[ To Express, To Reflect, To Give Back ]

Writing one blog at a time

Sunday, August 29th, 2010

Writing a blog should be about expressing my opinion in an authentic voice – initiating a conversation with myself and of course, readers. It is not about finding the right topic or spending twice the time to “edit” the writing or censoring the thoughts before they show up on screen.

OK – I think I understand.

But the laziness comes from different directions. Having no readership is no incentive to anyone, though it shouldn’t stop me from writing. We all start from zero. But that is beside the point, I do seem to have some readership already, I have to presume they are real people and not search engine crawlers.

Or does it matter? See how I find excuses?

The habit of not following through on the ideas is possibly due to fear of imperfection. Perhaps, I have lost faith in my own capacity to form sincere opinions – let alone express them in writing – forget being able to write perfectly. I seem to have this unwritten expectation that what I write should of highest quality. Truth is I need to acknowledge that I am just another one of the millions writing through blogs and that I should simply write for myself and for the love of writing.

The biggest negative is, interestingly, the insatiable curiosity to read and read and…read, anytime, regarding any topic that catches my attention at the moment. iPhone and Google has only made it worse. I search and read about things so far and wide that if Google were to profile my searches, they could classify it as either ‘mindless’ or ‘cosmic’! Of course, this doesn’t help a bit because I seem to trade the time I could be writing to reading one more thing. Much of the reading is helping expand my awareness, which in itself won’t be of much use – or is it?

On the other hand, I do have a burning desire to write. This is the nutty part of this whole struggle. The desire is at a point where it’s equally pushing down on my procrastinator and mental naysayer – but unsuccessful. Ideas run through my mind all the time on what I could write about. It is as if I sit in imagination to write and hit a block and give up. The imagination reassures that I don’t need to waste time in real. Even if I end up writing the full blog in my imagination, it somehow seems to extend beyond that time frame to indicate the blog isn’t that great a writing. Another reassurance to go do something else – may be read about inability to write a blog or something!

In the end, I get it. This is a battle with my own psyche. Nothing will help unless I let desire to write raise up. No amount of reading matters, unless I let a few words down the hand into this laptop – to make up one blog at a time.

The silly part is this is my 350th post!

Fire Drop Quote

Wednesday, April 28th, 2010

I have been dormant for a while but got totally inspired today to write about this. In spite of owning the now-not-so-trendy iPhone, I don’t spend a lot of time playing games in it. I open up the FireDrop today and after a level or two, this quote showed up in my screen and it just shook me up a bit.

If you don’t want anybody to know it, don’t do it

Just think about it.

Will an Indian compete in Snowboarding in Olympics?

Wednesday, February 24th, 2010

I am not surprised about lack of attention to India’s representation in the Vancouver Winter Olympics. Most Indians aren’t interested in winter games and even amongst those who follow it, there is lesser people who actually play winter sports themselves.

Personally, I actually snowboard. Yep. Many of my Indian friends and family think, it isn’t much different from skiing. But it is not. I never skied so I wouldn’t know which one is harder or better. However, It did take a long time for me be a decent snowboarder, especially since I had not seen snow until I was 21 and started learning snowboarding only when I was about 25 or 26. I can come down the hill in most trails with no issue, but my speed and aesthetics still sucks in steeper trails.

Let me tell you my secret – just do it and don’t give up. Most newbie give up after the first day on snowboard. But the truth is you can really get a hang of it within the 3rd day of learning and rest is just showing up and mastering it.

I have been hitting the slopes at least 2 or 3 times a year for many years now though I only frequent ski resorts in NY area. I have tried out resorts in Colorado, Vermont, and Candada too (Tremblant!). There is no comparison to the quality of snow and the overall boarding experience in Vermont or Canada. The local resorts here are just easier to access but not for great snow.

In all these years, I have seen many people from India in the slopes. Almost all of them ski. However, I am yet to meet another Indian (1st generation Indian like me) who snowboards. I am sure there are many out there, it’s just that I haven’t had a way to connect with them. I continue to go all by myself, year after year. Its a great meditative feeling to snowboard down a long hill all by yourself.

Since the day I picked up boarding, I always wondered if an Indian will ever compete in Snowboarding in Winter Olympics. May be, who knows, someone might be training today for it.

Shiva Keshavan thinks we can do something about winter sports and India. From India’s standpoint, he is a veteran winter Olympian even though he is only in late 20s. He has been participating in Luge, representing India for three Olympics now. While I know nothing about Luge beyond being a spectator, I got to imagine its just as hard as any sport and at least, he finished at a decent spot, unlike his two other counterparts who literally ended up at the bottom of all participants. Sad as it is, I applaud their courage to participate (against the usual odds) and hold India’s flag in Winter Olympics. Let’s not forget that we got to start somewhere to get to the top!

I found just a few blogs or news items on Shiva Keshavan :

A Chance Interview with Indian Olympian Shiva Keshavan (btw, he speaks genuinely and very sensibly)

Kamala Bhatt (who also runs a popular Internet radio show) blogged about Shiva.

Lakshmi Gandhi pieced the ten facts about Shiva’s sojourn to Vancouver.

CNNGoAsia cribs about the beaten Indian team

Comments are closed since I couldn’t keep up with deleting spam. You can reach me at my yahoo at skchary.

Dosas all over 2009

Wednesday, January 6th, 2010

Krishna Prasad weaves a beautiful look-back satire of 2009, anchored by the deadly masala dosa!

… a truism heard commonly in South Indian kitchens—“Even the best dosa has holes”—comes closest to sounding like wisdom. So, as the year began, the IT brain behind an angelic ambulance service revealed holes, lots and lots of them, in his company’s balancesheet. And, as the year closed, the greatest golfer the solar system has seen seemed to have played with more holes than 18.

Sometimes these things just jump out for me, begging to take a step back, and commend the writer!

Will idiots revive the Indian educational system?

Tuesday, January 5th, 2010

Anju Musafir writes in Ahmadabad Monitor that Indian education system was far sophisticated 1300 years ago than it is now. While rote learning of a series of subjects is the norm today, she points out to l-tsing’s extensive notes indicating how 7th century Indian children were trained to be superior thinkers and creative individuals. By age 15, children seemed to have grasped grammar, logic, medicine, arts and philosophy too! Whats interesting to note is that all reading and possibly writing were in the form of Shlokas. That perhaps is the missing link between why we still mug up? How else do you recite Shlokas? Today’s Children look at Shlokas as a painful exercise of mandatory recital. Ah! Shlokas were the lessons to begin with!

I am having a hard time figuring how children can learn to “heal their spirits” but I do agree with Anju that almost everything has been reduced to “conditioned learning”. In an art class, they are “conditioned to draw the statutory scene of mountains, a hut, a river, birds flying, a sun and the mandatory river!”

Speaking at the Indian Science Congress, the Prime Minister kicked off a new ‘Decade of Innovation’, and wants to “liberate Indian science from the shackles and deadweight of bureaucratism and in-house favouritism.” Elsewhere, IBN Live took advantage of the roaring success of ‘3 Idiots’ to pull together a panel to debate if the movie in fact depicts reality of Indian higher education.

I haven’t seen the movie, but I assume it makes sense to very many people. I do agree with Parasuram (Karadi Tales) that it’s not that higher institutions are the sole culprit but the system before that, as in secondary school and higher secondary schools have inculcated those habits anyway. Ranking students from 1-100 based on performance is questionable. I can speak from my experience that it was painful but I am not quite sure if that has stopped my learning abilities, at least not significantly. Used appropriately, it does tell you where you stand so you can improve.

Chetan Bhagat (on whose book 3 idiots is based off) ends by citing that our system simply stifles innovation. I think innovation is overloaded term here. What the system does stifle is independent thinking and encourages conformance and copy culture. I would even argue that India is far better in just replicating US than building a unique identity and position for ourselves. Most average Indians, (I would include myself too), don’t really pursue critical thinking. Is that because of how I was taught and experienced learning in school? Unless it’s genetically inherited or a male-thing, I got to say yes!

There are other factors too. Most children just don’t know enough. They can’t be blamed. The system and the society doesn’t expose to them very many things in a structured, meaningful, contextual fashion. What they learn is merely through informal and formal exposures in school, home, neighborhood and of course, TV and Movies. One area I am particularly interested is in building awareness within younger children about possibilities in life. Be it education or careers or living in general.

How many children know that if they really like oceans and the living beings in the sea, they could some day become a marine biologist? Even if that connection is somehow introduced early, how many children really have a marine biologist that they can relate to, as in – see, talk and believe they can be like them? Even if we get that far with a kid meeting and talking with her friends cousin’s father who is a marine biologist, the kid is left to struggle for themselves (or struggle with mostly naïve parents) piecing together how they should take up science route at high school and possibly a biology route at college. Leave aside the financial aspects and the societal pressure to “study something that guarantees a job”

I do think this problem is super real. If addressed in a sensible way, this has the potential to fundamentally shift the thinking and attitude at a younger age, so they grow up to be independent, critical thinkers. Unlike very many who just went with flow, only to realize they are still not sure what to do with life.

May 2010 be the very best ever!

Friday, January 1st, 2010

I look back at the year that just ended and feel thankful for everything. Personally and professionally, it has been a year with significant milestones crossed. Let the new year bring fresh perspectives and opportunities to scale new heights.

A Mind Is A Terrible Thing To Waste

You want to write? want to learn it short and quick?

Thursday, December 24th, 2009

The recent edition of American Scholar magazine published William Zinsser’s succinct instruction on how to simply write well in English. I always look out for good writing habits and this article does a fine job of boiling it down to simple principles. For those bored of reading books on writing skills and sick of struggling to write well, this article should help immensely. It was targeted to international students at Columbia School of Journalism, but I find it applicable to just about everyone with a desire to toy with writing.

It’s really hard to write well because it’s really easy to write garbage.

I just made that sentence up as I type and I would be stunned if nobody ever said that before!!!

I had my 30 seconds with Bill Drayton

Friday, December 18th, 2009

Last night, I had the privilege of meeting Mr. Bill Drayton at a speech he gave at Princeton University. He is one of my role models and I don’t think its an exaggeration if I see him as a modern day version of Gandhi. He is on a mission to identify, encourage and support “changemakers” across the breadth and depth of human society. These ‘changemakers’ are working on the ground solving pressing social problems and Mr. Drayton ensures that these changemakers get whatever they need to do their best and sustain their impact. We need more Draytons and more organizations like the one he is pioneering: Ashoka. If I have a choice to be someone, I would like to be Mr. Drayton someday. Seeing him yesterday talk and spending a few seconds that close to him has reinforced my faith that I will be able to do what he has done, and more.

Mr. Drayton is credited for bringing social entrepreneurship to the forefront of America. During his speech yesterday, he pointed out that social entrepreneurs and their enterprises existed for centuries (so all we are doing is just finding more and more of them and shedding some global light on their work). He said we might just be reaching a “tipping point” of getting social entrepreneurship to mainstream. Many other organizations and individuals have dedicated their lives to direct welfare of society, but Ashoka has done it differently, in my humble opinion. I say it because I see their model as based on what I call ‘McKinsey of Social Enterprise’. When I graduated from NYU Stern, I seriously considered working for Ashoka. There were many personal reasons for not pursuing it rigorously. But the desire continues to deepen. That’s part of the reason why I showed up right away in Princeton, when I got a google alert that Mr. Drayton is speaking there.

He speaks so softly that folks at back couldn’t hear everything clearly but he spoke with a good sense of clarity regarding whats required to make meaningful changes in the society, for good. He was speaking to an audience of about 100 students from the Princeton’s engineering school, particularly those enrolled in Gordon Bloom’s Social Entrepreneurship program. The fact that such courses are already being offered to under graduate students and that Mr. Drayton’s latest Youth Ventures is reaching out to younger generation to be “changemakers” speaks for the “tipping point” of social entrepreneurship. On the topic of leveraging human potential, Mr. Drayton has also written an insightful article recently on the topic of how flight of increased productivity year after year is causing the depletion of natural resources and why the world must wake up soon to “engage people and to retire things”.

When I look back at my own life growing up in Coimbatore, India, I had been a “changemaker” in a real sense. I was an active member for many years in a social service club (Rotaract)and was also the president of the club during which we won awards for some innovative service work. I felt good doing that type of work, even while hanging around with my best buddies. However, I never consciously thought about what I was doing and if it will have any inherent relationship to what I will do in future.

I remember vividly the times I had spent with the Handicapped Children Society. We loved the smile on their faces so much that they became our default place to campout every other Sunday and do some gratifying social work. I can’t forget how much the children enjoyed a Sunday afternoon of Rajnikanth movie. There was this one boy who really wanted to grow up to be like Rajinikanth. I hope he is doing well somewhere.

My life, however, moved on after I graduated from Engineering College and commitments from the family front required me to stay focused on earning. It reminds me of the opening scenes of ‘Forrest Gump’; I went with the flow just like a feather caught in the breeze, moving to Chennai and then to US, building a career that I didn’t think much about. I hate to think this way, but I did lose sight of social work for quite sometime, until it dawned on me again.

Just around the mid point during my 2.5 years in NYU, I figured I had pretty much ended up where I am in life, by sheer ‘go with the flow’ mentality without thinking through what I really want to do or be. This is not to say I didn’t have commitment. I worked very hard to be where I am and grateful for the people and opportunities that helped along the way. But, as they say, ‘you know when you are on a mission’. I knew I was not.

I enrolled for a Social Enterprise class with Bill Shore. I was one of the just 5 guys in about 30 students who enrolled (guess more women cared about society, than men, at least in Stern, that year!). Stern is known for Finance majors and I wasn’t surprised that there were only 30 students. In fact, it’s the opposite, the 30 students really knew what they were getting into and possibly why. So it couldn’t have been a better setting. Having read Bill’s book prior to start of the sessions and sitting through the classes, guest lectures and case discussions made me feel like I have somehow found the deepest core of who I am and what I want to be. Perhaps, it goes back to my high school days of social work around Coimbatore and I do think experiences from childhood, one way or other, returns to remind who you really are. At last, I found something that just was always there for me for the taking. I want to be a social entrepreneur. A big, audacious changemaker.

I truly believe God has placed the seed within all of us. A seed to become meaningful persons and play particular roles in serving the humanity. The seed grows and symptoms of its growth may manifest more clearly during childhood, but somewhere along the way due to family and social settings, the growth is inhibited. For many, the seed gets buried deep enough that it takes a lot of time and energy to unearth it. But the fact is, the seed is there for us to find, nurture and make a beautiful tree out of it.

All said, how to get to from where I am today to where I want to go, is going to be work in progress. It starts with the faith, the rest must fall in place. I must continue to do what I need to do.

Who am I?

Sunday, August 16th, 2009

A year ago I visited India and when there, I wrote this…

Its this odd feeling every time I visit India: I don’t belong here, yet some of me wants or feels like it does.

But then here I am in America and feeling seems to be very same …I don’t belong here, yet most of my self behaves like it does.

poor me, who am I, really?

Son of the Soil

Sunday, May 17th, 2009

If I am the son, then the soil is town of Coimbatore, India. Technically, I am not an original ‘son of coimbatore soil’ since I was born in Chennai, and moved to Coimbatore when I was about 4 years old. Few people remember exactly what happened before they were 4 and I am certainly not one amongst that few.

I am sure everyone loves their city or town or village where they grew up and I am no exception. Its just that Coimbatore is a city that has more than a few reasons to fall in love; reasons many other cities can only envy of. One thing I am proud of about Coimbatore is respect for others build into the language, as in the Tamil dialect spoken by residents.

If you have never heard of coimbatore and its people, this is probably news to you. The dialect of tamil used in Coimbatore is the (in my humble opinion) most friendliest, considerate and humblest in the entire state of Tamilnadu. This is also the first striking social aspect a visitor would come across. I have heard friends from Chennai feeling overwhelmed when they hear auto drivers and bus conductors addressing them with respect (literally addressing them as brothers or sisters). People in general are also helpful, nice and easy to talk to. Its generally unheard of where visitors were misguided or exploited by general public. Perhaps the inherent attributes of the language builds the right attitude in people. Also, the Tamil spoken in and around Coimbatore city is little polished, when compared to what is spoken in the outskirts and villages around Coimbatore. Tamil movies often showcase the rural dialect as the common “Covai Tamil”. As much as we respect others through the words and actions, people of Coimbatore get offended when outsiders address them with disrespect. With people moving across cities more common, this happens a lot so its not a big deal. Yet, when I visit Chennai, I feel offended when Auto drivers address you the way they normally do. Of course, it is totally unintentional and is a mere localized difference in culture and language, neverthless, it helps to know the values of people from different cities and respect their values. It cannot be denied that disrespectful words (in some dialects) encourage a unfriendly attitude among children and citizens, in general. Of course, there are always exceptions.

Its just timing! Stupid!

Monday, February 23rd, 2009

Dear Rahman,

you just made hell lot of Indians proud! You bumped the morale of an entire country thats still wondering what its really worth!

But…I have to agree with ubiquitense, Rahman didn’t really need an Oscar, everyone one else wanted it, for him!

The timing of the movie and the vibe of the music couldn’t have hit the American ear at a better time…its just a great year (read economy, layoffs) for a rags to riches story. Any other year, this movie wouldn’t have seen a daylight and just made it straight to DVD, as apparently planned! However, one thing that Rahman highlights is “Karmanye Vaadi kaarastey, Maa Faleshu kadaachana!”“When you work in the right consciousness, when your work becomes organically a part of your whole self, and when you do your work out of that commitment, no matter what other people do, no matter what the compensation may be, do it for the health of your own soul, then you open the door by which the affluence of the Universe flows forth into your life.”

I am just proud of you from the bottom of my heart pal! Keep doing what you are doing, this is just a glorious journey, with no beginning or end…Jai Ho!

Happy New Year!

Thursday, January 1st, 2009

Happy New Year!

Thanks

Looking back at 2008, there is a lot to be happy about and there is a lot to be frustrated, in the end, I thought, there is more to be thankful for all the good things!

Aspen Ideas Festival

Monday, August 4th, 2008

“Imagine some of the most inspired and provocative thinkers, writers, artists, business people, teachers, and other leaders drawn from myriad fields and from across the country and around the world – all gathered in a single place, ready to teach, speak, lead, question and answer – all interacting with an audience of thoughtful people who have stepped back from their day-to-day routines to delve deeply into a world of ideas, thought and discussion”

Thats a blurb from Aspen ideas festival, hosted by the Aspen Institute. They bring the likes of Bill Clinton, Thomas Friedman and host of other leading thinkers to share their perspectives in a serene Aspen mountain side.

A week of thought-provoking, meaningful and fun conversations – all available online for folks who couldn’t be there in Aspen.

Internet booms

Tuesday, July 15th, 2008

The data from the recently published 2008 Quarter two report of venture capital investments has an interesting hightligh in the new venture space : 238 Internet-based companies got an funding of around $1.5 billion! Thats just in one quarter! This quarterly figure in fact represents the highest since 2001. Are we seeing a surge in the dot com business?

On a side note, US venture capitalists sent about $473 million in India’s way.

Eye glasses under $30?

Sunday, June 29th, 2008

Yes, one of my colleagues recommended Zennioptical and I just placed an order with them for a rimless glass for about $30. If you have ordered eye glasses in any of the retail specialty stores, you should be freaking out with that $30 deal. Because, I paid $350 at Sears a couple of years ago! Actually, Zennioptical sells basic glasses for $8!!!

I couldn’t fathom how Zennioptical could sell stuff so cheap unless they have an undersea walkway to a Chinese manufacturing plant. From what I hear online and from my colleague, their quality is just perfect and at that price, I don’t care if I have to buy one every year! The buying process was painless. Of course, I will wait for mine to arrive before I say more.

This just tells me how retail prices in the US are inflated with hundreds of middle men and brands. While the economy might be flourishing in that model, is it in the best interest of the US consumer and the Chinese producer?

Explorer Iam

Saturday, May 31st, 2008

One of the things I enjoy is to do is to wander. I was telling Harini today is that I am an “explorer” at my core.

I enjoy the time I spend at the local library or the bookstore. I love to scan through aisles of books, looking for that one title or author to inspire me.
I enjoy the time I wander around new cities we visit. I can’t wait to get up and get out looking for that one scenery or spot that would inspire me. e.g new mexico, puerto rico, paris, maui…
I enjoy the time I wander on the cable networks channel surfing, looking for that something that interests me at that moment.
I enjoy the time I wrestle through the random magazines on the side table at the wait room at the OBGYN’s office, inspired by the reader’s digest article.
Best of all, I enjoy the time I wander online looking for new things that internet (and google) helps me find!

I was reading NYtimes this morning and happened to get attracted to “Hot Ticket in B-School: Bringing Life Values to Corporate Ethics”. There I was reading about the inspiring Stewart D. Friedman and his leadership development course at Wharton Business School. I stumbled upon Brett Hurt, the founder and CEO of startup BazaarVoice.com at Austin, Texas. His company and the blog sounds interesting. If for the first time in the history of mankind we can see word-of-mouth, why not monetize it? Sounds good to me. Apparently, he was so impressed by Prof. Friedman that he is inspiring his employees with Friedman’s teachings and his book.

Austin reminded me of one of my former colleague, Tony Castro. I spent a unforgettable 3 day, action-packed, fun-filled weekend at Austin 7 years ago with Tony and his roommates and that experience left a yearning in me that some day I will move to Austin to live that life everyday. Brett, does BazaarVoice need my service?

I don’t want to look at Billboards!

Friday, May 30th, 2008

“New technology has made it possible, using tiny cameras, to gather details about people looking at billboard ads, such as their age or gender” – NYTimes article, May 31, 2008 – titled “Billboards That Look Back”

This is getting ridiculous. The privacy issues are going out of control in the name of business!

I understand the need for make advertising effective. I also understand that without knowing who is “consuming” the advertising, it can’t be made much effective. But please not camera’s watching me!

As such, I am not a big fan of cable TV settop boxes collecting data about what ads we are watching. Although I have a satellite dish providing us service, they enfore we connect their settop box to the telephone line to enable them to send data back when I watch the superbowl Ad or if I was channel surfing!

Sooner or later, the data collected about us will be so intelligent that we don’t have to make any decisions ever in our life for ourselves. The data analytical systems will be so intelligent and likely accurate that we better let them say what we should do, than to think and decide for ourselves. I wonder what will be do with all the time we will then….? Watch more TV!!!

Odyssey Of the Mind – my calling?

Thursday, May 29th, 2008

One of my core desires is around doing something to foster creativity among children in developing nations, especially among those children, who lack awareness and resources to experience the “creative process”.

Given that desire, my soul always looks out for anything related to it.

I stumbled upon today’s Courier News paper at the desk of one of my colleagues at work. I was browsing through it really quickly, until I stopped at an article in the local section that said “Students prepare for World Finals of problem-solving competition” . The heading was enough for me take a minute to read through it.

I had never heard of “Odyssey of the Mind” of before. But it sure hit a chord in me. Obviously, I returned to my desk and googled it. Odyssey of the Mind is apparently a popular competition among school-going children and its purpose is to “foster the development of children’s creative-thinking and problem-solving skills”. Founded almost 25+ years ago, seems a movement of a sort to foster creativity among children. One day, I would love to do something like this for children in India, who I am sure, given right environment, resources, time and encouragement, will beat anyone else in creativity!

I was just fascinated to visit their website : http://www.odysseyofthemind.com. Looks like their next world finals is next week in MaryLand and a few teams from central jersey has made it to the world finals. I was telling Harini that we could go there if not for the safe arrival of our little master! Children from 20 different countries participate besides children from 50 states in the US. Indeed, India is not one of them.

Perhaps, my “calling” came through the Courier News today!

You got ADD!

Wednesday, May 28th, 2008

pseudo-attention deficit disorder : Its sufferers do not have actual A.D.D., but, influenced by technology and the pace of modern life, have developed shorter attention spans. They become frustrated with long-term projects, thrive on the stress of constant fixes of information, and physically crave the bursts of stimulation from checking e-mail or voice mail or answering the phone. from NYTimes.

Am I reading about myself? I have to admit that the last sentence is gem. It absolutely reflects my own situation. To be doing nothing or to be silent and peaceful, scares me these days, as much as I know I should love it!

I am back!

Sunday, May 25th, 2008

The long hiatus is over and I now have an MBA from NYU Stern. No more excuses to not blog! At least, I can’t sleep at night peacefully with any other excuse!

I have been thinking about the emotional reaction to having a business school degree now and the 2.5 years of ordeal going to Manhattan twice a week, the hours and hours of reading and case writing, working with hundreds of great students and world-class professors and finally, a spectacular commencement at RadioCity hall. It does feel unreal at times, that it is done and over!

My father sent a note of appreciation : “[you are] really fortunate to get this higher education in New York University. Nenachukooda pakkallai. GOD IS GREAT”. Nenachukooda pakkallai means, never even thought such a thing was possible.

I agree, from where we were as a family 12 years to where we are…I am happy for what we got and for what I had even 3 years ago. I have not thought about doing an mba, let alone in the US and let alone in the No.1 part-time program in the country. yet here I am writing this. This only proves to me what I already strongly believe : “If you put your mind & heart, anything is possible!!!” Credit goes to two individuals : Mohan Tavaroth, who really pushed me off the cliff when I was questioning my abilities to do it three years ago. The larger credit goes to Harini. She has been trooper all along and has gone through much pains due to lack of my attention and help at family front. The delayed price of which is coming in 3 weeks from now! our little boy! Timing of it couldn’t have been better thanks to Almighty!

It may sound like a big deal? is it?

It sure is. To paraphrase what I have learnt from my readings : “Pain and Joy aren’t comparative; A person’s pain or joy is just as big as anyone else’s pain or joy, regardless of the reasons or context”.

With that, I am starting to blog again! I am honored & thankful for your continued readership support for my blog.