Monday, May 31, 2021
Wormhole Tunnels in Spacetime is Possible.
Sunday, May 30, 2021
'Pakodas' at pay parade.
Saturday, May 29, 2021
The Resilience India Showed.
Friday, May 28, 2021
The Lakshadweep Story.
Thursday, May 27, 2021
Puns.
Wednesday, May 26, 2021
The habits that are mine.
Tuesday, May 25, 2021
The Abilene Paradox.
Monday, May 24, 2021
Interesting information......
Sunday, May 23, 2021
Play the Battle Drums.
Saturday, May 22, 2021
News that cheer!
The Israelis do not make islands in the shape of palm trees nor towering skyscrapers nor expensive hotels nor do their leaders use cars with massive silver bodies( clear allusion to Dubai and the UAE). The pride of the State of Israel is that soon its technologies will be able to be used by all humanity.
1. Tel Aviv University is developing a nasal vaccine that will protect people from Alzheimer's and stroke.
2. The Technion, Institute of Technology(Haifa) has developed a simple blood test capable of detecting different types of cancer.
3. The Ichlov Center (Tel Aviv) isolated a protein that makes colonoscopy unnecessary to detect colon cancer with a simple blood test. Colon cancer kills about 500,000 people annually.
4. Acne doesn't kill anyone but it does cause anxiety and dissatisfaction in teens. The Curlight Laboratory has created a cure by emitting UV rays - high intensity, which kills the bacteria that cause acne without generating additional complications....
5. The Given Imaging Laboratory has developed a tiny camera in the form of swallowed pills and transmits thousands of photos of the digestive tract. These high quality photos (2 per second for 8 hours) can detect polyps, cancers and sources of bleeding. The photos are sent to a chip that stores them and and sends to a computer. At the end of the process, the chamber is eliminated via the rectum.
6. The Hebrew University (Jerusalem) developed an electrical neurostimulator (batteries) that is implanted in the chest of Parkinson's patients, similar to the pacemaker. The emissions from this device block the nerve signals that cause tremours.
7. The simple smell of a patient's breath can detect if a patient has lung cancer. The Russell Berrie Institute for Nanotechnology has created sensors capable of sensing and registering 42 biological markers that indicate the presence of lung cancer without the need for a biopsy.
8. Catheterization can be dispensed with in mant cases. Endopat is a device placed between the indicator fingers which can measure the state of the arteries and predict the possibility of a heart attack in the next 7 years.
9. The University of Bar Ilan studies a new drug that fights viruses through the bloodstream. It is called Vecoy Trap, as it tricks a virus into self-destruction. Very useful to combat hepatitis and in the future Aids and Ebola.
10. Israeli scientists at Hadassah Medical Center (Jerusalem) may have discovered the first cure for amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, known as Lou Gehring's disease, in an Orthodox rabbi. Stephen Hawking, a famous British scientist, suffered from this disease and used methods invented by Israeli scientists to communicate.
The world does not live on bad news alone. Information like this is what is missing.
Tailpiece.
Got up at a half past 6, opened up the house and put on the music. The chores and was ready by a quarter past 9. It was a thoroughly wet day. Sanil and Mini had gone to Ayoor to look up his mother who hasn't been keeping well for the past few days.
A quiet day otherwise. Participated in the Aazhchakkoottam : "The realities and doubts about Covid vaccines" by Dr Pankaj Srivastava, Senior Cardiac Surgeon, Lucknow. An interesting interaction!
Rain accompanied by thunder and lightning with power breakdown. Post sunset was really wet!
Friday, May 21, 2021
The twelve gifts of birth.
Thursday, May 20, 2021
An ex-NDA remembers.
Wednesday, May 19, 2021
My answer to a persistent question.
Tuesday, May 18, 2021
A noble yet tough cause!
'20 a Day' : Cousins volunteer to give Bangalore's Covid victims dignified burials. Nicole Cherian (20), a resident of Bangalore and her cousins have been helping with the burial of COVID-19 patients.
'Dignity in death is the birthright of each living thing', these were the words of Bhagat Puran Singh. Unfortunately, with an ever-increasing number of people passing away due to COVID-19, it seems that the virus takes away its victim's dignity in death as well.
The sudden rise in demises puts immeasurable pressure on the graveyard and crematorium infrastructure and their under-appreciated and uncared for staff. However, in a moment of hope, even in the end, there are also young young people like Nicole Cherian, Tina Cherian and Samuel Joseph, who are working overtime to provide the dead dignity during their final journey.
Nicole Cherian is a final year student of social work at St Joseph's College of Arts and Science in Bangalore. For the last week or so, after she gets done with her online classes, she leaves home in the afternoon and heads to the graveyard nearby. Once there, she and her cousins, Tina Cherian (21) and Samuel Joseph (38) assist in giving COVID-19 victims a decent send-off.
Given the situation, there are no final goodbyes, no wakes and no memorial services or even people to dig graves and bury their loved ones. There have also been instances when the family is scared to go into the room of a COVID-19 patient and when the body reaches the graveyard, it is in a state of decomposition.
Nicole says, "There are times when a COVID-19 patient dies alone in isolation and in such cases, we have a team that goes, wraps up the body and brings it back to the graveyard in an ambulance. Sometimes the family can gather for the final send-off and sometimes it's just us, volunteers".
"On average, there are about 20 bodies that are being brought in every day. The maximum we have seen is upwards of 25 and the minimum has been at 15", says Nicole in conversation with The Better India.
What happens at the graveyard?
Once at the site, the volunteers get into their PPE suits and are ready for the job. "Once the ambulance comes in, about 5 to 6 of us take a trolley/stretcher and get the body out of the ambulance. If the body is too heavy, we shift it into a body bag and then onto a stretcher. The body is then carried to the burial site and we lower the coffin once the priest is done with the prayers", says Tina, a final year medical student at Kasturba Medical College, Mangalore.
When asked if she feels a sense of fear, Nicole is quick to say, "no" and goes on, "there are moments when fear takes over, especially when one reads all the stories about COVID-19 doing the rounds. But honestly, it is with a strong mind that I can go on with what I am doing".
"We are taking all precautions to ensure safety but at the back of my mind, there is a small fear. I know I am meant to do this, so I will go on".
There are challenges that the volunteers face and speaking about it, Tina says, "There was a body of a rather big man and as we tried to lower the body, we relised that the grave was not big enough. We were six of us handling the body and it was physically difficult even then. We had to pull the body back on top and even though there was mud on the body, it had to be done. We did all of it, got the grave dug bigger and buried the body. There was such a collective sigh of relief after we managed to bury the body", Nicole recollects just sitting by the gravesite after it was done, feeling a sense of exhaustion, both physically and emotionally.
There are also poignant moments when family members come and thank the volunteers for the service they are so selflessly performing. "There was a lady who was weeping but even in that state made it a point to thank us for what we are doing", says Tina.
What does it mean to be a volunteer at the graveyard?
Nicole is one of the younger volunteers and when asked how she deals with this kind of tragedy every day, she says, "I am surrounded by immense love at home, my family. I have always seen my father (Mathew Cherian) do so much to help those in need and those less privileged. I am glad to be of help at this juncture". While Nicole tends to investemotionally in the work that she is doing, Samuel says that he looks at it as something that needs to be done. "I find that I am detached from it and do not invest emotionally".
For Samuel, a former pilot with Etihad, volunteering at the graveyard leaves him with a sense of being blessed. "We see so many people who have lost their family members and going through such tough times, that it leaves me with a sense of gratefulness. I am happy to be in a position that lets me help". The first few times, when one is surrounded with the pain and misery, it hits hard. However, Samuel says that he tries to disconnect and not get emotionally invested in the pain he sees around.
- By Vidya Raja in thebetterindia.com edited by Vinayak Hegde.
My take.
My salute to the youngsters!
Tailpiece.
Got up late, at 7 and Mini was ready with a piping hot cup of tea. The first gathering of the family sets the agenda for the day! Chakki, a female kitten, is our companion and Mithun-Ammu make sure of her morning food. Lekha, Mini and Ammu tend the kitchen with Sanil making major culinary contributions.
It's a sunny day, the chores and I'd breakfast before the bath. Clothes were washed and had settled down for work on my laptop.
Saw a Tamil movie, "Karnan" with Dhanush and Rejisha Vijayan after lunch. Took my forty winks during the break.
Not very good news from Allan, at Pune, where Sally has been buttoned up to the ventilator early this morning at a half past 4.
Saw the remaining part of Kannan before pipe down!
'no"
Monday, May 17, 2021
Interesting tidbits.
1. Positive Attitude
Sunday, May 16, 2021
It's been 30 years!
Saturday, May 15, 2021
Kudos to the Madras High Court!
The Madras High Court has rejected a petition filed by Muslims seeking a ban on Hindu festivals and processions.
The gist of the petition had read, "Idolatry is a sin for us. We will not encourage it. This is a territory dominated by us".
However, the court rejected the petition and strongly criticized the intolerance shown against Hindus.
The Muslims demanded that Hindu festivals be banned in areas where they were in the majority.
The court wondered as to what if the Hindus had thought like this since independence and what their situation would have been today.
Kalathoor is a Hindu minority town in the Perambalur district. The Muslim community often protested against the processions and the devotional music/discourses from the Hindu temples.
According to the PTI, Muslims in the area have been opposing the Hindu march since 2012. Islamic fundamentalists refer to Hindu festivals as the 'Celebration of Sin'.
Since the Muslim community dominates a particular area, another religious community cannot be prevented from celebrating festivals or marching in the streets of that area.
Festivals that have been held together for decades cannot be banned because of the intolerance of a particular religious sect.
If religious intolerance is allowed, it is not good for a secular country. The court ruled that intolerance of any kind should be abandoned by the Muslim community and should not lead to conflicts and riots with religious narrow-mindedness.
The bench consisting of Justices N Kirubakaran and P Velmurugan observed that Muslims were trying to establish their dominance by making such demands.
My take.
Where is the intolerance brigade? Why are they quiet about this blatant audacity? And where are we headed?
And for the mainstream national media, this is no news as yet! What a shame!!
Tailpiece.
Got up at 7, yet again as we'd gone to sleep around a half past 1 after seeing the movie. Went about the chores and was ready by 9 as bath was given the go by because water could not be pumped into the overhead tank as the electricity outage was continuing since yesterday morning.
Achu, Mithun and Ammu had stored water in each of the bathrooms after drawing water from the well where the water has come up to the ground level with the rains persisting. Achu had left, soon after, for Pidavoor.
Power was restored after a few hiccups, by afternoon. Phew! The laptop, the cellphones and the dongle were recharged.
Participated in the Aazhchakkoottam : "The second covid-wave in India" by Dr Jayachandran, Ayurveda acharya, Gujarat from 1600 - 1745 hrs. It was interesting.
Friday, May 14, 2021
Sunk Cost Fallacy.
The film was of a very poor quality. After an hour, I whispered to my wife : "Come on, let's go home:. She replied : "No way. We're not throwing away three hundred bucks".
"That's no reason to stay", I protested. "The money's already gone. This is the sunk cost fallacy at work - a thinking error!"
She glared at me, I desperately tried to clarify the situation. "We have spent the three hundred bucks regardless of whether we stay or leave, so this factor should not play a role in our decision". Needless to say, I gave in and sunk back down in my seat and had to suffer the rest of the movie.
A friend struggled for years in a troubled relationship. His girlfriend cheated on him time and again. Each time, she came back repentant and begged for forgiveness. He explained it this way : "I've invested so much energy in the relationship, it would be wrong to throw it away". A classic case of the sunk cost fallacy.
The sunk cost fallacy is most dangerous when we have invested a ;ot of time, money, energy or love in something. This investment becomes a reason to carry on, even if we are dealing with a lost cause. The more we invest, the greater the sunk costs are and the greater the urge to continue becomes.
Our investors frequently fall victim to the sunk cost fallacy. Often they base their investment decisions on acquisition prices. "I lost so much money with this stock, I can't sell it now", they say. This is irrational. The acquisition price should play no role. What counts is the stock's future performance (and the future performance of alternative investments).
Ironically, the more money a share loses, the more investors tend to stick by it.
This irrational behaviour is driven by a need for consistency. After all, consistency signifies credibility. We find contradictions abominable. If we decide to cancel a project half way through, we create a contradiction : we create a contradiction : we admit that we once thought differently. Carrying on with a meaningless project delays this painful realisation and keeps up appearances.The Concorde is a prime example of a government deficit project. Even though both parties, Britain and France, had long realised that the super supersonic aircraft business would never work, they continued to invest enormous sums of money in it - if only to save face. Abandoning the project would have been tantamount to admitting defeat. The sunk cost fallacy is, therefore, often referred to as the "Concorde effect". It leads to costly, even disastrous, errors of judgment.
The Americans extended their involvement in the Vietnam War because of this. Their thinking : "We've already sacrificed so much for this war; it'd to be a mistake to give up now".
Rational decision making requires you to forget about the costs incurred to date. No matter how much you have already invested, only your your assessment of the future costs and benefits counts.
Don't "throw good money after bad" and stay blessed forever.
Tailpiece.
An early morning call from Ramakrishnan, who's in the ICU of the Sucheendram Hospital, at Kochi. Assured him that he was in my prayers. Got up an hour later than usual, consequently.
A power breakdown for almost the entire day.
Saw the Kunchacko Boban - Nayantara movie, "Nizhal" in Malayalam on Amazon after a half past 10. It was, consequently, a very late night.
Thursday, May 13, 2021
How Civil Society Failed India.
Wednesday, May 12, 2021
Never lose your morals.
Tuesday, May 11, 2021
People's Voice and Positivity.
India has vaccinated 16 crores people till date........
Monday, May 10, 2021
The Beauty of Human Relations.
Sunday, May 9, 2021
Adieu Nandybo!
Captain Arun Kumar Nandy aka Nandybo (Acronym for Nandy boy because of his energetic countenance) is the latest casualty of Covid-19 from among my naval course mates. On the 7th, the last message that he had sent on our course What'sApp group was,
"My O2 level has dropped to 89-90 but Ruma's Sp O2 level is better at 95. I have a consistent low grade fever too. I was at Base Hospital and commenced a heavy dose of antibiotics and steroids course to retrieve the O2 levels. X-Ray too shows fair level of chest congestion. But it is felt that it is better to battle it out at home rather than getting admitted as secondary level infection at Base Hospital is on a high. Also managing a O2 cylinder just as a precaution if levels persist at 80s.
Hence avoiding WA for some time, till I tide over the crisis. Thanks for the good wishes from one and all. Deeply touched".
Yesterday evening, his condition had worsened and he was admitted into the Base Hospital for better medical management. Around 1812 hrs, this evening, I got the news that he had passed into the mist of time, leaving me numbed and shocked.
I would like to recapitulate the good moments that we'd shared from the time we met on board INS Delhi in Spring '77, after passing out from the NDA. At the Academy, he was in Kilo Squadron while I was in Hunter, we rarely criss-crossed each other but met at the service classes in the NTT (Naval Training Team) but were not that close.
On Board INS Delhi As Cadets
We were involved in flashing/semaphore exercises on the poop deck, one afternoon. Nandy, as usual, was up to mischief and was caught by Lt Sam Vazir Mohammed, one of our Training Officers who asked him to carry out 20 push ups. Nandy gave him a lost - such a lost one at that - look as if to say that he couldn't decipher what the officer meant. The Officer, then, proceeded to give a demo much to our surprise, to make him 'grasp' the nuances of the punishment which he 'innocently' carried out thereafter. All of us desperately suppressed our chuckles.
P Jayapal is one of our course mates. Many of our friends used to pronounce his name in such a manner that I was convinced he should be called 'JayaPaul' and had added a twist - a combination of Jaya Bhaduri and Paul Newman. I think it was Nandy who'd guffawed the most and the longest; it has become an oft quoted acronym in our course!
The 'Ambuda trophy' and the 'Kichodhara chuckle' were the products of those days - the one-liners and the puns thrown up by me and given wide publicity by Nandybo.
During our Midshipman days, we were on separate ships, he on board Brahmaputra and I, on Beas and hence there weren't much of interaction except for the times that we met in the harbour, at Kochi.
During The Sub Lieutenants' Courses
Both of us were in the same group for the Subs' Courses from Jan '78 and we'd lots of fun. We studied, played and worked hard. I think it was during that time that we got to know each other well and became lasting friends. He'd taken me many a time to his house at Andheri and the occasions were full of fun and frolic. At INS Valsura, in Jamnagar, we'd a tricky situation with one of the instructors which saw the both of us losing seniority!
It was during our attachment with the Signal School that the epithet Y(3-R) was originated to denote Vaithee of our course.
But the maximum were churned out during Mr Mathews' class during our attachment with the Naval Academy. Teck-nickel (technical), Fuck-ulty (faculty) and You Yes (US). I still remember the day when the last of the lot was formalised, Nandy let out a muffled guffaw and we could feel a movement behind us - we were the back benchers, you see - and looking behind, espied the CinC, Adm OS Dawson going out of the class, with a smile on his face! He, probably, took it as our boyish pranks in an otherwise boring class!!
At Long Course
While I was at INS Hamla, in Malad doing my LLMC, during 1983-'84, he used to be a frequent visitor to the establishment to spend the evenings with me at our Mess. There were so many things that we used to discuss which were of interest to the two of us and laugh out, making many wonder as to whether we'd gone mad!
We continued to meet each other during our professional lives - at various places - and found that we always had time to spend time with each other. Our frequencies just matched and the PJs were galore.
At Puri
The last time we'd met was at Puri when we'd our course get together in Nov '19. I was saddened to see his wobble as both his knees needed replacement - which he said that he was going to do shortly, after his retirement recently.
Our interactions continued unabated through our course mates' What'sApp group and our one-to-one channel. He was fond of my PJs, one liners and puns - often out of place - during his lengthy discourses on Bollywood movies of the past and the IPL matches and he never failed to acknowledge them promptly.
And how can I ever forget Nandy with a 'why' and not Nandi with an 'eye'?
Since Puri, I've lost RBS Gill, Kalanidhi and now, Nandy. Those guys are having a ball up there with no one to pull their legs....hmm....they can't be left like that for long!
RIP Nandybo. Will miss you terribly. My salute, tears and prayers for a great friend! Here's wishing that Ruma and your children have the strength to tide over these difficult times.
Tailpiece.
Got up about half an hour late, the chores. Cdr MJ Paul gave a call that lasted more than an hour. Consequently, was ready by a half past 10.
Heavy rains in the afternoon.
PS.
Dateline 12 May