1. Mother Teresa
2. Padre Pio
3. Pope John Paul II
4. Kiran Bedi
5. Sonia Gandhi
6. A.P. J. Abdul Kalam
7. Kalpana Chawla
8. Jesse Owens
9. Muhammad Ali
10. Nick Vijucic
11. William Sahespeare
12. Milton
Sunday, December 26, 2010
Saturday, July 24, 2010
Teena's Tips for the Good Life!!!!! :D :D
After reading so many email forwards about how we can make our life so much better, I was inspired to write my own set of tips for the good life. I am hoping to follow them some time soon. He He!!! Of course, you would have heard of most of them. Hope you'll like it. Please give me your comments.
- Start your day with prayer, praise, and thanksgiving. In your prayers, don't forget your enemies. Also pray for the poor and underprivileged in the world.
- Be yourself. Keep your ears open to good advice, and closed to unproductive criticism.
- Dress the way you like but also be conscious of the image you're portraying to the outside world.
- Do something wild - a crazy hairdo, camping or trekking, go and learn something you always thought was kind of impossible for you.
- Make it a habit to do at least one good deed or to make at least one person happy. It can even be someone you're meeting for the first time.
- Be a friend to someone who has no friends. It would give you immense satisfaction.
- If there's some kind of friction between you and someone else, talk it out in a calm manner. It is really not worth keeping things unsaid and allowing the hurt to remain and the anger to grow.
- Exercise - Make it fun if exercising is boring for you. Try some lively music. You can always bring some neat dance steps into your exercise to make it more fun. Dance is exercise too!!!!!!!
- Go on a balanced diet.
- Get a good night's sleep.
- Express your feelings to the person you love now. Who knows, you might never get another chance.
- Write down all the positive things in your life now or in the past. Try to read what you've written when you experience the blues.
- Set some time aside at least on your day off to engage in a hobby.
Monday, July 12, 2010
I Too Have Travelled By Train.... Yipee!!!!!!
Rail Gaadi Rail Gaadi Chuk Chuk Chuk Chuk
Bhich Waale Station Bole Ruk Ruk Ruk Ruk
Being a protected child and having had spent a major part of my life in Dubai, I equated a journey by train to just another impossible dream. If people asked me how being 20 plus, I still had not travelled by train, I had a ready answer for them: "But I have travelled by plane."
Luck and maybe some divine intervention gave me an opportunity to make a nice trip in this primitive locomotive a week back. My destination was the "Divine Retreat Center" in Potta. The thought of being able to enjoy my first train journey for six hours made my heart leap in joy. My mind danced in excitement.
That first day in the train, i mentally transformed into a little child curiously probing new territory. It was a wonder to me that a train should have so many compartments, both a window and a shutter, and a holder for water and bags, could be a place where u could buy books and CDs, and sadly, could be a place for begging too.
From stories and narrations that I have come across in books and movies, I have come to understand that the train is a great place to make new acquaintances. In my opinion, the "one-day" ( "one-hour" is perhaps a better term) acquaintances I made on the train were really "one-day friends," the memory of whom I would probably cherish forever.
Every person in this world is unique. That is something like a kindergarten lesson for us all. On that train, the venerable Cape Mumbai Express, I realized that every guy is unique. I chanced to have the fortune or misfortune of being seated near two men, one on the "to"journey, and the other on the "return" journey. While the first was strangely friendly to the point of revealing to me that he was a complete zero in studies, the other seemingly preferred to turn his head the other way when a female species was near. Yup, that's different men and different backgrounds for you.
I also met two really nice young girls. One seemed to like me so much that she was so closely huddled against me even though there was sufficient space on the sleeper we were seated on.
Despite all the fun I had in my train journey, what i really regret is that I couldn't take a bite of any of the tempting eatables that the caterers were carrying up and down the train. My father wouldn't let me, fearing that the food would be unhygienic, a fear that i too shared, but grudgingly.
One thing is for sure....the next time I want to go on a trip or excursion, travel by train would be something I would definitely consider. However, I won't stop with traversing Kerala - I'm going to Delhi!!!!!!!
BYEEEEEEEEE!!!!!
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