Counting down the hours to go before my GRE Subject test, I'm trying to process close to 2 million gigabits of information in between 1 billion neurons in my brain( I use only one percent of my brain and dont ask me how I calculated that ) . The thoughts can be classified into roughly 10,000 different categories. However it seems to me that 70% of those thoughts ought to be categorized (on the basis of relevance to my current situation) as '100% junk'. Why am I writing a blog of all the things in the world then?!
1. To unfocus on the 'junk' and focus on the 30%
2. To tell myself to get my rear end moving!!
One song that can always pacify me to bring me to ground state everytime
"Thunbam nergayil yazhedutthu nee..
Inbam serka maataaya? Emakku inbam serka maattaaya?"
Friday, November 02, 2007
Thursday, September 27, 2007
Cricket, a nation and a half naked fakir
Everyones out with a post on the world cup and India's amazing triumph. A lot of positives and negatives on the win out there on the net. so here is my two cents ( and maybe more ) on that and a related thing that I thought of.
Witnessing the crazy things that people do when we win ( or lose ), the aggression that people show, out on the streets, in the cricket stands, the 'mob phenomenon' is truly a fearful thing. Its sheer potential to get what it wants, the uncontrolled power that it exudes, feeding on everything and everyone on its path, encompassing all and destroying anything that tries to stop or control it. It makes me wonder, if a cause such as cricket can set a nation ablaze, how much emotion would there have been in the fight for freedom? How many millions would have come forward, daggers drawn, ready to put forth their lives so that the country may breathe free again? If a thousand people in a cricket stand can cause such things as stampedes, how much could millions do? How long would it have taken the guns and cannons notwithstanding, to raze down the British, to wipe them clean off the face of our motherland?
If one man, a single human soul, has turned a whole nation from breathing fires of war and revolt to protest in silence for freedom, whatever may his faults be, he is truly a mahatma. It is not so much as the loss of life that he prevented , but his ways that changed the mind, body and soul of a nation from war to peace. I think we owe it to him if the rest of the world sees us today as a country which despite being one of the most populated, is also one of the most peaceful and tolerant in matters of foreign relations.
It may sound strange to link two things so far apart, but on reflecting, there aren't enough superlatives for me to describe the job that Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi did. I salute you.
Witnessing the crazy things that people do when we win ( or lose ), the aggression that people show, out on the streets, in the cricket stands, the 'mob phenomenon' is truly a fearful thing. Its sheer potential to get what it wants, the uncontrolled power that it exudes, feeding on everything and everyone on its path, encompassing all and destroying anything that tries to stop or control it. It makes me wonder, if a cause such as cricket can set a nation ablaze, how much emotion would there have been in the fight for freedom? How many millions would have come forward, daggers drawn, ready to put forth their lives so that the country may breathe free again? If a thousand people in a cricket stand can cause such things as stampedes, how much could millions do? How long would it have taken the guns and cannons notwithstanding, to raze down the British, to wipe them clean off the face of our motherland?
If one man, a single human soul, has turned a whole nation from breathing fires of war and revolt to protest in silence for freedom, whatever may his faults be, he is truly a mahatma. It is not so much as the loss of life that he prevented , but his ways that changed the mind, body and soul of a nation from war to peace. I think we owe it to him if the rest of the world sees us today as a country which despite being one of the most populated, is also one of the most peaceful and tolerant in matters of foreign relations.
It may sound strange to link two things so far apart, but on reflecting, there aren't enough superlatives for me to describe the job that Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi did. I salute you.
Wednesday, September 12, 2007
Weathered Lives
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