Monday, December 12, 2011

Celebrating Love by Sri Sri Ravishankar Guruji


This book belongs to more of spiritual than personality development category. There is much of non-human component and it treats the reader as some Godly creature who has overcome the human inadequacy.

It aides in understanding the purity that rest within us. Purity by meaning to say the innocence and genuineness of the soul. 

Secretes of Relationships by Sri Sri RaviShankar Guruji


The book starts with the definition of the relationship and lets us understand the types of relationships we hold with the people, society, world and the lethargic components of the surroundings.

This book did not hold my interest for long and I skipped pages reading the same gyaan. But when I was reading the book, I made a great comparison between the preaching of Ravishankar Guruji and Sri Sri Bhramha nanda Swamiji. The basis for both is same but the way in which Ravi Shankar Guruji preaches  is more famous among the  fast, modern, youth whereas Bramha Nanda Swamiji’s is more applied to the  middle aged,  family stuck and troubled people.

Secretes of Relationships is available as CD and book. The book cost is around 50INR and available in all AOL stores. 

Mind Matters by Sri Sri RaviShankar Guruji


Of late I have been reading a lot of books by Ravishankar Guruji because I get them all free of cost.  This one is the best of the whole lot. It talks about the importance of mind control and the ways to achieve mind control. The book is quite small but speaks in volumes.

The author tells about the difficulties of not having the mind control and then about the benefits of mind control and many challenging ways to achieve it.

Mind control is a technique through which one can achieve immense elation of the spirit. It basically means controlling the turbulence of the mind and keeping a steady state of mind in the moments of glad and sad. It prepares one accept the surprise of the birth and grief of the death alike. Though a man having worldly regulations and disciplines may not achieve such a state of calmness, he would get a blissful mind which enables him to see good and bad as one.

The book is a great eye opener and lets us understand the barriers that lay deep inside us for pursuit of truth.

Friday, September 9, 2011

ಬೇಡ ಮಾಡಬೇಡ ???

ಎಣೆ ಎಣೆಯಾಗಿರುವ ನನ್ನ ಪ್ರೀತಿಯನ್ನು
ಎಣ್ಣೆಯಲ್ಲಿ ಕರಿಯಬೇಡ |
ಮೃದುವಾಗಿರುವ ನನ್ನ ಹೃದಯವನ್ನು 
ಬಾಣಲೆಯಲ್ಲಿ ಹುರಿಯಬೇಡ ||

ಬೆಂದಿರುವ ಭಾವನೆಗಳನ್ನು 
ಬಿಸಿನೀರಿನಲ್ಲಿ ಕುದಿಸಬೇಡ|
ಕಲ್ಲೋಲವಾಗಿರುವ ಮನವನ್ನು 
ಮಾತಿನಿಂದ ಕದಡಬೇಡ|||

ಅರ್ಥ ಮಾಡಿಕೋ ನಿನ್ನ ದುಗುಡವ 
ಪಡೆದುಕೋ ಉಸಿರಾಟದ ಹಿಡಿತವ |
ಬಿಗಿದಪ್ಪಿಕೋ  ನನ್ನ ನಿನ್ಹಿಡಿಥದಲಿ
ಸೇರುವುದು ನಮ್ಮ  ನೋವುಗಳು ಮನೆಯ ಗೂಡಿನಲಿ||

ಹೋಲಿಸಬೇಡ ನಿನ್ನ ಪ್ರೀತಿಯನೇನಕೂ
ಸಿಗುವುದು ನಿನಗೆ ಶಾಂತಿಯ ಬದುಕು |
ವಿಶ್ವಾಸವನಿಟ್ಟಕೋ ನಮ್ಮಿಬ್ಬರಲಿ 
ದೊರಕುವುದು ನಮಗೂ  ಸ್ವರ್ಗದ  ತಪ್ಪಲು||

 ಜೀವನದ ದಾರಿ  ಬಲು ಕಷ್ಟ 
ನೋವ ನುಂಗಿಕೊ ??????
ಆಗ ಆಗುವುದು ಇದು ಬಹಳ ಇಷ್ಟ || || ||| |||

                                                                             ಚತುರ್ಮುಖ 

Monday, August 15, 2011

Hai Hum me Hero


Yesterday was the 64th Independence Day of India. As usual I was jobless and happened to watch the movie Gandhi on sony pix. (My dad has been persuading me to watch it since I was 4yrs old when I won the awards for speeches on Gandhi’s biography. I remember precisely every time the competition is over on the mornings of 15th Aug, he would hurry down the award giving ceremony and rush back home to watch this movie. I’ve had never been keen on it to watch. This time I made it)

The movie starts with the day of Gandhi’s death where he quotes ‘When I despair, I remember that all through history the way of truth and love has always won. There have been tyrants, and murderers, and for a time they can seem invincible, but in the end they always fall. Think of it--always.’

It shows how Gandhi had been successful in winning the rights of Indians in South Africa, his journey to India and non- cooperation and non-violence. The movie also fables on how Gandhi fought with the Muslim communities and Jinnah against the India – Pakistan partition.

It’s a four hour movie and a lot slow paced compared to the contemporary movies (Eg: Avatar which I also watched yesterday). At the end Gandhi’s death scene has been recalled from the beginning of the movie.

More than the movie, what moved me most was the intermittent Hero Honda ad by AR Rehman singing ‘Hai Hum me Hero’. The ad has a gymnast, a dancer in the India challenge TV show, an old Sikh climbing a hill, an IAF pilot and a bungee jumper. The gymnast falls in the practice sessions but wins the grand finale, the dancer battles the challenge and wins, the Sikh views the panoramic view from the top of the hill and by that they show that all of us have a Hero in Us.

With the ad in the background, I concluded that Gandhi had a big job to do and so does Anna Hazare or our most gallant army soldiers. Gandhi was identified as the leader of the Independence struggle and he did his job great. Our army officers are also doing their job right. I say anybody who does his job right without any flaw is a Hero. Every day at 11 o’ clock, a BBMP guy drops at my door to collect garbage and he’s never missed a minute ever. I always wonder how someone can be so perfect. If his effort is very ordinary – so is Gandhi’s. I find a Hero in that garbage collector.

We are all heros in our own self because we have a goal to achieve and we are all doing it just right or we are only ordinary including Mahatma Gandhi. For now let’s just say ‘Mujme hai Hero'.

Thursday, May 26, 2011

Where's God?

I am literally mad over this song.

Sung by Shreya Ghoshal, its rich and consummate in meaning.

Na kuch poocha
Na kuch manga
Tune dil se diya jo liya

Na kuch bola 
na kuch tola
Muskura ke diya jo diya

Tu hi dhoop tu hi chaoon
Tu hi apna paraya
Aur kuch na jana
Bas itna hi janu

Tujh mein rab dikhta hai


You didn’t ask anything  
You didn’t demand for anything
Whatever you gave, you gave from your heart 

You didn’t say anything
You didn’t weigh the pros and cons
Whatever you gave, you gave with a smile

You’re the warmth, you’re the shade
You are my own yet a stranger
I may not know much
but this I do know
I see God in you

Tuesday, March 29, 2011

Honor among thieves: Jeffery Archer


It is a thriller set in the United States of America, Iraq, Israel and Middle Eastern countries. The plot is that Saddam Hussein plans to avenge America by stealing the declaration of independence after his defeat in the gulf war. 

Saddam and party contact international mafia don and set a deal to steal the declaration of independence from the national archives of America in Washington.  When the declaration is stolen, it is passed on to the Iraqi ambassador at the UN and in turn brought to Iraq. 

One CIA agent Scott Bradley and Mossad- Hannah Kopec together bring back the declaration with illogical, poorly built Jeffrey Archer drama before the press gets to know about the theft. 

The book is disappointing even for hard core Jeffery Archerians.  May appeal the naïve readers.

Train to Pakistan: Khushwant Singh.


This is one of the most acclaimed books about the India Pakistan partition happened in Aug 1947. It talks about the human dimension of the partition in comparison to the political and economic dimensions of the contemporary books.

The story is set in a fictional village of Mano Majra on the borders of India and Pakistan and dominated by Sikhs. The protagonist- Juggat Singh is a Sikh in love with a Muslim girl. The day before the call is given for Muslim separation in Mano Majra, the village’s only rich man is murdered and Juggu is captured in relation to the murder.

The lover girl is pregnant and she with her blind father leave for Pakistan to be taken as refugees. Juggu is released from jail to find that there is a train arriving at Mano Majro full of dead Sikh bodies. There’s not a lone man who is alive.
There is more violence and bloodshed. Muslims say Hindus planned and started the killings and Hindus in turn say Muslims are to blame. But the fact is both are killed. Both are stabbed and speared and clubbed. Both tortured. Both raped.

If the initial down-for-count pages are passed through patiently, there is a good picture of the 1947 partition event and a wonderful narration follow.       

Lajja- Taslima Nasrin


In Ayodhya- a town in Uttar Pradesh, on 6th December 1992, Babri Masjid is demolished and the demolition has it repercussions even in Bangladesh.

The book is about the impact of this event in on an average family in Bangaladesh. The Dutta family feels and faces the heat of the communal  hatred.  Sudhamoy, the patriarch of the family, feels that Bangladesh, his motherland, shall never let him down. Kiranmayee as a faithful wife stands by her husband’s views. Suranjan, their son, believes that nationalism will be stronger than communalism, but is progressively disappointed and finds himself adopting communal reactions which contrast entirely with the ideology of patriotism he has always had faith in. Nilanjana curses her brother’s apathy and coaxes his brother to take the family to a Muslim friend’s house for safety. It is a story of metamorphosis, in which disastrous events create disillusionment, resulting in violence and resentment.

Take away points from book:
1. Don't buy a book for its public hype
2. Don't be patient to read an unimpressive book.