Thursday 30 August 2007

The Water Bearer and The Two Pots.

Once upon a time there was a water bearer in China. He had two large pots; He hung each on the ends of a pole which he carried across his neck.



One of the pots had a crack in it, while the other pot was perfect and always delivered a full portion of water.

At the end of the long walk from the stream to the House, the cracked pot arrived only half full.

For a full two years this went on daily, with the bearer delivering only one and a half pots full of water to his house.

Of course, the perfect pot was proud of its accomplishments, perfect for which it was made.

But the poor cracked pot was ashamed of it's own imperfection. And miserable that it was able to accomplish only half of what it had been made to do.

After two years of what it perceived to be a bitter failure, the cracked pot spoke to the water bearer one day by the stream.

"I am ashamed of myself, and I want to apologize to you. I have been able to deliver only half my load because this crack in my side causes water to leak out all the way back to your house. Because of my flaws, you have to do all of this work, and you don't get full value from your efforts," the pot said.

The bearer said to the pot, "Did you notice that there were flowers only on your side of the path, but not on the other pot's side? That's because I have always known about your flaw. So I planted flower seeds on your side of the path, and every day while we walk back, you've watered them. For two years I have been able to pick these beautiful flowers to decorate the table.

Without you being just the way you are, there would not be this beauty to grace the house?

Moral:
Each of us has our own unique flaws.

We're all cracked pots. But it's the cracks and flaws we each have that make our lives together so very interesting and rewarding.

You've just got to take each person for what they are, and look for the good in them.

"Blessed are the flexible, for they shall not be bent out of shape"

Remember to appreciate all the different people in your life.

Wednesday 29 August 2007

Just imagine! You will be able to climb the wall, right up to your balcony, without falling.

Have you wondered how insects and lizard can walk up the walls?

If you look closely, you will notice that insects, spiders and geckos all have tiny hairs on their feet that set up weak attractions called van der Waals forces between molecules that are very close together.

This microscopic Velcro can cling to smooth surfaces yet is easy to detach.
Based on this idea Italian scientists have calculated how sufficient stickiness could be generated in the same way to support a human being's body weight. They believe microscopic hollow structures called carbon nano tubes could theoretically be used to make the idea work.

They are planning to make a "Spiderman suit" that allows the wearer to scale vertical walls just like the fictional superhero.

Prof Nicola Pugno, from the Polytechnic of Turin, said: "It may not be long before we are seeing people climbing up the Empire State Building with nothing but sticky shoes and gloves to support them."
Source: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/

Monday 27 August 2007

Rakhi Day is Righteous Day

by
A.P.J.Abdul Kalam

This full moon day our hearts are in brim
Feeling of faith and serenity in mind.
We light the lamps and our hears glow
Radiance of happiness and peace are in flow.
Harmonious homes are like streams of joy
Flowing and flourishing the landscape en route.
Nobility in heart and character in deed
Righteous homes alone make a beautiful State.
Sisters will tie the thread on the brothers
Abiding them to do only what is right and clean.
Put the Kumkum and blessed rice on the head
Where will dwell right thoughts and noble action.

Friday 24 August 2007

Why do we read Geeta, even if we can't understand a Sanskrit word???

a Story by Sri Sri Ravi Shankar

An old Farmer lived on a farm in the mountains with his young grandson.Each morning Grandpa was up early sitting at the kitchen table reading his Bhagavat Geeta. His grandson wanted to be just like him and tried to imitate him in every way he could.

One day the grandson asked, "Grandpa! I try to read the Bhagavat Geeta just like you but I don't understand it, and what I do understand I forget as soon as I close the book. What good does reading the Bhagavat Geeta do?"

The Grandfather quietly turned from putting coal in the stove and replied, "Take this coal basket down to the river and bring me back a basket of water."

The boy did as he was told, but all the water leaked out before he got back to the house.

The grandfather laughed and said, "You'll have to move a little faster next time," and sent him back to the river with the basket to try again.

This time the boy ran faster, but again the basket was empty before he returned home. Out of breath, he told his grandfather that it was impossible to carry water in a basket, and he went to get a bucket instead.

The old man said, "I don't want a bucket of water; I want a basket of water. You're just not trying hard enough," and he went out the door to watch the boy try again.

At this point, the boy knew it was impossible, but he wanted to show his grandfather that even if he ran as fast as he could, the water would leak out before he got back to the house.

The boy again dipped the basket into river and ran hard, but when he reached his grandfather the basket was again empty. Out of breath, he said, "See Grandpa, it's useless!"

"So you think it is useless?" The old man said, "Look at the basket."

The boy looked at the basket and for the first time realized that the basket was different. It had been transformed from a dirty old coal basket and was now clean, inside and out.

"Son, that's what happens when you read the Bhagavat Geeta. You might not understand or remember everything, but when you read it, you will be changed, inside and out. That is the work of Krishna in our lives."

"Celebrate Life. Care for others and share whatever you have with those less fortunate than you. Broaden your vision, for the whole world belongs to you."

Wednesday 22 August 2007

White, pretty pearl necklace


Tina went to market with her mother, one day
She saw a white, pretty pearl necklace

The cost was less, but she was poor
Could not really afford that pearl necklace

She saved each dime, in her own piggy bank
And finally bought white pearl necklace

Feeling too proud, she played with her friends
Always wearing her pretty, pearl necklace

Her dad, one day asked, if she loved him much
Would she give him, her pretty, pearl necklace?

She said, he could take her prettiest, lovely doll
But, she could not ever part her pearl necklace.

Days, then months, each time dad asked
Always same answer, no, not my pearl necklace.

But one fine day, when dad asked once more
She gave him her precious pearl necklace

He took her old one, in his pocket there was new
He exchanged it with a genuine pearl necklace

He had waited too long, for his daughter to know
In his pocket he had carried, real pearl necklace.

Monday 20 August 2007

Happy New Year to all our Parsi friends!

Jamshed-e-Navroz is a time for Parsis to reiterate their identity in India's melting pot of religions. For many Parsis, this festival also ushers in the new year.


Navroz is a day of celebration. Apart from new clothes, all Parsis wear their gold or silver jewelry and caps. Auspicious symbols like fish, birds, butterflies and stars, are patterned on doorways with metallic moulds. Guests are welcomed with a sprinkling of rose-water and rice.

The most traditional drink for Navroz is falooda, which is prepared with milk and flavoured with rose water.

The traditional lunch consists of sev and sweet yogurt, followed by pulao. The meal would end with ravo. A copy of the Gathas, a lit lamp, an afrigan, a bowl of water containing live fish, a shallow earthenware plate with sprouted wheat or beans for prosperity, flowers for colour, a silver coin for wealth, painted eggs for productivity, and sweets and rosewater in bowls for sweetness and happiness, are kept on a table. Apart from these, the table also has seven foods beginning with 'sh' and 's'. These are meant to symbolise creation.

Source: http://festivals.iloveindia.com/

Saturday 18 August 2007

Performing Monkeys in India

Raju Sujan from China wants to share his story with his friends, he writes:

If you go to any tourist spot in India, you are likely to see monkeys perform trick. They are trained to perform tricks that are sometimes very amusing.

Recently, on my route to Agra from Delhi, we stopped at the toll station and saw this monkey perform some tricks.
He climbed on a bamboo pole and danced while the man sang a Bollywood song.


then his master told him to say hello to me and he bend down double, touching his head to the ground.

He snatched the bamboo rod from his master and started to walk like an old man

He danced, jumped, climbed the bonnet of my car and tried to peep into my car. when I tried to shoo him away, he was making funny faces at me..I enjoyed watching the show.

Ha! ha! ha! What fun we had watching his show!

Friday 17 August 2007

Do you wish to make Paper Finger Puppets?

Your fingers are the legs (or trunk) of these simple paper puppets. You can make the entire cast of a nursery rhyme or fairy tale in just a few minutes, and then put on your own show.


You will need

Stiff paper, like thick construction paper or even thicker paper
A pair of Scissors
Markers or crayons to make some good designs
If you like, you can also have a printer, googly eyes, glue, cotton balls

It is really very easy to make

Using stiff paper, either print out a puppet template or draw your own.

Then you must cut out the finger puppet and the finger hole(s).

Now decorate the puppet with crayons or markers.

And you can glue on googly eyes and cotton-ball or yarn hair to make them look friendly.

So are you having a puppet show and having some fun?.

Source: http://www.enchantedlearning.com/

Thursday 16 August 2007

15th August, an Independence Day of India, was celebrated everywhere in India.


There was flag hoisting ceremony in my building too. Children and parents gathered in the building compound at six in the morning. Everybody had a small flag in their hands. Everybody was dressed in Indian clothes, women in salvar kameez or sari and men in kurta pajama. Women wore clothes of bright colors like orange and green and some wore white dresses too.

As the flag swayed with the breeze, everybody sang patriotic songs like ‘Uncha rahe triranga hamara” and then they all sang National Anthem.

After the flag hoisting ceremony, there was a small party where they served Idlis and tea,

Sunday 12 August 2007

National Anthem of India

The Jana Gana Mana was composed by Shri Rabindranath Tagore and first sung at the Calcutta session of the Indian National Congress on December 27th, 1911. It was adopted as the National Anthem of India on 24th January, 1950 by the Constituent Assembly. The first stanza( out of five stanzas) of the song forms the National Anthem.

visit for video at
http://www.touchninspire.com/inspire/iday.html

NATIONAL ANTHEM OF INDIA
" Jana Gana Mana Adhinayaka Jaya He
Bharat Bhagya Vidhata
Punjab Sindh Gujarat Maratha
Dravida Utkala Banga

Vindhya Himachal Yamuna Ganga
Ucchala Jaladhi Taranga
Tubh Shubha Name Jage
Tubh Shubha Ashisha Mange
Gahe Tubh Jaya Gata

Jan Gan Mangaldayak Jay He
Bharat Bhagya Vidhata
Jaye He ! Jaye He ! Jaye He !
Jaye,Jaye,Jaye,Jaye He "

Translation of The national anthem- Jana Gana Mana In English

Thou are the ruler of the minds of all people, dispenser of India's destiny.

The name rouses the hearts of Punjab, Sind, Gujurat and Maratha. Of the Dravid and Orissa and Bengal.

It Echoes in the hills of Vindhyas and Himalayas, mingles in the music of Yamuna and Ganga and is chanted by the waves of the Indian Sea.

They pray for your blessing and sing thy praise. The salvation of all people is thy hand, thou dispenser of India's destiny. Victory, Victory, Victory to thee.

Everybody chants "Jai Hind"

SRI AUROBINDO message to Indians on Independence day of India, on 14th August 1947



Sri Aurobindo had been requested by the All India Radio, Trichinopoly, to give a message for India's independence. This is the message which was broadcast from the All India Radio on the 14th of August 1947. It is of special relevance and importance in this 60th year of India's independence.

Excepts from his speech
August 15th, 1947 is the birthday of free India. It marks for her the end of an old era, the beginning of a new age. But we can also make it by our life and acts as a free nation an important date in a new age opening for the whole world, for the political, social, cultural and spiritual future of humanity.

Unity must and will be achieved, for it is necessary for the greatness of India's future.

The unification is therefore to the interests of all, and only human imbecility and stupid selfishness can prevent it; but these cannot stand for ever against the necessity of Nature and the Divine Will. But an outward basis is not enough; there must grow up an international spirit and outlook, international forms and institutions must appear, perhaps such developments, as dual or multilateral citizenship, willed interchange or voluntary fusion of cultures.

India has her part to play and has begun to play it with an energy and ability which already indicate the measure of her possibilities and the place she can take in the council of the nations.

If this evolution is to take place, since it must proceed through a the initiative can come from India and, although the scope must be universal, the central movement mgrowth of the spirit and the inner consciousness,ay be hers.

Such is the content which I put into this date of India's liberation; whether or how far this hope will be justified depends upon the new and free India.


He said that nothing is dearer than Her service

There are times in a nation's history when Providence places before it one work, one aim, to which everything else, however high and noble in itself, has to be sacrificed. Such a time has now arrived for our Motherland when nothing is dearer than her service, when everything else is to be directed to that end. If you will study, study for her sake; train yourselves body and mind and soul for her sake. You will go abroad to foreign lands that you may bring back knowledge with which you may do service to her. Work that she may prosper. Suffer that she may rejoice. All is contained in that one single advice.
Source:
http://www.sriaurobindosociety.org.in/

Friday 10 August 2007

Do you want to make an orange frosts?


You will need

2 cups of milk
1 cup of water
1 cup of ice cubes
3 table spoons of sugar
1 cup of frozen orange juice concentrate.

Wash your hand before you begin and wear an apron to look like a chef. Now combine all the ingredients and mix it in the blender till the ice is all squash up and you see lots of froth.

Hey, are you having with your breakfast?

Blue Umbrella



Blue umbrella
Blue umbrella

It is a new movie
I just watched its trailer

Story of a girl and tea seller
Both of them love blue umbrella.

Stealing umbrella
There is one traitor

Greedy people
Could never prosper

Magic umbrella
Blue umbrella

It is a new movie
I just watched its trailer.

Tuesday 7 August 2007

Dolphins are friendly mammals

“Hello mama, how are you?” said the Dolphin trapped in a strange tank
“Baby, where are you my dear, I am looking for you everywhere.”



Here's a conversation worth talking about: A mother dolphin chats with her baby…over the telephone! The special call was made in an aquarium in Hawaii, where the mother and her two-year-old calf swam in separate tanks connected by a special underwater audio link. The two dolphins began squawking and chirping to each other—distinctive dolphin chatter.

Cracking the Code"It seemed clear that they knew who they were talking with," says Don White, whose Project Delphis ran the experiment. "Information was passing back and forth pretty quickly." But what were they saying? That's what scientists are trying to find out by studying wild and captive dolphins all over the world to decipher their secret language. They haven't completely cracked the but they're listening…and learning

Chatty MammalsIn many ways, you are just like the more than 30 species of dolphins that swim in the world's oceans and rivers. Dolphins are mammals, like you are, and must swim to the surface to breathe air. Just as you might, they team up in pods, or groups, to accomplish tasks. And they're smart.

They also talk to each other. Starting from birth, dolphins squawk, whistle, click, and squeak. "Sometimes one dolphin will vocalize and then another will seem to answer," says Sara Waller, who studies bottlenose dolphins off the California coast. "And sometimes members of a pod vocalize in different patterns at the same time, much like many people chattering at a party." And just as you gesture and change facial expressions as you talk, dolphins communicate nonverbally through body postures, jaw claps, bubble blowing, and fin caresses.

Thinking DolphinScientists think dolphins "talk" about everything from basic facts like their age to their emotional state. "I speculate that they say things like 'there are some good fish over here,' or 'watch out for that shark because he's hunting,'" says Denise Herzing, who studies dolphins in the Bahamas.

When the going gets tough, for instance, some dolphins call for backup. After being bullied by a duo of bottlenose dolphins, one spotted dolphin returned to the scene the next day with a few pals to chase and harass one of the bully bottlenose dolphins. "It's as if the spotted dolphin communicated to his buddies that he needed their help, then led them in search of this guy," says Herzing, who watched the scuffle.

Language LessonsKathleen Dudzinski, director of the Dolphin Communication Project, has listened to dolphins for more than 17 years, using high-tech gear to record and analyze every nuance of their language. But she says she's far from speaking "dolphin" yet. Part of the reason is the elusiveness of the animals. Dolphins are fast swimmers who can stay underwater for up to ten minutes between breaths. "It's like studying an iceberg because they spend most of their lives underwater," Dudzinski says.

Deciphering "dolphin speak" is also tricky because their language is so dependent on what they're doing, whether they're playing, fighting, or going after tasty fish. It's no different for humans. Think about when you raise a hand to say hello. Under other circumstances, the same gesture can mean good-bye, stop, or that something costs five bucks. It's the same for dolphins. During fights, for example, dolphins clap their jaws to say "back off!" But they jaw clap while playing, too, as if to show who's king of the underwater playground.

"I have not found one particular dolphin behavior that means the same thing every time you see it," says Dudzinski. "If you like mysteries and detective work, then this is the job for you." And who knows—maybe someday you'll get a phone call from a dolphin.

Source:
http://kids.nationalgeographic.com/

Sunday 5 August 2007

Honey, honey

Honey, honey
Hmmn! Yummy, yummy
It tastes so sweet,
Oh, so good.
I feel fine
With just one spoon
Oh mummy, mummy
Give me some more
With my food.


Honey is a sweet and viscous fluid produced by honey bees, and derived from the nectar of flowers

It is significantly sweeter than table sugar and has attractive chemical properties for baking. It has a distinctive flavor which leads some people to prefer it over sugar and other sweeteners.

Properly stored, honey is the one food that does not spoil - 3,000-year-old honey found in the tombs of Egyptian pharaohs was tasted and considered edible.

Honey is hygroscopic: it can absorb and hold moisture so that any moulds and bacteria that touch it quickly lose their own moisture and die.

It's why cakes made with honey stay moist longer than ones made with sugar.

Saturday 4 August 2007

Story behind Rakhi festival


Many, many years ago, in 1535 AD, in the city of Chittor, in Rajasthan, there lived Maharani Karnawati. She was the queen of the Rajput Kingdom. At that time, Rajputs were facing the invasion from the Mughals.

Maharani Karnawati realized that Mughals were very powerful and her state would never survive if there was a war. She didn’t know what to do. She wanted to protect her kingdom. She decided to sent a rakhi to Humayun as a token of love from a sister.

Rakhi festival was an established festival by then and a spiritual symbol associated with the protection of a sister. Humayun was aware of this Hindu tradition.

Normally he wouldn't have pardoned anyone, but her gesture of love touched him. He immediately stopped his troops and asked them to return. He also swore that may what happen he will protect his new sister under any circumstances.

Their story touches the heart of zillions and is an emblem of pure brother sister love.

Thursday 2 August 2007

Have you made rakheee for your brother?



In this month of August, we have many festivals on our Hindu calendar and one most important festival is raksha bandhan, on this day, sister ties rakhee to her brother.

Hope you will make one rakhee for your brother this year.

Materials needed:
 Strands of silk threads-2/3
 A pair of scissors
 Cotton thread to tie knots
 Beads, sitaras, golden threads and sponge to decorate
 Glue
 A toothbrush with hard bristles.

Method:
Take 20-24 inches long silk thread strands in a bunch. If you want to make multi coloured rakhis take silk threads of different colours.

Tie a tight knot with a cotton thread on the one-fourth part of the silken thread bunch. The one-fourth part will be made into a rakhi while the three-fourth will be the string to tie around the wrist.

Now make sure the heads of the silk threads of the one-fourth part of the bunch do not remain in loops, in case they are, cut them with a pair of scissors.

Once they are independent of loops, with a toothbrush rub hard on these threads and brush them with strong strokes by holding tight on the knot. With repeated strokes the silk threads turns fluffy and soft.
To make the string, divide the three-fourth part of the silk thread in two equal parts and plait them separately. At the end tie a knot and brush the end again.


Once this is done decorate it with beads or sitaras. Stick them with glue. You can purchase sponge of a suitable colour, cut it into a star shape, decorate it with beads or sitaras. Golden threads can be entwined used for decoration. And then stick it with glue.
Source: http://www.theholidayspot.com/rakhi/

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