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Sunday, April 22, 2012

Some one liners........must read.



1. If you want your dreams to come true, don't oversleep.

2. The smallest good deed is better than the grandest intention.

3. Of all the things you wear, your expression is the most important.

4. The best vitamin for making friends....B1.

5. The 10 commandments are not multiple choices.

6. The happiness of your life depends on the quality of your thoughts.

7. Minds are like parachutes...they function only when open.

8. Ideas won't work unless YOU do.

9. One thing you can't recycle is wasted time.

10. One who lacks the courage to start has already finished.

11. The heaviest thing to carry is a grudge.

12. Don't learn safety rules by accident.

13. We lie the loudest when we lie to ourselves.

14. Jumping to conclusions can be bad exercise.

15. A turtle makes progress when it sticks its head out.

16. One thing you can give and still keep ...is your word.

17. A friend walks in when everyone else walks out.

18. The pursuit of happiness is: the chase of a lifetime!

ஐபோன் மற்றும் அன்ட்ரொய்ட் கைபேசிகளில் குறிப்புகளை எடுத்து வைப்பதற்கு




ஐபோன் மற்றும் அன்ட்ரொய்ட் கைபேசியை பயன்படுத்துபவர்கள் சில விடயங்களை மறந்து விடாமல் இருப்பதற்காக குறிப்பெடுத்து வைக்க விரும்புவீர்கள்.
இதற்கென சந்தையில் ஏராளமான மென்பொருட்கள் இருக்கின்ற போதும் பயன்படுத்த இலகுவான வடிவமைப்புடனும், அதிக வசதிகளையும் கொண்ட மென்பொருட்களே முதல் இடம் வகிக்கின்றன.
இதில் பதிவு செய்து கொண்டால் 100 MB அளவுக்கு இலவசமாக குறித்து வைக்கும் தகவல்களை CLOUD இல் சேமித்து தேவையான டிவைஸ்களில் பெற்றுக் கொள்ள முடிகின்றது.

SHIRDI SAI BABA 9 DIVINE COINS WITH SHAILEJA MAA GR. DAUGHTER OF LAXMI MAA

Saturday, April 21, 2012

Sapta Rishi (Seven Sages)


Sapta Rishi (Seven Sages)

As per hindu mythology, when Lord Brahma decided to create our universe, he created seven sages out of his thoughts. They were called the Sapta Rishis and also "Maanasa Putra"(created out of mental thoughts). The Sapta Rishis are :


Bhrigu

Bhrigu is said to have stepped on Brahma, Shiva and Vishnu to test the greatness of each God. Brahma and Shiva were furious but Vishnu treated the Sage with respect and was declared the greatest. His descendants are supposed to have composed the Atharva Veda.


Angira

Angira alongwith Sage Atharvan is said to have composed Atharva Veda. He is also mentioned in the other Vedas.


Atri

Atri is the rishi who composed the fifth Mandala (chapter) of Rig Veda. He proclaimed the theory of three strands of the sacred thread : Janeu/Janou. The three strands symbolise creation(represents Brahma and the letter "A"), sustenance(represents Vishnu and the letter "U") and destruction(represents Shiva and the letter "M"). Together these three strands show the vow that a Brahmin takes to recite and adhere to AUM/OM.


Gautama

In hindu mythology, he is credited to have created mantras and also river Godavari which was formed after he prayed to Lord Shiva. Shiva descended to Tryambakeshvar and this gave rise to the river Godavari. He is said to be the creator of Dharma Sutras that contain the rules for the four Ashramas, the forty Samskaras, the four Varnas, kingly duties, the punishments for various offences, etc.


Kashyapa

He is the father of Gods and Demons. Sage Kashyapa is said to have two wives : Aditi (mother of Gods) and Diti (mother of demons).


Vashishta

He was chief of Saptarishis and the Rajaguru of the Suryavamsha (Solar Dynasty) in hindu mythology. Vasishtha is said to be the chief author of seventh Mandala (Chapter) of the Rigveda. He also wrote the "Vasishtha Samhita" - a book on Muhurtha/Muhurt that forms the basis of electional astrology.


Agastya

He is said to be one of the greatest of all Sapta Rishis in hindu mythology. He is credited with spreading the vedic religion to South India and creating the Tamil language. He married Lopamudra, the human daughter of Brahma.

விநாயகர் திருவுருவங்கள்


விநாயகர் திருவுருவங்கள்

சித்ரா பலவேசம்


கணபதி எனப்படும் விநாயகர் 32 திருவுருவங்களைக் கொண்டு வணங்கப்படுகிறார். அந்த 32 திருவுருவங்களின் பெயர்கள் உங்களுக்குத் தெரியுமா?

1. பால கணபதி
2. தருண கணபதி
3. பக்தி கணபதி
4. வீர கணபதி
5. சக்தி கணபதி
6. துவிஜ கணபதி
7. சித்தி கணபதி
8. உச்சிட்ட கணபதி
9. விக்ன கணபதி
10. க்ஷிப்ர கணபதி
11. ஏரம்ப கணபதி
12. லட்சுமி கணபதி
13. மஹா கணபதி
14. விஜய கணபதி
15. நிருத்த கணபதி
16. ஊர்த்துவ கணபதி
17. ஏகாட்சர கணபதி
18. வர கணபதி
19. திரயாக்ஷர கணபதி
20. க்ஷிப்ரபிரசாத கணபதி
21. ஹரித்திரா கணபதி
22. ஏகதந்த கணபதி
23. சிருஷ்டி கணபதி
24. உத்தண்ட கணபதி
25. ரணமோசன கணபதி
26. துண்டி கணபதி
27. துவிமுக கணபதி
28. மும்முக கணபதி
29. சிங்க கணபதி
30. யோக கணபதி
31. துர்க்கா கணபதி
32. சங்கடஹர கணபதி

Changing brains for the better; article documents benefits of multiple practices




(Medical Xpress) -- Practices like physical exercise, certain forms of psychological counseling and meditation can all change brains for the better, and these changes can be measured with the tools of modern neuroscience, according to a review article now online at Nature Neuroscience.
The study reflects a major transition in the focus of neuroscience from disease to well being, says first author Richard Davidson, professor of psychology at University of Wisconsin-Madison.
The brain is constantly changing in response to environmental factors, he says, and the article "reflects one of the first efforts to apply this conceptual framework to techniques to enhance qualities that we have not thought of as skills, like well-being. Modern neuroscience research leads to the inevitable conclusion that we can actually enhance well-being by training that induces neuroplastic changes in the brain."
"Neuroplastic" changes affect the number, function and interconnections of cells in the brain, usually due to external factors.
Although the positive practices reviewed in the article were not designed using the tools and theories of modern neuroscience, "these are practices which cultivate new connections in the brain and enhance the function of neural networks that support aspects of pro-social behavior, including empathy, altruism, kindness," says Davidson, who directs the Center for Investigating Healthy Minds at UW-Madison.
The review, co-written with Bruce McEwen of Rockefeller University, begins by considering how social stressors can harm the brain. The massive neglect of children in orphanages in Romania did not just have psychological impacts; it created measurable changes in their brains, Davidson says. "Such studies provide an important foundation for understanding the opposite effects of interventions designed to promote wellbeing."
Davidson says his work has been shaped by his association with the Dalai Lama, who asked him in the 1990s, "Why can't we use the same rigorous tools of neuroscience to investigate kindness, compassion and wellbeing?"
Davidson, who has explored the neurological benefits of meditation, says, "meditation is one of many different techniques, and not necessarily the best for all people. Cognitive therapy, developed in modern psychology, is one of most empirically validated treatments for depression and counteracting the effects of stress."
Overall, Davidson says, the goal is "to use what we know about the brain to fine-tune interventions that will improve well-being, kindness, altruism. Perhaps we can develop more targeted, focused interventions that take advantage of the mechanisms of neuroplasticity to induce specific changes in specific brain circuits."
Brains change all the time, Davidson emphasizes. "You cannot learn or retain information without a change in the brain. We all know implicitly that in order to develop expertise in any complex domain, to become an accomplished musician or athlete, requires practice, and that causes new connections to form in the brain. In extreme cases, specific parts of the brain enlarge or contract in response to our experience."
Scientific documentation for the benefits of brain training may have broader social impacts, says Davidson. "If you go back to the 1950s, the majority of middle-class citizens in Western countries did not regularly engage in physical exercise. It was because of scientific research that established the importance of physical exercise in promoting health and well-being that more people now engage in regular physical exercise. I think mental exercise will be regarded in a similar way 20 years from now.
"Rather than think of the brain as a static organ, or one that just degenerates with age, it's better understood as an organ that is constantly reshaping itself, is being continuously influenced, wittingly or not, by the forces around us," says Davidson, author of the new book "The Emotional Life of Your Brain." "We can take responsibility for our own brains. They are not pawns to external influences; we can be more pro-active in shaping the positive influences on the brain."
Provided by University of Wisconsin-Madison
"Changing brains for the better; article documents benefits of multiple practices." April 18th, 2012. http://medicalxpress.com/news/2012-04-brains-article-documents-benefits-multiple.html
Posted by
Robert Karl Stonjek

Breaking point: When does head trauma in sports lead to memory loss?



 
A new study suggests there may be a starting point at which blows to the head or other head trauma suffered in combat sports start to affect memory and thinking abilities and can lead to chronic traumatic encephalopathy, or CTE, in the brain. The research was released today and will be presented as part of the Emerging Science (formerly known as Late-Breaking Science) program at the American Academy of Neurology's 64th Annual Meeting in New Orleans April 21 to April 28, 2012.
"While we already know that boxing and other combat sports are linked to brain damage, little is known about how this process develops and who may be on the path to developing CTE, which is a degenerative brain disease found in athletes and others with a history of multiple concussions and brain damage," said study author Charles Bernick, MD, of the Cleveland Clinic in Cleveland and a member of the American Academy of Neurology. CTE is only diagnosed through autopsy after death, but symptoms include memory loss, aggression and difficulty thinking.
The study involved 35 boxers and 43 mixed martial arts athletes with an average age of 29 who were part of the ongoing Professional Fighters Brain Health Study. The fighters were given computer tests that measured memory and thinking skills and underwent MRI brain scans. Years of fighting and number of fights were recorded based on self-reporting and published records. The fighters were then split into two groups: those who fought for nine or fewer years and those with more than nine years of fighting history.
In both groups, those with more years of fighting and more fights per year were more likely to have lower brain volumes in three areas of the brain. In those with fewer than nine years of fighting, there was no relationship between the years of fighting or the number of fights per year and the results on memory and thinking tests. But for those who had fought for nine or more years, those with more fights per year performed worse on the thinking and memory tests than those with fewer fights per year.
"Our study shows there appears to be a threshold at which continued repetitive blows to the brain begin to cause measurable changes in memory and thinking, despite brain volume changes that can be found earlier," said Bernick.
Provided by American Academy of Neurology
"Breaking point: When does head trauma in sports lead to memory loss?." April 18th, 2012. http://medicalxpress.com/news/2012-04-trauma-sports-memory-loss.html
Posted by
Robert Karl Stonjek

All Things To All People



Rama and Lakshmana fighting off Tataka“The people observing received auspicious fruits for their eyes and mind. Rama accompanied Vishvamitra to his ashrama, with the fears of the sages removed.” (Janaki Mangala, 37)
mana loganha ke karata suphala mana locana |
gae kausika āśramanihaṃ bipra bhaya mocana ||
There is the saying that you can’t be all things to all people. This means that whatever behavior you adopt, you’re not going to give everyone a favorable result. For instance, if you should decide to dedicate more time to your job, you may make the coworkers and boss happy, but at the same time you’ll spend less time with your family. Perhaps the wife and kids will be upset with your decision, so you’re essentially caught in the middle of competing interests. With one person, however, whatever He does satisfies the desires of all the people He affects, even if those people belong to separate communities and keep different goals in mind.
Is the person we speak of God? Isn’t that too broad a generalization? God is everything, sure, but what does that really mean? Ah, the Vedas and their many branches of literature exist precisely to expand upon this concept, to give it some meaning. The above referenced verse from the Janaki Mangala, fulfilling many purposes, also sheds light on this issue. The scene at hand is the forests of India many thousands of years ago. At the time, there was no such thing as India, but we refer to the modern day country for geographical purposes. The entire land was known as Bharatavarsha, or the area ruled by King Bharata and his descendants. There were different states and provinces but everyone lived under the recognized authority of one king, though the rogue states sometimes tried to usurp control.
At the time, the island city of Lanka, which was ruled by a fiendish character by the name of Ravana, had become a state where sinful lifethrived. On the complete opposite end, there were the forests that were inhabited by the animals and the ascetics given to piety. The forests were under the jurisdiction of the pious kings, and since the rogues in Lanka were against dharma as it was meant to be practiced, there were clashes. Rather than fight the kings outright, Ravana and his band of Rakshasas would head straight for the lifeblood of society, the vipras.
Vishvamitra MuniA vipra is a kind of high-thinker, someone who avoids material association. Think of playing video games as a child and then giving them up in favor of more important obligations when you grow older. With increased maturity comes a reassignment of priorities, realigning which things are more important in life and which things can be relegated to the category of entertainment. For the enlightened vipra, the true purpose in life is to find the Supreme Absolute Truth, that one energy which is beyond duality, and then stay immersed in thoughts of Him.
What is duality? Think of a pendulum that swings back and forth. On one side is acceptance and on the other is rejection. The living being constantly swings on this pendulum, all the way through to the time of death. One activity is accepted with anticipation and eagerness only to be rejected later on in favor of something else. The cycle of birth and death represents the largest swing of acceptance and rejection. Take on a form, have it develop, leave some byproducts, and then exit that same form.
There has to be a higher purpose to fulfill. At least this is what the vipras think. In order to even ponder this issue one must be very sober. So many other outlets are tried first, before the final approach towards learning the truth in earnest is made. “Perhaps if I try my hand at increased sense gratification, I will be happier. My current lifestyle isn’t cutting it, so maybe I should get a more expensive car or take up a new hobby. Or maybe renunciation is the answer. Live a minimalist life and try to stay peaceful in mind.”
The vipras of the Vedic tradition take the route of austerity and penance, but with a purpose. The Absolute Truth is known as Brahman, which is formless. It does not have a visible manifestation, but we can sort of see it through the autonomous functions of the living beings. You can’t really see the wind, but you know it’s there if flags are blowing or trees are shaking. Similarly, you can tell that the life force of Brahman is present when living creatures are moving around and operating on their own.
The formless Brahman is not tainted by duality, so one who can realize it is highly enlightened. The flawless properties of Brahman stay with the living being even while they are encased within a material covering. For Brahman realization to take place, association with Brahman’s covering, known as maya, must be limited. Therefore traditionally the vipras would take to austerity and penance in the forest, to realize Brahman and make the most of their human birth.
Ravana talking to MarichaThe Rakshasas concentrated in Lanka not only didn’t care about Brahman, but they didn’t like anyone who went against the life dedicated to service to maya. To make sure that the influence of the brahmanas, the vipras who know Brahman, was limited, the Rakshasas would attack the sages in the forest. If your life is dedicated to spiritual pursuits, you’re obviously not much interested in violence. You don’t have a group of secret service agents around to protect you nor are you quick to pull the trigger when dealing with attacking enemies.
Vishvamitra, one of the more exalted vipras of the time, approached King Dasharatha of Ayodhya for protection from the Rakshasas. The vipras could have cast curses back on the demons, but this would have caused their accrued spiritual merits to decrease. Why have so much effort go to waste when it was already the duty of the king and his class to protect the innocent? Vishvamitra specifically asked for Dasharatha’s eldest son Rama to protect him. Rama and His younger brother Lakshmana then left home and escorted the vipra for some time.
While Brahman is formless, it has a source that is full of spiritual form. Rama is that source. He is the Supreme Personality of Godhead in the manifestation of a warrior prince. His association provides the delights of choice, cherished fruits, to every single person. For the vipras in the forest, the predominant desire was to be protected from the Rakshasas. They were living in fear, so there was no peace of mind. And without peace, how can there be happiness?
“One who is not in transcendental consciousness can have neither a controlled mind nor steady intelligence, without which there is no possibility of peace. And how can there be any happiness without peace?”  (Lord KrishnaBhagavad-gita, 2.66)
As an initial test of His strength, Rama had to defeat a powerful female Rakshasa named Tataka. He did not want to slay a female, and even though Vishvamitra advised Him to do so, the Lord was still resolved upon only hurting Tataka instead of killing her. Finally, when she started using her illusory tricks, appearing on the scene and then quickly vanishing, Vishvamitra pleaded more emphatically with Rama to give up His unnecessary kindness. The Lord obliged and slayed the wicked creature who had been harassing the sages.
Lakshmana and Rama fighting TatakaAs a result, Rama removed the fears of the vipras, including Vishvamitra. He made good on His promise that is found in many sections of the Vedas to protect the innocent, to make sure that the demon class cannot vanquish them. At the same time, the observers in the forest received the fruit of their eyes and mind. All of the onlookers, which included vipras, forest dwellers, and householders living innocently, watched the most beautiful form of Shri Rama, who was accompanied by His equally as beautiful younger brother Lakshmana.
God’s vision is more delightful when He is actively working on something for the good of the devotees. Rama was very young at the time, as was Lakshmana. When the two were fighting a very formidable enemy, the vision was something wonderful to behold. Imagine seeing two young boys able to pick up a car or run a marathon. While those feats are amazing, the sight of the two sons of Dasharatha ridding the forest of a wicked creature with just their bows and arrows was so splendid that the mind didn’t want to forget it.
The fruit of the eyes is the sight of the Supreme Lord. The same goes for the mind, as the external vision creates the image that can then be remembered over and over again within the mind. The young Rama and Lakshmana walked with Vishvamitra back to his hermitage, where they would continue to protect the vipras. Eventually, the trio would make its way to Tirahuta, where a marriage contest was taking place. The winner would win Sita Devi as a wife. There too, the residents had the desire to see Sita marry the beautiful Rama, and the Lord would oblige their request.
The slain enemies of Rama got the pleasure of liberation, which is achieved by seeing the Supreme Lord at the time of death. The atheists also take temporary pleasure in Rama’s external energy of maya, proving again that the Supreme Lord gives every person what they want.  When the innermost desires are shifted towards the transcendental realm, the true fruit of existence is tasted and relished.
In Closing:
To sages in forest Tataka was a pain,
Therefore they rejoiced when she was slain.

With her illusory powers, she came and went,
But finally killed by arrows from Rama’s bow sent.

The attacks on sages innocent to cease,
Because of Rama, they could now live in peace.

Eyes and mind to taste existence’s fruit,
By seeing Rama, whole creation’s root.

Dasharatha’s son, to all people He is all things,
Meaning to life His divine vision brings.

Experiment shows visual cortex in women quiets when viewing porn


(Medical Xpress) -- Researchers from the University of Groningen Medical Centre in the Netherlands have found that for women at least, watching pornographic videos tends to quiet the part of the brain most heavily involved in looking at and processing things in the immediate environment, suggesting that the brain finds arousal more important during that time than is processing what is actually being seen. The team has published a paper in The Journal of Sexual Medicine describing their findings.
To find out if the primary visual cortex is essentially deactivated during sexual arousal in women, the team enlisted 12 volunteers; all women between the ages of 18 and 47, who had not yet reached menopause. Also each was on oral birth control pills which tend to flatten menstrual cycles and smooth out sexual desire and/or anxiety. Each was shown three videos, one with no sexual connotation, another with mild sexual content, and a third that was full on hard-core porn. While they were watching the videos, the women were also having their brain activity watched via PET scans, which work by measuring blood flow to the various brain regions. It is thought that more blood flow indicates that more brainwork is occurring, which implies that when the brain delegates tasks to different regions, by sending more blood, it is demonstrating that it finds certain activities more important than others.
The team found virtually no difference in brain activity in all of the women when watching the first two videos. When watching the third however, they found that blood flow to the visual cortex was reduced in all of the volunteers indicating that the brain had decided that focusing on arousal was more important than fixating on exactly what was occurring on the screen in front of them (or that women just don’t want to really see what is going on with sex). This is in direct contrast to most other visual activities which tend to cause more blood to flow to the visual cortex to process all of the information that is coming in.
The researchers also suggest their findings help explain why women who exhibit symptoms of anxiety often report sexual problems, as high anxiety is often correlated with increased blood flow to the visual cortex due to the person reacting on a nearly constant basis to visual stimuli. They point out that for people in general, the brain cannot be both anxious and aroused, it generally has to be one or the other, or neither.
More information: The Journal of Sexual Medicine, 10 Apr 2012. DOI: 10.1111/j.1743-6109.2012.02706.x
© 2012 Phys.Org
"Experiment shows visual cortex in women quiets when viewing porn." April 20th, 2012. http://medicalxpress.com/news/2012-04-visual-cortex-women-quiets-viewing.html
Posted by
Robert Karl Stonjek

Brain scans reveal differences in regret as people age




(Medical Xpress) -- New research using brains scans shows that many elderly people have over time either learned to not stew over things they regret or to not regret them at all. Those that don’t learn such skills tend to become depressed, say researchers from University Medical Center in Germany, who have been conducting research into regret and aging using brain scans. The team, led by Stefanie Brassen has published the results of their efforts in the journal Science.
In their report, the team finds that young people and depressed older adults tend to rue decisions they’ve made and to fixate on them. In contrast, mentally healthy older adults tend to call it all water under the bridge and move on.
To find out such things, the team recruited sixty volunteers, 20 healthy young people, 20 mentally healthy elderly people and 20 elderly people who suffer from depression, to help them carry out an experiment. They asked each volunteer to play a video game of chance that involved several covered containers. Under each was either a gold ingot or a demon that would steal all the money they’d earned thus far. As each container was opened, the player got to keep the gold if it was underneath. As play progressed the odds of finding a demon increased, upping the anxiety. Also, to see what was going on in the brain, players played the game while being scanned inside of an MRI machine.
The researchers looked specifically at the brain region known as the ventral striatum, which is known to respond to rewards. In analyzing the players, the researchers found that young people and older depressed adults tended to show more activity than did the brains of older more complacent older people. By watching carefully, they could also measure the impact on players when they felt they opted out too early, or when they kept on playing but eventually lost all they’d won to the demon. This time, the younger players and those that were older but depressed showed less activity in the ventral striatum, indicating sadness or depression, meaning they were upset about how things had come out. The older, healthier players on the other hand showed little to no change, indicating they weren’t nearly as worried or upset about how things had played out.
The team also found by looking at the anterior cingulate cortex, that older healthy adults did actually feel some remorse at some points in the game, but suppressed it.
The researchers repeated the whole exercise with another group of volunteers, only instead of testing them with an MRI machine, they tested their heart rates and skin for electrical response (indicating degree of sweating) during play. This time too they found that the older healthier players were more relaxed regardless of outcome, while the young people and older depressed people tended to sweat it out both while playing and then when reacting to the results of their own decision making.
And finally, to put it all together, the team interviewed the volunteers asking them if they had a lot of regrets and how strong those feelings were if they hand them. Not surprisingly, the volunteers answers tended to mirror the results of the earlier experiments.
These results, the researchers say, show that as people grow older, those that do so in a healthy manner learn to not dwell on past mistakes or to suppress negative feelings about them, while those that don’t tend to become depressed.
More information: Science DOI: 10.1126/science.1217516
© 2012 Phys.Org
"Brain scans reveal differences in regret as people age." April 20th, 2012. http://medicalxpress.com/news/2012-04-brain-scans-reveal-differences-people.html
Posted by
Robert Karl Stonjek

Depression linked to greater risk of peripheral artery disease



Depression may be associated with an increased risk of arterial narrowing in the legs and pelvis, a condition known as peripheral artery disease (PAD), according to research presented at the American Heart Association's Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis and Vascular Biology 2012 Scientific Sessions in Chicago.
While experts know that depression is a risk factor for constricted heart arteries, its effect on PAD is uncertain. Researchers used data from 1,024 men and women in the Heart and Soul Study and followed them for about seven years.
At the study's start, 12 percent of participants with depression had PAD, compared to seven percent of patients without depression who had PAD. Similarly, nine percent of depressed patients and six percent of those without depression had PAD-related events during the seven-year follow-up.
These findings demonstrate the importance of depression screening and treatment for PAD patients, according to the researchers.
Provided by American Heart Association
"Depression linked to greater risk of peripheral artery disease." April 20th, 2012. http://medicalxpress.com/news/2012-04-depression-linked-greater-peripheral-artery.html
Posted by
Robert Karl Stonjek

Habit of Stealing-Astrological point of view


This problem is caused by malefic mercury. Malefic mercury with any yoga with Moon may cause the problem of stealing in the children or even in some females , like stealing of Lip Stick and Bindees from the shop.  Mercury also, gives the ability to hide your mistakes. 
When Rahu, Mangal, Saturn are also involved, then the person may steal openly and boldly, without the fear of getting caught. (Criminal mentality). It's best to treat this problem in the childhood itself, otherwise it won't be that easy to rectify. 
Here are the astrological remedies:
  • Wear "Firoza" of any ratti, in a copper pendant in a silver chain. This helps in keeping the mind positive. 
  • Chant "Om Bum Budhaye Namah" - the mantra of Mercury - the planet which if goes bad, gives the cunningnes to steal. 
  • Wearing Tulsi mala is a very good remedy. If your child has got the habit of stealing, then make him wear that. It helps to keep the purity of mind intact. 
  • Wearing rudraksh as a bracelet in the wrist or as a necklace increases the confidence to walk on the path of values and truth. 
  • Adults who experience this irresistable desire of stealing, may start  planting mercury related plants like, spinach (palak), sarso (mustard), or green vegetables.

Colorful Flowers !










Alcohol use in Bollywood movies impacting alcohol use among Indian adolescents




Alcohol use in Bollywood movies is directly influencing the drinking habits of India's adolescents, according to a new study presented at the World Congress of Cardiology in Dubai.
Overall 10 per cent of the students (aged between 12-16 years) surveyed in the study had already tried alcohol. But students that had been most exposed to alcohol use in Bollywood movies were found to be 2.78 times more likely to have tried alcohol as compared with those who were least exposed. Even when adjustments were made for demographic variables, social influences and characteristics of child and parenting, students were found to be 1.49 times more likely to have tried alcohol if they had been highly exposed to alcohol use in Bollywood films as compared to those who were least exposed.
"These results show that exposure to alcohol use depictions in Bollywood films is directly associated with alcohol use among young people in India," said Dr. G.P. Nazar, Health Related Information Dissemination Against Youth (HIRDAY). "While alcohol advertising is banned in all Indian media and scenes that justify or glorify drinking are not allowed in Bollywood films, there is no dedicated health legislation that prohibits the depiction of alcohol in these films and there is a clear need for an immediate alcohol control policy".
Study design
The study set out to determine two things – firstly if India's adolescents were exposed to alcohol use in Bollywood films and secondly if this exposure was associated with their own alcohol use.
Fifty-nine popular Bollywood movies were coded to record the number of alcohol use occurrences and 3,956 adolescents were then asked if they had seen these movies. Students were grouped according to their exposure to alcohol use occurrences in these movies. They were then asked about their alcohol consumption status. Students in the fourth quartile – i.e. the quarter than had seen the greatest number of alcohol use occurrences in these movies – were found to be 2.78 times more likely to have tried alcohol compared with those students in the first quartile of exposure.
Alcohol and cardiovascular disease
Drinking too much alcohol increases the risk of cardiovascular disease (CVD). It can raise blood pressure, increase the presence of some fats in the blood stream, and increase calorie intake, which in turn leads to overweight and obesity. One of the key characteristics of the hazardous pattern of drinking is the presence of heavy drinking occasions, defined as consumption of 60 or more grams of pure alcohol per day. Hazardous and harmful drinking results in 2.5 million deaths, each year, globally, of these 14 per cent are due to CVD and diabetes. High levels of alcohol consumption and binge drinking are associated with increased risk of CVD and harmful use of alcohol damages the heart muscle, increases the risk of stroke and promotes cardiac arrhythmia.
Provided by World Heart Federation
"Alcohol use in Bollywood movies impacting alcohol use among Indian adolescents." April 20th, 2012. http://medicalxpress.com/news/2012-04-alcohol-bollywood-movies-impacting-indian.html
Posted by
Robert Karl Stonjek

Colorfull Birds Photography By John Soong