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Tuesday, October 18, 2011

Faster-Than-Light Neutrinos Might Be Explained By GPS Failing to Account For Special Relativity


A possible victory for Einstein

GPS Satellite NASA/Wikimedia Commons
So it turns out that Einstein may not have been wrong about the universal speed limit. Not only is special relativity safe, it provides an explanation for those faster-than-light neutrinos. They’re not breaking the light-speed barrier; they just appear to be, thanks to the relativistic motion of the clocks checking their speed.
As we all remember, a few weeks ago some scientists at CERN set the physics world on fire when they shared data showing neutrinos were moving faster than light. Specifically, they were showing up at a distant neutrino detector about 60 nanoseconds faster than the time in which light would make the same trip. But the rules of physics said this could not be. The Oscillation Project with Emulsion-tRacking Apparatus team (which was not looking for this result, by the way) calibrated their clocks, measured their distances and crunched their numbers in search of an explanation.
Flummoxed, they dumped their findings on the larger physics community, which proceeded to eviscerate the experiment. In the three weeks since, almost 100 papers have shown up on the preprint server arXiv trying to make sense of it all. Physicists have blamed everything from poor geodesy to ill-timed clocks, and other particle physics observatories are hard at work trying toreplicate the results.

Now a Dutch physicist says it’s really very simple — the OPERA team overlooked the relativistic motion of their clocks. Technology Review's arXiv blog highlights the paper here.
OPERA was studying neutrino oscillation, in which these ghostly particles switch from one type to another. They were firing off muon neutrinos from a neutrino beam at CERN and sending them to Gran Sasso, Italy, where researchers counted how many of them had become tau neutrinos. Along with careful Earth-measuring, this experiment required super-precise synchronization of clocks at the two locations. The team did this with GPS satellites, which broadcast a time signal as they orbit about 12,500 miles above the Earth. The OPERA team had to calculate how long it takes for one of these time signals to reach the Earth. But they did not account for the clocks’ relativistic motion, according to physicist Ronald van Elburg at the University of Groningen in the Netherlands.
The radio signals travel from the satellites at light speed, which has nothing to do with the satellites’ speed. This is one of the central tenets of special relativity: “Light is always propagated in empty space with a definite velocity c which is independent of the state of motion of the emitting body,” as Einstein put it himself.
But because the satellites are moving, from their point of view, the positions of the neutrinos andthe detector are changing. The neutrinos are moving toward the detector, and the detector appears to be moving toward the neutrino source. So the distance between the origin and destination appears to be shorter than it would if it were being observed on the ground.
“Consequently, in this reference frame the distance traveled by the [particles] is shorter than the distance separating the source and detector,” van Elburg writes. This phenomenon is overlooked because the OPERA team thinks of the clocks as on the ground — which they are, physically — and not in orbit, which is where their synchronizing reference point is located.
Using the altitude, orbital period, inclination to the equator and other metrics, van Elburg calculates the error rate: “The observed time-of-flight should be about 32 ns shorter than the time-of-flight using a baseline bound clock,” he writes. This is done at both clock locations, so double that, and you get an early-arrival time of 64 nanoseconds. That pretty much accounts for the OPERA anomaly.
“This paper shows that Coordinated Universal Time (UTC) happens to be less universal than the name suggests, and that we have to take in to account how our clocks are moving,” van Elburg writes.
Of course, his paper has not yet been published, and is subject to the same scrutiny and peer review as the OPERA folks, so we can’t accept van Elburg’s theory just yet. But it’s certainly a handy explanation. And it’s a lovely piece of irony, too — not only was Einstein’s special theory of relativity right all along, it even provides a reason why.

On Second Thought




Shri Hanuman“Separated from Rama, that noble lady is not able to sleep, eat, drink, or even decorate herself.” (Hanuman thinking about Sita, Valmiki Ramayana, Sundara Kand, 11.2)
na rāmeṇa viyuktā sā svaptum arhati bhāminī |
na bhoktum na api alamkartum na pānam upasevitum ||
“Alas, I have finally found her. My hard work has paid off; it was not in vain. This most beautiful woman must be the person I am looking for, for her features do not resemble any of the others’ that I have seen thus far. I am so excited; I can’t wait to tell her why I have come here and how her rescue will arrive shortly.” But wait! Upon further examination, after careful consideration, this divine warrior realized that he was mistaken. Pounding his chest and kissing his tail in happiness were a little premature, for what could the princess of Videha, the religiously wedded wife of Lord Rama, be doing in the inner chambers of the palace of the King of Lanka, Ravana, who was now fast asleep, passed out in a drunken stupor? Though Hanuman’s elation was short-lived, the false hope ended up revealing some more of his wonderful qualities, which are impossible to fully enumerate or measure. Let’s just say that of all the good people to have ever graced this earth, no one has been as eager to put a smile on the face of Lord Rama, the Supreme Personality of Godhead, as Hanuman.
HanumanThe princess Sita had been taken from the side of her husband while she was living in the forest of Dandaka. Ravana was famous throughout the world at the time for his tremendous fighting prowess, with the opulence of his kingdom giving the appearance of a heaven on earth. He really had no need for another wife, a fact confirmed by Hanuman’s observations in the city of Lanka. Learning that Sita was missing, Shri Rama, as the most merciful of all beings, gave the opportunity for service to the monkeys residing in Kishkindha. Hanuman was their most capable warrior, and through a series of events he would end up in Lanka alone. The mission’s success rested in his hands, and he was up for the challenge. When the pressure really gets applied in a big game or when there is a deadline at work, you want your best people on the job, those who cast aside the pressure of the moment and keep the end-goal in mind. Otherwise the fear of failure would creep in and hinder the exhibition of the qualities in the individual that made them eligible for the task in the first place.
Hanuman didn’t have time to get scared over the danger of the mission, which called for him to find Sita and return the information of her location to Rama. It was Hanuman against an entire city of powerful demons. Moreover, there was no shortage of protection or opulence in Lanka. Even the floors were inlaid with jewels; so in this sense poverty was nonexistent in the city. Hanuman forged ahead anyway, as he was the only Vanara in his party who could cross over the massive ocean that separated Lanka from the mainland. After searching far and wide throughout the city, Hanuman finally made it into Ravana’s palace. This was the most elegant building, and it had the famous Pushpaka car situated outside. The Pushpaka can be likened to an ancient airplane, one created by the demigods and used by Kuvera previously. After Ravana drove Kuvera, his half-brother, out of Lanka, he took ownership of the Pushpaka. He used it to fly around the world and inflict terror wherever he went.
When Hanuman entered Ravana’s palace, it was nighttime, so everyone was asleep. Nevertheless, Hanuman couldn’t believe what he saw. The most beautiful women in the world, people who really didn’t belong on earth, were everywhere, elegantly dressed and drunk from a long night of partying. Some of the women were so intoxicated that they were passed out on each other. Some were sitting on each other’s laps, and some were resting on areas of the body not appropriate for mention. Needless to say, what Hanuman saw was not suitable for children. The ruler of this palace could be considered a swinger of ancient times, a playboy who had no shortage of sinful enjoyment. Wine and women were everywhere, however, so why did this miscreant need to take away a woman who was already married and living with her husband, the sweetheart jewel of the Raghu dynasty, Lord Rama?
Sita DeviThough most of these princesses were won by Ravana after defeating other kings in battle, Hanuman concluded from his observations that none of them were forced to enjoy with the demon. Rather, they were all won over by the king’s qualities and thoroughly enjoying his company. After Hanuman saw beautiful woman after beautiful woman enjoying in different ways, he finally came upon Mandodari, Ravana’s chief queen. She was the most beautiful of the women thus far, so Hanuman thought that she might be Sita. Hanuman had never met Rama’s wife, but he had heard of her divine qualities. He knew that she would stand out in Lanka, that she wouldn’t look like any of the other women.
Thinking that he had found Sita, Hanuman became elated for a brief moment. When he came back down to earth, he thought the matter over for a second. The obvious question in his mind was, “How could Sita be living in Ravana’s palace? She would never look at any man except Rama.” In the above referenced verse from the Ramayana, we see Hanuman reviewing Sita’s qualities as a way to validate his new assertion that indeed this beautiful woman he was looking at couldn’t be Sita. For starters, Mandodari was sleeping, as were the rest of the queens. Hanuman knew that Sita couldn’t be capable of sleep, especially the type caused by drunkenness. Of all the chaste women in the world, none could compare to Janaki, the daughter of King Janaka, whose hand in marriage was won by Rama during the famous bow-lifting contest held in Videha.
“As Rama drew the bow back fully, the force He applied caused the bow to break in half. The sound that resulted was as fierce and frightening as that of a falling thunderbolt.” (Sita speaking to Anasuya, Valmiki Ramayana, Ayodhya Kand, 118.49)
Rama lifting the bowSita’s devotion to Rama was certainly in line with dharma, or religiosity, but it was actually caused by her deep love and affection for her husband, who had won her over with His divine qualities. Sita’s behavior reveals the hidden secret that God doesn’t need to be surrendered to out of fear, obligation, or the recommendation of others. Surely preachers can come up to us and advise us to give up sinful behaviors like meat eating, gamblingintoxication and illicit sex, and turn our lives over to God, but unless and until we learn about the Supreme Person’s qualities and His worthiness of being worshiped, the devotional efforts we put forth will not bring the height of pleasure.
A half-hearted effort will not bring the same result as one driven by full-fledged enthusiasm. Therefore the central recommendation of the religion of love, bhakti-yoga, is that one regularly chant the holy names, like those found in the maha-mantra, “Hare Krishna Hare Krishna, Krishna Krishna, Hare Hare, Hare Rama Hare Rama, Rama Rama, Hare Hare”. Through this method, even if there is resistance at the beginning, just hearing the transcendental sound vibrations describing the Supreme Lord will slowly bring about a change in consciousness. Though the activity seems forced, if one can follow this chanting practice for at least six months, a huge difference in consciousness will result. The recommendation is that one chant the maha-mantra at least sixteen rounds daily on a set of japa beads. One round equals one hundred and eight recitations of the mantra, so sixteen rounds will take some time each day to complete, but the investment is well worth it.
Because Sita was won over by the qualities of her husband, she devoted herself to him in thought, word and deed. More than just for her benefit, this exclusive and unmatched affection brought great pleasure to Rama as well. In the spiritual sky, where God and His associates are situated, it is said that the Lord’s eternal consort is capable of bringing Him more pleasure than anyone else. Therefore Sita was just living up to her role, showing everyone just how wonderful it is to be in God’s company.
Understanding how devoted to Rama Sita was, Hanuman knew that she wouldn’t be able to sleep while separated from her husband. She must have been worrying the whole time whether she was ever going to see her beautiful darling again. She was not very much afraid to die, as she had no attachment to her body. If there was any fear in this area, it was over how Rama might react to her departure from the world. What’s amazing about Sita is that rather than bemoan her plight and complain over the fact that no one had come to rescue her, she was more concerned over how bad Rama and His younger brother Lakshmana were feeling over the incident. Rama had gone to chase after an illusory deer, which was really Ravana’s associate Maricha in disguise. Lakshmana was still with Sita, but she drove him away after insulting him. Sita wanted Lakshmana to go see if Rama was alright. Obviously once Lakshmana left, Ravana had no trouble coming in and taking Sita.
Sita and RamaHanuman knew that Sita wouldn’t be able to eat either. Though eating is required for the maintenance of the body, a devoted person like Sita would always first offer anything she ate to Rama and Lakshmana. The remnants of the food then become prasadam, or “the Lord’s mercy.” This ancient tradition of eating is followed even to this day by devotees of Vishnu, who are known as Vaishnavas. The Vedas reveal that the Supreme Lord has many different forms, with the original being Krishna. There are many different gods, but only the Vishnu-expansions are equivalent to the original. Thus any person devoted to Krishna, Rama, Vishnu, or any other Vishnu form is referred to as a Vaishnava. As Sita couldn’t get prasadam in Lanka, she wouldn’t be eating like the rest of the queens seen by Hanuman.
Sita also wouldn’t decorate her body. Though the practice may seem strange when juxtaposed with the fashion conscious modern society, women of the Vedic tradition typically don’t dress themselves up very nicely unless they are in the company of their husband. This guiding principle makes sense if you think about it. The main purpose of looking good is to attract your lover. If the amorous feelings are increased, the relationship will be enjoyed even more. Since Sita was away from Rama, there was no way she would be as elegantly dressed as Mandodari and the other queens were. What need did Sita have to be dressed opulently? Her aim was to repel Ravana as much as possible.
Lastly, Sita certainly wouldn’t be intoxicated. Looking at Rama’s beautiful face and thinking of His wonderful qualities with respect to beauty, wealth, strength, fame, knowledge and renunciation bring natural highs. Intoxication is not necessary in devotional life. Actually, getting drunk, smoking up, or shooting in are practices reserved for those who have yet to understand their inherent link to the Supreme Spirit. Intoxication brings a perverted version of the real high that the soul is meant to experience through God’s association. Therefore the drunkenness of Ravana’s queens revealed that Ravana himself was incapable of fully satisfying them. The women needed intoxication to enjoy each other’s company; thereby indicating the defect in Ravana’s qualities and also the strong presence of the mode of ignorance in Lanka. The material world is governed by three qualities: goodness, passion and ignorance. For the human being to make advancement towards full enlightenment, activities in the mode of goodness should be taken up as much as possible. The mode of passion maintains a neutral state, while ignorance leads to future demotion and a hellish life. Bhakti-yoga, or devotional service, is actually even more pure than the mode of goodness, so we can just imagine how beneficial it is for the spirit soul.
Despite temporarily thinking that he had found Sita and then realizing he hadn’t, Hanuman forged ahead. The characteristics enumerated by Hanuman reveal just how wonderful Sita Devi is. Moreover, just contemplating her behavior and her love for Rama is enough to please the heart for a considerable period of time. If you add on top of that Hanuman’s devotion and fortitude in pushing forward with the mission given to him by Rama, you’re left with endless opportunities for associating with people of the divine nature. While intoxication, the mode of ignorance, and fruitive activity bring the false hope of lasting enjoyment, thinking of Hanuman and his undying love for Sita, Rama and Lakshmana brings real hope for the brightest future, that of eternal residence in the spiritual sky.
HanumanIn Closing:
Seeing Mandodari after searching around,
Hanuman, excited, jumped up and down.
Afraid that in his mission to find Sita he would fail,
Now he had success, so happily did he kiss his tail.
But stepping back for a moment he started to think,
“Women in palace are all affected from drink.
If in her heart Rama’s image did she keep,
Then how was she capable of having any sleep?
Sita, always focused on her husband’s feet,
Separated from Him cannot even muster to eat.”
Thus Hanuman did realize his vision’s error,
That woman wasn’t Sita, of amazing grief’s bearer.
Yet one thing from incident we can learn,
Is that to please Rama does monkey’s heart yearn.
Though he sometimes wrongly gets excited,
From his eagerness, hearts of saints still delighted.
To think of Sita did error in vision give the chance,
Hanuman’s glory and fame did it also enhance.

PERSONALITY





Examples of Personality Tests

  • The first modern personality test was the Woodworth Personal data sheet, which was first used in 1919. It was designed to help the United States Army screen out recruits who might be susceptible to shell shock.
  • The Rorschach inkblot test was introduced in 1921 as a way to determine personality by the interpretation of abstract inkblots.
  • The Thematic Apperception Test was commissioned by the Office of Strategic Services (O.S.S.) in the 1930s to identify personalities that might be susceptible to being turned by enemy intelligence.
  • The 16PF Questionnaire (16PF) was developed by Raymond Cattell and his colleagues in the 1940s and 1950s in a search to try to discover the basic traits of human personality using scientific methodology. The test was first published in 1949, and is now in its 5th edition, published in 1994. It is used in a wide variety of settings for individual and marital counseling, career counseling and employee development, in educational settings, and for basic research.
  • The Five Factor Personality Inventory - Children (FFPI-C) was developed to measure personality traits in children based upon the Five Factor Model (Big Five personality traits).[3]
  • The EQSQ Test developed by Professor Simon Baron-Cohen, Sally Wheelwright, and their team at the University of Cambridge, England, centers on the Empathizing-Systemizing theory of the male versus the female brain types. [1]
  • The Strength Deployment Inventory, developed by Elias Porter, Ph.D. in 1971 and is based on his theory of Relationship Awareness. Porter was the first known psychometrician to use colors (Red, Green and Blue) as shortcuts to communicate the results of a personality test.[4]
  • The ProScan Survey is an instrument designed by Professional DynaMetric Programs, Inc. (PDP) to measure the major aspects of self-perception, including an individual’s basic behavior, reaction to environment, and predictable behavior. It was originally developed beginning in 1976 by Dr. Samuel R. Houston, Dr. Dudley Solomon, and Bruce M. Hubby[5].
  • The Newcastle Personality Assessor (NPA), created by Daniel Nettle, is a short questionnaire designed to quantify personality on five dimensions: Extraversion, Neuroticism, Conscientious, Agreeableness, and Openness.[6]

Cognitive Behavioral Therapy




Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) is a type of psychotherapy that is based on the following premise -- your unhealthy moods and behaviors are derived from your negative thoughts and beliefs. Cognitive behavioral therapy puts the responsibility on you, not on other people or outside situations.
There are several approaches to cognitive behavioral therapy. Most are based on the Cognitive Model of Emotional Response, which is based on the above premise -- your thoughts cause your feelings and behaviors. The benefit of cognitive behavioral therapy is that you can change how you think which, in turn, will impact how you act and feel -- even if the situation itself does not change.
Cognitive behavioral therapy is educational and structured. Patients may participate in about 16 sessions of cognitive behavioral therapy (variable depending on the person). You may put more stock in its mental health capabilities, but research shows that CBT could be a useful tool to you as you work to manage a chronic health concern.
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy: For Chronic Illness and Pain
Let's use pain as an example. In a CBT session, such as one used to deal with chronic pain, there may be a focus on a variety of techniques including relaxation, activity pacing and scheduling, visual imagery techniques, distraction strategies, focal point and visual distraction, problem solving, and goal setting. The sessions should help change thinking patterns about the pain being experienced.
According to the August 2009 issue of The Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery (American), "The effectiveness of cognitive behavioral therapy and other treatments that address the psychosocial aspects of disabling musculoskeletal pain has been confirmed in numerous high-quality studies."
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy: Helpful for Osteoarthritis and Insomnia
Cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia is effective when treating older patients who haveosteoarthritis paired with insomnia, according to the Journal of Clinical Sleep Medicine. Study results revealed that cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia improved immediate and long-term, self-reported sleep and pain in that group of patients -- even without directly focusing on pain control.
The lead author of the study concluded that insomnia is not a symptom of osteoarthritis -- insomnia co-exists with osteoarthritis. Cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia not only improved sleep of the study participants, it also improved the co-existing condition -- in this case, osteoarthritis.
Why? About 60% of osteoarthritis patients report that they experience pain during the night. Pain can worsen sleep disturbance -- and disturbed sleep can exacerbate chronic pain. It's a vicious cycle.
The study suggests that when sleep disturbance is successfully treated, there may be overall better quality of life for osteoarthritis patients and possibly patients who have other chronic pain conditions.

The Bottom Line

While cognitive behavioral therapy isn't discussed as often as prescription medications by most primary care physicians, you may wish to ask your doctor if it would be an appropriate treatment for you.



Career in Psychology



Psychology is a branch of science. Studies human mind, mental process, and behavior. Psychologists are finding out new theories and treatment technologies to meet changing needs of people and society. Psychology is a excellent field divided into two major sections as research and Practice. Research focuses the physical, cognitive, emotional and social aspect of human behavior. Counseling and Training programs are provided by Applied Psychologists.


There are different types of subtitles in psychology. Those are Abnormal Psychology, clinical Psychology, Counseling Psychology, Social Psychology, Educational Psychology, Engineering Psychology, School Psychology, Child Psychology, Adolescent Psychology, Biological Psychology, Developmental Psychology, Personality Psychology, Rehabilitation Psychology Experimental Psychology, Quantitative Psychology, Neuropsychology, Cognitive Psychology, Occupational Psychology, Evolutionary Psychology, Environmental Psychology,Health Psychology, Sports Psychology, Industrial Psychology,Cyberpsychology,Forensic Psychology,etc. Psychologists are pure mental health professionals working in different fields. Many Psychologists are work independently.

Psychology is offered as a subject at the Plus Two level or equivalent. It continuous to Diploma, UG, PG, Doctoral and Post doctoral level. After completing graduation in psychology they can assist to psychologist or other professionals in mental health center. Post graduate people can work in the research field, industry, schools, colleges and clinics. After getting their doctorate, they will be specialized in their field. Those people can open their own clinic or work as mental health professionals

10 Steps for Boosting Creativity


10 Steps for Boosting Creativity

By

Jeffrey Paul Baumgartner 



Listen to music by Johann Sebastian Bach. If Bach doesn't make you more creative, you should probably see your doctor - or your brain surgeon if you are also troubled by headaches, hallucinations or strange urges in the middle of the night.

Johann Sebastian Bach



Brainstorm. If properly carried out, brainstorming can help you not only come up with sacks full of new ideas, but can help you decide which is best.




Always carry a small notebook and a pen or pencil around with you. That way, if you are struck by an idea, you can quickly note it down. Upon rereading your notes, you may discover about 90% of your ideas are daft. Don't worry, that's normal. What's important are the 10% that are brilliant.




If you're stuck for an idea, open a dictionary, randomly select a word and then try to formulate ideas incorporating this word. You'd be surprised how well this works. The concept is based on a simple but little known truth: freedom inhibits creativity. There are nothing like restrictions to get you thinking.




Define your problem. Grab a sheet of paper, electronic notebook, computer or whatever you use to make notes, and define your problem in detail. You'll probably find ideas positively spewing out once you've done this.




If you can't think, go for a walk. A change of atmosphere is good for you and gentle exercise helps shake up the brain cells.




Don't watch TV. Experiments performed by the JPB Creative Laboratory show that watching TV causes your brain to slowly trickle out your ears and/or nose. It's not pretty, but it happens.




Don't do drugs. People on drugs think they are creative. To everyone else, they seem like people on drugs.




Read as much as you can about everything possible. Books exercise your brain, provide inspiration and fill you with information that allows you to make creative connections easily.




Exercise your brain. Brains, like bodies, need exercise to keep fit. If you don't exercise your brain, it will get flabby and useless. Exercise your brain by reading a lot (see above), talking to clever people and disagreeing with people - arguing can be a terrific way to give your brain cells a workout. But note, arguing about politics or film directors is good for you; bickering over who should clean the dishes is not.

Exam Anxiety/Stress Management Guidelines



The Physical approach:

(A) Eating healthy:

· Balancing food choices over time counts.
· Breakfast provides the energy needed through an active morning.
· Children who skip breakfast may have trouble concentrating.
· Fast foods supply more fat, salt & calories than good nutrition.
· Fast foods in moderation won’t ruin a healthful diet, especially when consumed with green salads.
· Replace finger chips with an apple.
· Add roughage to your diet – Dalia, Corn etc. will help prevent stomach discomfort and you will feel lighter.
· The golden rule for food safety is to keep hot foods hot & cold foods cold.
· Parents should teach good habits by example.

(B) Good Sleep

· Insomnia (the inability to fall or stay asleep) can be caused by stress & anxiety of Exam.
· Disturbances of sleep wake cycle during exams.
· If sleep struggles continue, talk them over with your doctor.

(c) Physical activity

· Exercise: planned & structured subset of leisure time physical activity undertaken for improving or maintaining physical fitness.
· Physical fitness: includes cardio-respiratory fitness, muscle strength, body composition and flexibility.
· Sport: any choice of outdoor game for a brief period. For example badminton, squash, tennis, etc.

The Psychological approach:


Stress can lead to both anxiety & depression. However, some amount of anxiety is imperative for good performance. The students may experience the following-
· Increased disinterest in studies.
· Seeing more TV, sleeping more
· Irritable/ crying / cranky
· Nervous and irritable
· Feelings of frustration and aggression
· Preoccupied, absent minded
· Symptoms like headaches, fainting spells, vomiting
· Wanting to be alone
· Major changes in eating or sleeping habits
· Lack of attention and concentration
· Forgetfulness
· Inability to complete tasks or make study plans
· Staying out longer, stop communicating with their parents and have health problems.

The tips to handle examination anxiety/stress are-
· Make realistic study plans
· Assess priorities, assets and difficulties
· Follow a normalized routine atmosphere at home should be recommended.
· To take frequent breaks.
· Not to strip off TV or entertainment and outings.
· Feel comfortable about self.
· That imagining extreme consequences and worst situations is of no use and needs to be discouraged.
· It is helpful to make the student see what he can accomplish in the remaining time is not negligible.
· Constant encouragement and reassurance is essential from all significant members in the school and family.
· It is important that the student is clear about how to take the examination, how to tackle questions and how to manage time.
· Students tend to magnify failures and try to talk to them out of it. They should not demean themselves and should manage time properly.
· Advise them to contact the teachers or counselors if they feel low or anxious or disinterested in studies.

THE PIANIST


அவசியம் பார்க்க வேண்டிய படம் : தி பியானிஸ்ட்!


திரைப்பட விமர்சனங்கள் எழுதுவதில் நான் அவ்வளவு சமர்த்தன் அல்ல. வலைத்தளங்களில் பல வித்தகர்கள் தாங்கள் ரசித்த பலமொழிப் படங்களைப் பற்றி அழகாக விமர்சனம் எழுதுவதைப் படித்து ரசித்திருக்கிறேன். அவ்வளவே. நான் பார்த்த பிறமொழிப் படங்களில் எனக்குப் பிடித்த, என்னைப் பாதித்த சில படங்களைப் பற்றி உங்களுக்குச் சொல்லலாம் என்ற எண்ணத்தில் பிறந்தது சற்றே நீளமான இந்தப் பதிவு.

போர் நிகழும் சமயத்தில் பாழடைந்த ஒரு பங்களாவில் பதுங்கியிருக்கிறான் பியானோ இசைக் கலைஞன் விளாடெக்.  அங்கே ஒரு பியானோவைப் பார்த்ததும் அவன் விரல்கள் இசைக்கத் துடிக்கிறது. ஆனால் இசைக்க முடியாத சூழல்! சப்தம் கேட்டால் அருகிலுள்ள ஜெர்மன் ராணுவ ஆஸ்பத்திரியிலிருக்கும் ஜெர்மானிய வீரர்களிடம் மாட்டிக் கொள்வான். இந்தச் சூழலில் அவன் பியானோவில் விரல் படாமல் இசைத்து, மனதில் அந்த இசையை அனுபவித்து மகிழும் காட்சி இருக்கிறதே... படம் பார்த்து பல வருடங்கள் ஆனாலும் மனதை விட்டுப் போகாது.

'THE PIANIST' என்கிற இந்தப் படத்தை நான் பார்த்து பல ஆண்டுகள் ஆகியும் இன்னும் மனதில் நிற்கிறது. அதன் கதை முழுமையாக இங்கே...

1939ம் வருடம். போலந்திலுள்ள வார்ஸா நகரத்தின் ரேடியோ நிலையத்தில் பியானோ வாசித்துக் கொண்டிருக்கிறான் விளாடெக். ரேடியோ நிலையம் குண்டுச் சத்தத்தில் அதிர்கிறது. பியானோ வாசிப்பதை நிறுத்தச் சொல்லி, அதிகாரிகள் ஓடுகின்றனர். இவன் தொடர்ந்து வாசிக்கிறான். ஸ்டுடியோவின் ஜன்னலருகே ஒரு குண்டு வெடிக்கிறது. விளாடெக் நெற்றியில் ரத்தக் காயம் பட்டு வெளியே ஓடி வருகிறான். மக்கள் அனைவரும் கூக்குரலிட்டபடி சிதறி ஓடிக் கொண்டிருக்கின்றனர். அப்போது டொராடோ என்ற பெண் அவனிடம் தன்னை அறிமுகப் படுத்திக் கொள்கிறாள். அவன் நண்பனின் தங்கை என்றும், அவனின் பியானோ வாசிப்பு தனக்குப் பிடிக்குமென்றும் அந்த அவசர சூழலிலும் பேசும் அவளை அண்ணன் இழுத்துச் செல்கிறான்.

வீட்டுக்கு வருகிறான் விளாடெக். அப்பா, அம்மா, ஒரு அண்ணன், இரண்டு தங்கைகள் அடங்கிய குடும்பம் அவனுடையது. ஜெர்மானிய நாஜிப் படைகள் டிசம்பருக்குள் போலந்து மக்களை நகரின் கிழக்குப் பகுதிக்குச் செல்ல உத்தரவிட்டிருப்பதைக் கூறி எவ்வளவு பணத்தை தாங்கள் எடுத்துச் செல்ல முடியும் என்று அப்பா பேச, தங்கைகள் கேலி செய்து சிரிக்கின்றனர். விளாடெக்கின் பியானோவை விற்று பணம் சேர்க்கிறார்கள்.

டொராடோவை மீண்டும் சந்திக்கிறான் விளாடெக். அவளுக்கு செல்லோ என்ற வாத்தியத்தை நன்கு வாசிக்கத் தெரியும் என்பதை அறிந்து கொள்கிறான். பேசியபடி ஒரு காபி ஷாப்பிற்குச் செல்ல, அங்கே ‘ஜெர்மானியர்களுக்கு மட்டுமே அனுமதி’ என்ற போர்டைக் கண்டு கொதிக்கிறாள் அவள். அவன் சமாதானப்படுத்துகிறான். அவன் குடும்பம் மற்ற மக்களுடன் இடம் பெயர்கிறது. டொராடோ அவனைச் சந்தித்து, தான் வரவில்லை என்றும் அங்கேயே இருந்துவிடப் போவதாகவும் கூறுகிறாள். அவன் குடும்பத்துடன் நாட்டின் கிழக்குப் பகுதிக்கு வந்து சேர்கிறான். அங்கே ஒரு கிளப்பில் பியானோ வாசிப்பவனாக வேலையில் சேர்கிறான். சிறிது காலம் கழிகிறது.

யுத்தம் தீவிரமடைய, முதியவர்கள், பெண்கள், குழந்தைகள் அனைவரையும் ஒரே சரக்கு ரயிலில் ஆடு மாடுகளைப் போல அடைத்து அழைத்துச் செல்கிறது ஜெர்மன் ராணுவம். மறுபடி சந்திக்கப் போவதில்லை என்பதை அறியாமலேயே தன் குடும்பத்தை அப்போது விளாடெக் பிரிகிறான். இளைஞர்கள் கேம்ப்களுக்கு அனுப்பப்பட்டு வேலை செய்யும்படி கட்டாயப் படுத்தப்படுகின்றனர். பியானோ இசைக் கலைஞன் விளாடெக் செங்கல் சுமப்பவனாக வேலை செய்ய நேர்கிறது. ஒருமுறை சாரத்தில் ஏறும் போது போர் விமானங்கள் வரும் சத்தத்தைக் கேட்டு செங்கற்களை நழுவவிட, ஜெர்மானிய அதிகாரி அவனை மயங்கும் வரை சாட்டையால் அடிக்கிறார்.

அவர்களி்ல் வேலை செய்ய இயலாத பலரை ஜெர்மானிய ராணுவம் இரக்கமின்றிக் கொல் வதைக் கண்டு குமுறுகின்றனர். வாரம் ஒரு முறை சென்று அவர்களுக்கு வேண்டிய ரொட்டி யும், உருளைக் கிழங்குகளும் வாங்கிவர ராணுவம் அனும திக்கிறது. அங்குள்ள இளைஞர் கள் அதனைப் பயன்படுத்தி, உருளைக்கிழங்கு மூட்டை யினுள் பதுக்கி எடுத்து வந்து ஆயுதங்கள் சேகரிக்கின்றனர். அவற்றை வாங்கச் செல்பவனிடம் மேற்குப் பகுதியில் வசிக்கும், தனக்குத் தெரிந்த இசைக்கலைஞரான ஒரு தோழியின் முகவரி தந்து பார்த்துவரச் சொல்கிறான். அவன் பார்த்து வந்து அவர்களிடம் பேசி விட்டதாகவும், அவனை தப்பிவரச் சொன்னதையும் சொல்கிறான்.

விளாடெக் தப்பிச் சென்று அவர்களைச் சந்திக்கிறான். அவர்கள் சொல்லும் ஒரு ஒளிவிடத்தில் மறைகிறான். ‘மிக அவசியமென்றால் இந்த முகவரிக்குச் செல்’ என்று ஒரு முகவரி அவனிடம் தரப்பட, அதை ஷுவில் மறைத்து வைத்துக் கொள்கிறான். அந்த இடத்தில் நீண்ட நாள் இருக்க முடியாத சூழல். ராணுவத்தின் குண்டு வீச்சால் அந்தக் கட்டிடம் பாதிக்கப்பட, அங்கிருந்து விலகி, தனக்கு கொடுக்கப்பட்ட முகவரிக்குச் செல்கிறான்.

அங்கு சென்றதும்தான் அது டொராடோவின் முகவரி என்பதையும், அவளுக்கு கல்யாணமாகி, அவள் கர்ப்பமாக இருப்பதையும் அறிகிறான். அவள் தன் கணவனிடம் அவனை அறிமுகப்படுத்தி அவனுக்கு அடைக்கலம் தரச் சொல்கிறாள். அவர் அவனை ஜெர்மானிய ராணுவ ஆஸ்பத்திரியின் அருகிலுள்ள ஒரு பில்டிங்கில் தலைமறைவாகத் தங்க வைக்கிறார்.

அங்கே சிலகாலம் மறைந்து வாழும் விளாடெக் இப்போது முகமெல்லாம் தாடி அடர்ந்து, இளைத்துப் போனவனாகக் காட்சி தருகிறான். ஆயுதங்கள் சேகரித்த போலந்து இளைஞர்கள் ராணுவத்தை எதிர்க்க, நிகழும் சண்டையில் அவன் மறைந்திருக்கும் பில்டிங் எரிகிறது. அங்கிருந்து விலகி தாக்குதலால் தற்போது பாழடைந்துவிட்ட ராணுவ ஆஸ்பத்திரியில் ஒளிகிறான். குடிக்க தண்ணீர்கூட கிடைக்காமல் அங்கிருக்கும் அழுக்குத் தண்ணீரைக் குடிக்கிறான்.

ஜெர்மானியப் படைகள் ஆஸ்பத்திரியையும் அழித்துவிட, வேறொரு பாழடைந்த கட்டிடத்தில் பரணில் ஒளிகிறான். அங்கே அவன் இருப்பதைக் கண்டுபிடிக்கும் ஒரு ஜெர்மானிய அதிகாரி, அவன் இசைக் கலைஞன் என்பதை அறிந்ததும் அவனைக் கொல்லாமல் தன் ராணுவக் கடமைகளுக்கு இடையே அவனுக்கு ரகசியமாக உணவு தந்து பராமரிக்கிறார். பின்னொரு நாளில் பிரிட்டன், பிரான்ஸ் படைகள் போரில் இறங்கி விட்டதாகவும் தங்கள் ஜெர்மன் ராணுவம் ஒரு வாரத்தில் வெளியேறி விடும் என்றும் சொல்லி, குளிரில் நடுங்கும் அவனுக்குத் தன் கோட்டைத் தந்து விடைபெறுகிறார்.

அவர் சொன்னபடியே படைகள் வெளியேறுவதைப் பார்க்கிறான். போலந்து தேசிய கீதம் இசைக்கப்படுவதையும், தன் நாட்டு மக்கள் விடுதலை பெற்றவர்களாய் வருவதையும் கண்டு மறைவிடத்திலிருந்து வரும் அவனை ஜெர்மானியன் என நினைத்து சுடுகின்றனர். ‘நான் போலந்துக்காரன்’ என்று அலறி, அவர்களிடம் உண்மையைச் சொல்கிறான். அவனைப் பராமரித்த ஜெர்மன் அதிகாரி இப்போது போலந்துப் படையினரிடம் கைதியாய் இருக்க, அவர் இவன் பெயரைச் சொல்லி, தகவல் அனுப்புகிறார். இவன் விரைந்து வந்தும் அவரைக் காப்பாற்ற இயலாமல் போகிறது.

விளாடெக் மீண்டும் வார்சா ரேடியோவில் இசைக் கலைஞனாக வேலைக்குச் சேர்கிறான். இது நிகழ்வது 1944ல் ‘அதன்பின் 2000ம் ஆண்டு வரை அவன் வாழ்ந்தான்’ என்று கார்டு திரையில் போடப்பட, படம் நிறைவடைகிறது.

போரின் கொடூரத்தை ஒரு பியானோக் கலைஞனின் வாழ்க்கையுடன் இணைத்து ஒரு கவிதை போல படத்தைக் கொண்டு போயிருக்கிறார் இயக்குனர் ரோமன் போலன்ஸ்கி.  Władysław Szpilman என்ற இசைக்கலைஞனின் வாழ்வில் நடந்த உண்மைச் சம்பவங்களை அவரது சுயசரிதையிலிருந்து எடுத்து படமாக்கி யுள்ளனர். ரொனால்ட் ஹார்வுட்டின் கச்சிதமான திரைக்கதை படத்தின் விறுவிறுப்புக்குத் துணை நிற்கிறது. அழகான பின்னணி இசையும், கண்களில் ஒற்றிக் கொள்கிறார் போல துல்லியமான ஒளிப்பதிவும் படத்திற்கு பக்கபலமாக நின்று மேலும் மெருகூட்டுகின்றன.

பல நாடுகளில் திரையிடப்பட்டு, பல விருதுகளை வென்ற, 143 நிமிடங்கள் ஓடும் இந்தத் திரைப்படம் அனைவரும் வாழ்நாளில் ஒரு முறை அவசியமாக, கட்டாயமாக பார்த்தே தீர வேண்டிய படம்.


இத்திரைப்படம் பெற்ற விருதுகள் :


* Academy Award for Best Actor – Adrien Brody
* Academy Award for Best Director – Roman Polanski
* Academy Award for Writing Adapted Screenplay – Ronald Harwood
* Palme d'Or, 2002 Cannes Film Festival[1]
* BAFTA Award for Best Film
* BAFTA Award for Best Direction – Roman Polanski
* César Award for Best Actor
* César Award for Best Director
* César Award for Best Film
* César Award for Best Music Written for a Film
* César Award for Best Cinematography
* César Award for Best Production Design
* César Award for Best Sound
* Goya Award for Best European Film