Oct 4, 2011

Who Are We?

In an ever-expanding Universe... who are we?

How we live in our comfort zone thinking and believing that we are important, that we make a difference, that our lives have a meaning. Yet when stacked up against an ever-expanding infinity - we're not even a speck in time and space.

This can only be seen in two ways:

#1 Nothing matters, so why bother?

#2 Nothing matters, so what do we have to lose?

I've always been in the let's-go-for-broke camp :)


Am reposting the article that triggered off this rambling... from the New York Times who took this off the wires:


Studies of Universe's Expansion Win Physics Nobel




STOCKHOLM (AP) — Three U.S.-born scientists won the Nobel Prizein physics on Tuesday for overturning a fundamental assumption in their field by showing that the expansion of the universe is constantly accelerating.
Their discovery created a new portrait of the eventual fate of the universe: a place of super-low temperatures and black skies unbroken by the light of galaxies moving away from each other at incredible speed.
Physicists had assumed for decades that the expansion of the universe was getting ever-slower, meaning that in billions of years it would resemble today's universe in many important ways.
Then, working in separate research teams during the 1990s, Saul Perlmutter, Brian Schmidt and Adam Riess found that the light from more than 50 distant exploding stars was far weaker than they expected, meaning that galaxies had to be racing away from each other at increasing speed.
The acceleration is driven by what scientists call dark energy, a cosmic force that is one of the great mysteries of the universe.
The Nobel-winning discovery implies instead that the universe will get increasingly colder as matter spreads across ever-vaster distances in space, said Lars Bergstrom, secretary of the Nobel physics committee.
He said galaxies that are 3 million light years away from Earth move at a speed of around 44 miles per second (70 kilometers per second). Galaxies that are 6 million light years away move twice as fast.
The research implies that billions of years from now, the universe will become "a very, very large, but very cold and lonely place," said Charles Blue, spokesman for the American Institute of Physics.
In contrast to the big bang, that fate has been called the "big rip" to indicate how galaxies would be torn apart, he said.
Galaxies will be flying away so quickly that their light could not travel across the universe to distant observers as it does today, making the sky appear black, he said.
"For almost a century the universe has been known to be expanding as a consequence of the Big Bang about 14 billion years ago," the citation said. "However the discovery that this expansion is accelerating is astounding. If the expansion will continue to speed up the universe will end in ice."
The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences said Perlmutter would receive half of the 10 million kronor ($1.5 million) award, with Riess and Schmidt, a U.S.-born Australian, splitting the other half.
Perlmutter, 52, heads the Supernova Cosmology Project at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and University of California, Berkeley.
Schmidt, 44, is the head of the High-z Supernova Search Team at the Australian National University in Weston Creek, Australia.
Riess, 41, is an astronomy professor at Johns Hopkins University and Space Telescope Science Institute in Baltimore, Maryland.
Schmidt said he was just sitting down to have dinner with his family in Canberra, Australia, when the phone call came from the academy.
"I was somewhat suspicious when the Swedish voice came on," Schmidt told The Associated Press. "My knees sort of went weak and I had to walk around and sort my senses out."
Riess said his "jaw dropped" when he received an early-morning call at his home in Baltimore from a bunch of Swedish men and realized "it wasn't Ikea," the Swedish furniture retailer. "I'm dazed," he told AP.
The discovery was "the biggest shakeup in physics, in my opinion, in the last 30 years," said Phillip Schewe, a physicist and spokesman at the Joint Quantum Institute, which is operated by the University of Maryland and the federal government.
"I remember everyone thinking at the time (that) there was some mistake," Schewe said. But there was no mistake, and in fact the basic finding was confirmed later by other measurements. For example, other scientists found evidence for it when they analyzed the microwave radiation left over from the big bang that still bathes the universe, he said.
Perlmutter told AP his team made the discovery in steps, analyzing the data and assuming it was wrong.
"And after months, you finally believe it," he said. "It's not quite a surprise anymore. I tell people it's the longest "aha!" experience that you've ever had."
Fred Dylla, executive director of the American Institute of Physics, said the prize confirmed an idea from Albert Einstein, called the cosmological constant, that Einstein inserted in his general theory of relativity, a cornerstone of modern physics.
Einstein later repudiated that idea as his "biggest blunder," but it did lead to a lot of theoretical and experimental studies, Dylla said.
The physics prize was the second Nobel to be announced this year. On Monday the medicine prize went to American Bruce Beutler and French scientist Jules Hoffmann who shared it with Canadian-born Ralph Steinman for their discoveries about the immune system. Steinman died three days before the announcement but since his death was not known to the committee, they decided he should keep the Nobel. Since 1974, Nobels have been awarded only to living scientists.
The Nobel Prizes were established in the will of Swedish industrialist Alfred Nobel, and have been handed out since 1901.
Last year's physics award went to Russian-born scientists Andre Geim and Konstantin Novoselov for groundbreaking experiments with graphene, the strongest and thinnest material known to mankind.
The prizes are handed out every year on Dec. 10, on the anniversary of Nobel's death in 1896.
___
Malin Rising in Stockholm, Malcolm Ritter in New York, Kristen Gelineau in Sydney, Jessica Gresko in Washington and Greg Moore in Phoenix, Arizona, contributed.

Sep 21, 2011

Malaysia Boleh! Malaysia Cane!

Rattan. Leather. Plastic.

You name it, my bottom has tasted it.
And if you asked which one I liked most, I would probably crown the rattan cane as my favourite..
(Leather belts or plastic pipes are literally a pain in the a**..)

The cane was a revered symbol in my household. 
Whoever who had a cane in his or her hand was seen as empowered and the center of authority.
I never had the chance to touch or hold the cane ( I was always the one on the receiving end ) maybe cause my parents kept in hidden away on top of a five feet refrigerator..

I wished secretly that I would take that cane and break it into two..One day...*evil laugh*

Writing this post brings back nostalgic memories..
I was always caned as a child. Its either I broke a porcelain figure, a cup, did not clean up my room, talked back to my parents or fought with my sister. 

I was caned up until I was 12 years old. Now you would think I was a really bad child because my mother resorted to caning even until I had hit puberty..The fact is that she knew she could not hit me with her bare hands because she revealed that her hands were in agonizing pain after hitting my butt that my dad had to apply ointment later after the smacking. I'm sorry that I was a fat kid. Fat kids have their advantage too!

The chances are when I look back, I was never that rebellious rude child going around kicking cats, dogs and cows..I was a studious kid who was polite to my teachers with good behaviour in school..So why the caning? Just because it inflicts pain, a child associates the pain with the mistake he or she had done? But again, would I be the way I am today if my mum has not disciplined me the way she did when I was younger? Would I be a spoilt brat or would I turn out better without the caning? 

Which actually brings me to what I just read today..There's an issue of the refugee swap between Australia and Malaysia that brought me to this article: Gruesome Punishment In Malaysia

Caning is rather a norm in Malaysia. We read about it, we hear about it, but I've never seen someone being caned by the police. After watching the video, I was petrified and disgusted at the practice. The wounds on the man's buttocks?! I believe criminals (murder and rape specifically) deserve to be caned but imposing caning on refugees? That's just way overboard! The fundamental human rights; dignity and worth is snatched away simply because of the inability to produce proper papers. Now where is the justice?

You may question me of my double standards where murder and rape convicts deserve to be caned. I believe that if you take away the dignity and worth of another person, then your rights to claim your self worth is automatically void. 

Yes, I believe that the article tries to invoke outrage and criticism towards our country's method of punishment and it is biased at times but ladies and gentlemen, it is the true reality of our homeland. The article highlights Malaysia's issues with corruption and violation of human rights. 

The sad thing is that the true perpetrators are those holding the cane instead of the ones at the receiving end.
How often do you hear normal citizens like you and me harassing a refugee?  
Now how often do you hear the authorities betraying the trust of vulnerable people instead of safeguarding their rights?

Sep 6, 2011

Does your company look like this?



When top level guys look down, they see only shit heads.

When bottom level guys look up, they see only ass holes.

Note: Thanks to Ruma for this forward... and to its creator - postmodern yet classic :p

Sep 3, 2011

Unwrapping the 'God Particle' by Christmas?

When the Large Hadron Collider went live several years back, they said that its data would be enough to keep physicists involved in research for the next 50 years.

Looks like Christmas came early then.

Professor Guido Tonelli announced that their first set of data for the public could come as early as Christmas this year.

Unlocking the mysteries of the Universe... what could this possibly hold for mankind? Wave manipulation, scalar technology, the theory to debunk supergravity or string theory... or just a deeper 'hole' within the black hole?

Like children round the ol' tree, we eagerly await....

http://www.theatlanticwire.com/technology/2011/09/we-want-god-particle-christmas/42031/


Aug 31, 2011

Arabian Waltz makes the world go round

Nothing beats the work that's been painstakingly built through the Silk Road Project. 


From it's ambitious early days of bridging existences, if there was any group that deserved a true Nobel prize for making this world a better place, it would be this.


Where music becomes alive, living breathing ecstasy. 


The video is described as "Driven by complex additive rhythms and improvisatory melodic lines, "Arabian Waltz" is a propulsive work by Lebanese-born composer Rabih Abou-Khalil, whose works fuse the musical traditions of the Arabic world with jazz improvisation and European classical.." bla bla bla 


Don't use Words.


LISTEN...



Forgiveness

Have you ever experienced that Divine moment, when abstract occurences in a day suddenly combine to give you the whole picture? When all disparate pieces of the puzzle suddenly make sense?

It is synchronicity in action, the unlikely relation between many events that seem to occur by chance... but actually reflects the greater design and elegance of the Cosmos. This is God's realm - The Universe that Speaks without Words. Carl Jung just put it in one neat term :)

At that moment of revelation, when the design or plan is revealed to you, one is confronted with the Truth. And irrespective of how ugly it is, if a pattern is seen again and again... you must be a fool to deny its authenticity. 

But a seeker after Truth should always have the courage to accept Truth, even painful ones. 

Truth is revealed not in one's words - people often cultivate the sweetest of tongues to gain something. 

Truth is revealed in one's actions.

In spirituality, or practices of ancient mysticism, understanding the Hand of God in all things, the feeling of synchronicity, creates more balance, awareness and forgiveness within.

To forgive without needing to hear the words 'I'm sorry' from another, we do the greatest justice to no one but ourselves.

Drop anger, drop hurt, there goes expectations... it is an odd feeling because you become the observer. Standing outside of this instance, this feeling of betrayal, you are angry and yet... not angry.

You watch the emotion rise, you watch the emotion fall... and realise you were never a part of it all. Although emanating from you, it is not you. 

These instances may come in just pockets, but who is to say that transformation cannot be achieved in that split second? It is only a matter of whether we have enough faith to take the quantum leap... or will we continue living in our comfort zone, perpetuating the myth that it is always The Other at fault.

Most times, we hang on to the past, repeating the same pattern... is it really surprising then, we end up with the same outcome?

If I wish to change the outcome, I should stop blaming The Other. It is my shortcoming that I was not aware. I should have cultivated a deeper awareness of the situation, of the individuals at hand, of human nature. I accept that I was not working at my full potential. And my mission is to work towards cultivating that.

Then... a new outcome is possible. A new door opens to an infinity of possibilities.

When I change, the future once more becomes pregnant with meaning, full of potential. 

So today, I understood Ahimsa in a new way - to transform yourself, to accept responsibility for even things which are not remotely yours... one then does not harm any living being. Not even yourself. 

To close, an excerpt from Idries Shah's recounting of the teaching of Moulana Jalaludin Rumi, this one titled The Inward Eye:

"It is also narrated that Moulana Shamsuddin Malti reported that one day Moulana was giving a discourse of mystical subjects at the Seminary, when he said that he loved Shamsuddin much, but he had but one fault.


Shamsuddin begged to be enlightened as to what that fault was; and Moulana said 'Whatever he (Shamsuddin) perceives and sees, he thinks that God's most blessed thing and God's most blessed person is that thing or that person'. Then Moulana recited these verses:

'As many a man has
The Inwardness of Satan;
Should one hail everyone
As a Saint?

When your Inward Eye 
Is opened; -
The Real Master
Can then be perceived!'

Is it so difficult to believes that the most elegant solution, most truthful answer, is so simple that it involves no one. 

The Inward Eye is but a turning into Oneself, perceiving that we are the source and solution to each problem. It's never been anyone but... 

Aug 29, 2011

Griot - History's Keeper

With so few traditions left intact, on Merdeka eve, we pay tribute to the keepers of history... through music.

Griots, a term synonymous with West African storytellers who, through music, ensure the lineage of wisdom lives on in successive generations. How can any society live, breath and be reinvigorated on those weary days without a helping hand from the past?

Like the transformative touch of Adam and God, so too does the griot breathe power into the lives of its people through oral tradition. For Paul Oliver:


"Though [the griot] has to know many traditional songs without error, he must also have the ability to extemporize on current events, chance incidents and the passing scene. His wit can be devastating and his knowledge of local history formidable."


Essentially, these musicians were walking history books, preserving their ancient stories and traditions through song. Their inherited tradition was passed down through generations. Their name, jeli, means "blood" in Manika language. They were said to have deep connections to spiritual, social, or political powers as music is associated as such. Speech is also said to have power as it can recreate history and relationships.


Where are we today as Malaysians? WHO are we? Can we possibly be free, if we don't know who we are?

Some inspiration from Mali's most famous griot - Salif Keita.


Aug 22, 2011

Babar Turns 80!

The world's most (and only) beloved elephant in a green suit has had it all... adopted by a really rich lady after being orphaned by poachers, drove a smashing red sports convertible as a teenager, crowned King of the Jungle in adolescence, married the Heaven's (his wife's name is Celeste), is father to triplets, travelled the world and has a monkey for a friend :D

What more is there to life?

Except for the symbolic importance that Babar the Elephant plays in our lives. 

He was the harbinger of a better world, a gentle one. Of Peace and Humanity in the land of Animals. Of giving and and learning and feeling that the human world was a wonderful mysterious place for an Outsider. This is what childhood memories evoke.

So Babar at 80 isn't just about Babar at 80. 

It's about all the things we dream about to make life a better place. It's the Rin Tin Tin's and the Smurfs, the Road Runners and the Tasmanian Devils who keep chasing each other. It's the representation that even after 80 years, the battle still goes on... but we survive because of works of art which inspire us all that a better world is possible. 

Happy Birthday, Babar!

Aug 19, 2011

Breathing

A painting by Jody Uttal which I find
captures what it feels to breathe & flow
freely - without dogma, no inhibitions,
just... Breath.
The simplest and most inspirational explanation on the power within each Breath.

Every breathe holds the magic of transformation and it exists in all cultures. Defined as Pranayam to yoga practitioners, essential in Zazen practice and key to managing Chi, this is by far, the most beautiful interpretation to remind us that the world is within:


"In deep breathing together, something of deep empathy arises; you become one - because breath is life. Then feeling can be transferred, thoughts can be transferred. 


Pranayam means to breathe with the whole. That is my translation, not "control of breath" but to breathe with the whole. It is absolutely uncontrolled! If you control, how can you breathe with the whole? So to translate pranayam as "breath control" is a misunderstanding. It is not only incorrect, inadequate, it is certainly wrong. Just the opposite is the case.


To breathe with the whole, to become the breath of the eternal and the whole, is pranayam. then you expand. Then your life energy goes on expanding with the trees and mountains and sky and you have completely disappeared. Now you no longer breathe; the whole breathes in you. Now your breathing and the whole's breathing are never apart; they are always together. So much so that it is now useless to say. "This is my breath.""


~ Osho

Aug 17, 2011

Tantra: The Great Teaching

"You are fast asleep, so deeply asleep, as if you are not there. A person fast asleep, in a come in the house - is he really there? There is no distinction to be made. Whether he is there or not makes no distinction - he is in a coma. If thieves come and rob the whole house, will you call that man responsible who is lying down in a coma, unconscious? Will he be responsible? Will he be asked and judged: "Thieves came! What were you doing here?" How can you make a man responsible who is in a coma, unconscious?

Tantra says in all your lives you have remained in a coma - you are not responsible. This is the first liberation that tantra gives you. And on the base of it, many things immediately become possible. Then you need not wait for millions of lives - this very moment the door can open. It is not a gradual process, it is a sudden awakening - and it has to be so.

When you are fast asleep and somebody tries to wake you up, is it a gradual process or a sudden thing? Even in ordinary sleep, is it a gradual process or a sudden thing? Even in ordinary sleep, is it a gradual process? Either you are awake or you are asleep; there are no gradual steps in it. If you have heard the man who is calling your name, you are awake, not ten percent awake. Eyes may be closed, but if you have become aware that somebody is calling you, you are already awake.

Love, Life, Death, they all happen suddenly.

Tantra says: Don't focus your attention on the acts, focus your attention on the person who has done the acts. Yoga focuses on the acts. Tantra focuses on the person, on the consciousness, on you.

If you are ignorant, tantra says you are bound to commit sin. Even if you try to be virtuous, your virtue will be a sort of sin - because how can an ignorant man, fast asleep, be virtuous? How can virtue arise out of ignorance, unconsciousness? Impossible! Your virtue must be just a mask; behind it will be the real face, the real face of sin.

You may talk about love, but you cannot love - you will hate. You can talk about compassion, but compassion must be just a covering of your anger, greed, jealousy...

Tantra is a great teaching. It doesn't teach about acts, it teaches only about your being. who you are is the point - fast asleep, snoring or awake? Who are you - alert, conscious or moving in a hypnosis? Are you a sleepwalker? Or are you awake, alert, whatsoever you do?" ~ Osho

Aug 12, 2011

I'm Moving On

I've never had a liking for country music. It sounds so old, so yesterday, so my parents. YUCK.
Somehow I stumbled upon Rascal Flatts and that changed my perception a hundred and eighty degrees.
What they do is simply incredible;
they sing about life.

Songs these days are all about going down low or getting it on, being in some club where you can't handle me right now or probably just catching a grenade for someone you really love.

Rascal Flatts does not have all those cheesy stuff in their songs. And that's what I really love about them.
They are so real, genuine and touching. Realistic perhaps..My all time favourite would be What Hurts The Most & My Wish but I found another song recently which really coincides with the objective of our meeting last week: Moving On.


I've dealt with my ghosts and I've faced all my demons
Finally content with a past I regret
I've found you find strength in your moments of weakness
For once I'm at peace with myself
I've been burdened with blame, trapped in the past for too long
I'm movin' on

I've lived in this place and I know all the faces
Each one is different but they're always the same
They mean me no harm but it's time that I face it
They'll never allow me to change
But I never dreamed home would end up where I don't belong
I'm movin' on

I'm movin' on
At last I can see life has been patiently waiting for me
And I know there's no guarantees, but I'm not alone
There comes a time in everyone's life
When all you can see are the years passing by
And I have made up my mind that those days are gone

I sold what I could and packed what I couldn't
Stopped to fill up on my way out of town
I've loved like I should but lived like I shouldn't
I had to lose everything to find out
Maybe forgiveness will find me somewhere down this road
I'm movin' on

I'm movin' on
I'm movin' on

Aug 3, 2011

Unmistaken Child

What does it mean to know one's true journey, the reason for YOUR existence?

In many ways, the true story of finding a child's reincarnation thrust upon a follower and disciple in Unmistaken Child, a documentary by Nati Baratz, reminds us that a lifetime can be defined by our ability to fulfil our responsibility, no matter how long or short that journey should take. One's life's work is greater than life itself.



The feeling of great responsibility thrust upon your shoulders when the young monk, tasked by the Dalai Lama to find his master's reincarnation with the words, "When you face the child, you will recognise him." Such is the power of absolute faith in another.

"I just cannot trust my feeling. I am not Buddha." says the astonished young monk.

Baratz spent 5 years filming this, a story which he stumbled upon while working on another documentary on Tibetan Jews. Relocating with his wife and 2 year old daughter, it is a labour of love.

I feel the same way, having spent over 6 years researching a book which seems to land itself on the wayside every now and then... one wonders will there ever be a day when it will see the light.

Jul 30, 2011

Elegance is...


What would happen if we approached each day as if it were Ramadhan?

Our 30 days of fasting for Ramadhan is accompanied by watching one's own thoughts, words, motives and actions. But what happens after 30 days? In fact, what happens after one 'breaks' fast each day? 

When calligraphy, artistry, spirituality, poetry, history collide... 
Today, a receipt was delivered to account for a gifts bought for charity from a small home for handicapped children in Penang. The donation was made several weeks ago via a friend in Penang, and I mentioned that a receipt was not necessary. But when the receipt did arrived today, it spoke volumes of the sender and the ethics of the organisation itself. 

In contrast, another established organisation whom we've been assisting has never offered to do the same and did not send any receipt, despite being more established. 

Assisting brothers and sisters of the Islamic faith, one must ask oneself what it means to be honest and ethical in thoughts, actions, words.

For me, Ramadhan is more than just knocking down dates on a calendar. It is, each year, a new call to once again to do what we were not able to. God's only exhortation, in Mevlana Jelaluddin Rumi's words, is not to be perfect but understand that one should never be ashamed to have fallen:

Come, come, whoever you are. 
Wanderer, worshiper, lover of leaving. 
It doesn't matter. 
Ours is not a caravan of despair. 
Come, even if you have broken your vows a thousand times. 
Come, yet again , come , come.

What would happen if we approached each day as if it were Ramadhan?

When Ramadhan is every day, 30 days lasts a lifetime. Therein is the True Elegance we seek each day...

Elegance



It

Is not easy
To stop thinking ill
Of others.



Usually one must enter into a friendship

With a person



Who has accomplished that great feat himself.

Then



Something

Might start to rub off on you
Of that

True
Elegance.

~ Hafez-e Shirazi

Jul 24, 2011

Another... EARTH?

Note: Dedicated to the misfits, to Wanderers, to those who Despair. And all who wonder if fresh beginnings are possible.

What if there was another Earth out there. A parallel universe in which there was another you... the Alternative You. YOU 2?

What would that world be? Who would YOU 2 be? If we believe the proportions of String Theory and Supergravity... there are 11 dimensions in this world and these 11 dimensions are in contact with another 11, then another...

The possibilities are infinite. What does this mean for us?

A new beginning? A way to undo all the things we might not have done? Would you gain comfort knowing that out there... in at least ONE alternate universe... you probably got it RIGHT?

It is a startling reality to realise. That we are not alone. That perhaps in an infinite world of choice, we got one life right.

A brilliant movie that explores the complex theme of the frontiers of physics. "Another Earth" talks about the dreams of a young brilliant astrophysicist who's been admitted into MIT, whose life takes on a tangential turn when she crashes her car in a night of drunken partying. No more MIT, no more dreams of science but instead she is jailed, destined for a life of obscurity as a janitor, post-incarceration.

In the backdrop, science has just discovered another Earth... dubbed Earth 2. An alternate reality, with the same living conditions and homosapiens who inhabit this Earth. She looks up into the big alternate planet, Earth 2, and wonders in that world... what if I got it right?


The trailer here: 


Jul 22, 2011

4 Great Thinkers

History is written by the victors... Charles Darwin was not the first to come up with the Theory of Evolution yet claimed glory for it. Volkswagon was the brainchild of Hitler, but its survivors have erased its Nazi past.

True knowledge is dangerous. There is a pantheon of uncelebrated geniuses who have changed and shaped our world, but whose views were censured for the implications on our world - the mathematician George Cantor, Ludwig Boltzmann... the aspect of spirituality has been left out in our textbooks, education, despite its crucial place in the evolution of mathematics, science, humanities.

We have censored our own understanding because it is 'uncool' to be spiritual beings, to have inspired moments that give insight into our inner beings... that reveal the deeper mysteries of infinity.

We pretend that the brilliance, elegance and beauty of science... is secular.

Here's a great BBC documentary that brings out the beauty and religiousity of life.

Jul 21, 2011

Angkor's Calling

Some lands can only be experienced. Cambodia is one of them and will always be my land of dreams. It's brought humbling perspective, great peace and invigorated me on each sojourn.

But nothing can equal the first touch down. The awe of approaching Angkor's main gates, the diamond waters sparkling under the sweltering Cambodian heat... the first step is pure magic.

Alone, with little money, knowing no one, caring for little except to find a little peace in my soul searching... Cambodia remains an unknowable, mysterious country whose depth is one of an ancient civilisation lost in the New World Order.

One of my more ignorant moments came riding pillion on a motodop. We had taken the journey from Angkor Wat moving onto Bayon, when I asked an extremely arrogant question without knowing it.

"Why aren't all these children in school?"

My moto driver, a lovely quiet man who spoke some English, was silent.

It was a question that I wondered many times.

Only years later did I realise the superiority complex one has of what a Third World nation needs. Education is secondary when Life is about Surviving the next day.

One of the many lessons that Angkor and Cambodia has taught me. It continues to teach me on each journey - that hard, tough country that has seen little mercy but people blossom and have shown me outstanding kindness.

The height of Angkor is in her people as well as her architectural splendour. The first brought peace, the second blessings... and who knows where the third will go...

Here is one advertorial that captures in some ways, a great culture and enduring legacy that is the Cambodian spirit: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oX2OKv2TCtI&feature=aso

And a beautiful guide: http://www.theangkorguide.com/images/download/Angkor.pdf

Jul 18, 2011

About Turn for Charter Schools?

Everyone would have thought that Charter schools would be supported under all circumstances. Yes? Think again.

Affluent Americans are lobbying against specialised Charter schools which cannot prove necessity in areas where local school education is already deemed to be good and available for all.

Is the jury still out? Read it here: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/17/education/17charters.html?_r=1&nl=nyregion&emc=ura1

Jul 7, 2011

Social Entrepreneurs: Real Change, please?

New proposed Legislation in New York

Another salvo for Asian movements to wake up and administer greater MEANINGFUL change for social entrepreneurs... tax break, classification rules, more relevant business structures to aid, not hinder, growth for good business.

What constitutes a social enterprise? Many structures and enterprises in the world classify themselves as Social Enterprises but when queried on the metrics which they use to properly administer their social enterprises - bottom line, profit margins, breakeven point and mechanisms, per unit cost... it normally draws blanks.

It's to be expected that Social Enterprise will eventually go the way of CSR... totally basterdisation of a very good concept for cheap PR spin.

When will we insist on measurable results and quantifiable change?

Accountability is not an option... we should all voluntarily adopt best practices because... well... it's the best practice possible. Social enterprises should be leading the way for better business practices, not following in its footsteps of opt-in clauses when it comes to being accountable and transparent, whilst in the meantime saying to all and sundry, "Thanks, we appreciate the cash. Will get back to ya about that accountability thang, ya!"

Link here with commentary at Columbia Business School: http://columbiasocialenterprise.wordpress.com/2011/07/06/benefit-corporations/

Jun 30, 2011

Crazy = Genius?

Jim Henson, the genius who made the world a better, funnies 
place with the beloved Muppets, Sesame Street & Fraggle
Rock... where would millions of children be if someone had
told him that puppets were for losers? BTW, his drawings are 
also the inspiration behind the Awake Minds logo.  
Every proclaimed genius today, was once labelled a misfit, an agitator, an instigator, a rebel, a threat to society, a ne'er do well...

How we forget about the crazy ones.... The people whom we owe everything because they've shaped the very world we live in today.

John Maynard Keynes revolutionised economics by going against the bandwagon of classical economists.

Einstein, told everyone that Newton wasn't all that right... and later admitted he may not be either...

Gandhi, who changed the world with love.

Jose Antonio Abreu, who said there's a better way forward.

Steve Jobs, who proved that everything functional should be coupled with artisty. 

And what better way to remember and pay tribute to these revolutionaries, these Crazies, than to remember and once again re-live this brilliant campaign, run by Apple and titled "Think Different" in the late 90's...

They, and many others in the world, have proved that what society once regarded as sheer Craziness was indeed utter Genius! 

"They push the human race forward."


Here's to the crazy ones. 
The misfits. The rebels. The troublemakers. 
The round pegs in square holes. 
The ones who see things differently.

They're not fond of rules, and they have no respect for the status quo. 
You can quote them, disagree with them, glorify and vilify them. 
But the only thing you can't do is ignore them because they change things. 

They push the human race forward. 
And while some may see them as crazy, we see genius. 
Because the people who are crazy enough to think they can change the world...are the ones who do."

Note: Thanks to Ramesh for this link.



Jun 27, 2011

Brew & Thunder!

Look at it from the Other's perspective:


A little kid is walking home from school when a thunderous electric storm begins to brew. At home, his mother, concerned he would be struck by lightning or afraid to walk home, drives along the route he normally walks hoping to pick him up. She sees him from a distance and watches him from afar: Each time there was a flash of lightning, he would stop in his tracks, look up to the sky and smile. 


Concerned, the mother drives up to him, and called out, "What are you doing? Why do you keep stopping to smile?"

The child answered: "I'm trying to look nice. God keeps taking my picture."

Jun 26, 2011

New York Votes 'Yes' To Gay Marriage

New York, birthplace of the American Gay Rights Movement in the 60s, is now the 6th and largest state to legalise same-sex marriages.

But what's more significant is how the vote came about, in which Republicans broke ranks and voted with Democrats in a rare bi-partisan push, the sort that has hampered the Obama administration.

The 33-26 vote was credited to 4 Republicans who joined the majority of the state senate's Democrats to pass the bill. This NYT article wrote:


"But after days of contentious discussion capped by a marathon nine-hour closed-door debate on Friday, Republicans came to a fateful decision: The full Senate would be allowed to vote on the bill and each member would be left to vote according to his or her conscience."

The Hallmarks of a representative government when statesmen understand that they function to represent the wishes of their constituents. Voting along party lines undermines the essence of why we elect candidates to represent our wishes, the wishes of the people, at the National level. It is more telling that elected representatives to the state understood "according to his or her conscience" to mean "the conscience of my constituents", giving voice to the people's wishes.

Proof? Here's an apology by Sen. Grisanti who for years campaigned against same-sex marriage but switched camps late in the game:

"With his position still undeclared, Senator Mark J. Grisanti, a Republican from Buffalo who had sought office promising to oppose same-sex marriage, told his colleagues he had agonized for months before concluding he had been wrong.

“I apologize for those who feel offended,” Mr. Grisanti said, adding, “I cannot deny a person, a human being, a taxpayer, a worker, the people of my district and across this state, the State of New York, and those people who make this the great state that it is the same rights that I have with my wife.”
In a country where voting against party lines, even if it is "against one's conscience" is barred and those who do face suspension (even abstention from voting may bring about disciplinary party action), where will we evolve in our own maturity of what it takes to run a first class nation?

Then again, Mr. Grisanti's change of heart isn't all sugar-coated with sugar, spice, all things nice. It's a tactical manoeuvre that's helped build Republican connection with more liberal, youthful voters, and changing perceptions of people towards same-sex unions. Even Democrats could never pass a bill when they controlled the Senate, the move boosts Republican credibility and hints to the public of a more liberal element in its conservative lining. A nice touch. Cream on the cupcake. (Was that a pun there? Yes, I think it was...)

After all, elections are up soon... With Obama's dwindling support with an unlawful Libyan war, a fractious front of the GOP with no credible candidate against the presidency (dear God, haven't we had enough of Palin? Hasn't she had enough of herself?).... this move by Republicans can only bring them that much closer to narrowing the polls divide.

Jun 25, 2011

Sorrow

A swallow grieves for his partner in this
series of photographs which ran in a
French newspaper, outlining the bird's
cajoling with food, anger, then sadness,
then acceptance of her death.
It seems to be a recurring theme lately, for many on the path. Here's a reminder that sorrow is felt by all in Earth's care: birds, trees, mankind. But birds to fly again, and trees grow bigger, stronger after losing parts of itself... what then makes us an exception to sorrow? Nothing. Man, too, can rise.

"This pain is not to make you sad, remember. That's where people go on missing.... This pain is just to make you more alert--because people become alert only when the arrow goes deep into their heart and wounds them. Otherwise they don't become alert. 


When life is easy, comfortable, convenient, who cares? Who bothers to become alert? When a friend dies, there is a possibility. When your woman leaves you alone--those dark nights, you are lonely. You have loved that woman so much and you have staked all, and then suddenly one day she is gone. 


Crying in your loneliness, those are the occasions when, if you use them, you can become aware. The arrow is hurting: it can be used. The pain is not to make you miserable, the pain is to make you more aware! And when you are aware, misery disappears."


There is a story:


"Ananda, the cousin and disciple of Gautam Buddha was at Buddha's side constantly, attending to his every need for forty-two years. 


When Buddha died, the story is told that Ananda was still at his side, weeping. The other disciples chastised him for his misunderstanding: Buddha had died absolutely fulfilled; he should be rejoicing. 


But Ananda said, "You misunderstand. I'm weeping not for him but for myself, because for all these years I have been constantly at his side but I have still not attained." 


Ananda stayed awake for the whole night, meditating deeply and feeling his pain and sorrow. By the morning, it is said, he was enlightened. 


Times of great sorrow have the potential to be times of great transformation. But in order for transformation to happen we must go deep, to the very roots of our pain, and experience it as it is, without blame or self-pity."



Jun 18, 2011

Revolution Against Homework!!!

The New York Times featured this headliner:

New Recruit in Homework Revolt: The Principal


And about time too!

It's time we place more importance on how we are learning in schools than the hours we force kids to face a book - Quality not Quantity.

It's time we ADMIT that volume doesn't equal self-awareness - A-HA moments never happens to the brain-dead. They're called zombie's for a reason - they zoned out long time ago.

It's time to say we're sorry and just fix the problem - our kids may know the right answer in math, but trust me, 99% don't know the logic behind it. 

Favourite student quote "Coz teacher said so."

I've had lots of teachers who told me things. That a grape tree would grow out of my belly button if I ate the seed. That Kant is a misspelling of Can't. That differentiating a function is just 'like dat becoz it's just like dat'.

Clearly in such cases, it ain't so just coz teacher said so.

KIDS HAVE THE RIGHT TO ASK WHY. 

It's evidence a working brain. So here's Pink Floyd to remind everyone....

We don't need no education
We don't need no thought control
The dark sarcasm in the classroom
Teachers leave 'dem kids alone
Hey, teachers! Leave 'dem kids alone!
All in all you're just another brick in the wall.



Jun 13, 2011

Hide or Seek?

Every Warrior of the Light has felt afraid of going into battle.
Every Warrior of the Light has, at some time in the past, lied or betrayed someone.
Every Warrior of the Light has trodden a path that was not his.
Every Warrior of the Light has suffered for the most trivial of reasons.
Every Warrior of the Light has, at least once, believed he was not a Warrior of the Light.
Every Warrior of the Light has failed in his spiritual duties.
Every Warrior of the Light has said 'yes' when he wanted to say 'no.'
Every Warrior of the Light has hurt someone he loved.

That is why he is a Warrior of the Light, because he has been through all this and yet has never lost hope of being better than he is. ~ Paolo Coelho

adapted from google images

The book was placed on my hands in the most perfect timing, when i was in doubt.

I started to believe that a part of me might not be able to continue the fight, because other warriors were marching forward while I constantly glanced to the past, tied firmly by the chains of Fear.

Fear is an ugly monster. It rips you of your soul mercilessly. Along with it, other comrades of Fear manifests, Ego, Pride, Sin and Jealousy, all trying to gain the most sought after prize, me.

I opened the door to invite Success, Humility, Satisfaction and Happiness in without realising that i left the door open ajar. 

My mistake. Should not have assumed that I was strong enough to resist Fear, Ego, Pride, Sin & Jealousy.

Regrets should be learnt, but Ego and Pride got in the way. 
Mistakes should be rectified, but Fear and Sin was too tempting to turn away.
Jealousy burgeoned, becoming the catalyst to my downfall.  

At my most vulnerable state,my saviour in the form of fate through Paolo Coelho's manual, emerged into my life, opening a path which would free myself from the grasp of all this emotional baggage.  

I'm bouncing back, kicking out all my uninvited guests from my life. I'll tell them who owns the house and how I am in charge in the end of the day.

Yes, I might have failed but failure is temporary. Success and failure is impermanent. Success will only be permanent if enough effort is constantly channeled in, and failure will continue when effort becomes stagnant.

There's only two ways out of a problem. Either hide from it, or seek courage and solve it.

Jun 8, 2011

Whither The Music?

You know that time when you once felt inspired to do something with Life? That it wasn't about money or prestige or hanging around with people who spoke with a champagne glass in one hand and their thumb up another?

Yeah, I remember those days too.

In fact, everyone has had those days. The days that they remember about what they forgot.

It's a little thing I like to term the Music. You don't really need to have drums and a voice singing in your head, or the radio on. It's more like a Feeling of something. Like your spirit dancing, like you were One with whatever forces there are in this great big Universe. It's you being carried by the waves... and you're just in your groove, busting a move without moving an inch.

It's Moving beyond Moving. That's what I call the Music.

Once in awhile, we lose it. Where did it go?

Sometimes, someone stole it from you. The guy who's spouting rhetoric and shoving it down your throat, telling you to grow up and that the world's ugly. Or the person who took that great idea you were working on and said it was theirs. Thud! Goes the Music.

Sometimes, you allow people to steal it from you. Watching your Mom counting her pennies to pay the next bill, telling you that you can't have what you want, not in this lifetime, so grow up. Thud! Goes the Music. 

Other time, we lose it ourselves. We tell that face that looks back in the mirror that it's 'Gotta grow up and be an adult. I like being an adult, I like power, I like telling people what to do, I like seeming like I know stuff and use terms like 'been there, done that', even though I really haven't. I wanna be an adult.' Thud! Goes the Music.

Well, today I heard a 60-year old chef who at the cutting-edge of molecular gastronomy foods the art of using chemistry to create funky, out-of-this-world dishes), who looked like he was 40 and laughed like he was 12, say:

"To be a great chef, you've got to have a good imagination - like a kid! Most important is to be happy and play. Every day, every texture, everything is new... we re-imagine the world, then we create the plate!" You see, he's never been there, or done that... even though he probably has. Now that's a mental trip.

Just like that.

Every day, if we could re-imagine our world, and then create a new plate each day. A new plate today, another one tomorrow... after 10 years... Voila! Those stacks of new plates add to up to a pretty great Life!

And the bills... well, they sorta took care of themselves. Don't know what happened to them, but they sure didn't make it for seconds.

So where did the Music go? Nowhere.

We just forgot to Listen.

If Johnny Depp can reinvent a pirate, I'm sure lesser miracles can happen. Arrrrrrrr! (Jack Sparrow style)



P.S: This post is specially dedicated to two lovely souls who said they stalked this site to have their minds awakened. I'm sorry for the absence. Lets rock 'n roll! *guitars shredding*