Showing posts with label thoughts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label thoughts. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 19, 2011

Satya Vachan: The evil you do remains with you: The good you do, comes back to you!


*A woman baked chapatti (roti) for members of her family and an extra one for a hungry passerby. She kept the extra chapatti on the window sill, for whosoever would take it away.* 


*Every day, a hunchback came and took away the chapatti. Instead of expressing gratitude, he muttered the following words as he went his way: 


"The evil you do remains with you: The good you do, comes back to you!" * 


*This went on, day after day. Every day, the hunchback came, picked up the chapatti and uttered the words: "The evil you do, remains with you: The good you do, comes back to you!" The woman felt irritated. "Not a word of gratitude," she said to herself...* ** 


*"Everyday this hunchback utters this jingle! What does he mean?" One day, exasperated, she decided to do away with him. "I shall get rid of this hunchback," she said. And what did she do? She added poison to the chapatti she prepared for him! As she was about to keep it on the window sill, her hands trembled. "What is this I am doing?" she said. Immediately, she threw the chapatti into the fire, prepared another one and kept it on the window sill. As usual, the hunchback came, picked up the chapatti and muttered the words: "The evil you do, remains with you: The good you do, comes back to you!" The hunchback proceeded on his way, blissfully unaware of the war raging in the mind of the woman. Every day, as the woman placed the chapatti on the window sill, she offered a prayer for her son who had gone to a distant place to seek his fortune. For many months, she had no news of him.. She prayed for his safe return.* 


*That evening, there was a knock on the door. As she opened it, she was surprised to find her son standing in the doorway. He had grown thin and lean. His garments were tattered and torn. He was hungry, starved and weak. As he saw his mother, he said, "Mom, it's a miracle I'm here. * 


*While I was but a mile away, I was so famished that I collapsed. I would have died, but just then an old hunchback passed by. I begged of him for a morsel of food, and he was kind enough to give me a whole chapatti. * 


*As he gave it to me, he said, "This is what I eat everyday: today, I shall give it to you, for your need is greater than mine!" “As the mother heard those words, her face turned pale.* ** 


* She leaned against the door for support. She remembered the poisoned chapatti that she had made that morning. Had she not burnt it in the fire, it would have been eaten by her own son, and he would have lost his life! It was then that she realized the significance of the words:* ** 


*"The evil you do remains with you: The good you do, comes back to you!" Do well and don’t ever stop doing Good, even if it is not appreciated at that time.*

Tuesday, July 5, 2011

The 25 Documents You Need Before You Die

pic: 25 things

It isn't enough simply to sign a bunch of papers establishing an estate plan and other end-of-life instructions. You also have to make your heirs aware of them and leave the documents where they can find them.

Consider: At least 10 states have been investigating whether some of the country's largest insurers are failing to pay out unclaimed life policies to beneficiaries. California and Florida have held public hearings on the issue in recent weeks.

Insurers say they are behaving lawfully. Under policy contracts, they aren't required to take steps to determine if a policyholder is still alive, but instead pay a claim when beneficiaries come forward.

You can avoid such problems by securing important documents and telling your family where they are stored.

Jean Parr is grateful that her mother obsessed about the subject. "I really didn't want to think about it," says Ms. Parr, 54 years old, a manager at the American Chemical Society in Washington. But when her mom died in 2005, she knew exactly where to look for the will, the key to a safe-deposit box and documents indicating her mother had paid and arranged for her own funeral.

The financial consequences of failing to keep your documents in order can be significant. According to the National Association of Unclaimed Property Administrators, state treasurers currently hold $32.9 billion in unclaimed bank accounts and other assets. (You can search for unclaimed assets at MissingMoney.com .)
25 things
Most experts recommend creating a comprehensive folder of documents that family members can access in case of an emergency, so they aren't left scrambling to find and organize a hodgepodge of disparate bank accounts, insurance policies and brokerage accounts.

You can store the documents with your attorney, lock them away in a safe-deposit box or keep them at home in a fireproof safe that someone else knows the combination to.

That isn't to say you should keep everything. Sometimes people hold onto so many papers that loved ones can't find the important ones easily.

In 2008, Jane Bissler, a counselor in Kent, Ohio, approached her then-87-year-old mother about organizing her documents. Because her mom was a widow with relatively simple finances and two homes, Ms. Bissler, 57, says she figured it would be a relatively simple task.

Instead, it took an entire year for Ms. Bissler and her mother to go through all of her papers, which included documents from eight bank accounts, utility bills from the 1950s and reams of canceled checks.

The two of them pared down the stash from four four-drawer filing cabinets to one two-drawer cabinet, shredding anything extraneous. Ms. Bissler and her mother visited banks and brokerages to ensure she was listed on all of her mother's accounts. Her mother died in May 2009.

"It would have been a total nightmare if we hadn't gone through it all with her," Ms. Bissler says. "It was that Depression-era stuff where you keep everything and hide other things." Ms. Bissler estimates that having the documents organized ahead of time spared them from ordering an additional 15 copies of the death certificate and "years" of time.

Here is a rundown of the most important documents you'll need to have signed, sealed and delivered. You should start collecting these as soon as possible and update them every few years to reflect changes in assets and preferences. Some—such as copies of tax returns or recent child-support payments—need to be updated more often than others.

The Essentials

An original will is the most important document to keep on file.

A will allows you to dictate who inherits your assets and, if your children are underage, their guardians. Dying without a will means losing control of how your assets are distributed. Instead, state law will determine what happens.

Wills are subject to probate—legal proceedings that take inventory, make appraisals of property, settle outstanding debt and distribute remaining assets. Not having an original document means this already-onerous process could be much more of an ordeal, since family members can challenge a copy of a will in court.

Rick Law, founder of estate-planning firm Law ElderLaw LLP in Aurora, Ill., says estate planners increasingly recommend revocable trusts in addition to wills, since they are more private and harder to dispute. "Every will is like a compass that points toward the closest courthouse," he says.

A revocable living trust can be changed anytime during your lifetime. After you transfer ownership of various assets to the trust, you can serve as the trustee on behalf of beneficiaries you designate. Provided you do so, there aren't any ongoing fees.

If your family can't find the original trust documents, you are "basically setting your estate up for litigation," says Duncan Moseley, vice president of Sanders Financial Management in Atlanta.

A "letter of instruction" can be a useful supplement to a will, though it doesn't hold legal weight. It is a good way to make sure your executor has the names and contact information of your attorneys, accountants and financial advisers. While the will should be stored with your attorney or in a courthouse, the letter of instruction should be more readily accessible, particularly if it contains instructions on funeral arrangements.

Also, make sure your heirs have access to a durable financial power-of-attorney form. Without it, no one can make financial decisions on your behalf in the event that you are incapacitated.

Proof of Ownership

You should keep documentation of housing and land ownership, cemetery plots, vehicles, stock certificates and savings bonds; any partnership or corporate operating agreements; and a list of brokerage and escrow mortgage accounts.

If you don't tell your family that you own such assets, there is a chance they never will find out. Mr. Moseley says in such an event, clients must perform their own detective work, watching the mail for real-estate tax bills or combing bank accounts for interest payments, for example.

File any documents that list loans you have made to others, since they could be included as assets in an estate. Similarly, keep a list of any debts you owe to avoid surprising your family. Wills and living trusts generally are drafted to include provisions for how debts should be settled, and creditors have a stipulated period of time in which to file a claim against the estate.

Make the most recent three years of tax returns available, too. "Looking at last year's returns offers a snapshot of what assets we should be looking for this year," says Lesley Moss Mamdouhi, a principal at estate-law firm Oram & Moss in Chevy Chase, Md. This also will help your personal representative file a final income-tax and estate return and, if necessary, a revocable-trust return.

Bank Accounts

Mr. Law recommends sharing a list of all accounts and online log-in information with your family so they can notify the bank of your death. "If nobody ever takes any more out or puts money in, it becomes a dormant account and then becomes the property of the state," he says.

Be sure to list any safe-deposit boxes you own, register your spouse or child's name with the bank and ask them to sign the registration document so they can have access without securing a court order.

Health-Care Confidential

Possibly the most important health-care document to fill out in advance is a durable health-care power-of-attorney form. This allows your designee to make health-care decisions on your behalf if you are incapacitated. The document should be compliant with federal health-information privacy laws, so that doctors, hospitals and insurance companies can speak with your designee. You may also need to fill out an Authorization to Release Protected Healthcare Information form.

If you are incapacitated and your family can't locate a health-care power of attorney, they will have to go to court to get a guardian appointed.

Porter Storey, executive vice president of the American Academy of Hospice and Palliative Medicine in Glenview, Ill., says it isn't enough to establish a health-care power of attorney unless you have explained to your designee how you would like to be treated in case of incapacity. He also recommends writing a living will detailing your wishes.

After Diane Dimond's mother had a series of strokes in 2006, Ms. Dimond knew there was a signed living will tucked away in a safe at home. Ms. Dimond, 58 and living in New York, recalls the Sunday she watched her mother in a coma and was able to fulfill her wishes never to be kept on external life support. "It was gut-wrenching," she says, "but I took the physician aside and said, 'I want to take her home.'" Having her mother's living will enabled Ms. Dimond to do just that.

The living will and the power of attorney constitute what are called "advance directives"; some states consolidate these into a single form. (AARP offers a state-by-state listing of advance-directive forms on its website.) Terminally ill patients may wish to have their doctors sign a do-not-resuscitate order.

Certain companies, such as Advance Choice Inc.'s DocuBank, will keep copies of health-care documents for a fee. Subscribers get a wallet-sized card and, in case of an emergency, a hospital will call DocuBank, which will fax over the information.

Life Insurance and Retirement Accounts

Copies of life-insurance policies are among the most important documents for your family to have. Family members need to know the name of the carrier, the policy number and the agent associated with the policy.

Be especially careful with life-insurance policies granted by an employer upon your retirement, since those are the kind that financial planners most often miss, says David Peterson, CEO of Denver-based Peak Capital Investment Services. New York state alone is holding more than $400 million in life-insurance-related payments that have gone unclaimed since 2000, according to the state comptroller's office.

Estate planners also recommend that you draw up a list of pensions, annuities, individual retirement accounts and 401(k)s for your spouse and children.

An IRA is considered dormant or unclaimed if no withdrawal has been made by age 70½. According to the National Association of Unclaimed Property Administrators, tens of millions of dollars languish in unclaimed IRAs every year.

If your heirs don't know about these accounts, they won't be able to lay claim to them, and the money could languish. The U.S. Department of Labor estimates that each year tens of thousands of workers fail to claim or roll over $850 million in 401(k) assets. You can track unclaimed pensions, 401(k)s and IRAs at Unclaimed.com.

Marriage and Divorce

Ensure your spouse knows where you have stored your marriage license. Mary Cay Corr, now 74 and living in Raleigh-Durham, N.C., couldn't locate hers when her husband died. "I had to write to New York, where we got married, and pay for a new marriage license to prove that I had been married to my husband before I could claim anything," she says.

For divorced people, it is important to leave behind the divorce judgment and decree or, if the case was settled without going to court, the stipulation agreement, says Linda Lea Viken, president of the American Academy of Matrimonial Lawyers in Chicago. These documents lay out child support, alimony and property settlements, and also may list the division of investment and retirement accounts.

Include the distribution sheet listing bank-account numbers that accompanied the settlement to avoid disputes about ownership or payments due. Also include a copy of the most recent child-support payment order. In the majority of states, the obligation to pay child support still exists after death.

Ms. Viken also recommends filing copies of any life-insurance papers. In many states if you have a policy that benefits your children, it can be set off against the ongoing child support.

You also should include a copy of the "qualified domestic-relations order," which can prove your spouse received a share of your retirement accounts.

Tuesday, June 21, 2011

Life is the first gift, love is the second, and understanding the third

Life is the first gift,
love is the second,
and understanding the third.

Sometimes, we think of why friends keep forwarding
mails to us without
writing a single word...
maybe this could explain why...

When you have nothing to say,
Still want to keep contact,
Guess what you do,
You forward mails.

When you have something to say,
But don't know what,
But don't know how,
Guess what you do,

You forward mails.

When you have something to say,
But don't know why,
Guess What you do,
You forward mails.

When you are still wanted,
When you are still remembered,
When you are still important,
When you are still loved,
When you are still cared about.

Russian plane crash raises fresh concerns about ageing fleet

The deadly plane crash in northern Russia on Monday night that left forty four people dead and eight in a critical condition has raised fresh concerns about the airworthiness of Russia’s ageing civil aircraft fleet.

Although investigators have warned it is too early to say precisely what caused the disaster, they said mechanical failure (along with human error and bad weather) was one of the lead theories.


State media told viewers that the plane involved in the crash, a Tupolev-134 passenger jet, was generally reliable, but conceded it was in the process of being phased out due to its old age.


Although Russian airlines flying international routes typically use more modern Boeings and Airbus planes, many domestic carriers continue to use ageing Soviet-era aircraft that are on their last legs.


The Soviet-era jet involved in the crash was thirty one years old, and Russia’s transport minister Igor Levitin warned in 2007 that such planes were getting too old for commercial use and should be withdrawn from service within five years.


Around 150 such planes are estimated to remain in service inside Russia however, along with a similar number of ageing Tupolev-154 passenger liners which are also reaching the end of their service life.

Monday, June 20, 2011

Is honesty still best policy?

Human history is a continuously rotating wheel of events borne out of social and political dynamics peculiar to a time and age.

Corruption must have been an intrinsic part of human behaviour in every age to give birth to the proverb — honesty is the best policy. Strangely, those who practised it were often made to pay, either with their jobs or with their lives. In India, several paid dearly for clutching on to the proverb. The ruling class during Emergency could not take in its stride Justice H R Khanna’s lone dissent against robbing citizens of their most precious possession — right to life (ADM Jabalpur case).

    Though it won in the SC with 4:1 majority to have a free run with the lives of its own countrymen, the government, to teach Justice Khanna a lesson, appointed Justice M H Beg as Chief Justice of India. Justice Khanna resigned. Govind Rao Khairnar as deputy commissioner of municipal corporation struck terror in the hearts of Mumbai land mafia by fearlessly demolishing illegal construction, including temples and a hotel run by a CM’s son. He came to be known as Mumbai’s “one-man demolition army” and was rewarded with suspension.

    National Highway Authority of India project director Satyendra Dubey was mysteriously shot dead after exposing the highway construction mafia in Bihar for poor quality of roads in the Golden Quadrilateral Corridor Project.

    Marketing manager for Indian Oil Corporation Shanmugam Manjunath paid with his life for stopping two petrol pumps from selling adulterated diesel in Uttar Pradesh. The same reason why additional collector Yeshwant Sonawane was burnt alive by the fuel mafia.

    Why did Justice Khanna, Khairnar, Dubey, Manjunath, Sonawane and their ilk suffer? Is it because they discharged duties honestly? Who has the last word — the mafia or the government? Is government serious about punishing those who confront the honest with bribes and, if they refuse, batter them? What can a common man do in such a scenario? How can he sensitize governments to its bread and butter issues and make them accountable without waiting for five years to teach them a lesson at the hustings for corruption?

    This dilemma was answered by a 7-judge bench of the SC in State of Rajasthan vs Union of India [1977 SCC (3) 592]. It said, “The wisdom of man has not yet been able to conceive of a government with power sufficient to answer all its legitimate needs and at the same time incapable of mischief. In the last analysis, a great deal must depend on the wisdom and honesty, integrity and character of those who are in charge of administration and the existence of enlightened and alert public opinion.”

    There is another argument that one comes across too often — the
government and ministers are answerable to the house of representatives and not to the courts which understand very little of political dynamics. This too was answered by the court in State of Karnataka vs Union of India [1977 SCC (4) 608]. It said, “It was contended that conduct of governmental affairs by state governments and their ministers is subject exclusively to the control by state legislatures and those of the Union government by Parliament alone.”

    It added, “To accept such contentions is to place ministers, both in the states and in the Union governments, completely outside the scope of legal answerability on the ground that they are only politically responsible to and controllable by appropriate legislatures even when they, in the course of purported exercise of official powers, act dishonestly and corruptly and even commit criminal offences.”

    The crux of the two judgments reflects what Miguel de Cervantes wrote in his 17th century novel ‘Don Quixote’ — “Honesty is more effective than dishonest scheming.”

    Is honesty still the best policy? Answer to this depends on whether anyone in politics would agree with Mahatma Gandhi’s quote — “What is true is that honesty is incompatible with amassing of a large fortune.”

Sunday, June 19, 2011

Our Past Days

Our Past Days

When the school reopened in June,
And we settled in our new desks and benches!

When we queued up in book depot,
And got our new books and notes!
When we wanted two Sundays and no Mondays,
Yet managed to line up daily for the morning prayers.

We learnt writing with slates and pencils, and
Progressed To fountain pens and ball pens and then Micro tips!

When we began drawing with crayons and evolved to
Color pencils and finally sketch pens!
When we started calculating first with tables and then with
Clarke's tables and advanced to
Calculators and computers!

When we chased one another in the
corridors in Intervals, and returned to the classrooms
Drenched in sweat!

When we had lunch in classrooms, corridors,
Playgrounds, under the trees and even in cycle sheds!
When all the colors in the world,
Decorated the campus on the Second Saturdays!

When a single P.T. period in the week's Time Table,
Was awaited more eagerly than the monsoons!

When cricket was played with writing pads as bats,
And Neckties and socks rolled into balls!
When few played "kabadi" and "Kho-Kho" in scorching sun,
While others simply played "book cricket" in the
Confines of classroom!

Of fights but no conspiracies,
Of Competitions but seldom jealousy!

When we used to watch Live Cricket telecast,
In the opposite house in Intervals and Lunch breaks!
When few rushed at 3:45 to "Conquer" window seats in our School bus!

While few others had "Big Fun", "peppermint",
"kulfi", " milk ice !" and "sharbat !" at 4o Clock!

Gone are the days
Of Sports Day, and the annual School Day,
And the one-month long preparations for them. ..

The smile pockets a rattling controversy.

Saturday, June 18, 2011

Gone are the days, Our Past Days

Gone are the days
Of the stressful Quarterly,
Half Yearly and Annual Exams, And the most
enjoyed holidays after them!

Gone are the days
Of tenth and twelfth standards, when
We Spent almost the whole year writing revision tests!

We learnt,

We enjoyed,

We played,

We won,

We lost,

We laughed,

We cried,

We fought,

We thought.

With so much fun in them, so many friends,
So much experience, all this and more!
Gone are the days
When we used to talk for hours with our friends!

Now we don't have time to say a 'Hi'!

Gone are the days
When we played games on the road!
Now we Code on the road with laptop!

Gone are the days
When we saw stars Shining at Night!

Now we see stars when our code doesn't Work!
Gone are the days
When we sat to chat with Friends on grounds!

Now we chat in chat rooms.....!

Gone are the days
Where we studied just to pass!
Now we study to save our job!

Gone are the days
Where we had no money in our pockets
and still fun filled on our hearts!!

Now we have the ATM as well as credit card but with an empty heart!!
Gone are the days
Where we shouted on the road!

Now we don't shout even at home

Gone are the days
Where we got lectures from all!

Now we give lectures to all...
Gone are the days
But not the memories, which will be
Lingering in our hearts for ever and ever and
Ever and ever and ever .....

Gone are the Days.... But still there are lot more Days to come in our Life!!

NO MATTER HOW BUSY YOU ARE ,
DONT FORGET TO
LIVE THE LIFE THAT STILL
EXISTS...

I'm looking for you in the woods tonight

I'm looking for you in the woods tonight,

I'm looking Looking for you in my flashlight,

I'm searching From in the high or down the ocean

And I face myself in reason

Gain the wolf Gain the wolf

Conjure me as a child Slipping down a webside

Stretch up I cannot reach him

Jumping up they drag him from the water

I watch them march him into life

I watch them take him from the pale Into the sky for your eagle eye

The sun seeds a sickle and a scythe Ridicule

they won't allow Quench abuse and let love flower

Rip the cage out of your chest

Let the chaos rule the rest

Show without showing

What you know without knowing

Twigs snap eye / I catch no canoe only you and me

Alone on the ol' teal sea

Dissolving who we are

Call out for yesterdays destiny come

We're on a foreign shore

It was your mark of falling

I was the car still running

And when you call i'll be your shield for life

And if you feel it you will fly

The sun should have been with me

When I was set to fall in

As I was set to fall in, As I was set to fall in

As I was set to fall in, As I was set to fall in

As I was set to fall in, As I was set to fall in

As I was set to fall in, As I was set to fall in

As I was set to fall in, As I was set to fall in

As I was set to fall in, As I was set to fall in