour, from a quarry in India to a cement factory at Chhatak Bangladesh. The belt is 7 km long in India and 10 km long in Bangladesh. The entire conveyor has been put on trestles.

longest conveyor-belt-6

Photo credit

SOURCE::::www.amusingplanet.com

Natarajan

AirAsia Crash: Flying Into a Thunderstorm is the Biggest ” No No” in Commercial Aviation …

First thing’s first, we need to trundle out the boring but critical post-crash disclaimer: It is a bad idea to speculate too broadly on the how-and-why so soon after an air disaster.

AirAsia Clouds

Almost always the initial hunches and theories end up totally off-base or at best incomplete. We live in an age when people want and expect instant answers, but that just isn’t possible with plane crashes.

It often takes months or even years before a cause is nailed down. In some cases we never learn for sure what happened.

That said, a seeming red flag in Sunday’s AirAsia disappearance is the weather. Could the Airbus A320, flying from the busy Indonesian city of Surabaya to Singapore, have wandered inadvertently into a violent thunderstorm and suffered some kind of catastrophic malfunction or structural failure? It’s possible.

I’ll point out that flying into thunderstorms is about the biggest no-no in all of commercial aviation. The crew had asked for a weather-related altitude change shortly before the disappearance, a request that was denied by air traffic control — presumably because of traffic constraints. This isn’t terribly unusual; pilots ask for altitude changes and route deviations all the time, and not always are they granted. However, that does not mean the AirAsia crew had no choice but to plow headlong into a storm. Worst-case, the crew always reserves the right to do what it needs to do, with or without permission. I cannot imagine the pilots willingly flew into what, on the radar screen, would have been a bright red splotch of potentially dangerous airspace. Perhaps a patch of weather that the pilots presumed would be manageable turned out to be otherwise? We don’t know.

Some are drawing comparisons between this incident and the 2009 Air France tragedy. They occurred under somewhat similar circumstances, and the media is eager to link these recent incidents together and wring some scary significance out of them. Some commentators have noted, for instance, that both planes were built by Airbus. I understand the temptation here, but this is extremely premature, and it’s unlikely that the aircraft model played a significant role. Remember that basically half of all the commercial jetliners in the sky are Airbus models.

An even bigger red herring is the fact that the pilots made no distress call. Several news outlets have brought this up. Effectively it means nothing. Communicating with air traffic control is pretty far down the task hierarchy when dealing with an emergency. The pilots’ priority is to control the airplane and deal with whatever malfunction or urgency is at hand. Talking to ATC comes later, if it’s practical.

So, the year appears to be closing on a tragic note. That’s a shame, seeing that 2013 was the safest year in the history of modern commercial aviation. Not to sound flip, but we can’t expect every year to be the safest, and it’s important to look at the broader context. This year will be something of a correction, but over the past ten or fifteen years the rate of fatal accidents, per miles flown, has been steadily falling. The International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) reports that for every million flights, the chance of a crash is one-sixth what it was in 1980, even with more than double the number of planes in the air.

Whenever people bring up the less-than-stellar accident record for 2014, I remind them of how bad things used to be. In 1985, 27 — twenty seven! — serious aviation accidents killed almost 2,500 people. That included the JAL crash outside Tokyo with 520 fatalities; the Arrow Air disaster in Newfoundland that killed 240 American servicemen, and the Air-India bombing over the North Atlantic with 329 dead. Two of history’s ten worst disasters happened within two months of each other! That’s a bad year.

Headquartered in Kuala-Lumpur, Malaysia, AirAsia is the largest low-fares airline in Asia, and one of the biggest in the world. It operates about 70 aircraft, all of them A320s, on routes around Indonesia, Thailand, Malaysia and beyond. (AirAsia X is the airline’s long-haul affiliate, and operates the larger A330.) I flew AirAsia between Bangkok and Phuket a few years ago. For what it’s worth, except for a delay on the outbound leg, its operation struck me as no more or less professional than that of any other major airline.

Asia, by the way, is now the world’s biggest and busiest air travel market, having surpassed both North America and Europe.

This article originally appeared at AskThePilot.com.

SOURCE::::

http://www.businessinsider .com

Natarajan
Read more: http://www.askthepilot.com/airasia-flight-missing/#ixzz3NQpTxsKx

Joke of the Day…” Take it to Zoo…” !!!

A guy found a penguin and showed him to a policeman.

The policeman said, “Take that penguin to the zoo, now.”

Next day the policeman sees the man with the penguin again.

The policeman stops the guy and says, I told you yesterday to take the penguin to the Zoo, what on earth are you doing with the penguin in your truck again?”

The guy says, “What is there to do? Yesterday I took him to the zoo and today I’m taking him to the movies.”!!!

SOURCE:::: http://www.joke a day.com

Natarajan