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Tuesday, December 31, 2019

2019 - Another Year - Eventful




Eventful, indeed was the year. Even comman men have started taking interest in politics/economics. Constitution is being read and understood. Some Significant Dates which will help navigate the year are:

1st January 2019 - In a first, over 35 lakh women stood shoulder-to-shoulder across the national highways in Kerala, creating a 620 km-long human 'wall' from the northern end of Kasaragod to the southern tip as part of a state-sponsored initiative to uphold gender equality. The 'Women's wall' was conceived in the backdrop of frenzied protests witnessed in the hill shrine of Lord Ayyappa at Sabarimala after the CPI(M)-led LDF government decided to implement the Supreme Court verdict, allowing all women to pray at the Ayyappa shrine. This was against the judgement by Supreme Court in September 2018 stating women are equally entitled to have entry to public space. For some the protest was like the Stockholm syndrome.


14th February Pulwama attack; one of the deadliest terror attacks in Jammu and Kashmir. 40 Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) personnel were martyred. a convoy of vehicles carrying security personnel on the Jammu Srinagar National Highway was attacked by a vehicle-borne suicide bomber at Lethpora. The attacker was identified to be Adil Ahmad Dar, a local from Pulwama district, and a member of Jaish-e-Mohammed.


26th February, Tuesday - Balakot airstrike was conducted by India in the early morning hours when Indian warplanes crossed the de facto border in the disputed region of Kashmir, and dropped bombs in the vicinity of the town of Balakot in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province in Pakistan. Request for restraint was made by Australia, China, US, France and Organisation of Islamic Cooperation. The PAF downed a MiG-21 Bison in an aerial combat, after Varthaman had shot down an F-16 of Pakistan. IAF Wing Commander pilot Abhinandan Varthaman was captured, who was handed over to India on March 1.

27 March 2019, India tested an anti-satellite weapon during an operation code named Mission Shakti (IAST; Śakti lit. "Power"). The target of the test was a satellite present in a low Earth orbit, which was hit with a kinetic kill vehicle.

23rd May 2019, Modi was reelected as the Prime Minister of India with a sweeping majority, The success of Modi 1.0 was the on ground implementation of various schemes like Swatch bharat, Ujvala, Jandhan, DBT, PM Hosing, Digital India, Mudra Loans etc. clubbed with strategies by Amit Modi Jodi, BJP is firmly in saddle, with the Congress completely decimated with A catchy slogan:'Aab Ki Baar Modi Sarkar' (Not BJP but Modi-Shah Jodi Sarkar), The usage of IT and social media to reach out to the mass, converted this election into a US presidential model, where his opponents were pushed to talking only about him, good or bad, and that publicity helped. Also seems voting machines had a part to play in the results. BJP's indulgence in horse trading to execute this installment of Operation Lotus cannot be ruled out.

23rd July 2019, Chandrayaan-2 the spacecraft was launched on its mission to the Moon from the second launch pad at the Satish Dhawan Space Centre by a GSLV Mark III. The craft reached the Moon's orbit on 20 August 2019 and began orbital positioning manoeuvres for the landing of the Vikram lander. However, the lander deviated from its intended trajectory starting at 2.1 kilometres (1.3 mi) altitude, and had lost communication when touchdown confirmation was expected. Initial reports suggesting a crash[30][31] were confirmed by ISRO chairman K. Sivan, stating that "it must have been a hard landing". The Failure Analysis Committee concluded that the crash was caused by a software glitch.

30th July 2019, Thriple Thalaq bill was passed declaring the practice of Triple Talaq as illegal, unconstitutional and made it punishable act from 1 August 2019 which is deemed to be in effect from 19 September 2018.

5th August 2019, Article 370 providing special status to the state of Jammu and Kashmir was withdrawn. "I was waiting to see this day in my lifetime." Sushma Swaraj Tweeted this and within hours had her last breath. August was the month of deaths - Starting with the 'Cafe Cofee Day - Siddartha's Suicide; Death of Sushma Swaraj to my deal Mother in Law and Sid's mother.

22 September Narendra Modi addressed "Shared Dreams, Bright Futures", Texas India Forum.2 power-soaked megalomaniacs met each other's match at Houstan while 50k cheered on and 20 k protested outside. This clearly tells us a good bit about the power of critical thinking and how each think the other to be bigots and hypocrites. Many stood with pride out in the sun, drenched in honest sweat, outside the NRG stadium, in Houston, with prefabricated posters, T-shirts, flags, etc. which they believed to be the moral side of history, while the another lot danced to the tunes of the megalomaniacs inside the opulence of the NRG stadium.



9th Nov 2019 finally decision was made on Ayodhya dispute. The Supreme Court, in a 1,045-page, unanimous verdict by a five-judge constitution bench comprising Chief Justice of India Ranjan Gogoi, brought closure to the case, one community ended up with the 'site' and the other with a five-acre plot not by virtue of being the majority and minority nor because of faith, but because the apex court unambiguously believes in the evidence of 'actual worship down the centuries'. The reasoning, according to the learned judges, was that while both parties Ram Lalla Virajman and the Sunni Central Waqf Board had competing rights over the disputed site, lawyers representing the Hindus had provided better evidence of continuous worship compared to the Muslims. Critics argue that judgement was relied on "faith instead of law and reason" and that the judgment has "sided with majoritarianism".

11th Dec 2019 CAB was passed in parliament. This is not anything new - Upto Article 15 of the Constitution, already covered it - But the year ended with unrest about it; presumably because:
1) Ethnicity of people in states like Assam was being effected
2) Some linked it to NRC, which was done in Assam and yet to be implemented in the rest of the country - and saw the danger of the minority being persecuted
3) Politicians made it a religious issue for the reasons best known
4) Haste in passing the bill, without explaining and bringing the minority into confidence


My thought - rather than making the 'bill - presently passed' so complicated - why could they not just have included in the amendment clause - 'Includes' - minorities of neighboring countries; and minority 'means' - anyone who is not the major population of that country and constitute say 5% of the population of that country?

By the end of the year the State Election results have shown that, India is firmly back to being a federal constitutional entity – The politics of the state is challenging the politics of the centre; which had strong majority of the same party for some time. People started making distinction between national and state. Our PM is a leader by himself – but not all powerful a popular leader – i.e. he cannot win lamp post state election. Poli - Tricks was seen in many state elections and how all efforts were made to keep the seats like in Karnataka, Maharashtra which are different stories by themselves - interesting ones. After 11 days of presidents rule, when the news papers had morning headlines on 23rd November - that NCP/Sena/Congress would form a collision government in Maharashtra; the news in the web media read the Devendra Fadnavis had swron in as CM in the wee hours of the morning. He was in office for three days - what was the real agenda behind that? Then followed a week of interesting drama.

14th July 2019 though England had lost early wickets, B Strokes kept the game going. Towards end New Zealand had missed catches, catch becoming six, and a two becoming four which eventually turned to six, all pointing towards a lucky day for England and the match ending in a tie of 241 each. Now it was time for Super Over. 6 balls per team. Six balls or two wickets whichever is earlier finishes the super over. England Scored 15 runs with batting continued by Stokes and Buttler. Neesham and N Guptil from NZ took over. And here too there was a tie, with Guptil being run out on the last ball!! England became champions based on number of boundaries. England scored 26 boundaries in total in the entire duration of the match as compared to 17 by the Black Caps and were thus crowned as champions, winning the world cup cricket. Indeed hard luck for New Zealand. Men in Blue were toppers through out, but was chucked out in the Semifinals.

Other highlights in sports were National record holder Dutee Chand became the first Indian woman track and field athlete to clinch a gold medal at the 30th Summer University Games in Napoli, Italy after she won the 100m dash event in July this year; Hima Das, who won five successive gold medals in different meets across Poland and the Czech Republic in July within 20 days. Four of her victories came in the 200m sprint while her fifth top-podium finish was in the 400m event; PV Sindhu on August 25 became the first Indian to win gold in BWF World Badminton Championships by beating familiar rival Nozomi Okuhara of Japan in a lop-sided final in Basel; Para-badminton player Manasi Joshi also created history by securing gold at the BWF Para-Badminton World Championships, just a day before Sindhu; India's middle-distance runner PU Chitra ran her season's best to win the women's 1500m gold at the Folksam Grand Prix in Sweden in June after winning the gold in the Asian Championships in April.

Indian-American Abhijit Banerjee, his wife Esther Duflo and Michael Kremer jointly won the 2019 Nobel Economics Prize on a Monday, 14th October "for their experimental approach to alleviating global poverty."

On the last Monday of the year - 30th December India gets her first Chief of defence staff, General Bipin Rawat, the senior-most uniformed military adviser to the Government of India. .. The Chief of Defence Staff (CDS) is the professional tri-service chief of the Indian Armed Forces and ill serve as the first CDS till December 2022, coordinating the army, navy and airforce.


Amdist all these Paul Salopek in his Year 6 of a Global Journalism Journey - On his 'out of Eden' walk across the planet that bridges continents, languages, nationalities and creeds was in India covering around 1,800 miles including the banks of Ganga and Brahmaputra; naming his Chapter 'Riverlands' and exploring the mounting effects of dramatic environmental change, including climate woes, rapid urbanization, growing communal tensions in the world’s largest democracy, and the tenuous endurance of South Asia’s many varied cultures.

Stand up performance was not just from Shashi Tharoor in One Mic stand; but from the actor parliamentarian Smriti Irani. Remember her Rohit Vemula lies and 'Satya Meva Jayate' speech full of lies? She outdid herself again by twisting a statement by Rahul Gandhi to interpret it as a 'Clarion Call' to 'Rape in India'. All because they wanted to kill another debate on North East, CAA, NRC and Kashmir. And the entire BJP MP's, without morality, responsibility or principles, disrupted parliament. Here was a ruling party disrupting parliament; though there were two long sessions and many bills passed this year. Then we had the duo giving us hearty laugh...Gaurav Vallabh and Sambit Patra.

Each day brings new horrors of depravity against women! You think it can't get worse..but it does! While Nirbhaya's Delhi High Court hearing is adjourned - Tarikh pe tarikh. Tarikh pe tarikh, Are we waiting for shashtipurthi of culprits? there are new cases sprouting across the countries - with poor victims burned to death, and poor criminal's being shot - while rich criminal's still moving around being MP's and MLA's.

Need of the hour:

Stop talking of how many woman were raped, but say how many men raped women;
Stop saying how many police saved victims or killed culprits, but say how many police prevented possibilities;
Stop discriminating and murdering our constitution, but uphold and protect it;
Stop passing bills like Citizenship Amendment Act, but pass bills like politicians amendment act - restricting entry for criminals in parliament;
Stop attacking on people having different views, accept the differences, patience - tolerance pays;
Stop arriving at a 'perfect conclusion' reached at by majority creating discord, agree for an imperfect decision arrived at by consensus leading to harmony;

" Those of us whose faith in India’s democratic system was absolute now face the sobering realisation that its roots may be shallower than we had allowed ourselves to believe"

Indian government must create an atmosphere of trust to improve consumer/society/economy/mass sentiments. Social reforms and changes are also needed, but has to be properly planned and prioritized. For the year end protests Government also has their share for not being able to foresee and for being in a hurry...what people say is home ministry is in a home delivery spree. Either other departments should come to his speed or he should slow down. How would it be if only one tire of your car go in super speed? All can see, what it is to be misruled. We did need doers, we did have hare and tortise in the past, but seems now is the time for Cheetah. The actions of the Government do determine, the direction, that they are heading towards.

Climatic change has been impacted like never before with India going through an unprecedented natural disaster with eight states experiencing heavy to very heavy rains for days, including neighboring countries, while few other states had almost near drought, and few states have highest winter in 120 years. Unemployment is at its highest in the near past. 12 of the worlds 15 most polluted cities are in India, poverty, malnourishment, falling living standard, agriculture distress, middle-class distress, increasing gap between rich & poor continue to be daily issues.

Environmental system includes - strengthen economic, political and social security - which can be strengthened with strong laws, powerful system and ethics. This can happen with radical leadership. So Environmental problem today is no more confined to Air, Water, or Sound pollution. Need is to save democracy, which have a huge say in the investments. Give priority to people and planet and not profit or religion. Cataract continues to be the third biggest cause of blindness, religion and politics remaining the first two. It's so interesting to see for one same event/situation/decision required some like, some love, some cry and some are angry about it. That's life. Nothing is completely right. It all depend on the time, situation, mood, thoughts and surroundings of the person.

When it comes to rulers—or their Dewans—who can change the lives of an entire population, small acts have huge consequences. Our mistakes may not matter to anyone; theirs could cost a great deal.

People make history. You and I, and everyone around us, are shaping history in our own microscopic ways. Our actions are affected by normal human feelings like jealousy, ego, helplessness, arrogance, love, kindness and so forth.

Hope in the coming year we become better - than who, how and where we are today!

Sathyameva Jayathe!



Monday, December 30, 2019

Flying High - A dozen Formidable success stories By R Sivakumar & V Pattabhi Ram


An amazing, thought provoking and value adding insights from lives of men united in profession and proving how diverse and enriching the career paths can be. As Justice Prabha Sridevan mention in the Forward - "This is a very well-written book. Meticulous, humane with touches of humour, while underlining the strong ethical core inside each of the men covered. " "Congratulate the authors for their labour of love" The chapter on 5 lessons from their lives, summaries what we can draw from these 12 outstanding men. Can't Thank You enough R Sivakumar Sir and Pattabhi Ram Sir the 2 Gems who write about the 12 gems.

Really missed S Gurumurthy as rightly mentioned in From the Editors - This is 'a' list and not 'the' list. So expecting more as sequel or series. Each chapter has brief bio, beautiful pictures, and above all lessons from each of them and the one that resonates and apt for the current political situation is that by GN " Finally, an imperfect decision arrived at by consensus is better than a perfect 'conclusion' reached at by majority."

Wednesday, December 25, 2019

The Arthashastra - Kautilya



Chanakya/Kautilya and Machiavelli both gave most profound and most practised philosophies of Statecraft, Governance and International Politics. Chanakya who lived many centuries before Machiavelli has entered Indian vocabulary as the equivalent of 'Machiavellian' . While Machiavelli wrote ‘The Prince’ for Lorenzo di Medici of Florence during Renaissance around 14th century AD, Chanakya authored ‘Arthashastra’ for Chandragupta Maurya in the late BC/early AD - exact time period is unknown. Machiavelli propounded the importance of Secular nature, i.e, separation of Roman catholic church from politics while Chanakya advises King to follow dharma and religion both and have in fact put King below Dharma ‘righteaousness’ while Machiavelli puts King above everything. Both have been compared to one another - the unknown to the known.


From the Penguin Classics, this version of Kautilya's 'The Arthashastra' is edited, rearranged and introduced by L.N. Rangarajan; dedicating the book to R. Shamasastry who discovered the test and translated it first and R. P. Kangle's whose work was used as the authoritative work for this translation. Preface begins with how both Kautilya the preceptor and his masterwork the Arthashastra are much misunderstood.




The great aims of human endeavour have been classified as being four - Dharma (moral behavior), Artha ( wealth), Kama ( worldly pleasure) and Moksha ( salvation). Artha follows Dharma and Kautilya's Arthashastra can be looked at as a valuable document which throws light on the state and society in that time, whether it be 300 B.C or 150 AD or Kautilya can be regarded as a great preceptor of statecraft, whose teachings have a universal validity. It is a practical work, covering how to form alliances, how to attack a powerful king, how to deal with revolts in the rear, what tricks to play on gullible people - presumed to be implemented then.

The source of livelihood of men is wealth. Wealth of a nation is both the territory of the state and its inhabitants who may follow a variety of occupations. The state or government has a crucial role to play in maintaining the material well-being of the nation and its people. Therefore, an important part of Arthashastra is 'the science of economics/politics', including starting productive enterprises, taxation, revenue collection, budget and accounts. The aim of pursuing successful economic policies, particularly through productive enterprises, is also to increase the revenues of the state and appropriate the surplus for the state treasury. A king with a depleted treasury eats into the very vitality of the citizens and the country. If he impoverishes his own people or angers them will lose loyalty [7.5.27]. A balance has to be maintained between the welfare of the people and augmenting the resources of the state. This presupposes maintenance of law and order and adequate administrative machinery.

Part I

Introductory Section


"This Arthashastra is a compendium of almost all similar treaties composed by ancient teachers, on the acquisition and protection of territory. (1.1.1)"

"The people of a society, whatever their varna or stage of life, will follow their own dharma and pursue with devotion their occupations, if they are protected by the king and the just use of danda (coercion and punishment) (1.4.16)"

" The source of the livelihood of men is artha (wealth); that is to say, the territory (and the inhabitants following various professions) is the wealth [of a nation]. The science by which territory is acquired and maintained is Arthashastra - the science of wealth and welfare. [15.1.1.1]

Knowledge has four branches, philosophy, Vedas, economics and the science of government. Philosophy is the lamp that illuminates all sciences, it provides the techniques for all action; and it is the pillar which supports dharma.

The auxiliary sciences are phonetics, ritual, grammar, etymology, prosody and astronomy.

The three Vedas are most useful because they establish the respective duties of the four varnas and the four stages of life. The four stages of life are that of a householder, Brahmachari, Vanaprastha (forest recluse), and Parivrajaka (a wandering ascetic).

Duties common to all are Ahimsa, Satyam, cleanliness, freedom from malice, compassion and tolerance.

CONFLICTS: Four methods to deal conflict are: Sama, Dana, bheda and danda i.e. adopting a conciliatory attitude, placating with rewards and gifts, sowing dissension among enemies and using force.

Part II


The State and its Constituent


" Kautilya says: There cannot be a country without people and there is no kingdom without a country" [13.4.5]

" The value of a land is what man makes of it" [7.11.9.]

" In the interest of the prosperity of the country, a king should be diligent in foreseeing the possibility of calamities, try to avert them before they arise, overcome those which happen, remove all obstructions to economic activity and prevent loss of revenue to the state" [8.4.50]

This covers the qualities required by different people, how to deal with calamities and adversities. It is important to know of people's vices because they are the cause of personal adversities. Vices are due to ignorance and indiscipline; an unlearned man does not perceive the injurious consequences of his vices.

The main vices are Anger and Desire.

Three kind of vices are due to anger and four due to uncontrolled desire. Of the two, anger is worse because it knows no boundaries. It is wel known that angry kings have often been killed by popular fury, whereas greedy and lustful kings have perished by disease, poverty or enemy actions.

The three kind of vices arising from anger are inflicting verbal injury, causing injury to another's property and inflicting physical injury. Injuring another's property includes: not giving what is due, taking away unjustly, destroying it and neglecting entrusted property. Anger makes one the object of hatred, creates enemies and brings suffering on oneself.

The four vices springing from excessive desire are addiction to hunting, gambling, women and drink. Excessive greed and lust bring about humiliation, loss of wealth and association with undesirable persons.

Excessive desire leads to the cultivation of evil things while anger causes the abandonment of good things. Since both results in multitude of evils, both are classified as calamities. One need to exercise self-control.

Part III

The King


Often used to signify the state. The three science (philosophy, the three Vedas and economics) are dependent for their development on the science of government.

The sole aim of all branches of knowledge is to inculcate restraint over the senses. Self-control, which is the basis of knowledge and discipline, is acquired by giving up lust, anger, greed, conceit, arrogance and foolhardiness. Living in accordance with the shastras means avoiding over-indulgence in all pleasures of hearing, touch, sight, taste and smell.
It describe the duties of The King, Kings security, ever present dangers like - revolts/rebellions/conspiracies and treason, succession, regency,

Per Kautilya people will naturally obey a high-born king though he is weak, because a man of nobility has a natural capacity to rule. Furthermore, people frustrate the intrigues of the low-born, however strong he may be, because, as the saying goes: 'Where there is love, one sees all the virtues in the beloved'.

Part IV

The Well Organized State


" A king can reign only with the help of others; one wheel alone does not move (a chariot). Therefore, a king should appoint advisers (as councillors and ministers) and listen to their advice."

"The root of wealth is economic activity and lack of it brings material distress. In the absence of fruitful economic activity, both current prosperity and future growth are in danger of destruction."

This deals with how land and roads should be, how a king should choose his Councillors and ministers. Also the chapter on aspects of the economy gives details of agriculture, different industries and types of economic activities. It also gives guidelines on customs regulations comsumer protection.

Part V

Treasury, Sources of Revenue, Budget, Accounts and Audit



If receipts and expenditure are properly looked after the king will not find himself in financial difficulties. Sources of revenue are:
1) Income from crown property (agricultural land), mining and metallurgy, animal husbandry, irrigation works,
2) Income from state controlled activities like manufacturing industries like textiles, food items, liquor, leisure activity
3) Taxes in cash and in kind, including customs, cess, royalty and surcharges
4) Trade
5) Fees and service charges
6) Miscellaneous covering interests, aids, presents, foreign affairs, court cases, savings, fines, special levies, donations,

Accounts are to be properly maintained and audited.

Part VI

Civil Service Regulations



Part VII

The Department's of the Government



Part VIII

Law and Justice


The idea of justice and punishment is same - punishment in proportion of crime. Dandaniti of Chanakya.


"Judge shall discharge their duties objectively and impartially so that they may earn the trust and affection of the people" (3.20.24)

Judge was called 'dharmastha' - upholder of dharma'. Ultimate source of all law was Dharma.

The subject covers both civil law called ' Concerning upholder of dharma' in book 3 and criminal law including Penal code in book 4 called 'The removal of Thorns' i.e elemination of antisocial elements.

Prevention of crime is an aspect of maintenance of law and order.


Part IX


Covert Operations


"Miraculous results can be achieved by practising the methods of subversion"

The creation of a secret service, with spies, secret agents and specialists such as assassins, was a task of high priority for the king, so also the testing of the integrity of appointed ministers. This applies to both men and women. The chancellors and the security too had network of spies. The could be as monks, householders, merchants or ascetics both brahminical and non brahminical.

This includes Magic, illusion and occult as well.

Part X

Foreign Policy


"The welfare of a state depends on an active foreign policy" [6.2.1]

The state is not a monolithic entity but with 6 internal constituents - the king, the ministers, the fortified city, the countryside, the treasury and the army.

The six methods of foreign policy are - Making peace, waging war, staying quiet, preparing for war, seeking support and adopting a dual policy - i.e. making peace with one and war with other.

All these six methods are interdependent.


Part XI

Defence and War


"To be in accordance with dharma, the place and time of battle must be specified beforehand" [10.3.26]

Even after acquiring any new territory, dharma must be followed and in case not; it has to be implemented.

For a mighty king the cycle of acquisition by conquest is a recurring process; the eventual objective being chakravarthikshetram - the area of operation of the king-Emperor - which as per 9.1.18 is the area extending from the Himalayas in the north to the sea (in the south) and a thousand yojanas wide from east to west is the area of operation of the king-Emperor this area is the whole of Bharatavarsha i.e. The Indian, Sub-continent. The last verse in this translation, reiterates that the King-Emperor shall rule in accordance with dharma.

Verse 1.13.5-10 ' When there was no order in society and only the law of jungle prevailed, the made Manu, the son of Vivasvat, their king.

The book from translation by R.P. Kangle's who based his writings from palm leaf manuscript about 300 years old, is not the original text.


A Science of Living.



Monday, December 23, 2019

3S's - Shashi Tharoor, Sharad Pawar and Subramanian Swamy (ST,SP & SS)



gerontocracy
/ˌdʒɛrənˈtɒkrəsi/

noun
a state, society, or group governed by old people.
government based on rule by old people.

Having written about 3S's Female Politicians - thought why delay to write on the men - why not when they are alive - and in this year itself? Came across an article by Shashi Tharoor - 'In praise of Gerontocracy' which brought one more similarity among them.

As quoted by ST - 'The New England Journal of Medicine' - Most productive age in human life is 60-70, next 70-80 and then 50-60. That is the age when they have acquired skills, made and learned from mistakes, and can focus on sharpening and deploying their skills. So these men are in their best years of their life, politically very active and have been creating headlines.

The youngest of the three, his charm works wonders, irrespective of your gender, is one of the best debaters India has ever produced. His excellent wit, apt humor, throat slitting points, his ever lasting charismatic style made him most famous among the elite circle, he is a non-official English teacher to many, who teach through tweeter, has written 20 books' 10 of them after his 50's; and has tarnished his image for being the suspicious wife killer, - who is liked for his writings and speeches, especially in international forums. He is an example of how just soft skills are not enough to prosper in life but can give you a certain edge. When politics by itself has become a comedy show, this year he participated in One mike stand - entertaining millions around the globe. Also he won the prestigious Sahitya Akademi Award for his book - 'An Era of Darkness' . A Malayalee from Palakad, three times MP from Trivandurm, born in UK, studied in Mumbai, Calcutta and Delhi, was the youngest PHd holder from US, he completed his doctorate in political science from Tuft University, worked with UN for almost 30 years. Shashi joined politics after his bid to become Secretary General of United Nations failed . He joined Indian National Congress and briefly served as Union Minister of state for external affairs (2009–2010) .Shashi Tharoor was all set to be next Minister of External affairs till a controversial tweet turned tables against him. IPL controvesy also greatly harm his public image.According to him if India must change, we have to re-introduce Indians to their Indianness. He believes in civilised discourse, and has been criticised for praising the opposition a couple of times. The Tharoorian Ideology rests on the three principles of Liberalism, Pluralism and Soft Power. Some belive that Tharoor joining the Congress was the downside of his career, he has been throughout seen as a level headed intellectual.


SS -

A Statistician, Number cruncher, holds a doctorate in economics from Harvard University at the age of 24, served as a professor in Harvard University and IIT, supposed to be a scholar in Chinese. He won Mumbai MP Seat in 1971. During emergency, he did a surprise entry into Parliament to keep up his MP seat & sneaked out of Delhi without getting arrested. speaks about his agility, network & guts.He was part of Sarvodaya Movement and had opposed national emergency .He was a member of Union cabinet led by Chandra Shekhar. He holds a long parliamentary career -five time Rajya Sabha member; one time Lok sabha member from Madurai (Tamil Nadu). Dr Subramanian- a Rajya Sabha member- is not part of Union Government; but is known as an influencer. His controversial views and acerbic language are admired by many in government and political circles. Regardless of his right winger image ; Dr Swamy is tolerant of all religions. His wife is a Parsee; one son in law is a muslim ;and a sister in law is a christian and another is a Sikh . Swamy is the man of action, over period of time he developed his own wit in interacting with different sections of media and Political spheres. True Indian heart and mind in action. To pull down the Bajpyee government - he brought together Sonia, Jayalalitha and Mayavathi and called them Sarashwathi, Lakshmi and Durga. His legal acumen as reflected in cases like 2G scam, coalgate, National Herald scam, disproportionate asset case...is unparalleled in contemporary Indian political and legal fraternity. He was instrumental in the Ramjanmabhoomi- Bhabri Masjid decision, and is believed to be one, who introduced the concept on faith into the decision/judgement, which was always disputed on the grounds of the possession of land untill then. His intellect in terms of economic acumen to impeccable political leadership to anti corruption crusader is well known in respective fields. He also has deep understanding in foreign policy matters. His contribution as an economist in 1991 economic reforms has been well acknowledged by none other than Dr. Manmohan Singh. His long political career has been impeccable and full of integrity. Apart from these, his insights into sociocultural evolutionary history of Indian society is remarkable. SS talks of facts and they have also supporting evidence. His first Law teacher was his wife Roxna Swamy who wrote his biography - 'Evolving with Subramanian Swamy a roller coaster ride'. A smart, intelligent man normally known to substantiate claims with proof, but deep within can cling to a charge even where it is unsubstantiated. Has a loose tongue, and is sadly a motor mouth. As he grows old, his criticism of his own party men including others not knowing Economics, and how things would be different, if he was made a Finance Minister is always mentioned by him in his interviews.

SP -

A professional politician by practice, has mastered the game over the years. He was the youngest CM in India at the age of 37 without any formal Godfather(at the background all know that Mr Yashwantrao Chavan was behind him). He was ICC Chairman, writer, Businessman who value Agriculture. He definitely would have aspired to be the PM, but could not; he was influential in having women in defense, when the cause of his oral cancel was detected to be his habit of chewing tobacca, he not only stopped that but banned it from the whole of India. For him there are no friends and enemies - very down to earth, but would stand up for what he want's - The first lot of three people who did not support Sonia Gandhi leading INC, and therefore formed NCP. The blasts, which left 357 people dead and 717 others injured, on a Black Friday (12th March 1993) in Bombay just two weeks after SP took charge as the CM and hardly a year after demolition of Babri Masjid. He foresaw the riots. He immediately held a live TV broadcast (doordarshan) and announced that 12 blasts had happened, the last one being at Masjid Bandar- a predominantly Muslim locality. He also stated that LTTE hand was suspected.The news did its job perfectly. The blasts could no longer be stereotyped as a Muslim action targeted against Hindus. - Justice Shrikrishna Commission, which later investigated the bombings, lauded Sharad Pawar for this lie. They even remarked- ‘That’s one bomb that saved so many lives.’Like a suspense thriller novel or a movie, everybody double-crossed everybody else in the recent Maharashtra elections. When the morning news papers read that the Shiv Sena, NCP, Congress Trio was to form the government - BJP had already took the oath and formed the government - SP was not to give up. Supreme Court opened on Sunday - asked them to prove majority. MLA's were taken to hotel in Delhi - They were all brought back and MLA's of all the three party was together untill majority was proved and the collision formed the government, but for him and his NCP.

Thanks to people like the 3's - Politics today is worthy of cinema, tutorial for English language and there are people out of the dynastic INC challenging the other wise majority government who has become autocratic, divisive and sham.

Wednesday, December 18, 2019

Dharma Vs. Karma


The word dharma is formed from the sanskrit root 'dhr', to hold, dharma is therefore that which holds a person or object and maintains it in existence, it is the law that governs its being. To live according to dharma is to be in consonance with the truth of things. A moral life, for a Hindu, is a life lived in accordance with his dharma, which in turn must be in conformity with the absolute truth that encompasses the universe.

"The fundamental difference between religion (dharma) and karma is that whilst dharma shows a way for people to live and conduct their lives with purpose, karma refers to the consequences of your actions resulting from the way people live that life."

"The term Dharma is defined in Mīmāṁsa as:—

Dharma is that which leads to the highest common good (śreyas) [and, is distinguished by Vedic injunctions - vidhi].

Dharma is “right living” defined by the practice of universal ethics and personal morals.

The Mahabharata defines Dharma:–

dhāraṇād dharma ityāhuḥ dharmo dhārayate prajāḥ |

ya syād dhāraṇa samyuktaḥ sa dharma iti niścayaḥ ||

The word Dharma is derived from dhāraṇa or sustenance; dharma sustains society. That which has the capacity to sustain is indeed dharma. (M.B. Karna Parva 69:58)

“Dharma” cannot be known through empirical means such as cognition. It can be known only either through intuition or through an impersonal source of knowledge.

The problem with relying on reason or intuition is that individuals will come to differing conclusions about what the ultimate nature of the “Common Good” is.

There are endless controversies on most if not all ethical issues by “experts” who take one side or the other.

The best and most universal source of Dharma therefore, would be an “impersonal” source such as the Vedas.

What is Dharma?

Dharma refers to Harmony, The Way, Righteousness, Compassion, Natural Law, Truth, Teachings, Tradition, Philosophy, Order, Universal, Flow, Religion, Wisdom, Divine Conformity, Cosmic Norm, Blueprint, Inherent Nature, Law of Being, and Duty.

The science of conduct, the systematized principles according to which one should act.

Ethical science is a relative science — relative to the individual and one's surroundings and circumstances.

The purpose of morality is to bring about happiness for the maximum number of people by creating harmony.

Harmony between individuals of a family, between families of a community, between communities that live together in a nation. Harmony between nations that make up humanity. Harmony between humankind and the environment and other creatures that share our earth. And harmony between earthlings and the inhabitants of other worlds.

Where there is harmony there is happiness, disharmony cause unhappiness.

The ultimate object of morality is to bring about universal happiness.

The underlying principle of Dharma is the recognition of the unity of the Self and the diversity of the not-self.

Examples of Dharma:-

Ijyayācarā damo’himsā dānam svādhyāya karma ca | Ayaṃ ca paramo dharmo yad yogena ātma darśanam || (Manu 2:7)

Altruism (ijyacara), control of mind, non-violence, charity, self-study, work, realisation of the Atman by means of Yoga — all these are Dharmas.

adrohaḥ sarvabhūteṣu karmaṇā manasā girā | anugrahaśca dānaṃ ca stāṃ dharma sanātanaḥ ||

The Eternal Duty (Sanātana Dharma) towards all creatures is the absence of malevolence towards them in thought, deed or word, and to practice compassion and generosity towards them. (MB Vana Parva 297;35)

satyam damas tapaḥ śaucaṁ santoṣaśca kṣamārjavam | jñānaṁ śamo dānaṁ eṣā dharmaḥ sanātana ||

Sanatana Dharma consists of truth, discipline, austerity, purity, contentment, forgiveness and honesty, knowledge, peacefulness and generosity. (Garuda Purana 1:213:24)"

"Duty is what should motivate everyone. Duty or Ethics is known as Dharma and is the way and the end in itself.

Is a person who does good and lives an ethical life for the sake of self-glorification and some future heavenly reward really virtuous? Or should virtue be an end in itself.

If you do good only through fear of hell then you are a fake and a fraud and merely suppressing and masking your inherent malevolent nature.

The Gita tells us never to be concerned for the fruit of action, but you should find your joy and purpose in the doing itself.

All philosophers have addressed this issue."

"Let us now understand the meaning of Gita in this new perspective. When our mind is focused on the results (of future), we can’t enjoy what we are doing (at present). You would have perhaps acquired more knowledge from the book, had you read it with joy instead of getting something out of it. In the same way, when you play tennis with your friend without bothering about winning or losing, you enjoy the game the most. If you are playing better tennis than your friend, you are anyway going to win with or without aiming for it. Even when you lose the game, you have still enjoyed the play.

When you stop thinking about the fruits of your action, and learn to just enjoy the action itself; you get a new meaning of your life. There is a paradigm shift in your life. Instead of looking others as your rival, you learn to see them as friends. You develop a sportsman spirit and you accept your victory or defeat in the same spirit. It does not matter to you if a hundred million people have already read ‘Angles and Demons’ as their enjoyment does not reduce your enjoyment? Your joy is coterminous with your action and you develop no attachment with your action.

It is thus evident that actions without aspiration of fruits are better than action done for achieving a goal. The more you perform such action, the better your life would be"

You participate in competition ,but the first serve the needy or you offer to God
Negates the karma

That is why we first offer to God as prasadam.

Thus:

Dharma and karma are Sanskrit concepts that have been codified through the practice of indigenous Indian religions. ... Dharma refers to one's lifelong duty whereas karma refers to someone's day to day actions and the negative or positive obligations these actions bring about

Karma is a concept of Hinduism which explains causality through a system where beneficial effects are derived from past beneficial actions and harmful effects from past harmful actions, creating a system of actions and reactions throughout a soul's (Atman's) reincarnated lives forming a cycle of rebirth.

Wednesday, December 11, 2019

The Legend of Khasak - O.V. Vijayan



The Legend of Khasak is a ballad of re-enactment. Thasarak as the Malayalam place name go, provides the interface, rest is no real life Eden. A short book with great deal of details, first published in Malayalam in 1969, as Khasakkinte Itihasam by O.V. Vijayan, with the English translation as well by him in 1994. Though late glad I got hold of it. Wondering if it has anything similar to 100 days of solitude?



The District Board has established a single teacher school in remote Khasak, in a an effort to give the local children access to basic education, and Ravi is to be the first teacher there. Ravi is the outsider in this place, but he easily fits in the scheme of things here. The smaller stories and individual fates are appealing and well blend into the whole. It also includes, Beliefs and superstitions that make sense in this small world, co-existence of religion, modern world intrigues with tradition, not involved around just a single character, but r

Vijayan carefully avoids presenting the book too closely as an educational journey but is very evocative, covering a great deal from various aspects of life in few pages, forward clearly say the English version cannot do full justice to the malayalam one, as there are limitations, but an interesting read indeed, especially considering the time it was written. Hence the normal saying - In Malayalam literature they say - there was a period before Khasak and after Khasak.

Angel by the River by Gus Speth : Environmental Issues + Job and Education today


What Gus Speth has pointed out is absolutely true - The root cause of all problems, including environmental, (and the solution lies in) cultivating compassion, empathy, cultural transformation, civic sense, etc. A change of mindset of people is the need of the hour.

James Gustave Speth an American environmental lawyer and advocate in Living on Earth – Gus Speth calls for a New Environmentalism. First aired on February 13, 2015. In conversation with host Steve Curwood, NRDC co-founder Gus Speth reflects on the environmental movement both as a previous ‘insider’ and now as a reformer. In his new memoir “Angels by the River” Gus Speth calls for deeper challenges to the economic status quo, and explores his life and career at the nexus of race, environment and politics.

“I used to think that top environmental problems were biodiversity loss, ecosystem collapse and climate change. I thought that thirty years of good science could address these problems. I was wrong. The top environmental problems are selfishness, greed and apathy, and to deal with these we need a cultural and spiritual transformation. And we scientists don’t know how to do that.”

Environmental system includes - strengthen economic, political and social security - which can be strengthened with strong laws, powerful system and ethics. This can happen with radical leadership. So it is no more confined to Air, Water, or Sound pollution. Need to save democracy, which have a huge say in the investments. Give priority to people and planet and not profit.


Some more interesting quotes from Gus Speth are:


This describes the plight of our society aptly, why Schools and colleges are no more important in India.... People need to follow and be Sadhus and Swami's or politics...well the crowd follow the leader right....

People with high mark take science, and go for B.Tech
Next Commerce, do MBA
Next take Arts do IAS
Just basic school be politicians and
those with no education becomes Sadhu and

Once in job the reporting is in reverse order: - Engineering graduates, report to MBA's, they work under IAS - all of whom are governed by the politicians; and everyone in turn go to the Sadhu's for blessings.


Once in job:

People leave in 6 months - Employers want at least 3 years retainer ship.

They must understand that the world of Business has seen 3 revolution:

Industrial revolution - Even if boss abused people stuck, boss was always right, Survival had to be taken care of - Our parents age
Information revolution - went to work for Standard of living, had options for better jobs - This included people of - Our age
Digital/Social revolution - Survival and Standard of life is taken care of - Today people look for quality of life, work place, job, environment, role, opportunity, learning and reward. - Since 2008

Tuesday, December 03, 2019

Shashi Tharoor tells #AsiaLitFest about the books that shaped his life



https://www.asialitfest.co.uk/post/shashi-tharoor-tells-asialitfest-about-the-books-that-shaped-his-life

Shashi Tharoor: Books That Shaped My Life- Tharoor was in conversation with journalist and author Shrabani Basu

The prominent Indian politician and bestselling author was discussing the books that have most influenced him in his life.

The Great Indian Novel first paragraph was read - and I did have that book with me - another connection - Inspired from the Grand Epic which has been around for more than 800 years – everything was into it – people, told and retold and included in it everything worth adding. At the same time it was a secular epic. Characters are human with lust, greed, ambition, envy and so on.

Took epic and retold as satiric novel – Ved Vyas dictates the novel to Ganesh – satirical tale with triumphs and failures.

Unofficial English teacher to many across the world, through his twitter - two words were discussed viz:

1) Floccinaucinihilipilification (noun) - First used to introduce the release of his new book - 'The Paradoxical PrimeMinister'

Pronounciation: floccī-naucī-nihilī-pilī-fication

Meaning: The action or habit of estimating something as worthless.

2) Hippopotomonstrosesquipedaliophobia (noun) - Used to justify the use of the above word.

Pronounciation: hip‧po‧po‧to‧mon‧stro‧ses‧qui‧pe‧dal‧i‧o‧pho‧bi‧a

Meaning: The fear of long words.


1) Heavy weather - 95 books by P.G. Wodehouse read all of them by 15- easier to choose an author than a book – Wodehouse – Left England as a young men – and therefore he reinvented England - subversion of language – classical illusion – fed into our subversive spirit – surprised lot of people that he had more followers than in India than UK. Represent so much of the joy language gave. Died in 1975 - Heavy weather has Absurd plot – prize pig known as empress which was logo of woodhouse society. Plotting incredible. As a kid ST read widely and indiscriminately, inconveniently fast. Reading was his education, entertainment and escape from suffering.

2) 100 days of solitude – Garcia – was famous in Latin America. It expands the realm of possible on what you can do with fiction. Experience that is lived by the character through a shuttle stretching of human imagination.

3) O.V. Vijayan – The Legends of Kasak. – Huge controversy of English version. Made living as political cartoonist as there was no money for Indian fiction writer. Book is subtly different – Young men going to obscure village where he is asked by govt. to set up one man school – It captures Kerala so well – where ideal India should be.

4) The discovery of India – Magisterial work, Philosophy, history, politics, history, culture, society, - remarkable work by a remarkable mind - with no reference but discussion with fellow jailers - Great pity people have forgotten Nehru – effective democratic politician, brilliant writer, influential person of 20th century – he wrote biography of Nehru – A wonder of such sharp insight – choices in context – presumptuous enough – train his mind to be like Nehru’s – Understand why people did what they do in the context of pressure and situation then. Not easy time but trying to be opposition – agree on the ground rule on how you disagree.

5) Arthashastra – 4th century B.C. – 2000 years old on state craft – humane work – good governance, justice, justification for governments rule to be welfare of people, - Neighbours enemy is friend – talk about human integrity – very sophisticated text – on spying, Artha is material success. The pursuit of four things of life – Dharma, Artha (Wealth), Kama (love, desire, sex); Moksha (salvation); - Penguine one is good. Notion of good governance are profound ideas.

If he could carry only One book and was left in a desert – Mahabharata - Unabridged thing is enormous – so many digression - 5 times the length of bible -

Why choose congress? Right path to put forward the liberal idea – going to congress means accepting the reality as it is. Party finds a tug of unity behind the family. Last 2 congress prime minister who ruled for 15 years were not congress. Leadership don’t monopolies the top position. Competence, skill, experience, are great strength. One party dominant thinking - Foreign policy – Tradition – part of culture to showcase to the world we are of one view opposition party shared this space but for first time now - Minister of state for home in previous govt. is now acting.

Irish Education effect? Convey ethical system, Jesuit good teacher. Epistemological lectures of the presence of God.

Too backlashes over globalization – economic – blue collar job’s migration; and cultural backlashes – intensified and raised in western country visible/audible minority. Placed a different premium on native-ism. David Goodheart – Brithish philosopher - Somewhere and Anywhere – Theresa Mais – if you think you are citizen of the world, you don’t know what citizenship is - Davos man - “Davos men” or “gold-collar workers.”

One favorite Character - Difficult to be both – narrator and character – Ved Vyas.

Asia House – Pluralism and diversity that makes literature interesting.

Inspiration – increasingly at night, was an early bird and now a night owl.

Depending on the mood – pluralism should be the favorite word. Make the world interesting place.

Literature and Politics both have human conditions. Should deal with universal principals Solutions – compatible fields to be in.

His reply to a student who asked him to give him a new word in view of his reputation as a fount of exotic vocabulary was - 'Read'.



Monday, December 02, 2019

Being respectful - Civility is the need of hour



What you want to be? Your actions determine it.

Be civil. Incivility is a bug and it is contagious. You can catch this anywhere - at home, around us. It takes our energy.

Looking to get ahead in your career? Start by being respectful to your coworkers, says leadership researcher Christine Porath. In this science-backed talk, she shares surprising insights about the costs of rudeness and shows how little acts of respect can boost your professional success -- and your company's bottom line.

https://www.ted.com/talks/christine_porath_why_being_respectful_to_your_coworkers_is_good_for_business?utm_source=linkedin.com&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=tedspread

Respect and result, is the key. Will help reduce stress. Help achieve goal.

Smile, care personally - even when you challenge.

Be Competent, Friendly and Smart.

What do people want most from their leader - being treated with respect. More important than appreciation and feedback.

Thank people, share credit, acknowledge others, listen attentively, humbly asking question, and smiling has an impact.

When you are withing 10 feet away from people smile and make eye contact; when you are withing 5 feet away, say hello.

Be Tough minded, but tender hearted. Make people feel valued. Be agile and mindful.

Tuesday, November 26, 2019

Nothing to Envy - Barbara Demick




Nothing to Envy follows the lives of six North Koreans who defect to South Korea beginning in the late 1990s over fifteen years—a chaotic period that saw the death of Kim Il-sung, the unchallenged rise to power of his son Kim Jong-il, and the devastation of a far-ranging famine that killed one-fifth of the population.

Taking us into a landscape most of us have never before seen, award-winning journalist Barbara Demick brings to life what it means to be living under the most repressive totalitarian regime today—an Orwellian world that is by choice not connected to the Internet, in which radio and television dials are welded to the one government station, and where displays of affection are punished; a police state where informants are rewarded and where an offhand remark can send a person to the gulag for life.

Demick takes us deep inside the country, beyond the reach of government censors. Through meticulous and sensitive reporting, we see her six subjects—average North Korean citizens—fall in love, raise families, nurture ambitions, and struggle for survival. One by one, we experience the moments when they realize that their government has betrayed them.

Nothing to Envy is a groundbreaking addition to the literature of totalitarianism and an eye-opening look at a closed world that is of increasing global importance.

Common Challenges for New Managers


Managing new leaders comes with a unique set of challenges. Even the most outstanding individual contributor can struggle as they unpack their new role and tackle their increased responsibilities. Leadership expert Sara Canaday shows how to identify the unique perspectives and challenges of your new managers, set the expectations for their transition, provide coaching and support, and cultivate the right conditions to help them succeed.

• 1. Know Who You Are Managing

Common challenges for new managers


1) they often struggle to balance and prioritize their workloads. They're tempted to do everything they did before they were new leaders, plus their new management duties. They are reluctant to delegate, they want everything to be right, so they try to do it all. That is a fast way for them to become frustrated, overworked, and exhausted.
2) new leaders may find it tough to set boundaries. This is an issue for managers because they're often subject-matter experts, but as a new leader, they cannot continue to be the go-to person for all problems that need troubleshooting. If they make themselves constantly available to answer every functional question, they can't focus on the leadership aspects of their new role. Boundary-setting may also be tough for new leaders who are friends with former peers, who are now direct reports. Pulling back to keep to keep those relationships at a more professional level can seem awkward, but it's important to maintain the objectivity of the position.
3) new leaders may not know how to shift from being a top performer to being able to inspire and motivate top performing teams. Getting results individually is one thing. Getting results with and through other people is a whole different skill set. New leaders may not realize the full importance of coaching and cultivating talent.

They might show signs of behavioral blind spots, areas where their intent doesn't match their impact. For instance, the leaders might think they're being decisive, but their team members might think they're being abrupt, or lets say they go out of their way to be seen as fair, but they end up looking wishy-washy

Take the personalized approach, and your new leaders will quickly become more self-sufficient as managers.


• 2. Set the Expectations

Transition strategy

Five topics you can use as part of your strategy discussions with your new leaders.

1) set the expectations for performance. They'll need to have a solid grasp of the key deliverables and metrics expected from their new teams, the ins and outs of the operations, and the issues surrounding talent management. This is particularly important if new leaders have been promoted from within their teams. They might be used to viewing all those factors from an individual standpoint, but they'll need to step outside of that silo. You'll also want to share with them a clear picture of their targeted goals, how they and their teams will be evaluated.
2) make sure they understand the broader business perspective. Give your new leaders the context to mentally link their team's goals with the overall objectives of the department or the company. They might have a history of being high performers, but they may not immediately see the bigger picture, like how the organization fits into the industry relative to its competitors, or why changing customer demand suddenly requires a new direction. If you can help them to view their leadership roles with a wide-angled lens, they will be more flexible and better prepared to deal with whatever comes their way.
3) ask them to define an action plan for the next three to six months. Talk about their specific plans moving forward to accomplish their goals. These include not only steps to produce actual deliverables, but also ways to advance their leadership skills. Push them to be ambitious, but make sure they're realistic. This would be a great opportunity to show them the value of delegating
4) discuss the best ways for them to prioritize their time. New leaders are probably skilled at completing their own daily assignments, but leadership throws much more complexity into the mix. They need to make sure that they schedule time to accomplish their expanded role within the organization. Their immediate duties have shifted to include more strategic priorities, like building strong relationships and trust with team members, coaching and counseling their direct reports, communicating with peers across lines of business, and thinking more broadly rather than just putting out daily fires.
5) ask the new leaders what they need to make their transitions easier. It's also important to make sure they have resources they can tap into other than you.

Communication guidelines

Need consistent communication. Needs to have the right information at the right time.

First, develop guidelines for their communication with you. What information do you want them to report back to you? Whatever it is, be clear about which updates you want and how often and in what format.
Second, establish expectations for how new leaders will communicate with their own team.
Third, clarify the tone new leaders should use for communication. As they jump into manage their teams they'll probably feel a bit of presser to drive performance, make the quotas, exceed projections.

You're goal is to convey the long-term value in developing real connections with the people that report to them. When they know them and inspire them they can directly influence team performance and building up the bottom line.

• 3. Provide the Appropriate Support

Coaching and development
Be respectful. Coach rather than criticize. Influence rather than inform. Develop rather than direct.
First, observe their leadership skills in action.
Second, schedule periodic one-on-one meetings to discuss their roles. Focus on transition, provide feedback on transition, discuss challenges they might have
Finally, provide them with the tools they need to succeed.

Modeling behavior
Lead by example
Learn much more from seeing how you handle those kinds of situations. Managers who fail to recognize the impact of their own behaviors and the implications of their daily decisions could be creating a problem. Indirect coaching – incredibly powerful
• Do you treat others with respect regardless of their roles or experience level?
• Do you seek out others' feedback and perspective?
• How do you handle difficult conversations and conflicts?
• Do you share credit with others after a team success?

Aligns with your words and your behaviors.
- Do you project confidence in how you speak, dress, and engage with others?
- Do you remain calm and composed in a crisis or when challenged?
- Are you patient and understanding when things don't go as planned?
- Are you perceived by others as influential, as a thought leader?
- Finally, analyze the actual impact of your leadership. Are you having the intended affect on the people you lead? That's the ultimate test.

Your new leaders will be able to read your results a mile away.
* Do the people on your team feel inspired, encouraged, and motivated?
* Do they feel comfortable approaching you?
* Do they feel empowered and valued?
* Do your employees trust and respect you?

Make it a priority to really get to know your new leaders. Building those relationships is the key. That's how you can determine the best way to leverage their strengths and provide targeted development.

Monday, November 18, 2019

The Old Man and The Sea - Ernest Hemingway & Amaram


A couple of years before my sister gifted me this book on my Birthday. Read it, unmoved, in one sitting - as it was a slim novella of 127 pages. But, yes, did wonder - what was in it for being cited by the Nobel Committee as contributing to their awarding of the Nobel Prize in Literature to Ernest Hemingway in 1954 and for being awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction, in 1953?

At this juncture, cannot get this book out of my head. Simple yet profound. At the outset it is a tale of an old Cuban fisherman Santigao who catches an enormous fish, only to lose it. Hemingway's novella shows how death can invigorate life, how killing and death can bring a man to an understanding of his own mortality -- and his own power to overcome it. The old man dreams his usual dream of lions at play on the beaches of Africa.

Some thoughts:

“But man is not made for defeat," he said. "A man can be destroyed but not defeated.”

“Now is no time to think of what you do not have.
Think of what you can do with that there is”

"And what beat you, the thought"

With 84 days of no success finally Santiago catches a big fist who carries him into the sea. As Santiago sails on with the fish, the marlin’s blood leaves a trail in the water and attracts sharks. Santiago’s continued fight against the scavengers is useless. They devour the marlin’s precious meat, leaving only skeleton, head, and tail. Santiago chastises himself for going “out too far,” and for sacrificing his great and worthy opponent. He arrives home before daybreak, stumbles back to his shack, and sleeps very deeply.

This thought, did not before - but today takes me to the move Amaram. Which is also a story of a fisherman Achootty - but has another story line underneath, which was sentimental and makes you cry. With big dreams and big sacrifice for daughter, who marries a local fisherman, Achooty is misunderstood and doubted to have killed his son-in-law. He brings his SIL back and Achootty takes his boat and ventures into the sea, saying that is the only thing which has loved him unconditionally.

Saturday, November 16, 2019

Space To Achieve Endless Possibilites



Space is beautiful! Space is Needed! Space is Possibilities! Space is Powerful! Space is meaningful!

Space is for everyone! Space is to be given! Space is to be respected! Space is your friend!

It's there.

The possibilities are endless.

There are times when an abundance of space is by accident or unintentional or done for convenience or done for money or time constraints.

But that doesn't mean that it is wasted space. An abundance of empty space can be used to create a sense of calm, peace, inaction, or stillness. It can be cold like snow or marble, or creamy like milk. An abundance of empty space can also imply wealth or luxury. Space can also be clean, sacred, or infinite.

And on the other hand, too much space can be lonely or imply poverty, theft, or someone or something lost or missing. There is a lot of meanings that space can take on.

There are different kinds of space, most namely, passive and active space.

A simple example - how comfortable would you be riding or driving, when there is someone sticking onto you?

Friday, November 15, 2019

Nostalgic Memories - Children's day & Handwriting



This Children's day - we get back to the memory lane - at a point when CBSE has removed the Father of nation reference about Gandhiji from text books in schools, and Sixty BJP MPs have requested PM Narendra Modi to designate December 26th as Children's day - Instead of Nov. 14th being Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru's birthday. God Bless India.
The story dates back to one VM Kulkarni who was a United Nations Social Welfare Fellow who was carrying out a study on the rehabilitation of children who had been victims of crimes in the UK. He realised that the republic of India(India) has no such mechanism to take of underprivileged children. He got inspired by a fact that in England, June 19, Queen Elizabeth II’s birthday, is observed as Flag Day to raise money for Save the Child Fund and suggested that Jawaharlal Nehru’s birthday too, be observed as Flag Day to raise money. An international fair was organised by the Indian Council for Child Welfare (ICCW) in 1951 and it was in 1951 that the day started being observed as Children’s Day. So not only the first Children’s Day was celebrated on 14th November when Pandit Nehru was alive, it was celebrated after he agreed to the idea.

Nostalgic Memories:

Annual vacations travelling in train with family, friends and cousins, Independence day for mother and fun to be with father – getting in and out at every station. Window view worth fighting for though we preferred upper berth, counting the compartments in the running train, checking weight at railway platform to read the details behind the measurement ticket with all cousins in grandparents’ house, swimming, swinging, plucking mangoes and jackfruits, playing cricket and pranks in ponds and paddy fields, how I wish I have those days again. We would put arms in our shirt and tell people we lost our arms, we swallowed a fruit seed and would be scared to death if a tree would grow in tummy and come out of our mouth, we tried to balance the switch between on and off, we would try to mix coins in carom board, chess, snake and ladder, luddo and cards, when we knew we were going to lose and start again, licking the icecream lid and wishing it never got over and snatching from others, trying to run faster than the moon or our own shadow, going round and round singing: “Ring-a-ring-a-rosies, A pocket full of posies, A tissue, a tissue, We all fall down”

Enjoyed going to 'Thabela' (Dairy farm) and seeing lines of buffalos, and bringing home fresh milk daily. Writing letters on postcards, inlands were interesting. There were phones only in one house somewhere around the corner, and we used to go to somebody's house and watch Chitrahar or P.T. Usha running for Olympics. In case there was something urgent - we used to send telegram. At times there were movies shown in a big white screen or by taking VCR/VCP on rent. We used to divide and share the cost of watching movie.

Ah! Those where the days when for life's simple choices we would just toss a coin and decide with heads/tails and for most complex choices had the simple solutions of Akkad Bakkad Bambey Bo, Asee nabe pure sau, Sau se nikla raja chor pakadke bhaga!

Other Competitions were:

Handwriting Olympiad

Here’s your chance to go back to the memory lane-Back to school. Write the below story (The Thirsty Crow) in a paper with pencil and share a picture with us. The best handwriting gets the reward.

Amazing Calligraphy by Mili - It was both interesting and challenging to write with pencil.



What Does Your Handwriting Say About You?

Back to School:

To get dressed in school uniform, with special award to the class (team) picture.

Monday, November 11, 2019

Retail Industry - The Changing Phases


Not long ago, Malls were the modern temples, on the verge of replacing the unorganized retail sectors like the 'kirana' stores, door to door sellers and general stores but also the organised retailers like the hypermarkets, supermarkets and specialty stores. Today, the tug of war is in between both the organised and unorganized put together called the offline market and the online market place that is ready & already have penetrated. We not only have the big sellers like Amazon and Flip-kart, but also many householders turning online marketers, with various modes of sales, including whatsapp.

Like the Telecom sector, Predatory pricing and Deep Discounting has been a norm in FMCG sectors in the past few years. Idea Cellular completed its merger with Vodafone India on 31 August 2018 and thereby became largest telecom company in terms of subscribers and revenue, surpassing Airtel, competing with Jio. The once market leader BSNL has almost become extinct. Business models both in Telecom and FMCG is such that competition is being eliminated. In May 2018, Walmart's largest investment in history was announced with Flipkart in India. Soon after Amazon-Samara Capital had a joint bid to acquire Aditya Birla Retail Ltd that owned 'More' super market' that was ventured in 2007 with the acquisition of Trinethra Super Retail. There were violations to the revised FDI policies, finally Competition Commission of India approved the bid; indicating another mockery of a policy in day light. One interesting point that fascinated me, was both sectors had key industrial player the Birla's and the Ambani's.

Hope our Commerce and Industry minister Piyush Goyal's partnership and working with Current United States Trade Representative, Ambassador Robert Lighthizer bring positive results, given the rift and conflicts today, inspite of the assurance of running e-commerce as an agnostic marketplace, wherein all suppliers get equal opportunity to offer their products and buyers have a choice to buy certain or any products on that marketplace.
There were some complaints about circumvention of the e-commerce policy and multi-brand retail laws, as the Offline market is trying to survive by approaching the customers, brands & the Government through various legitimate forms of protests with the help of associations, meetings. Malls, the modern temples are loosing prominence. Though we do find crowd there, fifty percent of them are window shopping, avoiding the hassles of transportation.

India one of the top three markets in the world has 1.3 billion people and an economy approaching $3 trillion, yet it's eCommerce business is less than 3%. It’s evident that data science and artificial intelligence are the key for the e-commerce industry. Amazon launched robots developed by a US firm known as Kiva Systems, in its warehouses 5 years back in 2014 and later on funded and acquired this company. They further named it as Amazon Robotics. These robots do most of the tasks, from sorting to picking and stacking. Amazon’s drone delivery program, would be delivering packages to customers. For now, India has a huge demand, for people delivering goods, but this should enter India too soon. Flipkart employed little orange cuboids as robots and call them bots or perhaps automated guided vehicles (AGVs), those transfer products within a fenced location bereft of humans. These robots are carrying anything with them, from publications to appliances to mobile phones. Indian e-commerce majors are engrossing the benefits of AI right from customer segregation, sales, and delivery to after-sales and further recommending products to the customers.


This is a period of critical change, the pace and magnitude of our changes are critical to the future as we adapt to an environment that is changing more quickly all the time. As we change, the way we buy, how we work and what we do, it is critical and the need of the hour is to ensure that the automation and ease of operation is spread across all the sectors, and everyone reap the benefit of mechanization. To be precise, it is saddening to see laborer’s still carrying heavy loads for mere wages in construction, farming and some mechanical industries. Hope this sales war boost the economy - and the offline marketers and even other sectors are able to cope up by undoing and redoing to cope up with time.

Thursday, November 07, 2019

Eden Walk - Paul Salopek - As I miss our walk



Like others with Paul Salopek's Eden Walk I am pleased to be "reminded that as human beings our journey on Earth is a migration we begin in birth and end in death. The path we take toward our end is one that seems to pull us back to where we started. Along the way, what we learn, what we experience, and what we accomplish all bring us to that place deep inside where we connect with each other. Most of the time I have avoided connecting—fear and other insecurities have been huge obstacles. I am still learning to relish and rely upon that connection."

Every hundred miles Paul Salopek pauses to record the landscape and a person he meets, assembling a global snapshot of humankind. It's so wonderful to read someone who is on a storytelling odyssey across the world in the footsteps of our human forebears. You can read him at nationalgeographic.org - https://www.nationalgeographic.org/projects/out-of-eden-walk/#section-0
And a brief summary is https://www.newyorker.com/news/out-of-eden/a-twenty-four-thousand-mile-walk-across-human-history

He writes: "Six years into trek, two broad impressions have emerged, at boot level, of this vast world.

First: We’re living in a golden age of human migration.

The second change I sense underfoot.

It is like a tectonic shift—a new geological weight over the horizon that tilts the surface of the planet east.

This is when we have Walks inspiring many to keep on ‘stepping’, as well as to continue to look after physical and mental wellbeing.- interesting ones in office as well - 31 days, 111 teams, 112 million steps, 50,000 miles! and I had some crazy thoughts; running in my head - I got to read about Paul Salopek - Thanks to Sony George for introducing Paul to me. During the walk here an individual who had the highest individual score walked over a phenomenal 1.8 million steps!



The book "Around the world in 80 days" read during school days, made me think it was possible to travel around the world, and was fascinated to learn about day light saving, and how it would work with different timings and climate around. But Walking around the world, and writing it, with such simple words, is really encouraging and enriching.

Hats off to you Paul Salopek...May your tribe increase. Best wishes!

Friday, November 01, 2019

Ente Keralam - Ethra Manoharam


Winston Churchill once said, "The further back you can look, the further forward you are likely to see." Churchill, a student of history, understood that studying the past allows one an educated glimpse into the uncertain future. Celebrating the Kerala Piravi was a time to cogitate if the land of Malabar arose, as a result of Parashuram throwing his axe, why and how did Onam celebration start? On Onam day, we welcome Mahabhali; who was a contemporary ruler during the time of Vamana born before Parashuram in the 8th Canto of Srimad Bhagvatam; and from Dhasavatharam. Possible there could be two theories, first Vamana submerged the land with Mahabali and Parasurama reclaimed the land, second Vamana / Mahabali event occurred near Narmada river, the descendants of Parasurama when they migrated carried the story over to new land reclaimed. According to this version, Thrikkakara temple was consecrated, after a bird sang the story of Mahabali/ Vamana. Kerala was, is and will continue to be an ecologically sensitive area, along with being the doorway to India for varied cultures and races embracing one and all.

It is believed that on the destruction of the First Temple in the Siege of Jerusalem of 587 BCE, some Jewish exiles came to India, they were from King Soloman's time, even before Christ was born. Thomas the Apostle is believed to have brought Christianity to India, in 52 AD; some believe it to be 6th century AD even. Kodungaloor houses the first Muslim mosque in India believed to be build around 629 AD by Cheraman Perumaal, a Hindu king who accepted Islam. Adi Shankaracharya who consolidated the doctrine of Advaita Vedanta is from Kalady in Kerala, the earlier kingdom of Cochin was the only kingdom in South Asia to be a protectorate of China. Buddhists, Arabs, Romans, Portuguese, Dutch and even the British have walked through Muziris, who has stood witness to varied civilisations and wars by being ancient world's greatest trading centre in the East. Trading in everything from spices to precious stones with the Greeks, Romans and the rest of the world. At the time of Independence of India, Maharaja Chithirai Thirunal of Travancore and his Dewan C. P. Ramaswami Iyer toyed with the idea of Travancore as an ­independent nation. on July 25, someone had assaulted Iyer with a knife, and on July 30 the Maharaja informed Mountbatten, the last British viceroy, that he would sign the instrument of accession to India. Kerala Varma Thampuran popularly known as Aikya Keralam Thampuran mooted the idea of a unified Kerala state in India for the Malayalam speaking population and stood for the merging of British Malabar, Cochin and Travancore. Fukyali Kerala (meaning united Kerala), was a popular movement, for the formation of the State of Kerala. On 1 July 1949, Travancore and Cochin merged, Travancore-Cochin State came into existence and Darsanakalanidhi Parikshith Thampuran was the last official ruler of the Cochin princely state. Malabar derived from the Malayalam word "Mala-Baram" (hill-slop or side of hill), earlier refeed to India's Southwest cost from Goa to Kanyakumari; but British Malabar was confined to the present North of Kerala, with minor differences. On 1st Nov. 1956, Kerala Varma Thampuran's dream was fulfilled, these three states were unified and finally the present day Kerala was formed.

Kerala has been, and will be always unique, showing this uniqueness in all spheres, whether it be in politics, culture, social achievements, quality of living, tourism, religious harmony, electoral franchise so on, and so forth. People here wish to be away from main stream pandemonium and wish to be cocooned in their south west India coastal comfy zone, flashy homes earned by sheer individual hard work at home or outside Kerala. Sipping a peg in evening and indulging in conversations, looking mainly on local visual media evening debates and aggressively posting all sorts of comments in social media as well! The greatest ever uniqueness was in 1959, when Kerala elected a communist government through ballotbox, and elsewhere communists came to power through gun barrel. It is fascinating to see Malayalees from rest of India visiting Kerala, more frequently these days, to taste good beef to their fill which makes Kerala the state still enjoying the freedom to eat. How can democracy be justified, when there is a restriction on what one should eat, press has been made parochial. The election results, made us wonder if South will always remain a separate kingdom. When rest of India voted for and arrived at a singularly contentious political party, here it was different; to the extend that the attitude towards the winning party was of anger, sometimes violent dissensus.

Most of food common in rest of India is not popular here especially those made of wheat, festivals like Holi and Diwali are not enthusiastically celebrated in this part of globe though at Trivandrum and Palakkad there is a bit part of national festivity due to the presence of Tamil community. Kerala has her Onam which is celebrated by all irrespective of caste, creed or religion, wherein is her beauty. She has her Kathakali a 400 year old, classical dance form combining facets of ballet, opera, mosque and pantomime explicating events and stories from the Indian epics and puranas, with an unparalled array of colour, music, drama and dance. It is accompanied by facial expressions and sophisticated sign languages, and Mohiniyattam literally interpreted as the dance of Mohini, the celestial enchantress of Hindu mythology noted for its graceful and sensuous movements with no tense footwork, reminds one of the gentle swaying of the green paddy fields and coconut fronds that dot the length and breadth of Kerala. There are many other unique and special art forms too. She has her unique place in sports as well. A race, which teaches a valid management lesson, loved by all is the boat race of Vellam Kalli - filled with songs, rhythm and energy. She would have given maximum number of nurses to the world; for fun, it is said, even if you go to moon, you will find 'Nair's' (The term Nayar is believed to be derived from the word ‘Nayak’ which means a leader of people and is, therefore, allied to the Dravidians term Naicker of Naidu. Some say the word is derived from the term Naga, as the worship of snake has been a characteristic of the community.) tea shop. One of my friends said, if a dog is born, it should be in US, for they are loved so much. So are elephant's in Kerala.



It is the state animal of Kerala and is featured on the emblem of the Government of Kerala. Thrissur being the cultural capital of India, Thrissur Pooram, is an especial events full of elephants. There are very few places in the world as beautiful as Alappuzha, the Venice of the East. Every district here has something special, few being Kottayam the land of 3L's - Latex, Letters and Lakes; wandering through Idukky and Wayanad gives you a feeling of eternal bliss, mesmerizing mother nature, hill stations without railways.

She lets you be you, let us allow her to be her. Let us not destroy the symbolic Chinese fishing nets, her natural beauty, or make Hadiya's out of Akhila's ; let us stop her people including couple and children joining Islamic State, Keep her clean with proper waste management system, complete her development projects on time rather than taking ages and becoming outdated, above all have worthy roads and not repair them when someone meets with an accident. Unfortunately what we have is a vision-less leadership, toothless-law and senseless-people who show no prick of conscience in dumping waste at public places and destroying public property..!! At times wonder where God's own country is heading to?


Being one of her, there is so much more that could be written on Kerala, there would be many with different views, but for me, God's own country,' Ente Keralam' is always 'Manoharam'. My enchanting Kerala, Thank you for all that you have given me.