Saturday, November 7, 2009

More than hard work, it is the passion that you need to succeed.

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Prasanthi Uppalapati <prasanthi.uppalapati@gmail.com<mailto:prasanthi.uppalapati@gmail.com>>
Date: Sat, Nov 7, 2009 at 10:44 PM


Friends,

You might be surprised on why am I sharing these stories. One for inspiration and second for observation: What it means by Success? The first person, Bread Maheswaran said..... you need to be at the right place at the right time. (In fact, I remember reading that Bill Gates also quoted so......... saying the reason for his success may be that he did the right things at the right time and in the right places). The last person, Sunil, mentioned that there is no right time and right place.


May be:

1. Being clear about what we want from anything (life, career, relationships etc., )

2. Believing /Visualizing the success

3. Clear Focus

4. Never say die attitude

5. Keeping enthusiasm alive

6. Fuel the energy with the burning desire and last but not the least...... enjoying the process, the journey!! are the ingredients for success

Source: Rediff.com


URL: http://business.rediff.com/slide-show/2009/oct/30/slide-show-1-professor-with-a-multi-billion-dollar-bread-biz.htm>

A professor's multi-million-dollar bread enterprise

I believe in the hand of God. You have to be at the right place at the right time, and God's hands have to be there to help you and guide you.

I give employment to 3,000 boys in India. India needs not one but 10,000 Mahadevans to give employment to thousands of people.

<

Could you tell us 5 things that entrepreneurs must do to succeed?


Most importantly you need to have the capacity to absorb a lot, and look at things with a larger perspective. There will be many days when nothing will work for you. Sometimes things go wrong, and they might not be in your control. But you need to remain focused with a vision.


Only when you know what you want to achieve will people know what they are working towards. I think you need to be a fast learner, because there may be many things you may have never done before. You need to have the capacity to learn, and unlearn the rubbish when needed. Work hard. And finally, celebrate the smallest of victories. It keeps you going.




GlobalGiving.com (May be in the lines of KIVA.org)


We built an application for
globalgiving.com<http://globalgiving.com/> which is a philanthropy marketplace where as little as $1 can be donated.

When someone requires funds, he is authenticated and his requirement is put up on the site and he gets the funds directly from Globalgiving. We launched it in 2001.


A requirement came for $5000 from Coimbatore. Remember all this was happening in the Internet space.


A school principal had put up this request with an authentication from an NGO (non-government organisation) that he needed the fund to build a toilet block. He noticed that adolescent girls opted out of his school as there were no separate toilets for them.


In less than 13 minutes, he got the fund from 15 individuals across the world who did not even know him. He came back on the site after four years with photographs to say that there were more girls in his school than boys after the toilet block was built. This was quoted by World Bank as one of the biggest achievements of Globalgiving.


To future entrepreneurs

There is no end to ideas or opportunities to be an entrepreneur. You have to only keep your ears and eyes open.


Sanjiv Gupta (Bodhtree Consulting) is the chairman, founder and chief executive officer of Pressmart Media Ltd which is venture-funded by Draper Fischer Jurvetson and NEA-Indo US Ventures.

<

Sunil Maheswari

I believe that any time is the right time and every place is the right place. Even in the worst times, people have started successful companies. I don't think any time is wrong time.


I feel you can create your own niche any time and you need to change your plans as per what you see for future.


Thank you.


with regards,

PRASANTHI.


More than hard work, it is the passion that you need to succeed.

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Prasanthi Uppalapati <prasanthi.uppalapati@gmail.com<mailto:prasanthi.uppalapati@gmail.com>>
Date: Sat, Nov 7, 2009 at 10:44 PM


Friends,

You might be surprised on why am I sharing these stories. One for inspiration and second for observation: What it means by Success? The first person, Bread Maheswaran said..... you need to be at the right place at the right time. (In fact, I remember reading that Bill Gates also quoted so......... saying the reason for his success may be that he did the right things at the right time and in the right places). The last person, Sunil, mentioned that there is no right time and right place.


May be:

1. Being clear about what we want from anything (life, career, relationships etc., )

2. Believing /Visualizing the success

3. Clear Focus

4. Never say die attitude

5. Keeping enthusiasm alive

6. Fuel the energy with the burning desire and last but not the least...... enjoying the process, the journey!! are the ingredients for success

Source: Rediff.com


URL: http://business.rediff.com/slide-show/2009/oct/30/slide-show-1-professor-with-a-multi-billion-dollar-bread-biz.htm>

A professor's multi-million-dollar bread enterprise

I believe in the hand of God. You have to be at the right place at the right time, and God's hands have to be there to help you and guide you.

I give employment to 3,000 boys in India. India needs not one but 10,000 Mahadevans to give employment to thousands of people.

<

Could you tell us 5 things that entrepreneurs must do to succeed?


Most importantly you need to have the capacity to absorb a lot, and look at things with a larger perspective. There will be many days when nothing will work for you. Sometimes things go wrong, and they might not be in your control. But you need to remain focused with a vision.


Only when you know what you want to achieve will people know what they are working towards. I think you need to be a fast learner, because there may be many things you may have never done before. You need to have the capacity to learn, and unlearn the rubbish when needed. Work hard. And finally, celebrate the smallest of victories. It keeps you going.




GlobalGiving.com (May be in the lines of KIVA.org)


We built an application for
globalgiving.com<http://globalgiving.com/> which is a philanthropy marketplace where as little as $1 can be donated.

When someone requires funds, he is authenticated and his requirement is put up on the site and he gets the funds directly from Globalgiving. We launched it in 2001.


A requirement came for $5000 from Coimbatore. Remember all this was happening in the Internet space.


A school principal had put up this request with an authentication from an NGO (non-government organisation) that he needed the fund to build a toilet block. He noticed that adolescent girls opted out of his school as there were no separate toilets for them.


In less than 13 minutes, he got the fund from 15 individuals across the world who did not even know him. He came back on the site after four years with photographs to say that there were more girls in his school than boys after the toilet block was built. This was quoted by World Bank as one of the biggest achievements of Globalgiving.


To future entrepreneurs

There is no end to ideas or opportunities to be an entrepreneur. You have to only keep your ears and eyes open.


Sanjiv Gupta (Bodhtree Consulting) is the chairman, founder and chief executive officer of Pressmart Media Ltd which is venture-funded by Draper Fischer Jurvetson and NEA-Indo US Ventures.

<

Sunil Maheswari

I believe that any time is the right time and every place is the right place. Even in the worst times, people have started successful companies. I don't think any time is wrong time.


I feel you can create your own niche any time and you need to change your plans as per what you see for future.


Thank you.


with regards,

PRASANTHI.


పెదవే పలికిన మాటల్లోనే తీయని మాటే... అమ్మ

చిత్రం: నాని (2004)
సాహిత్యం: చంద్రబోస్
సంగీతం: అల్లారఖా రెహమాన్
నేపథ్యగానం: పి ఉన్నికృష్ణన్ & సాధనా సర్గమ్

పెదవే పలికిన మాటల్లోనే తీయని మాటే... అమ్మ
కదిలే దేవత అమ్మ కంటికి వెలుగమ్మ
తనలో మమతే కలిపి పెడుతుంది ముద్దగా
తన లాలిపాటలోని సరిగమ పంచుతుంది ప్రేమ మధురిమ

మనలోని ప్రాణం అమ్మ మనదైన రూపం అమ్మ
ఎనలేని జాలిగుణమే అమ్మ
నడిపించే దీపం అమ్మ కరుణించే కోపం అమ్మ
వరమిచ్చే తీపి శాపం అమ్మ
నా ఆలి అమ్మగా ఔతుండగా జో లాలి పాడనా కమ్మగా కమ్మగా

పొత్తిళ్లో ఎదిగే బాబు నా ఒళ్లో ఒదిగే బాబు
ఇరువురికి నేను అమ్మవ్వనా
నా కొంగు పట్టేవాడు నా కడుపును పుట్టేవాడు
ఇద్దరికీ ప్రేమ అందించనా
నా చిన్నినాన్ననీ వాడి నాన్ననీ నూరేళ్లు సాకనా చల్లగా చల్లగా

ఎదిగీ ఎదగని ఓ పసికూనా ముద్దులకన్నా జోజో
బంగరు తండ్రీ జోజో బజ్జో లాలీ జో
పలికే పదమే వినక కనులారా నిదురపో
కలలోకి నేను చేరి తదుపరి పంచుతాను ప్రేమ మాధురి

పెదవే పలికిన మాటల్లోనే తీయని మాటే... అమ్మ

చిత్రం: నాని (2004)
సాహిత్యం: చంద్రబోస్
సంగీతం: అల్లారఖా రెహమాన్
నేపథ్యగానం: పి ఉన్నికృష్ణన్ & సాధనా సర్గమ్

పెదవే పలికిన మాటల్లోనే తీయని మాటే... అమ్మ
కదిలే దేవత అమ్మ కంటికి వెలుగమ్మ
తనలో మమతే కలిపి పెడుతుంది ముద్దగా
తన లాలిపాటలోని సరిగమ పంచుతుంది ప్రేమ మధురిమ

మనలోని ప్రాణం అమ్మ మనదైన రూపం అమ్మ
ఎనలేని జాలిగుణమే అమ్మ
నడిపించే దీపం అమ్మ కరుణించే కోపం అమ్మ
వరమిచ్చే తీపి శాపం అమ్మ
నా ఆలి అమ్మగా ఔతుండగా జో లాలి పాడనా కమ్మగా కమ్మగా

పొత్తిళ్లో ఎదిగే బాబు నా ఒళ్లో ఒదిగే బాబు
ఇరువురికి నేను అమ్మవ్వనా
నా కొంగు పట్టేవాడు నా కడుపును పుట్టేవాడు
ఇద్దరికీ ప్రేమ అందించనా
నా చిన్నినాన్ననీ వాడి నాన్ననీ నూరేళ్లు సాకనా చల్లగా చల్లగా

ఎదిగీ ఎదగని ఓ పసికూనా ముద్దులకన్నా జోజో
బంగరు తండ్రీ జోజో బజ్జో లాలీ జో
పలికే పదమే వినక కనులారా నిదురపో
కలలోకి నేను చేరి తదుపరి పంచుతాను ప్రేమ మాధురి

మహాప్రాణదీపం శివం

చిత్రం: శ్రీమంజునాథ (౨౦౦౧)
సంగీతం: హంసలేఖ
నేపథ్య గానం: శఙ్కర్ మహాదేవన్

ఓమ్ మహాప్రాణదీపం శివం శివం మహౌంకారరూపం శివం శివం
మహాసూర్యచన్ద్రాగ్నినేత్రం పవిత్రం మహాగాఢతిమిరాన్తకం సౌరగాత్రం
మహాకాన్తిబీజం మహాదివ్యతేజం భవానీసమేతం భజే మఞ్జునాథం
ఓమ్ నమశ్శఙ్కరాయ చ మయస్కరాయ చ నమశ్శివాయ చ శివతరాయ చ భవహరాయ చ

అద్వైతభాస్కరం అర్ధనారీశ్వరం త్రిదృశహృదయఙ్గమం చతురుదధిసంగమం

పఞ్చభూతాత్మకం షట్ఛత్రునాశకం సప్తస్వరేశ్వరం అష్టసిద్ధీశ్వరం
నవరసమనోహరం దశదిశాసు-విమలం ఏకాదశోజ్జ్వలం ఏకనాథేశ్వరం
ప్రస్తుతివశఙ్కరం ప్రణతజనకిఙ్కరం దుర్జనభయఙ్కరం సజ్జనశుభఙ్కరం
ప్రాణిభవతారకం ప్రకృతినిభకారకం భువనభవ్యభవనాయకం భాగ్యాత్మకం రక్షకం
ఈశం సురేశం ఋషీశం పరేశం నటేశం గౌరీశం గణేశం భూతేశం
మహామధురపఞ్చాక్షరీమంత్ర మార్షం మహాహర్షవర్షప్రవర్షం సుశీర్షం

ఓమ్ నమో హరాయ చ స్వరహరాయ చ పురహరాయ చ రుద్రాయ చ భద్రాయ చ ఇంద్రాయ చ నిత్యాయచ నిర్నిద్రాయ చ

డండండ డండండ డండండ డండండ ఢక్కానినాదనవతాణ్డవాడంబరం
తద్ధిమ్మి తకధిమ్మి దిద్ధిమ్మి ధిమిధిమ్మి సఙ్గీతసాహిత్యసుమకమలబంభరం

ఓంకార హ్రీంకార శ్రీంకార ఐంకార మన్త్రబీజాక్షరం మఞ్జునాథేశ్వరం
ఋగ్వేదమాద్యం యజుర్వేదవేద్యం సామప్రగీతం అధర్వప్రసాదం
పురాణేతిహాసప్రసిద్ధం విశుద్ధం ప్రపఞ్చైకసూత్రం విరుద్ధం సుసిద్ధం

నకారం మకారం శికారం వకారం యకారం నిరాకారసాకారసారం మహాకాలకాలం మహానీలకంఠం
మహానన్దరఙ్గం మహాటాట్టహాసం జటాజూటరఙ్గైకగఙ్గాసుచిత్రం జ్వలద్రుద్రనేత్రం సుమిత్రం సుగోత్రం
మహాకాశభాసం మహాభానులిఙ్గం... మహాభర్తృవర్ణం సువర్ణం ప్రవర్ణం

సౌరాష్ట్రసున్దరం సోమనాథేశ్వరం శ్రీశైలమన్దిరం శ్రీమల్లికార్జునం
ఉజ్జయినిపురమహాకాళేశ్వరం వైద్యనాథేశ్వరం మహాభీమేశ్వరం
అమలలిఙ్గేశ్వరం రామలిఙ్గేశ్వరం కాశి విశ్వేశ్వరం పరం ఘృష్ణేశ్వరం
త్ర్యంబకాధీశ్వరం నాగలిఙ్గేశ్వరం శ్రీకేదారలిఙ్గేశ్వరం
అప్లిఙ్గాత్మకం జ్యోతిలిఙ్గాత్మకం వాయులిఙ్గాత్మకం ఆత్మలిఙ్గాత్మకం అఖిలలిఙ్గాత్మకం అగ్నిసోమాత్మకం

అనాదిం అమేయం అజేయం అచిన్త్యం అమోఘం అపూర్వం అనన్తం అఖణ్డం
ధర్మస్థలక్షేత్రవరపరంజ్యోతిం


ఓమ్ నమస్సోమాయ చ సౌమ్యాయ చ భవ్యాయ చ భాగ్యాయ చ శాన్తాయ చ శౌర్యాయ చ యోగాయ చ భోగాయ చ కాలాయ చ కాన్తాయ చ రమ్యాయ చ గమ్యాయ చ ఈశాయ చ శ్రీశాయ చ శర్వాయ చ సర్వాయ చ

మహాప్రాణదీపం శివం

చిత్రం: శ్రీమంజునాథ (౨౦౦౧)
సంగీతం: హంసలేఖ
నేపథ్య గానం: శఙ్కర్ మహాదేవన్

ఓమ్ మహాప్రాణదీపం శివం శివం మహౌంకారరూపం శివం శివం
మహాసూర్యచన్ద్రాగ్నినేత్రం పవిత్రం మహాగాఢతిమిరాన్తకం సౌరగాత్రం
మహాకాన్తిబీజం మహాదివ్యతేజం భవానీసమేతం భజే మఞ్జునాథం
ఓమ్ నమశ్శఙ్కరాయ చ మయస్కరాయ చ నమశ్శివాయ చ శివతరాయ చ భవహరాయ చ

అద్వైతభాస్కరం అర్ధనారీశ్వరం త్రిదృశహృదయఙ్గమం చతురుదధిసంగమం

పఞ్చభూతాత్మకం షట్ఛత్రునాశకం సప్తస్వరేశ్వరం అష్టసిద్ధీశ్వరం
నవరసమనోహరం దశదిశాసు-విమలం ఏకాదశోజ్జ్వలం ఏకనాథేశ్వరం
ప్రస్తుతివశఙ్కరం ప్రణతజనకిఙ్కరం దుర్జనభయఙ్కరం సజ్జనశుభఙ్కరం
ప్రాణిభవతారకం ప్రకృతినిభకారకం భువనభవ్యభవనాయకం భాగ్యాత్మకం రక్షకం
ఈశం సురేశం ఋషీశం పరేశం నటేశం గౌరీశం గణేశం భూతేశం
మహామధురపఞ్చాక్షరీమంత్ర మార్షం మహాహర్షవర్షప్రవర్షం సుశీర్షం

ఓమ్ నమో హరాయ చ స్వరహరాయ చ పురహరాయ చ రుద్రాయ చ భద్రాయ చ ఇంద్రాయ చ నిత్యాయచ నిర్నిద్రాయ చ

డండండ డండండ డండండ డండండ ఢక్కానినాదనవతాణ్డవాడంబరం
తద్ధిమ్మి తకధిమ్మి దిద్ధిమ్మి ధిమిధిమ్మి సఙ్గీతసాహిత్యసుమకమలబంభరం

ఓంకార హ్రీంకార శ్రీంకార ఐంకార మన్త్రబీజాక్షరం మఞ్జునాథేశ్వరం
ఋగ్వేదమాద్యం యజుర్వేదవేద్యం సామప్రగీతం అధర్వప్రసాదం
పురాణేతిహాసప్రసిద్ధం విశుద్ధం ప్రపఞ్చైకసూత్రం విరుద్ధం సుసిద్ధం

నకారం మకారం శికారం వకారం యకారం నిరాకారసాకారసారం మహాకాలకాలం మహానీలకంఠం
మహానన్దరఙ్గం మహాటాట్టహాసం జటాజూటరఙ్గైకగఙ్గాసుచిత్రం జ్వలద్రుద్రనేత్రం సుమిత్రం సుగోత్రం
మహాకాశభాసం మహాభానులిఙ్గం... మహాభర్తృవర్ణం సువర్ణం ప్రవర్ణం

సౌరాష్ట్రసున్దరం సోమనాథేశ్వరం శ్రీశైలమన్దిరం శ్రీమల్లికార్జునం
ఉజ్జయినిపురమహాకాళేశ్వరం వైద్యనాథేశ్వరం మహాభీమేశ్వరం
అమలలిఙ్గేశ్వరం రామలిఙ్గేశ్వరం కాశి విశ్వేశ్వరం పరం ఘృష్ణేశ్వరం
త్ర్యంబకాధీశ్వరం నాగలిఙ్గేశ్వరం శ్రీకేదారలిఙ్గేశ్వరం
అప్లిఙ్గాత్మకం జ్యోతిలిఙ్గాత్మకం వాయులిఙ్గాత్మకం ఆత్మలిఙ్గాత్మకం అఖిలలిఙ్గాత్మకం అగ్నిసోమాత్మకం

అనాదిం అమేయం అజేయం అచిన్త్యం అమోఘం అపూర్వం అనన్తం అఖణ్డం
ధర్మస్థలక్షేత్రవరపరంజ్యోతిం


ఓమ్ నమస్సోమాయ చ సౌమ్యాయ చ భవ్యాయ చ భాగ్యాయ చ శాన్తాయ చ శౌర్యాయ చ యోగాయ చ భోగాయ చ కాలాయ చ కాన్తాయ చ రమ్యాయ చ గమ్యాయ చ ఈశాయ చ శ్రీశాయ చ శర్వాయ చ సర్వాయ చ

ఋగ్వేదం

ఋగ్వేదం(వేదాలు)

మన హిందూమతానికి ఆధారభూతాలు వేదాలు.ఇవి ఋగ్వేదం,యజుర్వేదం,సామవేదం,అధర్వణవేదం అని నాలుగు.

మనము మొదట ఋగ్వేదం గురించి క్లుప్తంగా తెలుసుకొందాము.

ఋగ్వేదం దేవతాస్తుతి పరాలైన మంత్రాల సమూహము.ఋగ్వేదంఅనగా దేవతలని కుడా చెప్పవచ్చు.ఇందులోముఖ్యమైన దేవతలు ౩౩ మంది.వీరికి సామాన్య మానవులవలె శరీరాలుఉన్నవి.ఇంద్రుడు,సూర్యుడు,వరుణుడు,మిత్రుడు మరియు అగ్ని ఇందులో ప్రముఖంగా కనిపించే దేవతలు.

ఋగ్వేద ఆశయము:

మన అందరి ఆశయాలు ఒకటిగా ఉండాలనియు అందరి హృదయాలు,ఆలోచనలు మంచివిగా ఉండాలనియు ఒకసత్యమార్గమున నడవాలని,అందరు ఒక్కటే అని ఏకత్వము భోదిస్తుంది.ఇదే ఋగ్వేదములోని ప్రధానఆశయము.అందరు ఒక్కటే,అందరు భగవంతుని అంశలే,శక్తులే.అందరియందు ఉన్నా ఆత్మస్వరుపుడుఒక్కడే,భేదములు ఉండరాదు అని శాసించునది.ఇలాంటి విశాలభావాన్ని మరిచి,భేదములు అభివృద్ధి చేసుకొనిసంకుచిత జీవనం గడుపుతున్నారు.ఆనాడు సంకుసితమును కూలద్రోసి విశాలత్వమును,ఏకత్వమును చాటినదిఋగ్వేదము.

ఉపనిషత్తులు ?

ఉపనిషత్తులు అనగా ఏమిటి?

వేదాంతము అని మనము పిలుచుకొనేదే ఉపనిషత్తులు. ఇవి వేదాలకు చివరిగా ఉండడంవలన వీటిని వేదాంతముఅంటారు.శ్రీ భగవద్గీత కు మూలాలు ఉపనిషత్తులే. వేదాలలో ఎక్కువ భాగం కర్మకాండకు (అనగాయజ్ఞయాగాలు,పూజలు మొదలగునవి) ఎక్కువ ప్రాముఖ్యతను ఇవ్వగా ఉపనిషత్తులలో జ్ఞానమునకే ప్రాముఖ్యతనుఇచ్చి కర్మకాండను పట్టించుకొనలేదు. "ఉపనిషత్" అను పదానికి అర్థం సమీపములో ఉండడం. సత్యాలను గురువుదగ్గర తెలుసుకోవడం లేక ఆత్మ(పరమాత్మ) కు సమీపములో ఉండడం అని అర్థం. ఉపనిషత్తులు చాలా ఉన్నాయి. అందులో 108 ఉపనిషత్తులు మనకు తెలుసు. ఈ 108 లో 10 ఉపనిషత్తులకు ఆదిశంకరాచార్యులు భాష్యం వ్రాసారు. వీటినే దశోపనిషత్తులు అంటారు.

ఈ దశోపనిషత్తులు ఏమిటనేవి క్రింది శ్లోకం వివరిస్తుంది.

"ఈశ కేన కఠ ముండ మాండూక్య ప్రశ్న తిత్తిరి
ఐతరేయంచ ఛాందోగ్యం బృహదారణ్యకం దశ"

అవి
1.ఈశావాస్య ఉపనిషత్తు
2. కేనోపనిషత్తు
3. కఠ ఉపనిషత్తు
4.ప్రశ్నోపనిషత్తు
5. ముండకోపనిషత్తు
6. మాండూక్య ఉపనిషత్తు
7. తైత్తిరీయ ఉపనిషత్తు
8. ఐతరేయ ఉపనిషత్తు
9.ఛాందోగ్య ఉపనిషత్తు
10. బృహదారణ్యక ఉపనిషత్తు

ఈ బ్లాగులో వీటిని గురించి వివరించాలనేది నా ప్రయత్నం. అంటే ఇక్కడ నేను సొంతముగా వ్రాసేది ఏమీ ఉండదు. మాహాత్ముల వాణినే నేను వ్రాస్తాను. కాని నేను అర్థం చేసుకొన్నది కూడా ప్రతి టపా చివర వ్రాస్తాను.

ఋగ్వేదం

ఋగ్వేదం(వేదాలు)

మన హిందూమతానికి ఆధారభూతాలు వేదాలు.ఇవి ఋగ్వేదం,యజుర్వేదం,సామవేదం,అధర్వణవేదం అని నాలుగు.

మనము మొదట ఋగ్వేదం గురించి క్లుప్తంగా తెలుసుకొందాము.

ఋగ్వేదం దేవతాస్తుతి పరాలైన మంత్రాల సమూహము.ఋగ్వేదంఅనగా దేవతలని కుడా చెప్పవచ్చు.ఇందులోముఖ్యమైన దేవతలు ౩౩ మంది.వీరికి సామాన్య మానవులవలె శరీరాలుఉన్నవి.ఇంద్రుడు,సూర్యుడు,వరుణుడు,మిత్రుడు మరియు అగ్ని ఇందులో ప్రముఖంగా కనిపించే దేవతలు.

ఋగ్వేద ఆశయము:

మన అందరి ఆశయాలు ఒకటిగా ఉండాలనియు అందరి హృదయాలు,ఆలోచనలు మంచివిగా ఉండాలనియు ఒకసత్యమార్గమున నడవాలని,అందరు ఒక్కటే అని ఏకత్వము భోదిస్తుంది.ఇదే ఋగ్వేదములోని ప్రధానఆశయము.అందరు ఒక్కటే,అందరు భగవంతుని అంశలే,శక్తులే.అందరియందు ఉన్నా ఆత్మస్వరుపుడుఒక్కడే,భేదములు ఉండరాదు అని శాసించునది.ఇలాంటి విశాలభావాన్ని మరిచి,భేదములు అభివృద్ధి చేసుకొనిసంకుచిత జీవనం గడుపుతున్నారు.ఆనాడు సంకుసితమును కూలద్రోసి విశాలత్వమును,ఏకత్వమును చాటినదిఋగ్వేదము.

ఉపనిషత్తులు ?

ఉపనిషత్తులు అనగా ఏమిటి?

వేదాంతము అని మనము పిలుచుకొనేదే ఉపనిషత్తులు. ఇవి వేదాలకు చివరిగా ఉండడంవలన వీటిని వేదాంతముఅంటారు.శ్రీ భగవద్గీత కు మూలాలు ఉపనిషత్తులే. వేదాలలో ఎక్కువ భాగం కర్మకాండకు (అనగాయజ్ఞయాగాలు,పూజలు మొదలగునవి) ఎక్కువ ప్రాముఖ్యతను ఇవ్వగా ఉపనిషత్తులలో జ్ఞానమునకే ప్రాముఖ్యతనుఇచ్చి కర్మకాండను పట్టించుకొనలేదు. "ఉపనిషత్" అను పదానికి అర్థం సమీపములో ఉండడం. సత్యాలను గురువుదగ్గర తెలుసుకోవడం లేక ఆత్మ(పరమాత్మ) కు సమీపములో ఉండడం అని అర్థం. ఉపనిషత్తులు చాలా ఉన్నాయి. అందులో 108 ఉపనిషత్తులు మనకు తెలుసు. ఈ 108 లో 10 ఉపనిషత్తులకు ఆదిశంకరాచార్యులు భాష్యం వ్రాసారు. వీటినే దశోపనిషత్తులు అంటారు.

ఈ దశోపనిషత్తులు ఏమిటనేవి క్రింది శ్లోకం వివరిస్తుంది.

"ఈశ కేన కఠ ముండ మాండూక్య ప్రశ్న తిత్తిరి
ఐతరేయంచ ఛాందోగ్యం బృహదారణ్యకం దశ"

అవి
1.ఈశావాస్య ఉపనిషత్తు
2. కేనోపనిషత్తు
3. కఠ ఉపనిషత్తు
4.ప్రశ్నోపనిషత్తు
5. ముండకోపనిషత్తు
6. మాండూక్య ఉపనిషత్తు
7. తైత్తిరీయ ఉపనిషత్తు
8. ఐతరేయ ఉపనిషత్తు
9.ఛాందోగ్య ఉపనిషత్తు
10. బృహదారణ్యక ఉపనిషత్తు

ఈ బ్లాగులో వీటిని గురించి వివరించాలనేది నా ప్రయత్నం. అంటే ఇక్కడ నేను సొంతముగా వ్రాసేది ఏమీ ఉండదు. మాహాత్ముల వాణినే నేను వ్రాస్తాను. కాని నేను అర్థం చేసుకొన్నది కూడా ప్రతి టపా చివర వ్రాస్తాను.

The Great Experimenter


Gandhi was no emperor, not a military general, not a president nor a prime minister. He was neither pacifist nor a cult guru. Who was Gandhi ? If anything, Mohandas K. Gandhi was a constant experimenter. Spirituality, religion, self-reliance, health, education, clothing, drinks, medicine, child care, status of women, no field escaped his search for truth. His thoughts when appeared in the form of talk or article became official words of action with the masses of India. He was a man who did what he said and led an exemplary and a transparent life. Not many people can claim "My life is an open book". There were millions of Indians who treated Gandhi's suggestions as supreme commands and acted upon them (hence the name Mahatma). Born in Gujarat, fluent with Hindi and English, and residing in the minds of millions, Gandhiji was able to unite India like none other. An adamant idealist, courageous fighter, a deep thinker, and a great leader of men and ideas, it was possible for him to do that because he identified himself with struggles and pains of the common Indians. He quickly became the sole voice of the downtrodden and the exploited. They completely believed that Gandhiji understood their difficulties and would provide justice for them. Among Gandhiji's disciples were kings, royals, untouchables, rich, poor, foreigners, and women. When this selfless and pure man became leader of the nation, he gave a clear and unambiguous direction to the Himalayan problems facing India. Most important of them were poverty, religious conflict, exploitation, ignorance and colonization by the British.


Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi (1869-1948), also known as Mahatma Gandhi, was born in Porbandar in the present day state of Gujarat in India on October 2, 1869. He was raised in a very conservative family that had affiliations with the ruling family of Kathiawad. He was educated in law at University College, London. In 1891, after having been admitted to the British bar, Gandhi returned to India and attempted to establish a law practice in Bombay, without much success. Two years later an Indian firm with interests in South Africa retained him as legal adviser in its office in Durban. Arriving in Durban, Gandhi found himself treated as a member of an inferior race. He was appalled at the widespread denial of civil liberties and political rights to Indian immigrants to South Africa. He threw himself into the struggle for elementary rights for Indians.

Gandhi remained in South Africa for twenty years, suffering imprisonment many times. In 1896, after being attacked and humiliated by white South Africans, Gandhi began to teach a policy of passive resistance to, and non-cooperation with, the South African authorities. Part of the inspiration for this policy came from the Russian writer Leo Tolstoy, whose influence on Gandhi was profound. Gandhi also acknowledged his debt to the teachings of Christ and to the 19th-century American writer Henry David Thoreau, especially to Thoreau's famous essay "Civil Disobedience." Gandhi considered the terms passive resistance and civil disobedience inadequate for his purposes, however, and coined another term, Satyagraha (from Sanskrit, "truth and firmness"). During the Boer War, Gandhi organized an ambulance corps for the British army and commanded a Red Cross unit. After the war he returned to his campaign for Indian rights. In 1910, he founded Tolstoy Farm, near Durban, a cooperative colony for Indians. In 1914 the government of the Union of South Africa made important concessions to Gandhi's demands, including recognition of Indian marriages and abolition of the poll tax for them. His work in South Africa complete, he returned to India.

Gandhi became a leader in a complex struggle, the Indian campaign for home rule. Following World War I, in which he played an active part in recruiting campaigns, Gandhi, again advocating Satyagraha, launched his movement of  non-violent resistance to Great Britain. When, in 1919, Parliament passed the Rowlatt Acts, giving the Indian colonial authorities emergency powers to deal with so-called revolutionary activities, Satyagraha spread throughout India, gaining millions of followers. A demonstration against the Rowlatt Acts resulted in a massacre of Indians at Amritsar by British soldiers; in 1920, when the British government failed to make amends, Gandhi proclaimed an organized campaign of non-cooperation. Indians in public office resigned, government agencies such as courts of law were boycotted, and Indian children were withdrawn from government schools. Throughout India, streets were blocked by squatting Indians who refused to rise even when beaten by police. Gandhi was arrested, but the British were soon forced to release him.

Economic independence for India, involving the complete boycott of British goods, was made a corollary of Gandhi's Swaraj (from Sanskrit, "self-governing") movement. The economic aspects of the movement were significant, for the exploitation of Indian villagers by British industrialists had resulted in extreme poverty in the country and the virtual destruction of Indian home industries. As a remedy for such poverty, Gandhi advocated revival of cottage industries; he began to use a spinning wheel as a token of the return to the simple village life he preached, and of the renewal of native Indian industries.

Gandhi became the international symbol of a free India. He lived a spiritual and ascetic life of prayer, fasting, and meditation. His union with his wife became, as he himself stated, that of a brother and sister. Refusing earthly possessions, he wore the loincloth and shawl of the lowliest Indian and subsisted on vegetables, fruit juices, and goat's milk. Indians revered him as a saint and began to call him Mahatma (great-souled), a title reserved for the greatest sages. Gandhi's advocacy of nonviolence, known as ahimsa (non-violence), was the expression of a way of life implicit in the Hindu religion. By the Indian practice of nonviolence, Gandhi held, Great Britain too would eventually consider violence useless and would leave India.

The Mahatma's political and spiritual hold on India was so great that the British authorities dared not interfere with him. In 1921 the Indian National Congress, the group that spearheaded the movement for nationhood, gave Gandhi complete executive authority, with the right of naming his own successor. The Indian population, however, could not fully comprehend the unworldly ahimsa. A series of armed revolts against the British broke out, culminating in such violence that Gandhi confessed the failure of the civil-disobedience campaign he had called, and ended it. The British government again seized and imprisoned him in 1922.

After his release from prison in 1924, Gandhi withdrew from active politics and devoted himself to propagating communal unity. Unavoidably, however, he was again drawn into the vortex of the struggle for independence. In 1930 the Mahatma proclaimed a new campaign of civil disobedience, calling upon the Indian population to refuse to pay taxes, particularly the tax on salt. The campaign was a march to the sea, in which thousands of Indians followed Gandhi from Ahmedabad to the Arabian Sea, where they made salt by evaporating sea water. Once more the Indian leader was arrested, but he was released in 1931, halting the campaign after the British made concessions to his demands. In the same year Gandhi represented the Indian National Congress at a conference in London.

In 1932, Gandhi began new civil-disobedience campaigns against the British. Arrested twice, the Mahatma fasted for long periods several times; these fasts were effective measures against the British, because revolution might well have broken out in India if he had died. In September 1932, while in jail, Gandhi undertook a "fast unto death" to improve the status of the Hindu Untouchables. The British, by permitting the Untouchables to be considered as a separate part of the Indian electorate, were, according to Gandhi, countenancing an injustice. Although he was himself a member of an upper caste, Gandhi was the great leader of the movement in India dedicated to eradicating the unjust social and economic aspects of the caste system.

In 1934 Gandhi formally resigned from politics, being replaced as leader of the Congress party by Jawaharlal Nehru. Gandhi traveled through India, teaching ahimsa and demanding eradication of "untouchability." The esteem in which he was held was the measure of his political power. So great was this power that the limited home rule granted by the British in 1935 could not be implemented until Gandhi approved it. A few years later, in 1939, he again returned to active political life because of the pending federation of Indian principalities with the rest of India. His first act was a fast, designed to force the ruler of the state of Rajkot to modify his autocratic rule. Public unrest caused by the fast was so great that the colonial government intervened; the demands were granted. The Mahatma again became the most important political figure in India.

When World War II broke out, the Congress party and Gandhi demanded a declaration of war aims and their application to India. As a reaction to the unsatisfactory response from the British, the party decided not to support Britain in the war unless the country were granted complete and immediate independence. The British refused, offering compromises that were rejected. When Japan entered the war, Gandhi still refused to agree to Indian participation. He was interned in 1942 but was released two years later because of failing health.

By 1944 the Indian struggle for independence was in its final stages, the British government having agreed to independence on condition that the two contending nationalist groups, the Muslim League and the Congress party, should resolve their differences. Gandhi stood steadfastly against the partition of India but ultimately had to agree, in the hope that internal peace would be achieved after the Muslim demand for separation had been satisfied. India and Pakistan became separate states when the British granted India its independence in 1947 (see: Tryst with Destiny -- the story of India's independence). During the riots that followed the partition of India, Gandhi pleaded with Hindus and Muslims to live together peacefully. Riots engulfed Calcutta, one of the largest cities in India, and the Mahatma fasted until disturbances ceased. On January 13, 1948, he undertook another successful fast in New Delhi to bring about peace, but on January 30, 12 days after the termination of that fast, as he was on his way to his evening prayer meeting, he was assassinated by a fanatic Hindu.

Gandhi's death was regarded as an international catastrophe. His place in humanity was measured not in terms of the 20th century, but in terms of history. A period of mourning was set aside in the United Nations General Assembly, and condolences to India were expressed by all countries. Religious violence soon waned in India and Pakistan, and the teachings of Gandhi came to inspire nonviolent movements elsewhere, notably in the U.S.A. under the civil rights leader Martin Luther King, Jr. and in South Africa under Nelson Mandela.


 

The Great Experimenter


Gandhi was no emperor, not a military general, not a president nor a prime minister. He was neither pacifist nor a cult guru. Who was Gandhi ? If anything, Mohandas K. Gandhi was a constant experimenter. Spirituality, religion, self-reliance, health, education, clothing, drinks, medicine, child care, status of women, no field escaped his search for truth. His thoughts when appeared in the form of talk or article became official words of action with the masses of India. He was a man who did what he said and led an exemplary and a transparent life. Not many people can claim "My life is an open book". There were millions of Indians who treated Gandhi's suggestions as supreme commands and acted upon them (hence the name Mahatma). Born in Gujarat, fluent with Hindi and English, and residing in the minds of millions, Gandhiji was able to unite India like none other. An adamant idealist, courageous fighter, a deep thinker, and a great leader of men and ideas, it was possible for him to do that because he identified himself with struggles and pains of the common Indians. He quickly became the sole voice of the downtrodden and the exploited. They completely believed that Gandhiji understood their difficulties and would provide justice for them. Among Gandhiji's disciples were kings, royals, untouchables, rich, poor, foreigners, and women. When this selfless and pure man became leader of the nation, he gave a clear and unambiguous direction to the Himalayan problems facing India. Most important of them were poverty, religious conflict, exploitation, ignorance and colonization by the British.


Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi (1869-1948), also known as Mahatma Gandhi, was born in Porbandar in the present day state of Gujarat in India on October 2, 1869. He was raised in a very conservative family that had affiliations with the ruling family of Kathiawad. He was educated in law at University College, London. In 1891, after having been admitted to the British bar, Gandhi returned to India and attempted to establish a law practice in Bombay, without much success. Two years later an Indian firm with interests in South Africa retained him as legal adviser in its office in Durban. Arriving in Durban, Gandhi found himself treated as a member of an inferior race. He was appalled at the widespread denial of civil liberties and political rights to Indian immigrants to South Africa. He threw himself into the struggle for elementary rights for Indians.

Gandhi remained in South Africa for twenty years, suffering imprisonment many times. In 1896, after being attacked and humiliated by white South Africans, Gandhi began to teach a policy of passive resistance to, and non-cooperation with, the South African authorities. Part of the inspiration for this policy came from the Russian writer Leo Tolstoy, whose influence on Gandhi was profound. Gandhi also acknowledged his debt to the teachings of Christ and to the 19th-century American writer Henry David Thoreau, especially to Thoreau's famous essay "Civil Disobedience." Gandhi considered the terms passive resistance and civil disobedience inadequate for his purposes, however, and coined another term, Satyagraha (from Sanskrit, "truth and firmness"). During the Boer War, Gandhi organized an ambulance corps for the British army and commanded a Red Cross unit. After the war he returned to his campaign for Indian rights. In 1910, he founded Tolstoy Farm, near Durban, a cooperative colony for Indians. In 1914 the government of the Union of South Africa made important concessions to Gandhi's demands, including recognition of Indian marriages and abolition of the poll tax for them. His work in South Africa complete, he returned to India.

Gandhi became a leader in a complex struggle, the Indian campaign for home rule. Following World War I, in which he played an active part in recruiting campaigns, Gandhi, again advocating Satyagraha, launched his movement of  non-violent resistance to Great Britain. When, in 1919, Parliament passed the Rowlatt Acts, giving the Indian colonial authorities emergency powers to deal with so-called revolutionary activities, Satyagraha spread throughout India, gaining millions of followers. A demonstration against the Rowlatt Acts resulted in a massacre of Indians at Amritsar by British soldiers; in 1920, when the British government failed to make amends, Gandhi proclaimed an organized campaign of non-cooperation. Indians in public office resigned, government agencies such as courts of law were boycotted, and Indian children were withdrawn from government schools. Throughout India, streets were blocked by squatting Indians who refused to rise even when beaten by police. Gandhi was arrested, but the British were soon forced to release him.

Economic independence for India, involving the complete boycott of British goods, was made a corollary of Gandhi's Swaraj (from Sanskrit, "self-governing") movement. The economic aspects of the movement were significant, for the exploitation of Indian villagers by British industrialists had resulted in extreme poverty in the country and the virtual destruction of Indian home industries. As a remedy for such poverty, Gandhi advocated revival of cottage industries; he began to use a spinning wheel as a token of the return to the simple village life he preached, and of the renewal of native Indian industries.

Gandhi became the international symbol of a free India. He lived a spiritual and ascetic life of prayer, fasting, and meditation. His union with his wife became, as he himself stated, that of a brother and sister. Refusing earthly possessions, he wore the loincloth and shawl of the lowliest Indian and subsisted on vegetables, fruit juices, and goat's milk. Indians revered him as a saint and began to call him Mahatma (great-souled), a title reserved for the greatest sages. Gandhi's advocacy of nonviolence, known as ahimsa (non-violence), was the expression of a way of life implicit in the Hindu religion. By the Indian practice of nonviolence, Gandhi held, Great Britain too would eventually consider violence useless and would leave India.

The Mahatma's political and spiritual hold on India was so great that the British authorities dared not interfere with him. In 1921 the Indian National Congress, the group that spearheaded the movement for nationhood, gave Gandhi complete executive authority, with the right of naming his own successor. The Indian population, however, could not fully comprehend the unworldly ahimsa. A series of armed revolts against the British broke out, culminating in such violence that Gandhi confessed the failure of the civil-disobedience campaign he had called, and ended it. The British government again seized and imprisoned him in 1922.

After his release from prison in 1924, Gandhi withdrew from active politics and devoted himself to propagating communal unity. Unavoidably, however, he was again drawn into the vortex of the struggle for independence. In 1930 the Mahatma proclaimed a new campaign of civil disobedience, calling upon the Indian population to refuse to pay taxes, particularly the tax on salt. The campaign was a march to the sea, in which thousands of Indians followed Gandhi from Ahmedabad to the Arabian Sea, where they made salt by evaporating sea water. Once more the Indian leader was arrested, but he was released in 1931, halting the campaign after the British made concessions to his demands. In the same year Gandhi represented the Indian National Congress at a conference in London.

In 1932, Gandhi began new civil-disobedience campaigns against the British. Arrested twice, the Mahatma fasted for long periods several times; these fasts were effective measures against the British, because revolution might well have broken out in India if he had died. In September 1932, while in jail, Gandhi undertook a "fast unto death" to improve the status of the Hindu Untouchables. The British, by permitting the Untouchables to be considered as a separate part of the Indian electorate, were, according to Gandhi, countenancing an injustice. Although he was himself a member of an upper caste, Gandhi was the great leader of the movement in India dedicated to eradicating the unjust social and economic aspects of the caste system.

In 1934 Gandhi formally resigned from politics, being replaced as leader of the Congress party by Jawaharlal Nehru. Gandhi traveled through India, teaching ahimsa and demanding eradication of "untouchability." The esteem in which he was held was the measure of his political power. So great was this power that the limited home rule granted by the British in 1935 could not be implemented until Gandhi approved it. A few years later, in 1939, he again returned to active political life because of the pending federation of Indian principalities with the rest of India. His first act was a fast, designed to force the ruler of the state of Rajkot to modify his autocratic rule. Public unrest caused by the fast was so great that the colonial government intervened; the demands were granted. The Mahatma again became the most important political figure in India.

When World War II broke out, the Congress party and Gandhi demanded a declaration of war aims and their application to India. As a reaction to the unsatisfactory response from the British, the party decided not to support Britain in the war unless the country were granted complete and immediate independence. The British refused, offering compromises that were rejected. When Japan entered the war, Gandhi still refused to agree to Indian participation. He was interned in 1942 but was released two years later because of failing health.

By 1944 the Indian struggle for independence was in its final stages, the British government having agreed to independence on condition that the two contending nationalist groups, the Muslim League and the Congress party, should resolve their differences. Gandhi stood steadfastly against the partition of India but ultimately had to agree, in the hope that internal peace would be achieved after the Muslim demand for separation had been satisfied. India and Pakistan became separate states when the British granted India its independence in 1947 (see: Tryst with Destiny -- the story of India's independence). During the riots that followed the partition of India, Gandhi pleaded with Hindus and Muslims to live together peacefully. Riots engulfed Calcutta, one of the largest cities in India, and the Mahatma fasted until disturbances ceased. On January 13, 1948, he undertook another successful fast in New Delhi to bring about peace, but on January 30, 12 days after the termination of that fast, as he was on his way to his evening prayer meeting, he was assassinated by a fanatic Hindu.

Gandhi's death was regarded as an international catastrophe. His place in humanity was measured not in terms of the 20th century, but in terms of history. A period of mourning was set aside in the United Nations General Assembly, and condolences to India were expressed by all countries. Religious violence soon waned in India and Pakistan, and the teachings of Gandhi came to inspire nonviolent movements elsewhere, notably in the U.S.A. under the civil rights leader Martin Luther King, Jr. and in South Africa under Nelson Mandela.


 

Analysis...

 

Analysis...

 

FW: Why going 'veg' is good for you

Why going 'veg' is good for you


[cid:image001.jpg@01CA3E0E.8E354340]

Detoxifies: A veggie diet contains dietary fibre (bottle gourd, pumpkins, spinach, cabbages), which flushes toxins out of the body. A diet containing only eggs, fish and mutton is a poor source of fibre.

Stronger bones: Gorging on meat can lead to protein overload. This can tax our kidneys, interfere with the absorption of calcium and prompt the body to extract existing calcium from the bones. Such calcium excretion is rare amongst vegetarians.

Carb deficiencies: A non-vegetarian diet is a poor source of carbohydrates. Carb-deficiency can lead to ketosis – a condition where the body starts breaking down fat (instead of carbs) as a source of energy.

Easy digestion: Complex carbohydrates in vegetarian foods are digested gradually providing a steady source of glucose. Conversely, meats rich in fat and proteins are difficult to digest.

Healthy skin: Eating beetroot, tomato, pumpkin and bitter gourd can clear off blemishes. And guava, apples, pears and peaches, eaten along with their peel, promise a glowing complexion.

Weight management: Avoiding meat is the simplest way to reduce fat intake. Instead, eating whole grains, legumes, vegetables, nuts, and fruits, lowers cholesterol levels, blood pressure, and obesity.

Easy on the teeth: Our molars are more suitable for grinding grains and vegetables than tearing flesh. Digestion begins with the saliva, which can only digest complex carbohydrates present in plant foods.

Phyto nutrients: Diabetes, cancer, kidney disease, stroke and bone loss are partially preventable with a good intake of phytonurtients. As these are present only in vegetarian diet, the non-vegetarians are at a loss.

YOUR RIGHT FOOT?

YOUR RIGHT FOOT!!!!!!!!!!

This is hysterical! You have to try this. I guess there are some things that the brain cannot handle.

It is from an orthopedic surgeon. This will confuse your mind and you will keep trying over and over again to see if you can outsmart your foot, but, you can't. It is pre-programmed in your brain!

1. While sitting at your desk in front of your computer, lift your right foot off the floor and make clockwise circles.

2. Now, while doing this, draw the number '6' in the air with your right hand.


Your foot will change direction!!

FW: Why going 'veg' is good for you

Why going 'veg' is good for you


[cid:image001.jpg@01CA3E0E.8E354340]

Detoxifies: A veggie diet contains dietary fibre (bottle gourd, pumpkins, spinach, cabbages), which flushes toxins out of the body. A diet containing only eggs, fish and mutton is a poor source of fibre.

Stronger bones: Gorging on meat can lead to protein overload. This can tax our kidneys, interfere with the absorption of calcium and prompt the body to extract existing calcium from the bones. Such calcium excretion is rare amongst vegetarians.

Carb deficiencies: A non-vegetarian diet is a poor source of carbohydrates. Carb-deficiency can lead to ketosis – a condition where the body starts breaking down fat (instead of carbs) as a source of energy.

Easy digestion: Complex carbohydrates in vegetarian foods are digested gradually providing a steady source of glucose. Conversely, meats rich in fat and proteins are difficult to digest.

Healthy skin: Eating beetroot, tomato, pumpkin and bitter gourd can clear off blemishes. And guava, apples, pears and peaches, eaten along with their peel, promise a glowing complexion.

Weight management: Avoiding meat is the simplest way to reduce fat intake. Instead, eating whole grains, legumes, vegetables, nuts, and fruits, lowers cholesterol levels, blood pressure, and obesity.

Easy on the teeth: Our molars are more suitable for grinding grains and vegetables than tearing flesh. Digestion begins with the saliva, which can only digest complex carbohydrates present in plant foods.

Phyto nutrients: Diabetes, cancer, kidney disease, stroke and bone loss are partially preventable with a good intake of phytonurtients. As these are present only in vegetarian diet, the non-vegetarians are at a loss.

YOUR RIGHT FOOT?

YOUR RIGHT FOOT!!!!!!!!!!

This is hysterical! You have to try this. I guess there are some things that the brain cannot handle.

It is from an orthopedic surgeon. This will confuse your mind and you will keep trying over and over again to see if you can outsmart your foot, but, you can't. It is pre-programmed in your brain!

1. While sitting at your desk in front of your computer, lift your right foot off the floor and make clockwise circles.

2. Now, while doing this, draw the number '6' in the air with your right hand.


Your foot will change direction!!

JUSTDIAL.COM

I strongly recommend this website www.justdial.com<http://www.justdial.com>. It's a world class local search service & I've always found anything I've ever wanted.

You can find info on any company, product, or service in over 240 cities in India.

You can also call them up 24x7, on phone (69999999), a local call in 240 Indian cities.

Ask for anything, you'll get the info on the phone and/or by SMS within 30 secs, and this service is absolutely FREE!

For a change, it's an original Indian idea and an Indian company with world class service, and with a vision to spread all over the world.

Be a proud Indian and forward this to every Indian you know.

JUSTDIAL.COM

I strongly recommend this website www.justdial.com<http://www.justdial.com>. It's a world class local search service & I've always found anything I've ever wanted.

You can find info on any company, product, or service in over 240 cities in India.

You can also call them up 24x7, on phone (69999999), a local call in 240 Indian cities.

Ask for anything, you'll get the info on the phone and/or by SMS within 30 secs, and this service is absolutely FREE!

For a change, it's an original Indian idea and an Indian company with world class service, and with a vision to spread all over the world.

Be a proud Indian and forward this to every Indian you know.

Read it...some true facts about life....

1. EVERY ONE KNOWS ABOUT ALEXANDER GRAHAM BELL WHO INVENTED PHONES, BUT HE NEVER MADE A CALL TO HIS FAMILY. BECAUSE HIS WIFE AND DAUGHTER WERE DEAF. THAT'S LIFE - "LIVE FOR OTHERS."

2. THE WORST IN LIFE IS "ATTACHMENT", IT HURTS WHEN YOU LOSE IT.
THE BEST THING IN LIFE IS "LONELINESS" BECAUSE IT TEACHES YOU EVERYTHING AND WHEN YOU LOSE IT YOU GET EVERYTHING.

3. LIFE IS NOT ABOUT THE PEOPLE WHO ACT TRUE TO YOUR FACE ........ IT'S ABOUT THE PEOPLE WHO REMAIN TRUE BEHIND YOUR BACK .

4. EGG BROKEN FROM OUTSIDE FORCE........A LIFE ENDS.
IF AN EGG BREAKS FROM WITHIN.......LIFE BEGINS ..
GREAT THINGS ALWAYS BEGAN FROM WITHIN .

5. IT'S BETTER TO LOSE YOUR EGO TO THE ONE YOU LOVE THAN TO LOSE THE ONE YOU LOVE ....... BECAUSE OF EGO .

6. A RELATIONSHIP DOESN'T SHINE BY JUST SHAKING HANDS IN GOOD TIMES. BUT IT BLOSSOMS BY HOLDING FIRMLY IN CRITICAL SITUATIONS .

7. HEATED GOLD BECOMES ORNAMENTS. BEATEN COPPER BECOMES WIRES. DEPLETED STONE BECOMES STATUE. SO MORE PAIN, MORE GAIN (VALUABLE).

8. WHEN YOU TRUST SOMEONE TRUST HIM COMPLETELY WITHOUT ANY DOUBT.............. AT THE END YOU WOULD GET ONE OF THE TWO : EITHER A LESSON FOR YOUR LIFE OR A VERY GOOD PERSON .

9. WHY WE HAVE SO MANY TEMPLES, IF GOD IS EVERYWHERE ?
Ans: WISE MAN SAID : AIR IS EVERYWHERE, BUT WE STILL NEED A FAN TO FEEL IT .


Keep smiling always……

Read it...some true facts about life....

1. EVERY ONE KNOWS ABOUT ALEXANDER GRAHAM BELL WHO INVENTED PHONES, BUT HE NEVER MADE A CALL TO HIS FAMILY. BECAUSE HIS WIFE AND DAUGHTER WERE DEAF. THAT'S LIFE - "LIVE FOR OTHERS."

2. THE WORST IN LIFE IS "ATTACHMENT", IT HURTS WHEN YOU LOSE IT.
THE BEST THING IN LIFE IS "LONELINESS" BECAUSE IT TEACHES YOU EVERYTHING AND WHEN YOU LOSE IT YOU GET EVERYTHING.

3. LIFE IS NOT ABOUT THE PEOPLE WHO ACT TRUE TO YOUR FACE ........ IT'S ABOUT THE PEOPLE WHO REMAIN TRUE BEHIND YOUR BACK .

4. EGG BROKEN FROM OUTSIDE FORCE........A LIFE ENDS.
IF AN EGG BREAKS FROM WITHIN.......LIFE BEGINS ..
GREAT THINGS ALWAYS BEGAN FROM WITHIN .

5. IT'S BETTER TO LOSE YOUR EGO TO THE ONE YOU LOVE THAN TO LOSE THE ONE YOU LOVE ....... BECAUSE OF EGO .

6. A RELATIONSHIP DOESN'T SHINE BY JUST SHAKING HANDS IN GOOD TIMES. BUT IT BLOSSOMS BY HOLDING FIRMLY IN CRITICAL SITUATIONS .

7. HEATED GOLD BECOMES ORNAMENTS. BEATEN COPPER BECOMES WIRES. DEPLETED STONE BECOMES STATUE. SO MORE PAIN, MORE GAIN (VALUABLE).

8. WHEN YOU TRUST SOMEONE TRUST HIM COMPLETELY WITHOUT ANY DOUBT.............. AT THE END YOU WOULD GET ONE OF THE TWO : EITHER A LESSON FOR YOUR LIFE OR A VERY GOOD PERSON .

9. WHY WE HAVE SO MANY TEMPLES, IF GOD IS EVERYWHERE ?
Ans: WISE MAN SAID : AIR IS EVERYWHERE, BUT WE STILL NEED A FAN TO FEEL IT .


Keep smiling always……

Friday, November 6, 2009

Importance of donating our body to medical colleges - Untiring efforts of a woman


This is inspirational work of a woman from Vizag by name Seetha Mahalakshmi about spreading awareness about dead body donation to medical colleges and also organ donation campaigns. It is good to see such selfless initiative.
 
Source-- Sakshi news daily 06- 11- 2009 family feature page 1.
 
 

Importance of donating our body to medical colleges - Untiring efforts of a woman


This is inspirational work of a woman from Vizag by name Seetha Mahalakshmi about spreading awareness about dead body donation to medical colleges and also organ donation campaigns. It is good to see such selfless initiative.
 
Source-- Sakshi news daily 06- 11- 2009 family feature page 1.
 
 

Sachin@17K..... The untouchable!!!!!!!!!



సచిన్ టెండుల్కర్ ఇటీవల సాధించిన మైలురాయి--వన్డేలలో 17000 పరుగులు పూర్తిచేయడం.

సచిన్ టెండుల్కర్ వన్డేలలో 17వేల పరుగుల మైలురాయిని ఏ స్టేడియంలో అందుకున్నారు--ఉప్పల్ స్టేడియం (హైదరాబాదు).

17వేల పరుగులను సచిన్ టెండుల్కర్ ఎవరి బౌలింగ్‌లో పూర్తిచేశారు--హిల్ఫెనాస్ (ఆస్ట్రేలియా).

వన్డేలలో సచిన్ టెండుల్కర్ ఇంతవరకు ఎన్ని సెంచరీలు పుర్తిచేశాడు--45.

సచిన్ టెండుల్కర్ తొలి అంతర్జాతీయ వన్డే వేదిక--గుర్జన్‌వాలా (పాకిస్తాన్).

సచిన్ టెండుల్కర్ ఏ జట్టుపై వన్డేలలో అత్యధిక పరుగులు చేశాడు--ఆస్ట్రేలియా.

వన్డే ఇన్నింగ్సులో సచిన్ టెండుల్కర్ అత్యధిక వ్యక్తిగత స్కోరు--186(నాటౌట్).

వన్డేలలో అత్యధిక వ్యక్తిగత స్కోరు 186* సచిన్ ఏ జట్టుపై సాధించాడు--న్యూజీలాండ్.

వన్డేలలో 17వేల పరుగుల మైలురాయిని ఎన్నవ వన్డేలో పూర్తిచేశాడు--435వ వన్డే (424వ వన్డే ఇన్నింగ్స్).

సచిన్ ఇంతవరకు వన్డేలలో సాధించిన మ్యాన్ ఆఫ్ ది మ్యాచ్ అవార్డుల సంఖ్య--60.

మ్యాన్ ఆఫ్ ది సీరీస్ అవార్డులు సచిన్‌కు వన్డేలలో ఎన్ని సార్లు లభించాయి--12..



Sachin@17K..... The untouchable!!!!!!!!!



సచిన్ టెండుల్కర్ ఇటీవల సాధించిన మైలురాయి--వన్డేలలో 17000 పరుగులు పూర్తిచేయడం.

సచిన్ టెండుల్కర్ వన్డేలలో 17వేల పరుగుల మైలురాయిని ఏ స్టేడియంలో అందుకున్నారు--ఉప్పల్ స్టేడియం (హైదరాబాదు).

17వేల పరుగులను సచిన్ టెండుల్కర్ ఎవరి బౌలింగ్‌లో పూర్తిచేశారు--హిల్ఫెనాస్ (ఆస్ట్రేలియా).

వన్డేలలో సచిన్ టెండుల్కర్ ఇంతవరకు ఎన్ని సెంచరీలు పుర్తిచేశాడు--45.

సచిన్ టెండుల్కర్ తొలి అంతర్జాతీయ వన్డే వేదిక--గుర్జన్‌వాలా (పాకిస్తాన్).

సచిన్ టెండుల్కర్ ఏ జట్టుపై వన్డేలలో అత్యధిక పరుగులు చేశాడు--ఆస్ట్రేలియా.

వన్డే ఇన్నింగ్సులో సచిన్ టెండుల్కర్ అత్యధిక వ్యక్తిగత స్కోరు--186(నాటౌట్).

వన్డేలలో అత్యధిక వ్యక్తిగత స్కోరు 186* సచిన్ ఏ జట్టుపై సాధించాడు--న్యూజీలాండ్.

వన్డేలలో 17వేల పరుగుల మైలురాయిని ఎన్నవ వన్డేలో పూర్తిచేశాడు--435వ వన్డే (424వ వన్డే ఇన్నింగ్స్).

సచిన్ ఇంతవరకు వన్డేలలో సాధించిన మ్యాన్ ఆఫ్ ది మ్యాచ్ అవార్డుల సంఖ్య--60.

మ్యాన్ ఆఫ్ ది సీరీస్ అవార్డులు సచిన్‌కు వన్డేలలో ఎన్ని సార్లు లభించాయి--12..



Sri Raja Babu--Dil ka Raja

 

FREE BOSF UPDATES TO UR MOBILE

SMSChannelsLabsLogo
REECIVE FREE REGULAR UPDATES - CLICK ABOVE or Send "ON BOSFBIRDS" to 9870807070