Archive for December, 2009

Happy New Year 2010

Thursday, December 31st, 2009

Before I start my rambling today, let me wish everyone a Happy New Year. May you all taste all the success you have been working and/or hoping for.

As the clock ticks its way to 00:00 hours, the whole world seems to be in a frenzy to welcome the new year 2010 and bid adieu to 2009. Such occasions make me wonder: will the coming dawn be really any different from what we had today?

As far as I can see, there will be nothing remarkably new except the Calendars hung at different locations in our homes and offices. The sun rising will be same old sun, the nature of tasks to be accomplished in the office or at home will remain the same, as will everything else.

On the other hand we can’t deny that the morning of the 1st of January does seem different than 364 or so other mornings. So what makes it different?

IMHO, it is a purely psychological thing. We, the humans as a collective, choose to believe that the morning of 1st of January is something special, more enjoyable and fresher than all the mornings we experienced during the year, and as a result of this choice the morning does appear to be different than the hundreds of other mornings we saw during the passing year.

This fact demonstrates a tremendously significant truth in our lives: things are as we choose to perceive them.

Just think about the statement for a moment. Isn’t it true that the whole world is relatively happier on 31st of December and the 1st of January every year? It is easy to see or demonstrate that these days have nothing special about them to make the world happier; it is just that the people choose to be happier on these days. Probably one of the greatest truths in human life can be stated in simple terms:

We are miserable or happy because we choose to be so!!!

It all boils down to our own choices we make consciously or subconsciously, doesn’t it?

The cricket match at Delhi abandoned, but why?

Sunday, December 27th, 2009

Dangerous, under-prepared, unplayable and bad pitch is the answer as all of us know. The fact that it happened in the national capital, New Delhi, which is preparing itself for a major sports event in the near future makes it all the more reprehensible.

The question to be asked is why is such a pitch offered for play at all? Is it callousness on the part of the people responsible, or is it their ineptitude? Do the curator and his team know how to prepare a cricket pitch at all, or have they been appointed for the job on the basis of their reach within the corridors of power?

The incidence is just a little symptom of the rot in the system. Shall we see the guilty being punished, or shall we all be treated with the usual platitudes and promises of action to set the things right?

Sri Lankans should have walked out much before when they eventually did as they were getting the punishment for incompetence and callousness of someone else.

By the way, did any Indian player, or offical, think of complaining about the pitch or stopping the game before the Sri Lankans?

Coming Back

Saturday, December 26th, 2009

Sigh….

How time flies; my first post was published more than a year ago, and the second one is germinating right now.

I do wonder many a times: has the passing of time actually accelerated, or is it only the psychological time which has? I suspect it is the latter. I think this feeling of accelerated time is due to the fact that our time, if you think of it as some sort of container, has become too full of things to do. We hardly have any free time. It is really unfortunate in the extreme because “time” is only the only true wealth for us. And why wealth, “time” is actually the life itself. What do we mean when we say that a person lived for 80 years? Don’t we mean he had 80 years’ time at his disposal?

It truly saddens me to see what we  do with this time or life we have.

Anyway, enough of this episode of rambling. I was reminded of this blog by my closest friend Yogesh. Yesterday he told me that he was thinking of starting his own blog, and naturally I agreed with him that it was a pretty good idea. Each one of us has many ideas to express. We do express them, but most of us do it in the real world with real vocal words which leave no footprint on the sands of time. We should try to do it in the virtual world of the internet. Ain’t it funny that what you do in the real world becomes virtual or non-existent the very next moment after you do it, and what you do in the virtual world might keep existing even after you are no more on this earth? LOL.

I think this time I will surely succeed in immortalizing some of my memories.