Tuesday, June 3, 2014

SLOW DANCE.

 email from Kamalini Kanapathippillai.


Slow 
Dance
 


This
 
is a poem
 
written by a teenager with cancer.



She wants to
 
see how many
 
people get her poem.
 



It is quite the poem
 
Please pass it
   
on.
  
This poem was written by a terminally ill young girl in a
 
New York Hospital .

It was sent by
 a medical doctor - 
Make sure to read what is in the closing statement
 
AFTER THE POEM.


SLOW DANCE

Have you ever watched kids
 on a merry-go-round?
Or listened to the rainslapping on the ground?

Ever followed a butterfly's erratic flight?
Or gazed at the sun into the fading night?

You better slow down.
Don't dance so fast.
Time is short.
The music won't last.

Do you run through each day
 on the fly?
When you ask, “How are you?”
Do you hear the reply?

When the day is done, do you lie in your bed,
with the next hundred chores running through your head?

You'd better slow down
Don't dance so fast.
Time is short
The music won't last.

Ever told your child,
 
We'll do it tomorrow?
And in your haste,
Not see his
 sorrow?

Ever lost touch,
 let a good friendship die 
Cause you never had time
 
To call and say,'Hi'

You'd better slow down.
Don't dance so fast.
Time is short.
The music won't last..



When you run so fast to get somewhere,
You miss half the fun of getting there.

When you worry and hurry through your day,
It is like an unopened gift....
Thrown away.

Life is not a race.
Do take it slower
Hear the music
Before the song is over.

------------
 
--------
 
FORWARDED
 
E-MAILS ARE TRACKED TO OBTAIN THE TOTAL
COUNT.

Dear All:
 
PLEASE pass this mail on to everyone you know -
 
even to those you don't know!
It is the request of a special girl, who will soon leave this world 
due to cancer.

This young girl has 6 months left to live,
 
and as her dying wish, she wanted to send a letter telling everyone to
live their life to the fullest, since she never will.
 


She'll never make it to prom, graduate from high school,
 
or get married and have a family of her own.

By you sending this to as many people as
 
possible, you can give her and her family a
 
little hope, because with every name
 
that this is sent to, the American
 
Cancer Society will donate 3 cents per name
to her treatment and recovery
 
plan. One guy sent this to 500 people! So I know
 
that we can at least send it to 5 or 6.
It'snot even your money, just your time!

PLEASE PASS ON AS A LAST REQUEST.
 




1046
 4


Old age.

email sent by JKS Weerasekera 

Old age is having a choice of two temptations and choosing
the one that will get you home earlier.

A man has reached old age when he is cautioned
to slow down by his Doctor instead of by the police.


You're getting old when "getting lucky" means you find
your car in the parking lot.


You're getting old when you don't care where your spouse goes,

just as long as you don't have to go along.

A train journey and two names to remember.

Part of email forwarded by Dawood.
June 1, 2014  


Leena Sarma 
5
Shankersinh Vaghela and Narendra Modi, who between them left a lasting  impression on two strangers in 1990, in Ahmedabad in May 2014.
Special Arrangement Shankersinh Vaghela and Narendra Modi, who between them left a lasting impression on two strangers in 1990, in Ahmedabad in May 2014.
 

Of two co-travellers who surprised the writer with their graciousness, 24 years ago

It was the summer of 1990. As Indian Railway (Traffic) Service probationers, my friend and I travelled by train from Lucknow to Delhi. Two MPs were also travelling in the same bogie. That was fine, but the behaviour of some 12 people who were travelling with them without reservation was terrifying. They forced us to vacate our reserved berths and sit on the luggage, and passed obscene and abusive comments. We cowered in fright and squirmed with rage. It was a harrowing night in the company of an unruly battalion; we were on edge, on the thin line between honour and dishonour. All other passengers seemed to have vanished, along with the Travelling Ticket Examiner.
We reached Delhi the next morning without being physically harmed by the goons, though we were emotionally wrecked. My friend was so traumatised she decided to skip the next phase of training in Ahmedabad and stayed back in Delhi. I decided to carry on since another batchmate was joining me. (She is Utpalparna Hazarika, now Executive Director, Railway Board.) We boarded an overnight train to Gujarat’s capital, this time without reservations as there wasn’t enough time to arrange for them. We had been wait-listed.
We met the TTE of the first class bogie, and told him how we had to get to Ahmedabad. The train was heavily booked, but he politely led us to a coupe to sit as he tried to help us. I looked at the two potential co-travellers, two politicians, as could be discerned from their white khadi attire, and panicked. “They’re decent people, regular travellers on this route, nothing to worry,” the TTE assured us. One of them was in his mid-forties with a normal, affectionate face, and the other in his late-thirties with a warm but somewhat impervious expression. They readily made space for us by almost squeezing themselves to one corner.
They introduced themselves: two BJP leaders from Gujarat. The names were told but quickly forgotten as names of co-passengers were inconsequential at that moment. We also introduced ourselves, two Railway service probationers from Assam. The conversation turned to different topics, particularly in the areas of History and the Polity. My friend, a post-graduate in History from Delhi University and very intelligent, took part. I too chipped in. The discussion veered around to the formation of the Hindu Mahasabha and the Muslim League.
The senior one was an enthusiastic participant. The younger one mostly remained quiet, but his body language conveyed his total mental involvement in what was being discussed, though he hardly contributed. Then I mentioned Syama Prasad Mookerjee’s death, why it was still considered a mystery by many. He suddenly asked: “How do you know about Syama Prasad Mookerjee?” I had to tell him that when my father was a post-graduate student in Calcutta University, as its Vice-Chancellor he had arranged a scholarship for the young man from Assam. My father often reminisced about that and regretted his untimely death [in June 1953 at the age of 51].
The younger man then almost looked away and spoke in a hushed tone almost to himself: “It’s good they know so many things ...”
Suddenly the senior man proposed: “Why don’t you join our party in Gujarat?” We both laughed it off, saying we were not from Gujarat. The younger man then forcefully interjected: “So what? We don’t have any problem on that. We welcome talent in our State.” I could see a sudden spark in his calm demeanour.
The food arrived, four vegetarian thalis. We ate in silence. When the pantry-car manager came to take the payment, the younger man paid for all of us. I muttered a feeble ‘thank you’, but he almost dismissed that as something utterly trivial. I observed at that moment that he had a different kind of glow in his eyes, which one could hardly miss. He rarely spoke, mostly listened.
The TTE then came and informed us the train was packed and he couldn’t arrange berths for us. Both men immediately stood up and said: “It’s okay, we’ll manage.” They swiftly spread a cloth on the floor and went to sleep, while we occupied the berths.
What a contrast! The previous night we had felt very insecure travelling with a bunch of politicians, and here we were travelling with two politicians in a coupe, with no fear.
The next morning, when the train neared Ahmedabad, both of them asked us about our lodging arrangements in the city. The senior one told us that in case of any problem, the doors of his house were open for us. There was some kind of genuine concern in the voice or the facial contours of the otherwise apparently inscrutable younger one, and he told us: “I’m like a nomad, I don’t have a proper home to invite you but you can accept his offer of safe shelter in this new place.”
We thanked them for that invitation and assured them that accommodation was not going to be a problem for us.
Before the train came to a stop, I pulled out my diary and asked them for their names again. I didn’t want to forget the names of two large-hearted fellow passengers who almost forced me to revise my opinion about politicians in general. I scribbled down the names quickly as the train was about to stop: Shankersinh Vaghela and Narendra Modi.
I wrote on this episode in an Assamese newspaper in 1995. It was a tribute to two unknown politicians from Gujarat for giving up their comfort ungrudgingly for the sake of two bens from Assam. When I wrote that, I didn’t have the faintest idea that these two people were going to become so prominent, or that I would hear more about them later. When Mr. Vaghela became Chief Minister of Gujarat in 1996, I was glad. When Mr. Modi took office as Chief Minister in 2001, I felt elated. (A few months later, another Assamese daily reproduced my 1995 piece.) And now, he is the Prime Minister of India.
Every time I see him on TV, I remember that warm meal, that gentle courtesy, caring and sense of security that we got that night far from home in a train, and bow my head.
(The author is General Manager of the Centre for Railway Information System, Indian Railways, New Delhi. leenasarma@rediffmail.com

http://www.thehindu.com/opinion/open-page/a-train-journey-and-two-names-to-remember/article6070562.ece?homepage=true

Monday, June 2, 2014

Seven Greatest Places On Earth

 Forwarded by Nihal Gooneratne.
5:11 AM (38 minutes ago)
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https://mail.google.com/mail/ca/u/0/images/cleardot.gif
https://mail.google.com/mail/ca/u/0/images/cleardot.gif

https://mail.google.com/mail/ca/u/0/images/cleardot.gif

Take time to watch Excellent documentary
Subject: VIDEO - IMAX -



A Grandmother's tale.

From: "J. K. S. Weerasekera" 
Baby ' s First  Visit to a Doctor.

A woman and a baby were in the doctor ' s examining room, waiting for the doctor to come in for the baby ' s first exam.
The doctor arrived, and examined the baby, checked his weight, and being a little concerned, asked if the baby was breast-fed or bottle-fed.
'Breast-fed, ' she replied..
' Well, strip down to your waist, ' the doctor ordered.
She did He pinched her nipples, pressed, kneaded, and rubbed both breasts for a while in a very professional and detailed examination.
Motioning to her to get dressed, the doctor said, ' No wonder this baby is underweight. You don' t have any milk. '
I know, ' she said, ' I ' m his Grandma,
But I ' m glad I came
​.​

Advance notice to all 1960 entrants to the Faculty of Medicine, Colombo, Sri Lanka.

Dear Batch mates,
It has been tentatively decided to hold our reunion on the second Saturday of June of the year 2015.
It will be a 'one-day' affair.
The venue will be 'The Jetwing Beach Hotel', Negombo, Sri Lanka.
Sarath Kapuwaththe & Philip Veerasingam.

To whet your appetite for a visit to Sri Lanka in June here is a series of photos and videos taken by me in May 2014 on a 'Dolphin & Whale-watching cruise'. Please click on the web-link below with your speakers on.
Enjoy the scenes.
Philip G Veerasingam

http://youtu.be/1iqB70FxR7U

Sunday, June 1, 2014

Range of electronic car keys.

email from Daya Jayasinghe

 Very interesting experiment with car keys


The wave length of the electronic key is limited to a certain distance.  If you want to expand it, learn the trick by watching this video.   You won't forget it.