When you dance, your purpose is not to get to a certain place on the floor. It’s to enjoy each step along the way— Wayne Dyer
First day of first grade
School started this week. On the first day DD brought home, among other things, a small Ziploc bag filled with sundries- a small cotton ball, a sticker, an eraser, a yarn and so on. As I was wondering what all these meant I found this note.
It was so touching. As adults we find it hard to get back to work after a vacation, why- even a long weekend. I can only imagine what getting back into the school routine after 8-9 weeks must be like for the young-uns. This kind of a start definitely must put the kids' fears at rest and ease them into an exciting and fun-filled new school year - make them want to make new friends, to be caring and sensitive to the feelings of their friends, to share, to forgive and so on. I was really impressed by how almost every single line stresses on the emotional component of the journey together - of feeling happy and warm in this place away from home and of watching out for each other and comforting and supporting one another. There was no mention of how this year is crucial to their academic success and and that the children must study for at least 2 hours every day - read and write and do their math- or else they will be doomed.
As far as I can remember every single class I have been in ( I've gone to three different schools between grades one and ten), my teachers always mentioned two things - 1) how that year was very important and that if we didn't put in the effort, we would go to dust and somewhere by mid year(2) how we were the worst batch they had seen in their 23 or whatever years of experience - the most indisciplined, unruly set of girls. In talking to our seniors and juniors we realized these comments were repeated for every single batch.
As I came to the end of the note, I thought to myself - in order to bring out the best in someone, they need to become comfortable and relaxed first. Once that happens, fears are banished, confidence shines through and one does not hesitate to ask questions or share their point of view. More importantly, with this kind of a lesson being the foundation to their new school year, kids (hopefully) will learn to empathize with people around them and resolve conflicts between them with fairness and understanding. Isn't that one of the main reasons they go to school ? To learn to work with others. This will automatically lead to an environment where children can thrive intellectually. I don't know what these kids will be taught for the rest of this year. But this sure is a great Segway to the beginning of a new chapter.
Boy! Oh Boy!
Being single and looking for a serious relationship must be hard. In many novels and movies I've seen a pretty, hardworking and sincere girl go through date after date only to be heartbroken and disappointed until she finally meets her Mr.Right! I don't have any idea how match-making websites fare when it comes to helping someone really find their special someone. I have been in the life partner hunt process twice - not for myself - but for each of my darling sisters.
More than twelve years ago, I was deeply involved in the groom search process for my older sister. She had a quintessential arranged marriage - spreading the word of the search through friends and family, sending out a handwritten biodata and photographs, matching of hor(r)o(r)scopes, formal girl-seeing by a mini army from the boy's family, engagement and finally a big tambram wedding! I used to start my sunday mornings with the Hindu newspaper, circling interesting-looking profiles from the matrimonial classifieds. I used to write cover letters to every single family that we contacted with the girl's horoscope and bio-data. I had lengthy and sometimes heated arguments with my mother on why we should let go of really good prospects just based on the fact that horoscopes didn't match. Many a time horoscopes that our astrologer deemed incompatible got the opposite verdict from the groom's side astrologer. And vice versa. This annoyed me to no end. If this is an exact science, 2 + 2 should equal 4, no matter where you computed it - here or at the North Pole, I argued. But my parents were adamant that our astrologer had to give us the green signal to go ahead. I detested how he put a big check mark ( to indicate good matching) or a yucky big cross mark( to mean we could not proceed). The pass or fail was so random according to me. Sometimes I wanted to just bribe him so he would pass good profiles. I once wrote thirty cover letters, attached the necessary paperwork and carefully wrote the addresses on the envelopes, sealed them and made a note of the name and addresses in my diary. I posted the thirty envelopes and came home and said - One of those better work , I am not doing any more. It was draining, just like when buying a house - what you like often does not work out, what is available is hard to like and time is running out. The girl-seeing was another big sore point with me, but my parents insisted on doing things the old fashioned way. But I have to give complete credit to them, in that, they always respected our wishes. My parents never forced anything on my sister throughout the process and she had the complete freedom to say no to anyone she did not feel okay to go ahead with. Finally along came my brother-in-law and the rest as they say is history.
My family has now started the groom search for my younger sister. After more than a decade going by and with my mother not being with us physically, this time, I am more then deeply involved. One big difference now is that most of the search happens on matrimony websites and that is completely the norm. While it is easy to have the initial screening process at least at your fingertips - this is a whole new level of what-the-heck? I am not looking at girls' profiles, so will only share my experience of looking at profiles of prospective grooms. The profile involves some pictures of the individual, a small write-up about the person - written by himself or a family member and other pieces of information - education, hobbies, work etc.
Pictures -
Category 1 : No pictures. - To this I want to say, 'Take a hike'. If you do not want to share some pictures with a prospective girl's family, you have no business being on this site. The photo is the first level of screening, it's hard to start communicating in this context without seeing a basic picture of someone.
Category 2 : A long shot on some snowcovered mountain or amidst a tea estate- hello!!!! If I've never seen you before I cannot appreciate you looking like a tiny dot in a big picture. Sunglasses on- everyone looks stylish with shades on, please! Without seeing your eyes I cannot figure out how you look.
Cap on head : how bald are you, I haven't a clue!
Hair being blown left, right or all directions by the wind/ long due for a cut : how hard is it to do a simple combing/styling?
Smile please - or at least don't frown - Seriously I have seen so many pictures with a sharp, rude stare or a grumpy expression - it's very off-putting.
Group picture : showing up with half-a-dozen friends in the picture makes it hard to get a good look and to put one such picture on a matrimonial site makes one go - what was he thinking?
If any of the above type of pictures coexist with a couple of good ones, I don't have an issue. But, many times, some profiles are guilty of all of the above.
When you get past the pictures, you land on the 'a few words about...'. If it is the parents or a family member that introduces the boy, mostly , one can be a little considerate. But when the boy writes about himself, I am hoping to see a decent write-up without too much bragging. Say a few things - about where you grew up, your education, what you do, your hobbies and what sort of a person you are and what kind of a person you are looking for.
Sometimes I'll see a ' looking for a beautiful, fair,slim, tall, well educated, girl' and that's it. On many occasions - intelligent, responsible and well behaved girl - have also been added to this list. Seriously?
Ah! Life would be so bleh! but for all these different people !!!!
More than twelve years ago, I was deeply involved in the groom search process for my older sister. She had a quintessential arranged marriage - spreading the word of the search through friends and family, sending out a handwritten biodata and photographs, matching of hor(r)o(r)scopes, formal girl-seeing by a mini army from the boy's family, engagement and finally a big tambram wedding! I used to start my sunday mornings with the Hindu newspaper, circling interesting-looking profiles from the matrimonial classifieds. I used to write cover letters to every single family that we contacted with the girl's horoscope and bio-data. I had lengthy and sometimes heated arguments with my mother on why we should let go of really good prospects just based on the fact that horoscopes didn't match. Many a time horoscopes that our astrologer deemed incompatible got the opposite verdict from the groom's side astrologer. And vice versa. This annoyed me to no end. If this is an exact science, 2 + 2 should equal 4, no matter where you computed it - here or at the North Pole, I argued. But my parents were adamant that our astrologer had to give us the green signal to go ahead. I detested how he put a big check mark ( to indicate good matching) or a yucky big cross mark( to mean we could not proceed). The pass or fail was so random according to me. Sometimes I wanted to just bribe him so he would pass good profiles. I once wrote thirty cover letters, attached the necessary paperwork and carefully wrote the addresses on the envelopes, sealed them and made a note of the name and addresses in my diary. I posted the thirty envelopes and came home and said - One of those better work , I am not doing any more. It was draining, just like when buying a house - what you like often does not work out, what is available is hard to like and time is running out. The girl-seeing was another big sore point with me, but my parents insisted on doing things the old fashioned way. But I have to give complete credit to them, in that, they always respected our wishes. My parents never forced anything on my sister throughout the process and she had the complete freedom to say no to anyone she did not feel okay to go ahead with. Finally along came my brother-in-law and the rest as they say is history.
My family has now started the groom search for my younger sister. After more than a decade going by and with my mother not being with us physically, this time, I am more then deeply involved. One big difference now is that most of the search happens on matrimony websites and that is completely the norm. While it is easy to have the initial screening process at least at your fingertips - this is a whole new level of what-the-heck? I am not looking at girls' profiles, so will only share my experience of looking at profiles of prospective grooms. The profile involves some pictures of the individual, a small write-up about the person - written by himself or a family member and other pieces of information - education, hobbies, work etc.
Pictures -
Category 1 : No pictures. - To this I want to say, 'Take a hike'. If you do not want to share some pictures with a prospective girl's family, you have no business being on this site. The photo is the first level of screening, it's hard to start communicating in this context without seeing a basic picture of someone.
Category 2 : A long shot on some snowcovered mountain or amidst a tea estate- hello!!!! If I've never seen you before I cannot appreciate you looking like a tiny dot in a big picture. Sunglasses on- everyone looks stylish with shades on, please! Without seeing your eyes I cannot figure out how you look.
Cap on head : how bald are you, I haven't a clue!
Hair being blown left, right or all directions by the wind/ long due for a cut : how hard is it to do a simple combing/styling?
Smile please - or at least don't frown - Seriously I have seen so many pictures with a sharp, rude stare or a grumpy expression - it's very off-putting.
Group picture : showing up with half-a-dozen friends in the picture makes it hard to get a good look and to put one such picture on a matrimonial site makes one go - what was he thinking?
If any of the above type of pictures coexist with a couple of good ones, I don't have an issue. But, many times, some profiles are guilty of all of the above.
When you get past the pictures, you land on the 'a few words about...'. If it is the parents or a family member that introduces the boy, mostly , one can be a little considerate. But when the boy writes about himself, I am hoping to see a decent write-up without too much bragging. Say a few things - about where you grew up, your education, what you do, your hobbies and what sort of a person you are and what kind of a person you are looking for.
Sometimes I'll see a ' looking for a beautiful, fair,slim, tall, well educated, girl' and that's it. On many occasions - intelligent, responsible and well behaved girl - have also been added to this list. Seriously?
Ah! Life would be so bleh! but for all these different people !!!!
My desi girl.......
There's something heartwarming about seeing people embrace something outside of their culture, especially when that culture happens to be yours. There's nothing narrow minded or conservative about that feeling - we've all experienced that smile that lights up faces when you, as a foreigner speak even a few words in someone's native tongue.
I exchanged a few words in Japanese once with a few ladies that were a part of a tour bus full of Japanese tourists when sightseeing in Vancouver, Canada. They were so thrilled, they all clapped for me!!!!
Today I met Ms.K who's originally from Poland and is married to an Indian from Madhya Pradesh. What caught my attention was the beautiful mangalsutra she proudly wears around her neck. The chunky black and gold beads had me doing a double take. Most Indian women these days choose to wear one selectively (on festivals and important days) or go without one. While wearing a mangalsutra is now a matter of personal beliefs and choice, and I am not arguing for or against it, it was cute to find a non desi wear it with such elan. She was also very kind to pose for me - thank you K, for also bringing me out of blogging hibernation for almost a year now.
Rahu kala timings
Found this on the net. I don't check for rahu kalam generally barring special/important occasions.
Easy way to remember rahu kalam
Easy way to remember rahu kalam
Just remeber this phrase
"Mother Saw Father Wearing The Turban"
M(other)- 7:30 - 9:00 - MONDAY
S(aw) - 9:00 - 10:30 -SATURDAY
F(ather) - 10:30 - 12:00 - FRIDAY
W(earing) - 12:00 - 1:30 -WEDNESDAY
TH(e) - 1:30 - 3:00 - THURSDAY
TU(rban) - 3:00 - 4:30- TUESDAY
Left with Sunday - 4:30 - 6:00
ASSUMING THE SUNRISE IS AT 6:00 AM
Day 5
breakfast : 2 cups coffee
early lunch : quinoa salad with grated carrot, walnuts, avacado, cucumber ; thai curry with lots of veggies eaten as a soup without rice.
evening: watermelon slices, 1 cup coffee
exercise : 60 mins walk
dinner : 2 whole wheat rotis with opu lentils curry
About 3-4 years ago, I once stopped by my co-worker( and very good friend GG - http://g3pedia.blogspot.com/ )'s office. She is a go to resource on almost any topic under the sun - very well read and well informed; It's hard not to be impressed by her wit and dazzling brilliance. Hence I started calling her encyclopedia ; when my friends and I urged her to start a blog, I insisted she aptly name it so and she has. More than anything else she's always ready to help or at least point you in the direction of help promptly!!!
So I mentioned to her that day that the happy hour was going on in full swing with many goodies - brownies and all. She gave a reluctant lip curve and said " I don't want to waste my calories on brownies". Her response surprised me and then it set me thinking. I had never heard someone put it quite that way. As I pondered over it, it made me realize that when you are trying to lose weight or maintain your weight loss, you are on a calorie budget. It's very similar to being on a tight financial budget where you don't have room for impulsive, frivolous purchases. Working on a calorie budget, you only eat what is really meaningful to you, not things you feel 'meh' about. I am not a big dessert person, I am not a big chocolate or ice cream person, not a big fried snacks person but I have let myself become just a 'big person' eating a little bit of things I don't care much about, here and there. So, as I read from somewhere 'Don't put it into your month if it's anything less than a 10 on 10 for you!'
And while on this subject - just like how if finances are tight, you may not want to buy the curtains your mom wants you to buy or the dress your friend wants you to buy, but may be saving money to buy what is close to your heart - in the same way, you may not want to eat a cake, a pastry or a hundred other things, but may want to indulge in one treat you really care for. Friends and family will question you - it's very common to be asked 'Oh, I thought you were dieting' or ' how come you didn't want to eat x, y or z but are eating this?'. Just stay unperturbed and focussed. It's your budget, you control what goes into your mouth!
early lunch : quinoa salad with grated carrot, walnuts, avacado, cucumber ; thai curry with lots of veggies eaten as a soup without rice.
evening: watermelon slices, 1 cup coffee
exercise : 60 mins walk
dinner : 2 whole wheat rotis with opu lentils curry
About 3-4 years ago, I once stopped by my co-worker( and very good friend GG - http://g3pedia.blogspot.com/ )'s office. She is a go to resource on almost any topic under the sun - very well read and well informed; It's hard not to be impressed by her wit and dazzling brilliance. Hence I started calling her encyclopedia ; when my friends and I urged her to start a blog, I insisted she aptly name it so and she has. More than anything else she's always ready to help or at least point you in the direction of help promptly!!!
So I mentioned to her that day that the happy hour was going on in full swing with many goodies - brownies and all. She gave a reluctant lip curve and said " I don't want to waste my calories on brownies". Her response surprised me and then it set me thinking. I had never heard someone put it quite that way. As I pondered over it, it made me realize that when you are trying to lose weight or maintain your weight loss, you are on a calorie budget. It's very similar to being on a tight financial budget where you don't have room for impulsive, frivolous purchases. Working on a calorie budget, you only eat what is really meaningful to you, not things you feel 'meh' about. I am not a big dessert person, I am not a big chocolate or ice cream person, not a big fried snacks person but I have let myself become just a 'big person' eating a little bit of things I don't care much about, here and there. So, as I read from somewhere 'Don't put it into your month if it's anything less than a 10 on 10 for you!'
And while on this subject - just like how if finances are tight, you may not want to buy the curtains your mom wants you to buy or the dress your friend wants you to buy, but may be saving money to buy what is close to your heart - in the same way, you may not want to eat a cake, a pastry or a hundred other things, but may want to indulge in one treat you really care for. Friends and family will question you - it's very common to be asked 'Oh, I thought you were dieting' or ' how come you didn't want to eat x, y or z but are eating this?'. Just stay unperturbed and focussed. It's your budget, you control what goes into your mouth!
Days 3 and 4
Day 3:
breakfast : 1 cup coffee, 1 whole wheat sandwich with peanut butter, 1 cup coffee
lunch : 2 whole wheat sandwiches (at the beach) with onions, tomato, avacado and cucumber smeared with peanut butter and a 1 tsp of basil pesto - yumm!!!! , 2 tbsps of pasta I made for the rest of the family
exercise : walked about 2.5 mi on beach sand.
late afternoon : some strawberries
dinner : made rice, rasam and potato curry as DD asked for this. Made quinoa for myself to eat with rasam. Pressure cooker safety valve went kaput, it knocked over the pot of rasam - all in all a huge fiasco! Salvaged some white rice for DH and the kids. Ate watermelon slices, quinoa with potato curry - was dead tired at the end of a day at the beach, followed by cooking, giving a shower to both kids and dealing with the kitchen mess. Was totally let down after losing the rasam.
confession : unending headaches coupled with DS not letting me have 3 hrs of continuous sleep at night led me to have sugar in my coffee. I feel so bad, but sugar in my coffee is letting me carry on with all the other rules. I am going to get a grip on all else and then try again at giving up sugar in my coffee. I read from a weight loss blog about how not to use a setback to stop and go back to old ways. If you eat a handful or a couple of handfuls of chips, don't go all out and eat the whole bag, or put off eating right for the whole weekend or until next month. She says , "If you have a flat tire, you fix it and move on, you don't sit and poke holes in all other tyres".
Day 4 :
breakfast : 2 cups coffee, wheat noodles with vegetables
mid morning snack : 2 figs, some watermelon
lunch : 1 cup of remining wheat noodles with veggies
exercise : 60 mins brisk walk, rest of the family enjoyed hot fries after a walk in the cold breeze- I watched them eat!
evening : 1 1/2 cups coffee
dinner : bhel puri with onions, tomatoes,cucumber,carrot and peas. Realized after eating a plateful that puffed rice is also a version of rice and hence may have been another violation :-(((
breakfast : 1 cup coffee, 1 whole wheat sandwich with peanut butter, 1 cup coffee
lunch : 2 whole wheat sandwiches (at the beach) with onions, tomato, avacado and cucumber smeared with peanut butter and a 1 tsp of basil pesto - yumm!!!! , 2 tbsps of pasta I made for the rest of the family
exercise : walked about 2.5 mi on beach sand.
late afternoon : some strawberries
dinner : made rice, rasam and potato curry as DD asked for this. Made quinoa for myself to eat with rasam. Pressure cooker safety valve went kaput, it knocked over the pot of rasam - all in all a huge fiasco! Salvaged some white rice for DH and the kids. Ate watermelon slices, quinoa with potato curry - was dead tired at the end of a day at the beach, followed by cooking, giving a shower to both kids and dealing with the kitchen mess. Was totally let down after losing the rasam.
confession : unending headaches coupled with DS not letting me have 3 hrs of continuous sleep at night led me to have sugar in my coffee. I feel so bad, but sugar in my coffee is letting me carry on with all the other rules. I am going to get a grip on all else and then try again at giving up sugar in my coffee. I read from a weight loss blog about how not to use a setback to stop and go back to old ways. If you eat a handful or a couple of handfuls of chips, don't go all out and eat the whole bag, or put off eating right for the whole weekend or until next month. She says , "If you have a flat tire, you fix it and move on, you don't sit and poke holes in all other tyres".
Day 4 :
breakfast : 2 cups coffee, wheat noodles with vegetables
mid morning snack : 2 figs, some watermelon
lunch : 1 cup of remining wheat noodles with veggies
exercise : 60 mins brisk walk, rest of the family enjoyed hot fries after a walk in the cold breeze- I watched them eat!
evening : 1 1/2 cups coffee
dinner : bhel puri with onions, tomatoes,cucumber,carrot and peas. Realized after eating a plateful that puffed rice is also a version of rice and hence may have been another violation :-(((
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