Did Lord send you a message?

F Douglass

DON’T REBLOG IT AT LEAST FOR A WEEK!  DON’T USE PICTURES; THEY ARE COPYRIGHTED BY SOMEONE.

 

Compiled  by London swaminathan

Date: 16th September 2015

Post No: 2164

Time uploaded in London :– 20-35

(Thanks  for the pictures) 

 

Prejudice against Race, Religion and Colour

Frederick Douglass, noted Negro author and champion of the rights of his people, was once invited to have tea with President Lincoln at the White House.

Whenever Douglass spoke of this occasion he always said, “Lincoln is the first white man I ever spent an hour with who did not remind me that I am a Negro.”

xxxx

Did Lord send you a message?

Innocently unaware of the prejudices held against him, an old coloured man, staunchly religious, applied for membership in an exclusive church. The pastor attempted to put him off with all sorts of evasive remarks. The old Negro, instinctively becoming aware that he was not wanted, said finally that he would sleep on it and perhaps the Lord would tell him just what to do.

Several days later he returned.

“Well”, asked the minster, “did the Lord send you a message?”

“Yes, he did,” was the answer. “He told me it wasn’t no use. He said, I have been trying to in that same church myself for ten years and I still can’t make it.”

Xxxx

Jewish Ladies

A man who was talking with Sir Moses Montefiore at a reception, found the conversation so entertaining that he completely forgot the race of his companion and made some uncomplimentary remark about the Jewish features of a lady who was passing by. The mistake was no sooner made than it was perceived. The unhappy man began to apologise profusely. “I ask thousand pardons. It was so stupid of me to forget. You look angry enough to eat me. I beg you not to devour me.”

“Sir”, replied Sir Moses, “it is impossible. My religion forbids.”

Xxxx

prejudice-quotes-8

In the days of the great Abolition furore, Wendell Philips was accosted on a lecture tour by a minister who hailed from the state of Kentucky, a place with very different views concerning the ideas of the Abolitionists. The clergyman, who was more militant on behalf of his prejudices than on behalf of his creed, said, “Yoy are Wendell Philips, I believe.”

“Yes, I am.”

“You want to free the niggers, don’t you?”

“Yes, I do.”

“Well, why do you preach your doctrines up North? Why don’t you try coming down to Kentucky?”

Philips began to counter question the man. “You are a preacher. Aren’t you?”

“Yes, I am, Sir”

“Are you trying to save souls from Hell?”

“Why yes, Sir. That is my business.”

“Why don’t you go there then?” suggested Mr Philips.

Xxxx

roosevelt

Theodore Roosevelt once said, “While I was a police commissioner of New York City, an anti – Semitic preacher from Berlin Rector Ahlwardt, came to New York to preach a crusade against the Jews. Many Jews were much excited and asked me prevent him from speaking and not to give him police protection.

This, I told them was impossible; and if possible would have been undesirable because it would make him a martyr. The proper thing to do was to make him ridiculous. Accordingly I sent a police under a Jewish sergeant, and Jew-baiter made his harangue under the active protection of 40 police, every one of them a Jew.”

Red Roosvelt

Xxx

I am an Irishman!

He was a red faced, middle aged Irishman, who had taken just enough to make him officious. He kept a wary eye on the conductor, and a sympathetic one on the unsteady entering passenger. Opposite the Irishman sat a young man of the most pronounced Hebrew type. He watched pat with a humorous twinkle in his black eyes.

A good natured Negro got in, and took the seat next to the Irishman. Pat threw one haughty look at the black man; then, rising with great dignity, he said in terms of unutterable scorn: “a nagger!” and sat down next to the young Hebrew. Quick as a flash his new neighbour, with an exact imitation of Pat’s tone and manner, said, “an Irishman!” and too the vacant seat next to the Negro a titter went round the car, and one Irishman looked foolish.

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How can you tackle Angry People?

angry

DON’T REBLOG IT AT LEAST FOR A WEEK!  DON’T USE PICTURES; THEY ARE COPYRIGHTED BY SOMEONE.

WRIITEN BY london swaminathan

Date : 11 September  2015

Post No. 2148

Time uploaded in London: –   19-16

(Thanks  for the pictures)

 

 

Great harm may be caused by anger. Therefore one should restrain anger towards anybody – Tirukkural 303

 

Can there be greater enemy than anger which flares up, destroying one’s peace of mind and cheerfulness? – 304

 

If one wishes to safeguard oneself, one should control anger. If not, it is bound to ruin oneself – 305

 

How Mataji tamed a Modern Durvasa

Swami Ramdas of Ananashramam narrated this anecdote:–

Sadhus (ascetics), to whatever denomination, sect or creed they belong, welcome at Anandhasram situated near Kanhankad in Northern Kerala. Sometimes we would find scuffles and fights going on amongst them in the Ashram Dharmashala. One would say to the other, “You should not touch me. Stand farther away! You belong to a lower sect. You have no business to sit close to me. Why did you touch my leaf? You have polluted the leaf on which I was served my food and so on and so forth”.

anger cartoon

Once a Sadhu came to the Ashram and would not eat food in the common dining hall. So he cooked his food separately. He was given the necessary provisions such as rice, dhal, ghee, wheat flower and vegetables for cooking his food. One day he had taken a bucket from the ashram for storing water. He had, of course his own Lota/tumbler which was used by him for drinking water and other purposes.  He also kept the bucket, nearly half full, by his side it was rather close to the plantain leaf on which he had, as usual, served his food , prepared by himself. He sat down for eating.

Just then, a woman worker of the ashram went there. She wanted the bucket, as it was the one used by her for washing utensils. She was about to take vessel, and had hardly touched it, when the sadhu shouted: “How did you dare to touch my bucket? You have polluted the whole place I cannot take this food”.

He became wild and started cursing and shouting at her. We could hear him in the ashram.  He was jumping about with uncontrollable fury. The woman, unable to stand all this ran away from the place and came to Mataji Krishnabai. In a moment, another person came and reported to Mataji: “The sadhu has collected all the food he had cooked and served on the leaf and thrown it away to the dogs. He is still fretting and fuming. Nobody dare approach him”.

The sadhu was short and stout in stature and had a ferocious look. He had a grizzly beard and a matted hair on his head. Mataji looked at his wild behaviour from a distance and found he was burning with anger. He looked like a modern Durvasa in action. She felt that something must be done to calm him down. She went inside the kitchen store. There were in it some water melons. She cut them into nicely shaped pieces and got also some fine variety of plantains and two tender coconuts. All these she placed on a plate and asked another worker to ake it to the sadhu. She also followed the worker to the place where the sadhu was.

anger

When the sadhu saw the plate with the juicy red water melon pieces and other fine fruits, and Mataji coming along with them, his anger cooled down a bit. Mataji said to him: “The woman worker committed a mistake but she never intentionally did it. Will you just take the fruits on this plate?”  She handed him also a big pitcher full of sweet warm milk. He now sat down and began to eat and when nearly half the fruit and milk was finished, he came back to normal.

Mataji is a tamer of lions. A smile appeared on the sadhu’s face when the whole quantity of fruits and milk went down. Now he was perfectly cheerful. Mataji then asked him, “ How do you feel?” He replied, “Quite happy, mother!”  At last, he went about telling everybody that Mataji was supremely gracious. “The food I had prepared was nothing in comparison”, he said. “What she gave me was veritable nectar. My body was burning, but it has cooled down now. I am most grateful to her”.

DURVASA: An angry saint in the Hindu Mythology, who was famous for his anger and curses
–Subham–

Ha Ha Ha Ha Ha!……Laughter is the Best Medicine!

M twain 2

Don’t Reblog it for a week. Pictures are copyrighted by someone else. Don’t use them. When you use the matter, you must not remove the author’s name and blog name.

Compiled by London swaminathan

Date : 9 September  2015

Post No. 2142

Time uploaded in London: –  20-30

Mark Twain once encountered a friend at the races who said, “I am broke. I wish you would buy me a ticket back to town.”

Twain said, “Well, I am pretty broke myself but, I will tell you what to do. You hide under my seat and I will cover you with my legs.” It was agreed and Twain then went to the ticket office and bought two tickets. When the train was underway and the supposed stowaway was snug under the seat, the conductor came by and Twain gave him the two tickets.

“Where is the other passenger?” asked the conductor.

Twain tapped on his forehead and said in a loud voice, “That is my friend’s ticket. He is little eccentric and likes to ride under the seat.”

hogarth

Painting of the Red Sea!

A miserly old nobleman wanted Hogarth (Famous English painter) to paint on his staircase a picture of the destruction of Pharaoh’s hosts in the Red Sea. He did so much haggling over the price that Hogarth finally agreed to do the work for about half what it was worth. After two day’s work, to the surprise of the nobleman, Hogarth said the picture was ready. When the curtain was removed there was nothing to be seen but the canvas was painted red all over.

“Zounds!” cried the miser. “What have you here? I ordered a scene of the Red Sea!”

“The Red Sea you have”, replied the artist.

“But where are the Israelites?”

“They are all gone over.”

“And where are the Egyptians?”

“They are all drowned”.

Kipling1977CF

Kipling outwitted!

In the days of Kipling’s most popular vogue, his literary works yielded him great sums.

An American wit once wrote to him, “I hear that you are retailing literature for $1-00 a word. I enclose $1-00, for which please send me a sample.”

Keeping the dollar, Kipling wrote, “Thanks.”

Shortly afterward, he received another letter from his correspondent saying, “Sold the ‘Thanks’ anecdote for $2-00. Enclosed please find 45 cents in stamps, being half the profits on the transaction, less postage.”

books picture2

How to Dispose of Dull Books?

It is said that Dr Clyde Miller of Columbia University has his way of disposing of dull books occasionally sent to him by publishers. He sends them on to friends with a note, ostensibly from the author, saying, “I hope you will be pleased by the references made to you in this volume, and hope that you will not have any objection to this use of your name.” Dr.Miller takes pleasure in the vision of his friends searching vainly through the books for the allusions to them.

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Two Parrot Anecdotes!

parrot

Compiled by London swaminathan

Date : 5 September  2015

Post No. 2128

Time uploaded in London : – 20-05

A certain old maid had a parrot which swore vigorously. She was used to the bird, but was in the habit of covering every Sunday in order it remained silent on that day. It chanced on a Monday morning, after the cover had been removed, that the old lady saw the minister come up the walk to pay a call. Hastily she replaced the cover on the cage; hearing the parrot observe as she moved towards the door, “This has been a damn short week!”

parrot 2

Xxxxxx

In the days of luxurious trans-Atlantic travel, shipboard entertainments frequently drew upon the professional talents to be found in the passenger list. On one occasion, the program followed up the performance of a remarkable parrot with a brief demonstration by a travelling magician. The parrot’s cage had been shoved to the one side of the stage when the magician came on for his act. Holding up a pack of cards, the man covered it with a hand kerchief, waved his hand, and the pack of cards disappeared. The parrot, looking on from the wings, cocked its head to one side. Next the magician took a book, covered it with a scarf, waved his hand, and the book disappeared. The parrot meditatively scratched its head with its claw. Taking a cloak, the magician threw it over a chair, waved his hand, and the chair disappeared. The parrot hopped up and down on its perch in the growing excitement.

In the next moment the ship was struck by a submerged iceberg; split in two, the lights were extinguished, there were screams and cries, and shortly afterwards nothing was left on the black night sea save the parrot clinging  to a piece of driftwood, bobbing up and down on the waters. The bird looked about at the dreary scene for a moment, and then said, “Marvellous! Marvellous!”

–From Thesaurus of Anecdotes

Story of an Envious Neighbour!

susidence

Compiled by London swaminathan

Date : 4 September  2015

Post No. 2125

Time uploaded in London : 19-18

He who is envious needs no enemy to ruin him. Envy itself is enough to bring him ruin – Tirukkural couplet 165

There were two people living next to one another in a village nearby a forest. One has a big and beautiful house and the other has an ordinary house. The person with the small house was very jealous of his neighbour. But that neighbour was very good.

One day the jealous person decided to go to the forest and do some penance for getting more money. To his surprise, an ascetic appeared before him in a short time. He asked the man what he wanted. When he told his story, the ascetic did not find much time to judge the person. But yet he gave him three boons to the jealous person on one condition:

“Look! My dear friend. I can see that you are very jealous of your neighbour. But yet I will fulfil your desire. Here is a dice. You have three chances to become rich. Because you are jealous of your neighbour whatever you get , your neighbour will get double the times. After giving the dice he went away”.

blind Argentina1132 (2)

The jealous man came home and started scheming. First he threw the dice and asked for a big and beautiful house with all the facilities. He got it at once and his neighbour got it twice the size. Now his jealousy grew more. He remembered the proverb, “Even if I lose one eye, my enemy must lose both the eyes”. So he threw the dice for the second time praying that he should lose one of his eyes. He lost it. His neighbour lost both the eyes. Now he was very happy. He was thinking about what else he can do to destroy his neighbour. Suddenly a “good” idea flashed in his mind. He threw the dice for the last time praying half of his house must go beneath the ground. And it went down immediately. His neighbour got it doubly. His whole house went under the ground. Because he became blind, he did not realise what was happening. But his servants saw the happiness on the face of the jealous neighbour and found out the mumbo jumbo he was doing. They beat him severely and took all his wealth and ran away.

dice

This is a folk tale. Villagers spread their age old wisdom through stories.

Gist of 18 Puranas in ONE line! Vyasa’s Discovery!

Intertwined-hands

Written by London swaminathan

Date : 3 September  2015

Post No. 2121

Time uploaded in London : 20-03

Veda Vyasa, the black sage of India, spent his life time in compiling the Four Vedas, writing the longest epic in the world – Mahabharata and compiling 18 Puranas. This is unparalleled in any part of the world and no one could beat him at any time to enter the Book of Records. He showed the world that India was the most civilized and most literate in the ancient world.

But after writing 800,000 lines in 18 Puranas (Hindy Mythology), ie. Four million words, he gave the gist in one line:

Paropakaara Punyaaya, Paapaaya para piidanam

Helping others is good; harming others is sin!

This is the message he conveyed to the world according to Panchatantra of Vishnusarman. His Panchatantra (Animal fables) itself was translated into other languages from fifth century CE. He says,

“Ashtaadasapuraaneshu Vyaasaaya Vachandvayam

Paropakaara Punyaaya, Paapaaya para piidanam – Pancha tantra.

(In the eighteen Puranas Vyasa made made two statements: Helping others is Punya (good, meritfl) and hurting others is Paapa (sin)

Ancient Hindu wisdom is always given in formulas (Sutras)

helping_hands_1_lgw

Following are the 18 Puranas with the number of Slokas (couplets) they contain:

Agni                        16,000

Bhagavata              18,000

Bhavisya                 14,500

Brahma                  10,000

Brahmanda            12,000

Brahmavaivavarta18,000

Garuda                   18,000

Kurma                    18,000

Linga                       11,000

Markandeya          9000

Matsya                   14,000

Naradiya                25,000

Padma                    55,000

Skanda                   81,000

Vaman                    10,000

Varaha                    24,000

Vayu                       24,000

Vishnu                    23,000

Total : About Four hundred thousand couplets= 800000 lines X 5 words a line = Four million words!

Largest Purana: Skanda Purana

Shortest Purana: Makandya Purana

Oldest Purana: Vishnu Purana: (in the present form -300 AD)

Heart-Quotes

They alone live…………….

There is another beautiful saying about helping others in Tamil, Sanskrit and English with the same message. Great men think alike:

“Param Paropakaaraartham Yo Jiivati Sa Jiivati” – Subhasita Ratna Bhandaagaaram

Those who live for others are only live (their life).

Swami Viekananda said,

“They alone live who live for others, the rest are more dead than alive”.

The same message is in Tamil Veda Tirukkural,

“Only those, who know and practise social cooperation, live their life;

The others are as good as dead” – Kural 214

German philosopher and poet Goethe also said,

“A useless life is only an earthly death”

 Helping-Others-Quotes

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Jealousy: Wisdom from Indian Villages

brahmins

Written by London swaminathan

Date : 2 September  2015

Post No. 2118

Time uploaded in London : 19-39

None has grown richer by envying

And no one has lost by not envying –Tirukkural 170

Envy destroys one’s wealth and leads one to evil deeds – 168

The Goddess of Good Fortune (Lakshmi) cannot bear the sight of envious people

Whom she will turn over to her elder sister (Alakshmi, Jyeshtadvi) — 167

jealousy2

There were two Brahmins, one is an illiterate and another is a learned. Both of them visited the king in the neighbouring county. The king treated them well and gave them equal respect. He gave them a gold coin every day. But the learned Brahmin was very jealous about the illiterate getting the same respect like him. When the illiterate Brahmin was gone to his room, he told the king, “Oh, King, don’t you know the proverb that says ‘give your daughter knowing the family (Gotra) and give money knowing the person (Paatra)’? Moreover that illiterate Brahmin has got two concubines. I am very learned and yet you give me the same treatment. Then he went home.

Next day both of them came to see the king. Now the king gave three gold coins to the illiterate and only one coin to the learned Brahmin. He became very angry and waited till the other person gone. He told the king, “Even after I explained to him his characterless life and his lack of knowledge in scriptures, you gave him three gold coins and only one gold coin to me. Why are you insulting the learned like this?”

The king replied, “Look, learned Brahmin! I am paying according to the needs, not according to your knowledge. You only told me that he has a larger family. I don’t want him to suffer.”

The Brahmin went home confused!

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September 2015 Calendar

tejo

Compiled by London swaminathan

Date : 31 August 2015

Post No. 2112

Time uploaded in London: 14-00 pm

Swami_48@yahoo.com

 

Important Days:-

Ekadasi:– 8/9, 24;  Auspicious days:– 9, 16, 17

Full moon:–27/28 (Pournami);  New moon:– 12 (Amavasai)

Important days:- September 5 Janmashtami (Krishna’s Birthday & Teachers Day; 11- Tamil Poet Bharati’s death anniversary; 17- Ganesh Chaturthy; 24 -Bakrid

 

 

IMG_4597 (2)

Quotations from Swami Tejomayananda,

Head of Chinmaya Mission Worldwide

September 1 Tuesday

Love and forgiveness go together. If we can’t forgive, it means we can’t love sufficiently.

September 2 Wednesday

Be tender towards the fault of others; be strict towards your own.

September 3 Thursday

Some are influenced by the bad around them. Some are untouched by the good around them.

September 4 Friday

Some people have love-less lives, and some people have life-less love.

September 5 Saturday

Important things are NOT things.

IMG_4592 (2)

September 6 Sunday

Children need your presence, not your presents.

September 7 Monday

Values are more valuable than valuables.

September 8 Tuesday

A person may have everything – knowledge, wealth and virtues, but if he is not humble, all is vain.

September 9 Wednesday

Have faith in the inherent goodness of others.

September 10 Thursday

Change your outlook, then look out.

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September 11 Friday

Don’t tell God how big your troubles are.

September 12 Saturday

An altar in our life will alter our life

September 13 Sunday

Those in drama and dance know they have makeup on. So they want to remove it as soon as possible. We do not know we have it on, so we don’t know we have to remove it.

September 14 Monday

To see truth… We need a pure mind and a subtle intellect.

September 15 Tuesday

Self-knowledge is the direct means to liberation.

IMG_4594 (2)

September 16 Wednesday

The solution to all worldly problems should be from a spiritual viewpoint.

September 17 Thursday

Our goals should be so inspiring that the challenges become fun in the journey of reaching our destination.

September 18 Friday

The softest pillow is a clean conscience.

September 19 Saturday

You are a product of your past, but NOT a victim.

September 20 Sunday

Take care of the state of your mind. More than the planets.

IMG_4595 (2)

September 21 Monday

Adopt the ways of nature. Her secret is patience.

September 22 Tuesday

Never believe in anything unless it happens.

September 23 Wednesday

Between the urgent and the routine, one must not forget the important.

September 24 Thursday

If we want to realise our dreams, we have to stay awake.

September 25 Friday

Everyone is born to succeed. Do not underestimate yourself or another.

IMG_4596 (2)

September 26 Saturday

No-one can give you rest. You will have to learn to take it.

September 27 Sunday

The sky is truly the limit for what we can do with what we have. We only have to realise this.

September 28 Monday

Dependence brings sorrow. Independence brings happiness.

September 29 Tuesday

Acquisition of things is great; renunciation of things is greater.

September 30 Wednesday

Love of wealth takes away the wealth of love from our heart.

A vision of one-ness, develops love, readiness to serve all, and creates an attitude of forgiveness.

–Subham–

மௌனம், மானம், கர்வம் பற்றிய சம்ஸ்கிருத, தமிழ் பழமொழிகள்

bharati drawing

செப்டம்பர், 2015 காலண்டர்

(மன்மத வருடம் ஆவணி/புரட்டாசி மாதம்)

Compiled by London swaminathan

Date : 31 ஆகஸ்ட்  2015

Post No. 2110

Time uploaded in London : 11-49 am

Swami_48@yahoo.com

Important days:-

செப்டம்பர் 5 ஆசிரியர் தினம்; ஜன்மாஷ்டமி (கிருஷ்ண ஜயந்தி); செப்டம்பர் 11-பாரதியார் நினைவு தினம்; 17-விநாயக சதுர்த்தி;24-பக்ரீத்; 29-மகாளயபட்சம் ஆரம்பம்.

 

முஹூர்த்த தினங்கள்:– 9,16, 17,

பௌர்ணமி:– 27/28 அமாவாசை:–12; ஏகாதசி :– 8/9, 24

 

silence

இரண்டு ஆண்டுகளாக ஒவ்வொரு மாதமும் ஆங்கிலத்திலும், தமிழிலும் தனித்தனியே பொன்மொழிகளுடன் காலண்டர்கள் உள்ளன. இவைகளில் இந்திய இலக்கியங்களிலிருந்து எடுக்கப்பட்ட ஆயிரத்துக்கும் அதிகமான மேற்கோள்கள் உள்ளன. படித்துப் பயன்பெறுக.

செப்டம்பர் 1, செவ்வாய்க் கிழமை

பலம் மூர்கஸ்ய மௌனித்வம்

மௌனமாய் இருப்பதே முட்டளுக்கு பலம்.

செப்டம்பர் 2, புதன் கிழமை

தர்துரா யத்ர வக்தாரஸ் தத்ரம் மௌனம் ஹி சோபனம் – சுபாஷித ரத்னகண்ட மஞ்சுசா

தவளைகள் எங்கு பேச்சாளர்களோ, அங்கு பேசாமலிருப்பதே நலம்தரும்

செப்டம்பர் 3, வியாழக் கிழமை

மௌனம் கூஹதி மௌட்யம் சதஸி

சபையில் மவுனமாய் இருப்பது முட்டாள்களுக்குக் கேடயம் போலாகும்

செப்டம்பர் 4, வெள்ளிக் கிழமை

மௌனம் விதேயம் சததம் சுதீபி: — சுபாஷித ரத்ன பாண்டாகாரம் (சு.ர.பா)

புத்திமான்களால் எப்போதும் மௌனம் காக்கப்படும் (புத்திசாலிகள் அதிகம் பேசாமலிருப்பர்)

செப்டம்பர் 5, சனிக்கிழமை

மௌனம் சம்மதி லக்ஷணம்

மௌனம் சம்மதத்திற்கு அறிகுறி

silence image

செப்டம்பர் 6, ஞாயிற்றுக் கிழமை

மௌனம் சர்வார்த்த சாதகம் – பஞ்சதந்திரம் 4-45

பேசாமலிருந்தால் பல காரியங்களும் அனுகூலமாக முடியும்.

செப்டம்பர் 7, திங்கட் கிழமை

மௌனே ச கலஹோ நாஸ்தி – சாணக்ய நீதி 3-9

மௌனம் இருக்குமிடத்தில் கலகம் விளையாது.

செப்டம்பர் 8, செவ்வாய்க் கிழமை

வரம் மௌனம் கார்யம் ந ச வசனம் உக்தம் யதன்ருதம்– சு.ர.பா.

பொய் சொல்வதைவிட பேசாமலிருந்து சாதிப்பதே சிறந்தது.

செப்டம்பர் 9, புதன் கிழமை

வாய்மை எனப்படுவது யாதெனின் யாதொன்றும்

தீமை இலாத சொலல் – குறள் 291

ந ப்ரூயாத் சத்யம் அப்ரியம் – மனு 4-138

உண்மையேயானாலும் மற்றவர்களுக்கு தீங்கு செய்யுமானால் பேசாமலிரு.

செப்டம்பர் 10, வியாழக் கிழமை

சீரினும் சீரல்ல செய்யாரே சீரொடு

பேராண்மை வேண்டுபவர் – குறள் 962

புகழை விரும்புவோர், பெரிய செல்வமே கிடைப்பதானாலும் தகாத செயல்களில் ஈடுபடமாட்டார்கள்.

silence draw

செப்டம்பர் 11, வெள்ளிக் கிழமை

சத்யம் யத் பரதுக்காய தத்ர மௌனபரோ பவேத்- விஷ்ணு புராணம் 3-12-43

உண்மை சொல்வதால் கெடுதல் வருமானால் பேசாமலிருப்பதே உத்தமம்.

செப்டம்பர் 12, சனிக்கிழமை

வாக் ஜன்ம  வைபல்யம் அசக்யசல்யம் குணாதிகே வஸ்துனி மௌனிதா சேத்  – நைஷதீய காவ்யம்

நல்லோர் முன்னிலையில் ஒன்றும் பேசாமலிருப்பது பொறுத்துக் கொள்ளமுடியாதது. (பேஸ் புக்கில் நல்ல விஷயங்களுக்கும் ‘லைக்’ போடாமல் கல்லுளி மங்கனாக இருப்பது போல)

செப்டம்பர் 13, ஞாயிற்றுக் கிழமை

விபூஷணம் மௌனம் அபண்டிதானாம் – பர்த்ருஹரி

மௌனமாக இருப்பது பண்டிதரில்லாதோருக்கு அணிகலன்.

செப்டம்பர் 14, திங்கட் கிழமை

அனுத்தரம் ஏவ உத்தரம் – ரத்ன சமுச்சய

பதில் சொல்லாவிடில் அதுவே ஒரு பதில்தான்

செப்டம்பர் 15, செவ்வய்க் கிழமை

துர்ஜனஸ்ய ஔஷதம் நாஸ்திகிஞ்சித் அனுத்தராத் – சுபாஷிதாவளி

தீயோருக்கு எதிரான மருந்து என்னவென்றால், எதிர்வார்த்தை (பதில்) பேசாலிருப்பதுதான்.

day_of_silence_2012_by_eveefugo-d4x36x8

செப்டம்பர் 16, புதன் கிழமை

அகாத ஜலசஞ்சாரி ந கர்வம் யாதி ரோஹித:

அங்குஷ்டமாத்ர தோய அபி சபரி பரபராயதே –பஞ்சதந்திரம்

ஆழ்கடலில் செல்லும் பிராணிகள் கர்வம் அடைவதில்லை; விரல் அளவு தண்ணீரில் செல்லும் மீன்கள் பரபரக்கச் செல்லும் (குறைகுடம் கூத்தாடும்)

செப்டம்பர் 17, வியாழக் கிழமை

அபிபூதி பூயாத் அசூனத: சுகமுஞ்சந்தி ந தாம மானின: – கிராதார்ஜுனீயம்

மானமுள்ளவர்கள், அவமானம் உண்டாகும் என்பதற்காக உயிரையும் விடுவர்; மானத்தை என்றும் கைவிடார்.

செப்டம்பர் 18, வெள்ளிக் கிழமை

புகழ் எனின், உயிரும் கொடுக்குவர், பழி எனின்,உலகுடன் பெறினும் கொள்ளலர் – புறம் 182

செப்டம்பர் 19, சனிக்கிழமை

அல்பவித்யா மஹாகர்வீ – சு.ர.பா.

கொஞ்சம் படித்தவர்கள் ‘படம்’ காட்டுவர் (குறைகுடம் கூத்தாடும்)

செப்டம்பர் 20, ஞாயிற்றுக் கிழமை

உத்தமா மானம் இச்சந்தி மானம் ஹி மஹதாம் தனம் – சாணக்யநீதி

நல்லோர் விரும்புவது மானம்; அவர்களுக்கு அதுவே பெரிய செல்வம்.

learn silence

செப்டம்பர் 21, திங்கட் கிழமை

நான்யஸ்ய கந்தமபி மானப்ருத: மஹந்தே- சிசுபாலவதம்

பிறருடைய கர்வத்தை மானமுள்ளவர்கள் பொறுக்கமட்டார்கள்.

செப்டம்பர் 22, செவ்வாய்க் கிழமை

ந அஹங்காராத் சத்ரு:

நான் என்னும் செருக்கைவிட பெரிய எதிரி இல்லை.

செப்டம்பர் 23, புதன் கிழமை

பெருக்கத்து வேண்டும் பணிதல் சிறிய

சுருக்கத்து வேண்டும் உயர்வு – குறள்- 963

செல்வமுள்ளபோது பணிவும், வறியநிலையில் உயர்ந்த கொள்கைப் பற்றும் வேண்டும்.

செப்டம்பர் 24, வியாழக் கிழமை

ப்ராணத்யாகே க்ஷணம் துக்கம், மானபங்கே தினே தினே – சாணக்யநீதி

உயிரைவிட்டால் ஒரு நாள்தான் துக்கம்; அவமானத்துடன் வாழ்வதோ நாள்தோறும் துக்கம்.

silence (1)

செப்டம்பர் 25, வெள்ளிக் கிழமை

மயிர்நீப்பின் வாழாக் கவரிமா அன்னார்

உயிர் நீப்பர் மானம் வரின் – குறள்- 969

ஒரு முடியை இழந்தாலும் கவரிமா உயிரிழக்கும். பெரியோர்கள், மானம் அழிந்தால் உயிர்துறப்பர்.

செப்டம்பர் 26, சனிக்கிழமை

வரம் ஹி மானினோ ம்ருத்யுர்ன தைன்யம் ஸ்வஜ்னாக்ரத: – கதாசரித்சாகரம்

தன் மக்களுக்கு முன்பு அவமானம் அடைவதைவிட, மானமுள்ளவர்களுக்கு மரணமே மேல்.

செப்டம்பர் 27, ஞாயிற்றுக் கிழமை

பராபவோ அப்யுத்சவ ஏவ மானினாம் – கிராதார்ஜுனீயம்

மானமுள்ளவர்களுக்கு தோல்விகூட உற்சாகமே தரும்.

செப்டம்பர் 28, திங்கட் கிழமை

சதாபிமான ஏகதனா ஹி மானின: – சிசுபாலவதம்

மானமுள்ளவர்களுக்கு அது ஒன்றே எப்போதுமுள்ள சொத்து (செல்வம்).

செப்டம்பர் 29, செவ்வாய்க் கிழமை

தலையின் இழிந்த மயிர் அனையர் மந்தர்

நிலையின் இழிந்த கடை – குறள்- 96964

மானம் போனால், கீழே விழுந்து கிடக்கும் மயிருக்குச் சமம்.

செப்டம்பர் 30, புதன் கிழமை

அதிதர்பே ஹதா லங்கா – மிகுந்த அஹங்காரத்தால் (ராவணனின்) இலங்கை அழிந்தது.

-subham-

No Pain, No Gain! Wisdom from Villagers!

2 er uzavan

rticle No. 2107

Written by London swaminathan
Date : 29 August  2015
Time uploaded in London :– 19-56

Indians have been passing their age old wisdom through proverbs, stories and golden sayings (Subhasitas). The villagers who go to field in the morning and return during sun set after a daylong hard work never had time to go to school and learn. But they learnt a lot of things from stories told by their grandmas and grandpas when they were children.  Even when they were working in the fields they exchanged such stories and proverbs in their conversations. That is how we have developed the largest story collection in the world (Katha Sarit Sagara), 20,000 Tamil proverbs and 20000 Sanskrit Subhasitas (Golden sayings).

Here is one more story to show how people learn some truths by the hard way:

There was wealthy villager in a village. He worked hard all through his life in his filed which is vast covering acres of land. He earned a lot of money through his successful farming. But his eight lazy sons were spending money in gambling. They did not go to the fields at all. They competed with one another in wasting father’s money. Their father tried all the ways to teach them good things, but failed in his attempts. When he was 85 year old and in his death bed, he called all is children to tell them about his will. Everyone was eager to know what he has written in his will and how much each one would get.

But he told them, “Look, my sons, I am not going to tell how much each one would get. But I will tell you a secret. I have buried all my treasures in various places in our vast land. It is definitely more than eight places. So whoever digs the land and gets it, it is his own. So the more places you dig, more you would get. But there is one condition. If you all respect me, don’t take it before my death”.

er uzavan

Every one of his sons was eagerly waiting for the farmer’s death. And the day came. The farmer died and after cremating his body all his sons ran to the fields with axe and other equipment’s and started vigorous digging. Several days passed. No one got anything. And the rainy season came. It started raining heavily making the fields muddy. Then his sons met together and decided to cultivate crops. They divided the land among themselves and did grow the same crops like their father. Because of vigorous digging and timely rain they had a very good harvest. They made big money. Then they realised what his father meant by “burying treasure under the earth.”

No pain, No gain