Kaleidoscope

World will rediscover relevance of Gandhi
2007/10/02,08:52

As the world observes the first International Day of Non-Violence, Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh today hoped the global community will rediscover the relevance of the eternal message of Mahatma Gandhi for fighting conflict, violence and terrorism.

Gandhi 

I read this news in internet and started pondering over 'violence'. How would it have originated? I read a story in a newspaper years ago, on how children less than 10 years old, who are employed to kill the animals in slaughter houses develop an insensitivity to blood and soon they forget to see the difference between animal and human blood.I have read one theory that as humans have evolved from animals, they just inherited animal tendecies of killing as well. Considering this to be true, I started thinking about why animals need to do so? Why does Nature left animals the choice to kill?  That is Nature - some say.

When there is natural death by ageing, and while there is abundance provided by nature , why some animals were left with a choice to kill for survival? When I was continuing to run my thought process, I realized that my assumption on killing is based on 'blood' and hence I left plants out of my scope.

Anyways, putting a stop to my mind walk in this direction, I diverted to another. However violence has originated, whatever its manifestations we have seen in the world, there are a very few who conquered the tendencies within themselves and Oct 02 is a day of one such person's birth which is recognized by UN as the International day of non violence.

Still in many parts of the world it is Oct 02, and here below are some quotes about him and by him.

The below are from the movie - Gandhi (1982) 

Whenever I despair, I remember that the way of truth and love has always won. There may be tyrants and murderers, and for a time, they may seem invincible, but in the end, they always fail. Think of it: always.

Nahari: I'm going to Hell! I killed a child! I smashed his head against a wall.
Gandhi: Why?
Nahari: Because they killed my son! The Muslims killed my son!
[indicates boy's height]
Gandhi: I know a way out of Hell. Find a child, a child whose mother and father have been killed and raise him as your own.
[indicates same height]
Gandhi: Only be sure that he is a Muslim and that you raise him as one.

Edward R. Murrow: [at Gandhi's funeral] The object of this massive tribute died as he had always lived - a private man without wealth, without property, without official title or office. Mahatma Gandhi was not a commander of great armies nor ruler of vast lands. He could boast no scientific achievements or artistic gift. Yet men, governments and dignitaries from all over the world have joined hands today to pay homage to this little brown man in the loincloth who led his country to freedom. Pope Pius, the Archbishop of Canterbury, President Truman, Chiang Kai-shek, The Foreign Minister of Russia, the President of France... are among the millions here and abroad who have lamented his passing. In the words of General George C. Marshall, the American Secretary of State, "Mahatma Gandhi had become the spokesman for the conscience of mankind, a man who made humility and simple truth more powerful than empires." And Albert Einstein added, "Generations to come will scarce believe that such a one as this ever in flesh and blood walked upon this earth."

Thanks to imdb.com for the online version of these quotes.

The most memorable birthday on October 2nd
2007/10/01,09:16

Tribute to this man, half naked by body, and fully disclosed, by his heart.I am happy and privileged to post a message from Gandhi, way back in 1924.

My study and experience of nonviolence have proved to me that it is the greatest force in the world. It is the surest method of discovering the truth and it is the quickest because there is no other. It works silently, almost imperceptibly, but none the less surely. It is the one constructive process of Nature in the midst of incessant destruction going on about us. I hold it to be a superstition to believe that it can work only in private life. There is no department of life, public or private, to which that force cannot be applied. But this nonviolence is impossible without complete self-effacement.

Thanks to www.mkgandhi.org for the beautiful picture and the message.

Travel - Jakarta
2007/09/30,09:06

I went on a very short, one day trip to Jakarta, Indonesia. Just a while before I boarded the flight, one of my best friends told me that she is more keen on visiting rural areas as compared to cities whenever she explores a country and its culture as they(rural areas) are the ones that offer the richness or uniqueness of the culture.

I realized the wisdom behind that statement after I went to the heart of the city in Jakarta. Shining Malls, very huge with almost all popular western brands have become a mandatory requirement that all major asian cities adhere to these days. I found Jakarta to be very similar.

I could also see Dunkin Donuts, Starbucks, Macdonalds and Burger King  at several places in the city. Not that I don't like these, as I myself went for some innovative donuts and indulged in the sweetness and the different flavors - lychy - peanut & chocolate - caramel glazed....

While it is enjoyable and in a way refreshing to enter these great malls, visit places like Starbucks, Dunkin , it is also true that for a visiting tourist the experience may be monotonous to an extent from a city to another.

There are some cool antique shops that I visited. I bought a small statue ( wooden ) as a memorabilia. That street was so cool with so much of different antiques that one historian would spend time studying for years. 

Finally, I told myself that when I visit Indonesia the next time, I will go to Bali and to some of the rural areas around Jakarta.

Love - Tagore
2007/09/29,18:08

I came across a  poem by Tagore on Love. The simplicity of the poem touched me. I admire how Tagore weaved the tendency of human towards outward beauty, ability to puzzle itself with nothing! into this poem. Enjoy!

Love adorns itself;
it seeks to prove inward joy by outward beauty.
Love does not claim possession,
but gives freedom.
Love is an endless mystery,
for it has nothing else to explain it.
Love's gift cannot be given,
it waits to be accepted.

Thanks to www.poetseers.org for the online version of this work.

Humor Time
2007/09/28,13:36

It took me fifteen years to discover I had no talent for writing, but I couldn't give it up, because by that time I was too famous. -Robert Benchley

An archaeologist is the best husband a woman can have; the older she gets the more interested he is in her. - Agatha Christie
However beautiful the strategy, you should occasionally look at the results. - Winston Churchill
Education is an admirable thing, but it is well to remember from time to time that nothing worth knowing can be taught.- Oscar Wilde
Law and Order
2007/09/27,11:10

Every episode in Star Trek Voyager stimulates my thought process. One of the episodes I recently watched revolves around the crew's visit to a planet in delta quadrant (70,000 light years away from earth). One of the crew members Balenna has a violent thought of hitting a man after he collided on her accidentally. The crew member is arrested for the crime of thinking violent, and she is given a corrective punishment of purging her memory, which can possibly damage all of her memories and her normal brain functions. She is charged with the 'cause' of a murder as her violent thought is believed to have caused a murder of a young woman by a man who is usually a calm fellow. Ballena's protest to this punishment, the investigation of the tactical officer of voyager, Mr.Tunok, on the events that triggered the murder, Captain Janeway's handling the situation with full respect to the customs and laws of the land they visited; yet working to have her crew un-harmed, the shock that the society experiences on witnessing a crime after decades - all makes the episode a 'must return and watch' item.

I was amazed by the creativity of the script writer(s) for voyager truly. This theme also helped me spin a few thoughts.

1. The desire of some people to protect by controlling, more often violates individual rights of others. Say if there a situation arises where everyone can telepathically connect to each other, Will the thoughts of others be considered equivalent to speeches now and people would further stricter actions than now, out of suspicion, in the current society of ours?

2. In the story described - what is the role of free will?

3. Is experiencing negative or violent thoughts needed for one's development/evolution?

4. In a world there is no violent thoughts, how will peace be felt and interpreted?

I am still exploring answers to these questions. I hope this intrigues you too.

Life and Death
2007/09/26,10:23

A master piece by Rumi, nothing to add from my side. The full poem is at http://www.khamush.com/life&death.htm. Thanks to Rumi and to the website. 

come on sweetheart
let's adore one another
before there is no more
of you and me

a mirror tells the truth
look at your grim face
brighten up and cast away
your bitter smile

once you think of me
dead and gone
you will make up with me
you will miss me
you may even adore me

why be a worshiper of the dead
think of me as a goner
come and make up now

since you will come
and throw kisses
at my tombstone later
why not give them to me now
this is me
that same person

 

Space
2007/09/25,12:53

Space

Literally it means nothing, a vacuum between stars and planets. But by the same token it means everything. It's what connects all our worlds--

Captain Janeway continues delivering this monologue to admire and appreciate Space and the contribution of an 'earlier generation explorer' who her crew finds in an anamoly in space.

Kathryn Janeway 1

I love this monolgue ( a short one - but deeply impactful ), in episode 'One Small Step'. Kate Mulgrew does Captain Janeway very well; her's is a truly  fantastic performance. This talk also reminded me of a model on reality presented by scientist and spiritualist Vethathiri Maharishi of India.

According to my interpretation, he described the alimighty or reality to be a scientific, yet sentient phenomenon which holds everything in it. It is the subtlest, not easily un-felt force that holds everything. It is also love.

I started wondering if this would be true. It may be that many people  experience reality truly and describe the way they recognize to others. It may be that, what they felt or perceived is the same, but their interpretation  - the language - words they know and thus use to communicate make the experiences seemingly different!

Thanks to startrek.com for the picture and hats off to the wonderful creators of 'Voyager'

Victory
2007/09/24,11:38

I love the game of cricket. In my childhood days, I was an ardent fan, who would run along with fellow friends to the ground with the ball and the bat even during the 15 minute breaks in a day, leave alone an elaborate 45 minute lunch break.

Whenever I played, I wanted deperately to win. I was a bowler most of the times and I would imagine that I were the fastest bowler in the world. While some of my friends accepted the sheer pace in deliveries, some pointed that I lack "planned" variety of deliveries though my keenness to simply bowl at a maximum pace itself resulted in a variety of deliveries - unplanned varities though - some of them going to the near by ground - several feets away from the target, into no man's land!

Anyways, after this 'Swim' session in my memory land ( or water , perhaps!) , I thought of the term victory and was keen to find out some quotes regarding the same. Here you go!

“The first and best victory is to conquer self; to be conquered by self is of all things most shameful and vile.” - Plato

Things won are done, joy's soul lies in the doing. - William Shakespeare


I count him braver who overcomes his desires than him who conquers his enemies; for the hardest victory is over self - Aristotle

Victory becomes, to some degree, a state of mind. Knowing ourselves superior to the anxieties, troubles, and worries which obsess us, we are superior to them.  - Basil King

Thanks to Plato,Shakespeare,Aristotle and Basil King for these wonderful reflections.Thanks to www.thinkexist.com for the first, www.quotations.about.com for the second and www.motivational-inspirational-corner.com for the online version of the rest of the quotes.

Landscape - East or West & Star Trek
2007/09/23,05:32

Not in a many years, I paid attention how the raw "land" looked like when I was in USA. I did a few times when I was about to leave on account of a job elsewhere.

land

From then on, I started paying attention to the land wherever I go, that lead me to wonder that the land everywhere else, in its rawness look exactly alike to my eyes as it is in USA.

Today I had such an experience out of a comparison which only brought similiarities more than differences amongst different lands. At the same time, a vivid image of me in a greyhound bus in an interstate highway in USA, watching the wilderness - the fresh trees passing by my window side came across my mind.

grand canyon

What people have contributed to the land, especially the contribution to themselves in making a 'not so disturbing' access to all the nature, thus allowing them to enjoy Nature at its best, in USA enthralls me. Atleast, this is my perception of the situation. I felt a natural freshness when I was driving along the curvy roads to grand canyon, and in phoenix along the mountains.

The self made singapore is similar too. There is a great deal of effort to preserve the green amidst all the modern constructions. India and China may have to work on improving accessibility to their fantastic natural scenic areas; I believe that it will be soon.

park singapore

I thank Star Trek for the greatest of the inspirations which is "exploration". Since I started watching Star Trek, I have widened my perspective on phenomenon around me and the ones that I observed earlier. The possibility that there could be other worlds, similar in landscape and with people similar to humans, that is described in Star Trek brings my mind close to consider the current differences in various cultures of earth negligible.

I think the moment we, humans come across other similar intelligent life forms ( well, I am making an assumption that they exist now ) in other worlds physically, we may all unite or rather believe and represent ourselves as a single race - 'human' - not anymore - american - british - european - asian. How would that be like?

Thanks to http://www.ga.gov.au/education/facts/images/farm.jpg for the picture of the land ( farms )

Thanks to http://www.wildsingapore.com/places/sbwr/gallery/photos/photo_17.html

for the picture of a main bridge in Sungei Buloh park - Singapore

Thanks to L.Grover-Bullington and http://www.nps.gov/grca/naturescience/naturalfeaturesandecosystems.htm

for the picture of grand canyon

Human Life - Origin and its value
2007/09/22,10:17

"Abiogenesis - study of how life on earth might have emerged" - I learnt a new term today when I was browsing Wikipedia for 'origins of life'.

It is believed to have happened 4.4 billion years ago and 2.7 billion years ago from the interaction of 'non-life' minerals.

Neanderthal 

Looking at our current 'physical' evolution, our own bodies - it is hard to believe that human kind has evolved from some kind of 'soup' of minerals, to begin with. If this is true, have we stopped evolving physically or will we be evolving further in future?. This question comes up in my mind, looking at the historical data of 'human physique' - I think it is the same for several centuries.

If we stopped evolving physically - why? what could be a possible reason?

If we further evolve physically - how and what would trigger that?

Will we be having two wings which also are hands and we all fly at will? :-) Just kidding.

Whatever the facts of the origins of the life, which the scientists were/are ardently trying to ascertain, even the historical data that we have, would let us know about the human evolution, from cave men to now.

Considering this journey, it is of no doubt that human life is very valuable and it is to be made the full use of!

Thanks to Wikipedia for the image and the statistical information on the formation of life.

The Mind of Mahatma Gandhi
2007/09/21,09:56

Today I browsed www.mkgandhi.org. Since my childhood, I have developed a fondness to Gandhi.

This web site is a wonderful remembrance of him. There are volumes of his thoughts and works shared online. One of the works I browsed through today is "The Mind of Mahatma Gandhi" (http://www.mkgandhi.org/momgandhi/momindex.htm)

Gandhi 

Please find below some of the words of his, that I cherish. You are welcome to visit the website for more. Thanks to his grace through these words and to mkgandhi.org for being a conduit of that grace.

Somehow I am able to draw the noblest in mankind, and that is what enables me to maintain my faith in God and human nature.

Mine is a life full of joy in the midst of incessant work. In not wanting to think of what tomorrow will bring for me, I feel as free as a bird….. The thought that I am ceaselessly and honestly struggling against the requirements of the flesh sustains me.

Work without faith is like an attempt to reach the bottom of a bottomless pit.

I believe in absolute oneness of God and, therefore, also of humanity. What though we have many bodies? We have but one soul. The rays of the sun are many through refraction. But they have the same source. I cannot, therefore, detach myself from the wickedest soul (nor may I be denied identity with the most virtuous). Whether, therefore, I will or not, I must involve in my experiment the whole of my kind. Nor can I do without experiment. Life is but an endless series of experiments.

I have made the frankest admission of my many sins. But I do not carry their burden on my shoulders. If I am journeying Godward, as I feel I am, it is safe with me. For I feel the warmth of the sunshine of His presence.

Whenever I see an erring man, I say to myself I have also erred; when I see a lustful man, I say to myself so was I once; and in this way, I feel kinship with every one in the world and feel that I cannot be happy without the humblest of us being happy.

Be lost in the call - Rumi
2007/09/20,12:07

Lord, said David, since you do not need us,
why did you create these two worlds?

Reality replied: O prisoner of time,
I was a secret treasure of kindness and generosity,
and I wished this treasure to be known,
so I created a mirror: its shining face, the heart;
its darkened back, the world;
The back would please you if you've never seen the face

After many a number of days, I looked for poetry in internet and came across this beautiful verse by Rumi. Deeply meaningful, this poem is a lovely one that also stimulates thinking. Thanks to www.armory.com for the online version of the poem. You could read this entire poem and many others by Rumi in this site. 

Meaning of Flowers
2007/09/19,12:41

Thinking of the subject to blog today, I typed flowers in google. To my surprise I find an interesting information in www.aboutflowers.com.

In victorian times, people ascribed specific meanings to certain flowers, as the selection was limited and the mode of communication of people  comprised more of symbols and gestures.

apple blossom                         Apple Blossom promise

DAFFODILS                         Daffodil chivalry

DAISY                         Daisy innocence

hibiscus                               Hibiscus delicate beauty

IRIS                     Iris inspiration

IVY                                               Ivy fidelity

jasmine                               Jasmine grace and elegance

Well, there is one with negative meaning too

 lavender                               Lavender distrust

There are several more in http://www.aboutflowers.com/floral_b5.html


Thanks to the below sites for the images of the beautiful flowers

Apple Blossom  - www.50states.com/flower/picts/arkansas.jpg
Daffodils      - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daffodil
Daisy   - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bellis_perennis
Hibiscus - http://healing.about.com/od/floweressences/ig/Flower-Essence-Gallery/Hibiscus.htm
Iris  - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Iris02.jpg
Ivy  - http://www.about-garden.com/e/en/381-english-ivy-hedera-helix
Jasmine  - http://www.fabiovisentin.com/photos/world/9_131/Jasmines-Flowers-Wallpaper-Wide.ashx
Lavender - http://www.flowers.vg/flowers/00flower01.shtml?n0flower460.jpg

Humor Time - Thanks to Einstein
2007/09/18,10:56

 

"Two things are infinite: the universe and human stupidity; and I'm not sure about the the universe."

"If A is a success in life, then A equals x plus y plus z. Work is x; y is play; and z is keeping your mouth shut."

 "I never think of the future. It comes soon enough."

"Common sense is the collection of prejudices acquired by age eighteen."

Thanks to Einstein and to stanford.edu for the online version of these quotes that helped my quick reference.

Thanks to http://www.spaceandmotion.com/Albert-Einstein-Quotes.htm for the image of Einstein.

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