Saturday, July 19, 2008

Whats in the url?

What is life? What are we here for? Why do we exist? Is there a bigger scheme of things?

Sometimes I feel may be I am a little too young to think about stuff like this. But I cannot keep myself from thinking about it cuz it is just far too interesting a topic to ignore or shy away from. It is almost a rhetoric that keeps running through my head. It am told that great philosophers of the world have spent entire lives thinking about this, effectively lives wasted. Lives wasted? I disagree. It was their goal in life to try to understand the meaning of life. They did try to understand the meaning of life, the best way they knew how to. They, I believe, have achieved more than what most people do.

It is interesting isn't it..... that you think best when you converse, converse either with yourself or with others. I wonder why that happens. I feel that it has something to do with "living in the now". the concept of ridding your mind of thoughts that are irrelevant to the current, of the now, where the mind is in a state of absolute consciousness, with the mind active, full of thought of nothing but the current moment, "the now" - source : what little I understood of the first few pages of "The power of now" by Eckhart Tolle.

Going back to where we started: Life! Life is that energy that distinguishes a carcass from a living being. Now what sort of energy is that? It beats me! But it sure is intriguing.

The Gita says, just like many other religions suggest, that there exists a certain phenomenon (I can’t find the right word) within us called the soul. Now is this soul that energy? The Gita says so. The Gita calls it the Jeevathma. This Jeevathma is described as the light within us. It is common knowledge that many religions/cultures associate light as the symbol of purity and energy. The Gita also explains the Jeevathma as a drop of the ocean Paramathma. Somehow, this makes profound sense to me. I associate with it in a way that I feel comfortable with and it makes sense to me.

There is energy all around us. There are several kinds of energy, Gravitational, Nuclear, electromagnetic, etc. The Unified Field Theory, though not complete yet, suggests that there must exist a certain rule of Physics that unifies all of the phenomena that happen in the universe, so as to imply that all these energies are merely different forms of the same energy. It is the same energy that flows through our body; the same energy that makes us think, through neurological electrical signals/pulses; the same energy that makes the heart beat; the same energy that provides us with motor skills. This is pretty much the same energy that is all around us. Now, does it not make sense that this energy, the soul or the Jeevathma is but a part of the energy that is all around us.

This energy that is around us is referred to as Paramathma in the Gita. Effectively, it makes sense that the Jeevathma is a drop of the ocean, Paramthma. It also makes sense that when a living entity dies, the energy (Jeevathma) within the body that has hitherto kept it alive escapes the confines of the body and becomes indistinguishable from the rest of the energy around us (Paramathma). “The soul leaves the body of the dead and becomes one with God”. Familiar concept isn’t it! So what I am ultimately arriving at is that God is energy and vice versa.

A parallel school of thought: It is common belief that matter and energy are two totally different things. This, despite Einstein’s famous equation, E=mc2. The fact that one is can transform into the other suggests that they are both different forms of the same thing. So to say, that energy and matter are the same and as established earlier, energy is God. Therefore, so is all matter. We are therefore, in effect, surrounded by God.

“God is on earth.”

- P. V. Ashwin

www.godsonearth-peevs.blogspot.com

Thursday, May 8, 2008

People and Me!

My world revolves around me as much as it revolves around the people around me. In fact, my world revolves as much as their worlds revolve around me.

Need I say more? Well, I am an extrovert!

Hot Young Blood, they'd say!

I am all of a sudden filled with a sudden anger for something that I admired, adored and worshiped only a few months ago!

Every company works within a certain system that it designs for itself. Here is a company that has its foundations set firmly on a base of hypocrisy; a company that strongly believes that one can make ends meet by merely pressurizing it's workforce, in particular, the executives; a company that states that all systems must be made man-independent when "percolating pressure" is the motto for the day; a company that bewilders its employees as to how it managed to credit itself with a Deming Award with a supplier base so incapable; a company that brands its executives incapable of performance when actually it is the company that is incapable of finding adequate resources that enable commendable performance; a company that supports its shop floor operators no end; a company that does so not in altruistic motives but with a motive to hold a firm grip over the activities of its worker union; a company that achieves this at the cost of the shop floor executives; a company that has a zillion schemes for welfare of operators; a company that seems to assume that workers and executives are motivated by the same scheme of thought; a company that seems to have no means to recognize talent and appreciate a hard day's work; a company that fails to see that greener pastures are available to its employees; a company that expects its executives to work as bonded labourers do; a company that has excelled in the art of powerpoint presentations; a company that seems to recognize the talent in people that involves the showcasing of illusionary talents; a company that i find myself fondly thinking as one that will be a shady haze of the past in less than a month's time, at least as far as I am concerned.

As for the people who intend calling it their livelihood, my message to you... GET A LIFE!

Sunday, April 27, 2008

TADA

"The machine that you sit on tells the rest of the world where you stand!" - Harley Davidson - Live by it!

Day started early at 5.30 AM. Got ready for what was an absolutely fantabulous day! Rode outta home at 6.45AM and met the guys, Arul and AT. Surprisingly, they were on time! Ah! What a pleasant surprise!

Here is what is getting off on the wrong foot means... Picked up food at a small road side hotel. While heading back to the bike, I twisted my ankle when I got off the pedestrian platform. Twisted pretty bad! And, it wasn't gonna subside for the rest of the trip!

Decided to put the bad stuff behind us and took off on our two wheeled macho machines! Mr. Sun was surprisingly nice to us, blessing us with tender warmth, when we were expecting the scorcher of the mid - April sun! Touched a 113kmph with pillion. some pics to start off with!



NH5 is one helluva ride! Took the left turn after Gummidipoondi towards Varadiah Palam (pronounced as Varadayyah). After this little village, over a bridge ( barely one) took another left towards Ubbalamadugu falls (a.k.a. TADA FALLS) . I must say that the roods upto this point were absolutely spectacular! (Why can't L&T lay all Indian Roads!?!?!?) After the 70Km to Tada and the 10 Km to Varadaiah Palam, we rode another 2-3Km to reach our destination.

It is this last leg of the ride that is so torturous that you wonder if it is even worth getting there! (and, I am not too sure if ma babe was made to take that kinda beating). There was literally no road! A pathway for vehicles maybe, no road! A pathway that alternated between stretches of large rocks the size of footballs and stretches of beach sand. This I presume is their way of preserving the pristine untouched nature of the place!


So we finally get there after putting are machines to the miseries of wicked ideas of unkept pathways (NOT ROADS!). Parked our bike at the Parking Lot, the farthest point upto which you can take your motor vehicle to. Photo Session!



Arul had done some homework before we left... He learnt from wikimapia and some other blogs of the distances between base camps and the way to the falls! Though it came in handy for a while, we didn't know which way to go beyond a certain point. Luckily there was this other group that called Ubbalamadugu Falls a frequent haunt. We simply followed them through for the rest of the distance.

From the parking lot, we walked some 100 odd metres and got to Base Camp 1. The fastest leg of the trek! With no patience for a break, we kept moving on when most would've stopped to relax after the long ride. Next was 1.5 Km walk through a reasonably defined pathway to the Sivalayam Temple, Base Camp 2. No stop here either! We were told to rest here and muster up as much strength as possible for what was to come. The arrogant trio paid no heed to no warning! Kept moving and in the process, overtaking a big bunch of fellow trekkers to get some sorta weird undisclosed "kick" by getting ahead of them!

Little did we know what we were to expect beyond the next hedge. To start off with, some reasonably formidable verticals that we scaled easily, thanks to some intelligent guy who had left this nice branch of a tree that was easy to climb!



Needless to say, we were really proud of ourselves for getting over that one! We thought that the worst was behind us. Boy, were we wrong! Less than 100 m down, we encountered this 35 foot vertical. No lousy branch around this time. No branch could help scale a 35 foot wall. It was upto our clad feet and naked hands to carry us the distance and it was particularly difficult for me with the twisted ankle. This leg of the trek could easily be called our attempt at free climbing and it sure was intimidating, atleast to the extent of making us forget to take a pic of the vertical before going up. But we did get a shot of the view after going up. Here it is.


This picture doesn't really give you a perspective of the height that we are talking of!









Here is one that does!





Once over this cliff and a 100 m walk, we came to this lake/pond that was bound on 3 sides by vertical mountain faces 80 feet tall. The catch is, we had to swim a 100 m to the waterfall and I was the best swimmer amongst the 3 of us. Needless to mention that I could well compete for the world's worst swimmer!

Luckily, the group that had come immediately after us knew of this and brought inflatable rubber tubes to get to the waterfall! They generously lent the tube to AT and me. We swam the 100 m only to see this little trickle of water falling from a height of a mere 10 feet that was supposedly christened "Ubbalamadugu Falls". Apparently, there was supposed to be another one next to the one that we saw, falling from a height of 80 feet. Summer had dried up the big guy!

The backdrop in these two pictures shows the little pond that I have mentioned above.



Left is a picture that I really like for the expression on Arul's face. Boy what comics we are!

We had our brunch immediately after this, the stuff that we had bought before I twisted my ankle. The Sambhar packet had leaked ruining my backpack and making the most of the remaining food inedible. The Coconut Chutney had gone sour and so had Arul's milk for his cornflakes (yeah, Arul brought cornflakes for the trip!). We ate the pongal and the vada that was untouched by the rotten side-dishes and satisfied our burning hunger the best we could.

Scaling up these verticals is a lot easier than climbing down one of them, just take my word for it! Luckily we found another way that was easier than the one that we took to climb up. Easy, but not easy enough. At one particular boulder, the toe end of my right shoe got stuck in a crevice and tore away, not entirely, but just flapping below the rest of the shoe. Now I had one leg with a torn shoe and another with a twisted ankle!

Ok, I forgot to mention that the initial pathway from the parking lot is continuously intercepted by the stream of water from the Falls. Decided to take another dip. AT was the first to leave the water here cuz he was feeling very conscious of himself as he was being checked out by a bunch of drunk kids (apparently software engineers, the incredibly local dirty cheary kind :P). I was next Arul wanted to linger around for a little longer. It just so happens that after the two of us got out, the little stretch of stream became heavily populated by fishes, fishes that love Arul so much that they decided to nibble up a piece of him. Oh what a sight that was!

He was finally driven away by the fishes and we headed home, through that wretched stretch of rocks and beach sand and then the blissful highway in the gorgeous violet of dusk.

Whatever the reason, be it the exertion of the trek or the wonderful company of my 2 best pals or even masochism of a twisted ankle, I thoroughly enjoyed myself!

Saturday, April 12, 2008

Theory of Minimum Incompetence!

The theory of minimum incompetence states that, "An employee grows in an organisation till such time that he reaches a point where he is found incompetent."

During the tenure of an employee in an organization, he would initially fulfill all his duties to an extent that would be classified as proficient. He would be found fit to take a promotion and would in all likelihood perform well there as well. Eventually, there would come his way, a designation which would involve duties and responsibilities, objectives and targets, to which he would just about be able to cater to. With passage of time, he would by default given another promotion, not because he deserves it, but because of other reasons such as vacancy and absence of alternatives, company policy, etc. Then, he would reach a post where he is unable to cater to his own O&T's. This is when he is said to have reached a state of minimum incompetence and there would be little or no growth in his career beyond this point on! Hence proved!

There rises a question in corollary to this theory, "If this theory be true, how would a company be able to perform with all its employees incompetent for their designations?". The answer is that not all employees are at a state "minimum incompetence". It is the ones that are yet to reach that level that contribute effectively to the company.


You and I are also would eventually reach a point of "minimum incompetence". Hard to digest is it not? Statements that bear maximum truth are always hard to digest!

Friday, April 11, 2008

Voila! Another one!!!

"In view, a humble vaudevilian veteran, cast vicariously by the vicissitudes of fate!" - from the all-famous "V"!

But... are we all not mere actors who seem to be permitted to stage only one act! An act that we consider so precious and oh so dear that it seems an almost distantly concieved idea to think of his co-stars, of his fellow artists! Under the mask of the character that we are assigned we are all absolutely the same, period! Yet, what is visible to us is nothing more than the character that is portrayed!

The flip side to this is that when one realises this, it is often very easy to forget the role that one is meant to play and is caught between worlds, one, that tells him lets him see only the character and not the person behind the mask, and the other, that is the fruit of his realisation that tells him that one isn't very different from the other nor himself!

In the cast that I see around me, particularly at my job, the clash of the 2 thought patterns is so stark that it sometimes hurts to understand the distinction. I see boys my age and younger and men, fully - bred over - grown men who take their daily orders from me. Sure they are merely playing a role! But is there not a reason as to why they have been cast their roles and i've been bestowed with the honour of the role that is to lead the pack (if I may...). I try and find a balance in terms of doing my job and respecting each individual for the fact that they are all equal, as I am, to any other man on the face of the earth today, but where exactly is that balance and what does it compromise?

Man, life isn't the least bit easy... is it?!?!?!?

Wednesday, April 2, 2008

Start!

I have been intending to do this for an aweful long time! And, voila! Here it is! My blog!

How we all yearn for things that are our own! My blog! My bike! My job.... MY LIFE... etc etc... Perhaps this is what the elders meant when they said that we are all attached to our material possessions! Should that be the case, I really wonder why they intended the statement in such a derogatory and demeaning way, in the sense that we should not have such attachments and obsessions!

But these are the things that I identify myself with! My alma mater, Don Bosco and Crescent Engg College; My music that ranges from anything from heavy metal to carnatic instrumentals; My bike, Bajaj Avenger 200 DTSi; My friends; and of course all those things that I hold near and dear that are probably superfluous to the topic of contemplation!

Assuming that it is possible to let go of all these things, then what does one identify oneself with?
What would one's purpose or need to exist be? If one's purpose in life to merely exist, isn't that a whole lot of waste of extensively buit up faculty! Evidently, this isn't the solution. It would be an incredibly simple solution, but as experience teaches you, the easy solution is usually not the right one!

Stephen Hawking says, "Humanity's deepest desire for knowledge is justification enough for our continuing quest." That would mean that the purpose to life is to identify the puspose of life. Now that means two things, one, no one has noticed that the greatest thinker of our living times has made a statement that is no less than a measly oxymoron and, two, we have identified the purpose of life! Now why exactly am I not satisfied? This too, is obviously not the right answer to the fine question!

Assuming that detaching from all material associations is the only way to achieving this purpose to life, also assuming that it is possible also assuming that one has achieved this purpose of life, THEN WHAT? I mean, what do you do after you have achieved the so-called purpose of life? What is the purpose of any further existence? Would you find another need/purpose to exist? In all logical probability, yes! Then, of what significance is the first purpose? Does it mean that there is more than one purpose to life?

Now that makes the idea of a single unified elusive "purpose of life" redundant and obsolete to me! What seems more logical is a subjective purpose to life! A purpose that is subjective, distinct, dynamic, self-centered (in one way or the other), and sensible only to the individual that the particular purpose is assigned to, rather assumed by!

Now what exactly was this post intended at? That is for me to know and you to find out! Ha ha ha!!!