iPhone photos in a walk-around witnessing the triumph of human imagination ushering in autumn in sweaty Singapore with lanterns and moon cakes Chinese style. The warrior metal statue is in fact on Orchard Road but belongs in spirit to the Chinese Garden.
Thursday, September 30, 2010
Tuesday, September 21, 2010
Monday, September 20, 2010
Obeisances, Oh Maestro!
Congratulations to everyone who celebrated the birthday of this extraordinary musician, Lalgudi G. Jayaraman, who turned 80 on 17 September. There was an excellent webcast direct from the Chennai Music Academy spread over two days with wonderful music and presentations. I share with you this recording from the webcast, which shows the calibre of the people who participated. The music features Bombay Jayashri and Vithal Ramamurthy (violin), who presented 3 compositions of their Guru Lalgudi G. Jayaraman.
Blessed are we all to be in this day and age to enjoy this wonderful gift of God.
Bombay Jayashri sings 3 Lalgudi compositions
Sunday, September 19, 2010
Totally HIlarious - Do You Have a Bullshit Job?
Stanley Bing, who has given many a laugh to readers of Fortune for some years, has written this side-splitting book..
100 Bullshit Jobs ... And How to Get Them
Here is a sample about the Food Critic.... and there's stuff too close to what you may be doing...Visit his blogSunday, September 12, 2010
Wisdom and the Face of Death
The theme of death continues. It is not an obsession, but a theme much encountered in the last few days. The sudden death of a 40-year old colleague... and the New York Times Interview of Mentor Minister and the architect of Singapore, Lee Kuan Yew. Titled "Days of Reflection", the interview shows what thoughts and meditations keep the senior statesman of 87 occupied. He is still busy. He is still advising people on all matters of nation building. And he also thinks of the approaching end.....
I saw today a movie on Confucius. I continue to marvel at the stunning visuals, haunting music and intimate insights into the human saga that Chinese movies are made up of these days. I give you a clip from the movie, showing Confucius, banished from his kingdom for being too sagely and peace-loving, and wandering without food or shelter with his small set of disciples. The man is suffused with humanism and takes a moment to live in the world of music...it elevates everyone from their sad predicament.
Come, watch this clip:
I saw today a movie on Confucius. I continue to marvel at the stunning visuals, haunting music and intimate insights into the human saga that Chinese movies are made up of these days. I give you a clip from the movie, showing Confucius, banished from his kingdom for being too sagely and peace-loving, and wandering without food or shelter with his small set of disciples. The man is suffused with humanism and takes a moment to live in the world of music...it elevates everyone from their sad predicament.
Come, watch this clip:
Sunday, September 5, 2010
The Death of a Zen Master
Osho talks about death in "Vedanta-Seven Steps to Samadhi":
... Because only waves are born, the ocean remains the same. The many are born, the one remains the same. You are born and you will have to die; hence the fear of death, so much fear of death, but the Brahman in you is unborn and undying. Everyone is afraid of death. Why this fear? And nothing can be done about it; only one thing is certain in life, and that is death.
It is said of one Zen master, Tojo, that he remained silent his whole life, he would not speak. When he was a child it was thought that he was incapable of speaking, but he was so intelligent that sooner or later people realized that he was just keeping silence, he was not dumb. His eyes were so radiant,
intelligent, wise; his behavior, his actions, were so intelligent that people became aware that he was simply keeping a deep silence – maybe continuing some vow to remain silent that he may have taken in his past life. And he remained silent for eighty years.
The first and last statement he made was on the day he was going to die. The morning he was going to die, just as the sun was rising, he collected his followers – many had started following him. He was not speaking, but he was living something, and that living something became so significant to those who could understand that there were many who followed him; many were his disciples. They would just sit around Tojo, they would just be in contact with his silence, and many were transformed.
He collected all his followers and said, ”This evening when the sun sets, I will die. This is my first and last statement.”
So somebody said, ”But if you can speak, why did you remain silent your whole life?”
He said, ”Everything else is uncertain, only death is certain. And I want only to speak about something which is certain.” Once born, death is certain; everything else is uncertain. Why is death so certain? Nothing can be done about it. Science may help to prolong life, but death cannot be destroyed, because it is implied in the very phenomenon of birth; it has happened already.
Death is one pole of the same phenomenon of which birth is the beginning, the other pole.
Wednesday, September 1, 2010
Osho: Why Jews have the most jokes
Osho is talking about laughter. He says both laughter and boredom are the signature of intelligence. He says the Jews have the most collection of jokes. And he points out that they have also won the most Nobel prizes.
I go and check.
This is what I find:
JEWISH NOBEL PRIZE WINNERS
JINFO.ORG
At least 180 Jews and persons of half- or three-quarters-Jewish ancestry have been awarded the Nobel Prize, accounting for 22% of all individual recipients worldwide between 1901 and 2009, and constituting 36% of all US recipients during the same period. In the research fields of Chemistry, Economics, Physics, and Physiology/Medicine, the corresponding world and US percentages are 27% and 39%, respectively. Among women laureates in the four research fields, the Jewish percentages (world and US) are 38% and 50%, respectively. (Jews currently make up approximately 0.25% of the world's population and 2% of the US population.)
Chemistry (31 prize winners, 20% of world total, 28% of US total)
Economics (27 prize winners, 42% of world total, 56% of US total)
Literature (13 prize winners, 12% of world total, 27% of US total)
Peace (9 prize winners, 9% of world total, 10% of US total)
Physics (47 prize winners, 25% of world total, 36% of US total)
Physiology or Medicine (53 prize winners, 27% of world total, 40% of US total)
See also data on "other Nobels":
Jewish Recipients of the Kyoto Prize (25% of recipients)
Jewish Recipients of the Wolf Foundation Prize (34% of recipients)
Jewish Recipients of the US National Medal of Science (38% of recipients).
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