Thursday, July 8, 2010
Dr. Medhavi Chourey
I once had a friend who grew to be very close to me. Once when we were sitting at the edge of a swimming pool, she filled the palm of her hand withsome water and held it before me, and said this: "You see this water carefully contained on my hand?It symbolizes Love."This was how I saw it: As long as you keep your hand caringly open and allow it to remain there, it will always be there. However, if you attempt to close your fingers round it and try to posses it, it will spill through the first cracks it finds. This is the greatest mistake that people do when they meet love...they try to posses it, they demand, they expect... and just like the water spilling ofyour hand, love will retrieve from you. For love is meant to be free, you cannot change its nature. If there are people you love allow them to be free beings. Give and don't expect.Advise, but don't order.Ask, but never demand. It might sound simple, but it is a lesson that may take a lifetime to truly practice. It is the secret to true love. To truly practice it, you must sincerely feel no expectations from those who you love, and yet an unconditional caring." Passing thought... Life is not measured by the number of breaths we take; but by the moments that take our breath away..... Life is beautiful!!! Live it !!!--
Dr. Medhavi Chourey
The researchers investigated the food habits of British and North Americans (who have the highest rate of heart-attacks) vis-a-vis the food habits in other cultures. They found that: - The Japanese eat very little fat... and suffer fewer heart attacks than the British or North Americans.- The Mexicans eat a lot of fat... and suffer fewer heart attacks than the British or North Americans. - The Chinese drink very little red wine... and suffer fewer heart attacks than the British or North Americans.- The Italians drink excessive amounts of red wine... and suffer fewer heart attacks than the British or North Americans. - The Germans drink a lot of beer and eat lots of sausages and fats... and suffer fewer heart attacks than the British or North Americans.
Friday, July 2, 2010
India in Football world cup?
do not invest money in them or is it that we do not invest and that is why we do not have good players. The truth strikes us like a bolt of lightning- it is just not our cup of tea. It involves real big money which a country like India cannot afford.
In countries like Brazil, Argentina, Spain football comes as naturally as Mamta Banerjee being a Marxist In Brazil to get into a football academy is as difficult as getting into an IIT or an IIM in India. We can be ardent admirers of the most democratic game of skills, stamina spontaneity, endurance and sportsmanship, with millions glued to the TV sets for the FIFA World Cup in South Africa, can further move to Ronaldo haircuts, Messi and Kaka slogans, set soccer theme-song as ring-tones however are unable to produce a team which would even qualify for the World Cup.
India with the 113rd ranking even behind Fiji, Faroe Islands, Sudan and Iceland is a country with an emerging economic power, it can have a stable democracy still it has two big drawbacks as far as football is concerned- lack of funds and infrastructure. The kind of big money that is involved a country like India cannot imagine for atleast another fifty years. Its still a far- fetched dream.
Dr Medhavi Chourey
Thursday, May 27, 2010
Is caste based census justified?
This seems to be a politically motivated move? On one hand we talk about the teachings of Geeta vasudev kutumbakam which means that the entire world is a big family and on the other hand we talk about the census and ask people about their castes. It is entirely baseless. India is a secular country, where all its citizens enjoy equal rights why then suddenly the need for caste bsed census.
We have always encouraged inter-caste, inter-regional as wll as across the border marriages. Do we ever ask our friends about their caste and now suddenly out of the blue the state asks me about my caste? Isn’t it weird. We might be culturally different, ractisind different religion speakind different languages, but to be branded by the state on the basis of our caste should not be the call of the day.
Instead of extending our horizons are we trying to confine ourselves to the four-walls of casteism. Isn’t it strange that though we call ourselves as a developing country, a country of diversities, a secular state we are more communal than the other countries.
Let us all rise, join hands and do not restrict ourselves with the all bondages of caste and state that our caste is that we are Indians. Enough is enough we do not want to be manipulated by the politicians for their own conveniences.
Lets all bring about the required social awareness of change of development of a country as a whole.
Dr. Medhavi Chourey