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How to Detect Hidden Camera in Trial Room?

In front of the trial room take your mobile and make sure that mobile can make calls……..

Then enter into the trail room, take your mobile and make a call…..

If u can’t make a call……!!!!

There is a hidden camera……

This is due to the interference of fiber optic cable during the signal transfer……

Please forward this to your friends to educate this issue to the

public……To prevent our innocent ladies from HIDDEN CAMERA………..

Pinhole Cameras in Changing Rooms of Bazaar and Malls?

A few days ago, I received this text message:

Please don’t use Trial room of a certain BAZAAR there are pinhole cameras to make MMS of young girls.

So, please forward to all girls. Also forward to all boys who have sisters and girlfriends.

Don’t be shy in forwarding this message. Because its about protecting the integrity of all girls & ladies.

HOW TO DETECT A 2-WAY MIRROR?
When we visit toilets, bathrooms, hotel rooms, changing rooms, etc., How many of you know for sure that the seemingly ordinary mirror hanging on the wall is a real mirror, or actually a 2-way mirror I.e., they can see you, but you can’t see them. There have been many cases of people installing 2-way mirrors in female changing rooms or bathroom or bedrooms.
It is very difficult to positively identify the surface by just looking at it. So, how do we determine with any amount of certainty what type of Mirror we are looking at?
CONDUCT THIS SIMPLE TEST:
Place the tip of your fingernail against the reflective surface and if there is a GAP between your fingernail and the image of the nail, then it is a GENUINE mirror.
However, if your fingernail DIRECTLY TOUCHES the image of your nail, then BEWARE, IT IS A 2-WAY MIRROR! (There may be someone seeing you from the other side). So remember, every time you see a mirror, do the “fingernail test.” It doesn’t cost you anything. It is simple to do.
This is a really good thing to do. The reason there is a gap on a real mirror, is because the silver is on the back of the mirror UNDER the glass.
Whereas with a two-way mirror, the silver is on the surface. Keep it in mind! Make sure and check every time you enter in hotel rooms.

Share this with your sisters, wife, daughters, friends, colleagues, etc.
Pass this message to all Ur Family, friends, Neigbours…

( Please note this article is by a group who wants to spread the maniac of hidden camera in changing area please note that I am not sure about the phone calls network theory as suggested by my friend but let me know about anything wrong in this post or if anyone concerned or have gone tru a experience as above let me know and if there is any correction need please mail me or comment and I will check it and make the necessary changes)

Thank you

 
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Posted by on September 5, 2011 in Articles

 

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Again Mumbai Attacked why we ?

A cat when cornered and no place to go attacks back irrespective what the consequences is going to be yesterdays attack is just going to bring this out of the common people attack. We dont have any help from the government who are mere spectators … I and all the other common people like me who travel on train , who eat simple normal place are always on the danger on being killed by bombs hidden at this common place by terrorist .. with no help from the international communities in stopping country like pakistan who train terrorist and mostly use them against India.. I ask the government of India isnt it time to give a suitable reply …

If not then when. The cries of the mother who lost a son , The cry of a wife who lost a husband. The cries of the family who lost their only son, the cries of the parents who lost their only kid , the cries of the family who lost their only earning member.

I am a common man and worked abroad for many years and always used to be worried about my family and whenever I woke up in the morning i used to pray to god please keep my family safe. This thought kept me worrying and I came back to India for good. Now everyday I do the same and when Leave home even for an hour I have a look at my family as if I am looking at them for the last time and say to my self maybe today Is my last day.

When abroad I used to feel that I am an outsider and didnt feel safe. i left the so called rich country to come and settle back In my Mother country but then the feeling is not left me,

when I or any member of my family leaves even for a moment , my mom prays to god that we reach back home safely. Thou we have are grown up now but still my mom dad are worried when we leave home for work or even go out for a minute….

Terrorist , robbers, Gangs, Murderers, Rapist,Sadistic paedophile criminals, continue to strive in India’s financial hub. If the terrorist wont kill us , then the above will kill us. and if the terrorist and the above wrong people dont kill is then the Tax leveled by the government on every week month basis will surely kills us.

Been watching the news about the Blast , Feel sorry for the all who lost their loved ones may the one who lost their life in the blast or anyways to certain criminals ( may your soul rest in peace) my condolences to their family.

Well Got up early as my parents where tensed up as we left home for work. So we had to show a happy face and make them happy. Everything was alright their were little okay but then they saw the papers the picture of those who are injured and then the news and again their eyes dull and their faith in the system failed too. Only one line by them this could have been one of our children or it could have been you ( me). Mom is like god knows how the family of those who lost life or the one who are injured will cope up with it. They question how can the terrorist or the Government ( Government according to my parents are equally responsible as they could not protect us but can tax as at every given chance and corruption doesnt stop ) I or my parents are not a spokesperson of the opposition party but merely a middle class family who want to live a normal life which either is disturbed by the attack on the neighborhood on loved ones or simply our fellow Indians who all are part of us, or sometime is disturbed by attack directly by the government in the form of Tax on monthly basis when they can stop the corruption in trillions and stop taxing the country for their luxury. Again if the terrorist and the criminals dont kill us the governement will surely kill us with their tax and their failure to protect us from the enemy…

Today 14 july 2011 evrything is normal other then in the house of those who lost closed one to blast and others. Everyone says that Mumbai is brave and normal everyone/ everything will be normal why? we are brave well if you see other then the Taj /oberoi hotel attacks , most of the attacks are targeted on places frequented by lots of people ( these people are poor or from the middle class families). None of them are rich atleast 99 percent people are not rich. The middle class or the poor families are dependent on us. we have to dig the well daily to get water( work everyday to get food for the month ) we cant sit home and say oh yesterday this happened now today we cant go. We know if dont work for a day we have to see our kids or our family go without food. So we get ready in the morning go tru the same route were earlier killings/ bombing has taken place . you can call all this people brave their are brave for the family and the stomach . Rich people have the luxury to mourn for ages for their lose of near and dear one , the luxury which we cannot afford sometime even for a day.

Politicians -
Where are the so called politicians who always fight for how Mumbai is for them and mumbai is for certain language and try to create rift between people. where are the so called flamboyant politician’s who is called the future politicians but not a word about yesterdays attack. where are the politicians who play politics about everything from language to caste to people to books to travelling to unions , yesterday no one was there even to give their view. some politicians are more bothered to woo the voters by changing the name of stations / street/ state rather then working on how to curb corruption and terrorist attack. And we should not blame the politicians but ourself, they serve us mint and we gave them vote for that. Array were are those politicians who in the name of religion became moral police but then are caught themself indulging in bribe , crime and corruption no one to question them one Azare against them and they oppose them too. Please all you politicians i know you will come saying that the certain group are responsible and the opposition will come up and say the government are not able to protect us . kargil , mumbai train blast , Mumbai attack , mumbai july attack are all under you politicians so stop playing your politics before you start also .

And Why most of the time the attacks are on Mumbai ? I fail to understand this. I am a Maharastran a Mumbaikar and will always have the fear who is next me maybe. We are called a people who love to co exist which each other so why we. But there is a limit to our patience do not try it we had enough Grrrrrrrrrr.\
Above all was written is my view and my frustration of what is happening In our Country/ world. Are you happy with what is going on ????????? I am not ………….
 
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Posted by on July 14, 2011 in Articles, Tigerleak

 

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We need many more Hazares in our country and I support him 100 per cent in what he is doing : Lokayukta Justice Santosh Hegde.

Lokayukta Justice Santosh Hegde, the ombudsman battling corruption in Karnataka, is impressed with the manner in which Anna Hazare has taken on the government this time.”We need many more Hazares in our country and I support him 100 per cent in what he is doing. He is 100 per cent right in what he is doing and I want to tell all those persons criticising him that what he has been doing is not a gimmick. For 40 years this government has not made a bill, and now when they do it, it appears to be a farce,” he said.

“The results are showing already. So, it’s important to have more such protests across the country since it is very important that the attitude of the government changes against corruption,” he said.

“We all know the number of cases they have filed in the past one year. When the government does not think and act, it is not important to have dedicated bodies to fight corruption. Let the people rise and fight. Let the government give more teeth to the Lokpal. Why are they shying away from that?” he said.

“People talk about corruption all the time and it is the same people who end up criticising a man who wants to fight it. If he has been wrong, then let us look at that issue as well. Merely pouncing on him will not be the best of things to do,” he said.

“I personally feel that the youth must come out in the open and fight corruption. Nine out of ten times it may fail, but then there is no harm in trying. The important issue is that we have raised our voices. Look at people such as Jayaprakash Narayan and Mahatma Gandhi [ Images ],” he said.

“People must remember that these are the after-effects of long periods of lethargy on part of the government. The government has been trying to mislead the people on this issue, and one man has stood up to fight them. Let him do his job. This agitation is not just about corruption, but it is the attitude of the government against corruption,” he said.

“Someone like Hazare has come out to fight this and all of a sudden there are many who want to sit in criticism of this man. What is the point in talking ill about someone who has decided to do something? Call it a publicity gimmick or anything, the fact remains that there is someone who has raised their voice on this issue,” he added.

Moreover, I am tied down with work in Karnataka and there is an important report on illegal mining that I have to submit. So it would be difficult for me to take up this assignment,” he said.

“Even if I were to be offered this, I would turn it down since I don’t want to be some kind of a middle man to discuss the issue. I don’t have any idea about what this government is planning on the draft of the bill. However, I would make it clear that I will not accept it,” he asserted.

 
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Posted by on April 9, 2011 in Articles

 

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In Tendulkar country

An American writer new to cricket experiences the first couple of weeks of the World Cup, navigating the madness of a billion fans and chasing the soul of the game  –

source – ESPN Cricinfo

Wright Thompson

April 7, 2011

DHAKA, Bangladesh – The guy walking across the parking lot is famous. That’s easy to tell from the reactions. Crowds part for him. Security guards mirror his every step. Other cricketers who made this same trip to the locker room tiptoed around the puddles. He strides over them, head up, confident. I am following an Indian cricket superstar, but I don’t know who he is. That’s the kind of trip this is going to be – one of constant confusion and mystery.

He’s not a big man, but he’s got a big aura. Fans climb the stadium wall, cheek to cheek, pressed against openings to catch a glimpse. The player looks up at the apartment buildings crowding the other side of the street, like a zoo animal in reverse, all the residents leaning over to get a peek. He waves his bat at the kids on the wall. The kids scream with joy. I grab a photographer and point.

Who is that?

He looks at me like I’ve got three heads.

Sachin Tendulkar.

Oh.

CHAPTER ONE: Dhaka
Sachin is both the riddle and the answer. That’s what I’m told. You must understand India to understand Sachin, but you must understand Sachin to understand India. They created each other. They are the same.

This, obviously, makes no sense to me.

How could it? Just a few hours ago, on a mid-February morning, I landed in Dhaka. I came with a copy of Cricket for Dummies. The 2011 Cricket World Cup starts tomorrow, India at Bangladesh, and I know nothing about the sport, not even about the tremendous pressure on the Indian National Cricket team to win its second World Cup after a three-decade drought. How tremendous? The Hindustan Times’ logo for their cup coverage says, every day, in enormous letters: A Billion Dreams… 28 years of yearning.

I don’t understand that the sport itself is at a crossroads, in crisis even.

I don’t realise that Sachin Tendulkar is likely playing in his final World Cup, still searching for his first title. Tendulkar is probably the most famous man in India. He’s so famous that people who worked for him are famous: a Bollywood movie character is based on his first agent, Mark Mascarenhas, who died in a car wreck. Billboards with Sachin’s photo blanket India’s cities; every other commercial on television features his face. He’s wildly rich. He is the greatest cricketer in the world. One of the greatest ever.

I know none of that.

At the moment, I’m too busy trying to figure out the definition of a wicket.

Is it the manicured area in the center of the field?

Is it the stumps on either end of that manicured area?

Is it when a player gets out?

(Turns out, according to my book, it’s all three.)

Cricket, like India, had long intrigued me from afar. It seemed so mysterious: a game with strange rules, and stranger vocabulary, one that can last for days, captivating billions but meriting only an inch or two in the papers at home. Only madness made it to my radar. Fan hangs himself after India loss. … Pakistan’s coach allegedly murdered after upset defeat. There seemed something pure and savage that was missing from the glossy sports I follow at home.

My first day in Bangladesh, I’m sitting in the press box considering the journey ahead. Sambit Bal, the editor of ESPNcricinfo, sits next to me. If you are looking for someone with the opposite of my cricket knowledge, he’s it. Back home, an Alabama fan had killed the trees at Toomer’s Corner, and I was trying to explain the significance to him. This was big news to me. I’m a Southern boy, and I tend to believe that SEC football is the most important thing in the world. Only, Sambit has never heard of Auburn, or Alabama, doesn’t know that they play college football, or that they are rivals. I fumble around. This is perhaps America’s most intense rivalry. A fan just poisoned two 130-year-old oak trees. It’s serious. I need an analogy.

My first thought: It’s like India-Pakistan in cricket.

Except, you know, for the four wars since 1947 and the constant threat of nuclear holocaust. Other than that, Auburn-Alabama is just like India-Pakistan.

This is my first day in the world of cricket.

I have a lot to learn.

No magic moment today
Game day outside the stadium is wild. People fill the streets for blocks. A drum beats somewhere in the distance. Vuvuzelas are the horn section. The roar of the mob gets louder and louder until it’s just white noise. Chaos is the new normal. Loud is the new quiet. Dhaka has ceased to function.

The stadium fills up. India is the favourite to win the tournament. The team’s line-up is stocked with sluggers. The first two swagger to the center of the field: Virender Sehwag and Sachin Tendulkar. They are really here, waddling in pads, giving fist bumps. The crowd is bubbling now after months of anticipation, after years of hunger for their country to be seen as more than its disasters.

The first ball brings a crescendo.

I’m trying to follow the game. I know Tendulkar is a star, so I focus on him. I cannot tell what makes him special. Then, before I know it, he’s out, finished for the day. I don’t really understand why. The fans rise to their feet as he walks off. He’s scored 28 runs. It all happened so fast. I feel cheated.

Sehwag stays in. He crushes ball after ball. It’s like watching Mark McGwire take batting practice. The dude has Popeye arms, and he’s pounding the thing all over the yard. Sehwag is called the “Butcher of Najafgarh”. He puts on a show. The cricket-mad Bangladeshi crowd oohs and ahs, just happy to be seeing the game in person.

Sehwag finally gets out with 175, an incredible total. After that, the game slows. India wins, and it’s a little boring, frankly. Maybe it’s because I don’t know the rules, or because the scene in the street was exponentially more dramatic than the one in the stands, but the game itself seems anticlimactic. I’ve flown halfway around the planet, and I’m after more than an intellectual understanding of why cricket matters. There’s a mystic place beyond the assignment. When the books are closed and the conversations about culture and history are over, I want to sit in a stadium and have the game explain itself to me.

That didn’t happen tonight.

Innocence lost?
One thing did happen – a press-box conversation during the game that will eat at me for the next week. I’m sitting with Sambit, and a guy comes up to chat. He’s a former Indian cricket player turned broadcaster, Sanjay Manjrekar, and he’s been captivated by Bangladesh’s reaction to this World Cup opening in its capital. This pure love for cricket transports him to his past.

“There is a certain amount of innocence here,” he tells us, “which I think India has lost.”

The entire exchange lasts a minute or two. His lament, and the place from which it comes, are beyond me.

I don’t yet know enough to recognise a eulogy when I hear one.

CHAPTER TWO: Ahmedabad, India
I’m taking a retired physics professor named Kumar Bhatt and his brother Bankim to the next game. Kumar taught at Ole Miss, Kentucky and Texas. Most of that time was spent in Oxford, Miss., where I live. Before he moved back to India, his house was a few blocks from mine. If anybody would understand where I am coming from, it’s a former neighbour.

We find our seats, and the game begins: a slow affair, plodding, with the powerful Australians still finding their legs and the overmatched Zimbabweans playing defensively, taking no chances.

The stadium is mostly empty. It will remain that way. I think of Manjrekar’s press-box lament.

Kumar tells me about the history of the game. When he was growing up, championship cricket meant a Test match. White uniforms. Breaks for high tea. Unlimited overs. (An over is a set of six balls, sort of like an at-bat.) Games lasted for days. Sometimes nobody won. Cricket was designed to be played, not watched. “After five days,” Kumar says, “it was frustrating for the spectators.”

Modern attention spans began shrinking cricket. First came the World Cup format, which could be completed in a day, and is now 50 overs. More recently, the 20-over game has become popular with paying customers, an event stripped of nuance, played in the same amount of time as a baseball game.

We sit in the lower bleachers, the entire circle of green in front of us. An Australian player muscles a ball toward the boundary. A ball that hits or bounces over the boundary at the edge of the field is four runs; a ball that crosses it on the fly is six. Some Aussie hits are seen as gauche. Kumar clucks disapprovingly. I ask why. Old-school cricket fans don’t like it when players cross the bat, which for baseball fans would be like if a right-handed hitter got an outside fastball and, instead of going the opposite way, turned and pulled it. It’s vulgar. The ball should be hit in the direction from which it’s pitched.

“You are to play gracefully,” Kumar says, “and give respect to the ball.”

Have you ever heard that something “isn’t cricket”? That’s where the phrase comes from. To cross the bat isn’t cricket. Sehwag crosses the bat. Constantly. He wants bombs. Fours and sixes. Sehwag revels in his vulgarity. Tendulkar, although a big hitter, plays with an old school respect. Kumar loves Sachin.

“Grace has a place,” Kumar says.

“The players have gotten soft,” Bankim grumbles.

“Australia relies mostly on fast bowlers to win,” Kumar says. “We don’t consider it fair.”

The sparse crowd gets behind Zimbabwe, which steals a couple of wickets. Fans whistle at the departing Australians, waving goodbye. Australia completes 50 overs with 262 runs.

“Not a good score,” Bankim says.

Zimbabwe comes to bat. It’s already been a long day. Kumar is 78 years old. “Would you like to leave?” he asks.

Bankim ignores him for a bit but gets the message. We pack our stuff. I check the scoreboard and work out some numbers. Zimbabwe is scoring 5.25 runs an over. It needs 5.26. It has a chance at the upset. I head up to the press box. I need to keep watching cricket, in person and on television, if I want a revelation. There will be a moment when it all becomes clear.

Maybe that will happen tonight.

That is one of many miscalculations I will be guilty of today. The Zimbabwe team slows down, needing 26 overs to reach 100 runs, but in the well-lit press box I hold out hope, doing the math on my phone, figuring out the run rate. At least I’m taking steps, learning the nuances of the game. I divide the runs by the overs. Repeat. Then the wire-service reporters stop watching the game and begin typing. Hope is gone. There are many ways to know when a game is over, but the most reliable is to find the correspondent from the Associated Press. The AP guy is sitting next to me. He taps furiously.

There will be no magic.

CHAPTER THREE: New Delhi
My New Delhi cab driver’s name is Deepchand Yadav. He loves cricket. Once, the captain of India’s 1983 World Cup champion team, Kapil Dev, rode in his car. Can you imagine?! Kapil Dev, in my cab! He hopes India will win this year’s tournament. Everyone is very nervous. A billion dreams. Twenty-eight years of yearning. The team must win, for the billion, for its star.

“I’m fans with Sachin,” he says. “Sachin is mentally cool.”

Deepchand moved to Delhi from his village 18 years ago. Yadav is a caste name. His caste members are traditionally cow herders, and as India has changed, they’ve spread through the nation, taking any job they can get, sending money back to the villages. He is part of post-caste India. Anything is possible through hard work. He grinds, trying to hang on to the first rung of a lower-middle-class life. He’s a smart guy, with a big smile and a luxurious mustache.

Six years ago, worried about the lives of his wife and three children, he brought them to Delhi with him. “My family actually likes village,” he says, “but I like Delhi because business purposes is good.” Six years ago, he played cricket – captain of his village team. But since his family came to the city, there’s no time. He’s never played cricket with his son.

His son is 10 years old. The boy plays cricket with friends in the street, wherever they can find a little space, five or six sharing a bat. The wheels turn. I ask Deepchand if I could play with them tomorrow. I’ve watched cricket, but I’ve never held a bat or struck a ball. Books take you only so far. The best way to know a sport is to play it with children.

“What’s your son’s name?” I ask.

“Sachin,” he says.

“If Cricket Is a Religion, Sachin Is God”
Deepchand chose this name carefully. A name is very important in Hindu culture. The right one, it is believed, can lead a child to immortality. A name is a compass. It points a person in a specific direction.

Of his three children, Deepchand got to name two of them. The girl he called Sonia, after Sonia Gandhi, a politician, “an honest and powerful woman.” He wants his girl to be like her. He wants his son to be like Sachin: strong, sincere, poised. Sachin represents so many things for Indians who aspire to a better future while not losing their past in the exchange. The name literally means “pure”.

“He never behaves badly,” says Rahul Bhattacharya, once a popular young writer on cricket, now a novelist, “which Indians find very appealing. He’s not had scandals with women or drugs. He’s the idol for our children.”

Before Sachin, typical Indian cricketers took few risks. For the first hour, shots were deflected, frustrating the bowler, tiring him out, forcing him into mistakes, a perfect sporting ethos in a country known for vein-popping passive-aggressiveness. Sachin changed that. His style was new. He swung a thick bat, heavier than Indians had used before.

He wasn’t passive-aggressive.

He was simply aggressive.

He played with respect, but he also played with power. A recent book, If Cricket Is a Religion, Sachin Is God, finds an important corollary to India’s history in this. Before, because of a stagnant economy, nutrition was a problem. India couldn’t outslug rivals. It needed spin bowlers and crafty batsmen. An inferiority complex developed. Despite his greatness, somewhere deep inside, Indian legend Sunil Gavaskar, who retired two years before Sachin debuted, seemed terribly insecure. After he became famous, he turned down a membership to London’s exclusive Marylebone Cricket Club – the Royal and Ancient Golf Club of cricket – because, once, a guard there didn’t recognise him. The slights burned until they became a part of him, his pilot light, defining both him and the nation he represented.

Sachin isn’t from that India.

His international debut came a year before India opened up its economy. His rise mirrored India’s early-90s rise, when foreign corporations arrived in India for the first time, accounts swelling with advertising dollars, looking around for a face. They found Sachin.

He was India’s first modern sports star, a combination of Babe Ruth, Muhammad Ali and Michael Jordan, because his rise mirrored a nation’s economic rise, and he forever changed sports celebrity and marketing in India. Once, when an American company executive contacted his agent and wanted to understand what place Sachin held in Indian culture, the agent didn’t quote the number of Test wins, or international centuries. He said, simply, that Sachin endorsed Audemars Piguet watches, and that the company made a model just for him. The executive was sold.

Sachin has been a star since he was a boy. Cops had to stand guard outside his 12th-grade exams. Despite the attention, he’s remained dignified. There are no porn stars. He grants few audiences. He is the man Indians count on when things are at their worst.

Two weeks after the Mumbai terrorist attacks, India’s 9/11, with the country reeling, India played a Test match against England. Sachin anchored the match, his performance rising to meet the stakes of the day, scoring more than 100 runs without getting out, which would be like dropping 50 in the NBA Finals. A century, it’s called. His success, which he dedicated to those suffering in his hometown, added to his legend. Over coffee one evening, his current agent asked me, essentially, if Derek Jeter had a Secret Service detail. He was completely serious. I laughed out loud. No, I told him. He seemed surprised. Everywhere Sachin goes, the government of India protects him.

He’s a national treasure.

Now his career is nearing its end, and fans are left with beautiful memories, to be sure, but also questions.

What does Sachin’s retirement mean for cricket?

What does it mean for India?

Elephant in the slow lane
The highway runs past ancient ruins, and the lights of the cricket ground. Tomorrow, I’ll see South Africa-West Indies. Today, I’m going to play cricket with little Sachin and his friends. I’ve brought a surprise for him. It’s a Sachin Tendulkar signature series cricket bat made from pure English willow. It’ll be his first proper bat, and when Deepchand told him about it last night, Sachin had trouble going to sleep. We ride out toward the suburban slums. I’m twisting around to see the wrecked castle when Deepchand shouts, “You see elephant?”

What? I turn around. There’s an elephant in the slow lane. Cars whip past and the elephant just lumbers, oblivious, carrying people patiently to their destination. There’s a freaking elephant in the slow lane.

“What happens if a car hits the elephant?” I ask.

“The car is damaged,” Deepchand says. “The elephant is OK.”

Like America in the ’50s
There are elephants on the highway. There are elephant-sized metaphors shuffling alongside. This is a nation with a foot in both the past and present. India is at an end and a beginning. Over drinks in Delhi with my friends Candace and Lydia, we talk about this. Lydia is a correspondent for the New York Times and one of the world’s experts on developing nations. Talking journalism with her is like talking cricket with Sachin. She cautions me to avoid trying to figure out what India is, or what it isn’t, or to draw conclusions. “It leads you down all of these blind alleys,” she tells me. “It defies all efforts to simplify.”

She’s right. I’m not sure what any of this means, or how cricket or Sachin fits into it, or even if he’ll actually retire, but this is a critical time for the nation, just as it’s a critical time for cricket. Their ambitions and threats are the same. Anyone who’s here for even a few days can tell that. India today seems a lot like America in the mid-50s.

This is largely a pre-ironic society. Yes, there is a rich history of satire, and modern exceptions – the ’50s also produced Jack Kerouac – but the earnestness with which people love Sachin is reflected in many aspects of the culture. There’s no place, yet, for an Indian Daily Show. Elephants aren’t for statues representing a bygone era, like the blue mustang outside Denver’s airport. They are for the slow lane.

Movies are expected to end a certain way. Heroes in those movies are expected to behave a certain way. In his definitive book on Mumbai, Maximum City, author Suketu Mehta describes an Indian audience’s reaction when the hero of a film turned out to be a terrorist. They ransacked the theatre. It does not seem strange to an Indian filmgoer that the songs in the movies have nothing to do with the plot. Mehta writes:

 

“The suspension of disbelief in India is prompt and generous, beginning before the audience enters the theatre itself. Disbelief is easy to suspend in a land where belief is so rampant and vigorous. And not just in India; audiences in the Middle East, Russia and Central Asia are also pre-cynical. They still believe in motherhood, patriotism, and true love; Hollywood and the West have moved on.”

Commercialism is a new mistress in sports. The Indian Premier League, which plays 20-over cricket, started three years ago. The creation of the IPL is India’s Dodgers-leave-Brooklyn moment. Money is changing the sport. The change is seen by most as good. Any achievement by an Indian is good, something to be admired in the light. For many Indians, especially those who speak English and are trying to navigate the brave new world of economic revolution, the issue of identity is an important one. Excellence is tied up in that search. Indian writers are judged by the size of the advance, not the magic of their words. Indian artists are judged by the price fetched at auction, not the feelings they create in someone who stands before their canvas. Open the paper any random day to find an example. When famous Bollywood actress Aishwarya Rai met Dustin Hoffman at a Lakers game, the tabloids report, she talked to him about “new market-tapping agendas and global trends”. Not acting. Not his construction of Benjamin Braddock or Ted Kramer. They didn’t talk craft. They talked money.

Over drinks, Lydia tells me one I hadn’t seen. Indians are obsessed with the Guinness Book of World Records. Obsessed.

India still believes in the simple beauty of success.

Irony and cynicism come next.

“Irony requires a certain amount of self-confidence,” Lydia says. “You have to have built enough of an identity to turn around and reject it, or to laugh at it. I think that’s something that takes time.”

The kids are all right
The kids see Deepchand and me walking down the street and furiously make preparations. One of them yells, “Wickets!” and they spring to action, setting up a stack of bricks. Our field is the only greenish space in the neighborhood, dirt, really, strewn with bits of trash. The kids introduce themselves. There’s Sachin. He’s quiet, with a wide smile and a laugh that comes out a chortle, rushed, almost as if it’s surprised him. Another one, the most confident, tells me his name is Sunny. That’s Sunil Gavaskar’s nickname. He’s 13. The brashest kid, the cockiest, is named Deepak.

I pull out the bat.

A neighborhood kid winds up and bowls to me. The first few, I deflect. Then I get into one, a full baseball-style turn, and wallop it over the crumbling brick fence at the end of the field. Six!

“Good knock!” one of the kids tells me.

When I pop out, Sachin bats next. He crushes a high-arcing drive that lands in the trash-strewn woods. The kids hunt in the mud for the ball. The day fills with laughter. The old women sitting in the shade of a tree watch the game. Deepchand and Sachin are playing cricket for the first time together in Delhi. They are happy, tossing the ball, dad bowling and son batting. The cab driver seems suddenly lighter.

“You’re a kid again!” I yell at him across the field.

He throws back his head and laughs.

The boys fight over who’ll bat next. They race back to the wicket. Sachin wins. They want me to bowl. The first time, instead of windmilling with my arm locked, I throw it like a baseball. That’s a no-no. It’s called chucking. I’m a chucker. Sunny explains.

“Full-arm action,” he says. “Can I show you?”

He places my fingers along the seams. I wind up and clean bowl Deepchand. I’ve gotten him out. The kids give me high-fives. “Pretty good,” Sunny says.

The game is no longer tedious. It’s alive, inside me, in these children, even in the women grinning at us from beneath the tree. I look down at the end of the field and catch Sachin staring at his new Sachin signature bat, showing it off to his friends.

The kids decide we should play a game – five overs, two teams of four. Sachin and I go first. One player stands at each edge of the makeshift wicket. To score a run, each runner has to make it safely to the other end. The farther the hit, the more times we can complete the circuit.

I put my notebook down. The sky is blue. The sun pans across my face, warming the afternoon. The boys are happy. Deepchand is happy. I am happy, too, playing with the neighborhood kids, although when I am bowled, when I’m out, I feel like I’ve let a ten-year-old down. Cricket, like most team sports, is a personal game but also one of intense connection. It is both individual and communal. I’m left to watch. Sachin crushes it, six after six. Sunny kills it, too, spraying the ball around the makeshift field, over the fence. We finish with 49 runs. That’s the target.

The next team scores fast, too. Deepak is a beast. He’s barrel-chested. He hits a booming six, and when the ball is finally found, he hits another. He hits a third one, high into the air, which will come down in the trees and in the trash, a ball that will never be found, ending our match in a draw. He watches it sail into the Delhi sky, and he poses.

“I am Sehwag!” he says.

Where pure aggression comes from
I am Sehwag.

As Sachin grew up watching Sunil, Sehwag grew up watching Sachin. He saw Sachin’s aggressive stance. He took what he saw, internalised it and spat out something new, something dangerous, even. There’s a reason some old-school fans find him vulgar, and Deepak screams his name.

Where does something like that come from?

We leave Deepchand’s house and drive toward the airport, past the endless storefronts featuring posters of bodybuilders. Strength is in. Out on the edges of Delhi, huge apartment buildings stretch to the horizon. Ugly concrete boxes, row after row of them. If Bruce Springsteen were from India, he’d sing about these streets. There are things being built here. There are things being torn down. A shepherd drives a flock of sheep down the road, turning them into a weedy lot, the proposed site of a cultural centre. He wears a red turban, carries a staff.

Sehwag grew up in these badlands. He saw Sachin through the prism of the gritty world around him, looking past the grace to the power. Before Sehwag, Indian opening batsmen were supposed to take the shine off the ball. That’s the cricket phrase. Take the shine off. Break it in. Wear down the bowler. Sehwag would take the shine off by going for fours and sixes. He got a reputation for dogging it on singles. And if Sachin gave birth to Sehwag, then a whole group of younger sluggers have taken it a step further. At least Sehwag still plays Test cricket. Some newer stars don’t.

The Indian team is a blunt object, 15 men created not in the image of Tendulkar, exactly, but in the image of the new India that he both inspired and represented. Sachin carried the team alone in the ’90s, but in the past decade a generation of hyper-aggressive Indian stars came of age. Former captain Sourav Ganguly ripped off his shirt and twirled it above his head on the balcony of the uptight Lord’s Cricket Ground in London.

They are celebrities now. They frighten opposing bowlers. They themselves are not afraid. Two years ago, the team changed its jerseys from powder blue to a deeper colour. It seemed less meek.

I am Sehwag.

“The aggression, the brashness,” says Bhattacharya, the cricket writer turned novelist. “It’s now something which Indians see that this is what we have to do to assert our place in the world. We’ve been f—ed over for thousands of years. Everyone has conquered us. Now we’re finding our voice. We’re the fastest-growing economy in the world. We are going to buy your companies. Our cricket team is like going to f—ing abuse you back, and we’re going to win and we’re going to shout in your face after we win. People love that.”

We turn on Najafgarh Road. Shop workers give us directions. Everyone knows The Butcher. In the midst of this urban blight, there is a single planted field. This all used to be farmland. Now there are big piles of sand, the dust of something old waiting to become something new. White smoke rises from burning trash. Mechanics fixing motorcycles on the sidewalk tell us to take a right at the feeble old tree past the shrine to the monkey god.

This is Sehwag’s street.

When his father died, the neighbors tell us, he moved his mother to a nice place in central Delhi. Other family members live in the house now. There, they point. That’s his aunt. The home is down an alley, where Sehwag used to pound cricket balls. “He was always a long hitter,” a man says.

The house has a big black gate and a bamboo fence to offer privacy for the patio. There’s an orange lantern and a rooftop terrace. It’s the middle-class home that Deepchand dreams of for his family. This is the home of a grain merchant who moved to the city from a village, wanting to build a new life.

Sachin is the son of a poet.

Sehwag is the son of man who sold wheat and rice.

The last of a dying breed?
“In the golden age of cricket,” Bhattacharya says, “you’d never be without rotis.”

Halfway around the world, I feel at home here, a group of sports writers at dinner. We’re crowded around an upstairs table somewhere deep inside the alleyed maze of Old Delhi. It could be Augusta, Georgia. They’ve brought our food but not our bread. No rotis? Bhattacharya hits the running joke. Gallows humour. In the golden age of cricket, the dal wouldn’t be bland. In the golden age of cricket, there wouldn’t be so much grease in the mutton. It’s never far away. Any conversation about cricket quickly arrives here: Are the changes designed to help cricket exist in a modern world actually killing the game?

They tell a story of Sunil Gavaskar crushing a six in a long-ago Test match and stepping back to curse himself. He knew he needed to calm down, to play for the long haul, not just one six-and-out. Adrenaline and aggression are enemies of Test success. Now some of the artistry has been bred out. The new formats have given birth to dramatic changes in strategy and in the skill set required. For football fans, imagine if a television network asked the NFL to shorten a few games a year to 15 minutes. Then imagine if, because of the success, it seemed inevitable that soon all football games would last 15 minutes. Now imagine if everyone who played football lost the ability to play the longer game.

“That’s one of those existential cricket dilemmas,” Bhattacharya says. “We don’t know. We all live in fear of Test cricket perishing at the hands of Twenty20. It’s something we all worry about. We don’t actually know.”

So, when Tendulkar retires, will he take an era of cricket with him?

“Sachin’s symbolic value is very strong,” Bhattacharya says. “He might be the last one.”

Sachin is a bridge in a sport that my friends fear is burning its bridges.

A delicate sort of question
The next afternoon we are all at the game. Bhattacharya sits next to me. His first book, a cricket travelogue called Pundits from Pakistan, has been my faithful companion on this journey. He has a big day tomorrow. People magazine just called. It needs to take his picture at 8 a.m. His novel The Sly Company of People Who Care, is hot here in India. He has a face made for a photographer, in that writerly way, delicate, almost pretty, except for the crooked nose that hints at a stormy past. He’s arrogant as hell, but in the same way I am, so we get along great.

I’m learning the rules. I feel more at home every day. The stadium is like any American stadium: (too-)loud music and ham-fisted promotion. The fans sit quietly until a JumboTron camera finds them, then they go nuts. Look! Everyone’s a celebrity!

But there’s something missing.

The stands are half-empty. These are two great teams, elite sides, evenly matched, on a beautiful Delhi day, in a city of 14 million people, and most seats are empty. They’ll stay that way. It’s not just Delhi. When India’s not playing, the stadiums are pretty dead. That game has explained itself, all right: Indians aren’t as cricket-mad as I thought. There is a surprising lack of street-level buzz. Sure, the televisions are going mad, and the newspapers and radio programs and billboards. The hype machine is kicking at max RPMs. But it seems just that. Hype. A mile wide and an inch deep. The former Indian player’s pressbox eulogy makes sense. India has gained an impossible amount in the past 20 years. Has it lost something, too?

I turn to Rahul. “Do Indians still love the actual game of cricket?”

There’s a pause.

“It’s a delicate sort of question,” he says.

Another pause.

“The thing about Indians’ love for cricket is, a lot of it is having something to support India at,” he says. “A lot of it is celebrity. People in love with [team captain MS] Dhoni instead of the actual sport. It happens all the time. In the past five years, you find that matches not featuring India don’t draw crowds. It does seem on some level the love is not for the sport itself but for some of the things it stands for.”

Cricket is everywhere. It’s on 24/7. It’s on red carpets with Bollywood bombshells and in corporate boardrooms. But the more it is, the less it is.

“We’ve been so neutered by cricket now,” Rahul says. “There’s so much of it. It’s reached a point where you can be oblivious to it. Indian fans now just watch India.”

The afternoon unspools. Friends come and go. Many jokes, and a few serious conversations. Rahul is quiet. An hour or two passes. He turns to me. “The question you asked me… “

He’s been thinking. India leads you down blind alleys. It is a place with many different regions and religions and cultures. The Indian national cricket squad binds them. You must understand that to understand the mania surrounding the team.

The team’s rabid popularity, he says, is a reflection of rising national ambition, of pride in national achievement. The Guinness Book of World Records, squared. In a republic with a short history and a thin national narrative, cricket and Bollywood are India’s baseball and apple pie. Rahul makes air quotes and says, “Indian culture.”

“People think if I’m Indian,” he says, “I have to access this part of our culture. It’s in our blood.”

More time passes. The game continues to drag. I think about tomorrow’s flight and my trip to Bangalore. In a few days, I’ll finally see India play in India. That’s ground zero. I’m ready to see the obsession up close, see if I’ll find passion or more hype. Next to me, Rahul is in thought, too. Something’s bothering him.

“I wonder,” he says, “if I’ve been too cynical about India and its passion for cricket.”

CHAPTER FOUR: Bangalore hype
Morning dawns ghost-white. We drive into a wall of smog. Pollution is the price of progress. One of the prices, anyway. Some drivers pull over. Jets scream overhead. We cannot see them. The New Delhi airport is nearby. We cannot see it either. Soon we can’t even see the car directly in front of us. Two disembodied red lights float in the chemical haze. The driver slows. He finds the turn at the last minute and screeches to the terminal. I’m dreading the usual chaos of an Indian airport.

But once inside, I am transported. Is this the future? The place is new and serene. The floors are shiny. A fancy coffee kiosk teems with under-caffeinated commuters. The food court has a Subway, a Baskin-Robbins, a McDonald’s, a Yo!China. There’s a bookstore. A bronze elephant towers in the lobby.

That’s when I see it.

There’s a restaurant named Dilli Streat. It’s a take on Delhi’s famous street-food scene. It has slightly dressed-up versions of blue-collar classics. The concept is an ironic mixture of old and new, with a winking nod to a past seen as quaint yet valuable. Cynicism and irony, on back-to-back days.

India is changing at lightning speed.

The new camera-smashing Indian heroes
Players walk through the lobby of the Royal Gardenia hotel. Wide-eyed young fans and gossip-hunting reporters slowly circle, the light and dark of fame. I’m sitting on a couch. A woman approaches. She’s from a local tabloid. She wants me to take a paparazzi picture of an English cricket player, a wealthy Indian liquor tycoon and the tycoon’s son. They’re together in the bar. She wants me to be her Trojan horse.

“We have a lot of pressure from our editor-in-chief to get the story,” she says. “You know that pressure? OK. So I need a picture. I’m local. They’ve seen me. They know my face. And, um, so we would like to take their pictures to publish. To print. So… we wondered if you could help us.”

“I can’t do it.”

“I just want you to take a picture. That’s it.”

“No.”

“No? It’s just a picture.”

“Then you go take it.”

I tell her that I’m a reporter, too, a professional, not a tourist, and I cannot be talked into anything, much less this.

“I could go take the picture myself,” she says. “I just don’t want my camera smashed. That’s the issue.”

“They won’t smash your camera,” I say.

“Of course they will,” she says. “He’s done it before. The kid.”

Her editors don’t want cricket info. They want to know about the players’ lives. This is a fairly recent development. Everything is changing. Lines must be crossed, ethics blurred. The newspaper industry is still rising here. Competitive celebrity gossip is corrosive, and it leads, almost inevitably, to the taking down of heroes – the end of heroes, even, for deep earnestness cannot survive a daily diet of snark. I think of Jane Leavy’s magnificent book about Mickey Mantle, and her documenting the moment when Americans began viewing our idols differently. India, it seems, is approaching that day. Another question about Tendulkar arises: Is he the final star athlete created by that deeply earnest society, the one with its suspension of disbelief fully intact?

Is he the last hero?

Cricket is Bollywood by a different name. The match-fixing scandal of the late-90s was the end of an innocence about the game, and Sachin’s role in steadying the ship afterward is part of people’s great love for him. But the lid is off. The readers demand information. The pressure is great. Where do they eat dinner? Whom are they dating? What movies do they like? What’s their favourite food? What’s to come? Are they on drugs? Are they taking steroids? What are their failures and weaknesses and scandals?

“Are they the same as us?” the tabloid reporter asks.

They will be soon.

Kids in the lobby
The thirst of a tabloid reporter and the love of a starstruck child are fruit from the same tree. Maybe the difference is intent, and maybe it’s innocence, which sounds like the pitter-patter of tiny feet on marble floors. Kids chase their favorite cricketers around the hotel. Their joy restores faith, washes away cynicism. Maybe the soul of cricket can survive this landslide of change. Maybe there’s more than hype.

To the cute little stalkers, there are many heroes besides Sachin. Parents hover nearby, briefly children again. Virat Kohli is eating in the coffee shop against the back wall covered with ivy. He’s got a woman with him. Kids hang by the door. Ten minutes is an eternity to a child who’s a few feet from his hero.

Vineet Sethi sits with his daughters, 15-year-old Radhika and nine-year-old Nandini. The girls started plotting the moment this game was announced for Bangalore. High-level strategy. When Vineet got home from work, the girls were ready to go. It’s D-Day. Who will they meet?

Finally, mercifully, Kohli stands to leave. The girls rise to meet him at the door. Kohli has a faux-hawk and a tight black T-shirt. He signs. His date carries a designer handbag. Radhika is checking out the signature when Nandini’s eyes widen. OMG!

It’s Sehwag.

Up close, he’s stocky and balding. He stops to sign. Then Gautam Gambhir comes down the hall. The girls are losing their minds now. Dad asks if he’ll pose for a photo. Gautam smiles for the camera.

“I’m gonna faint,” Radhika says.

The girls can’t stop looking at the autograph book, then leaning into each other, then giggling, then looking, then giggling. “I cannot believe you told Virat Kohli that I’m in love with him!” Radhika says.

Vineet laughs.

“I only like Gautam,” Radhika says. “I don’t like Virat Kohli anymore. I used to like him a lot, but he was with a girl. A nice one.”

Dad is still laughing but has that worried-dad look on his face.

“Why not Sehwag?” I ask.

“He’s married,” Radhika says. “And has two kids.”

Vineet looks a bit pale. “I’m not listening,” he says.

The girls cover their faces with their hands, tapping their feet, tingling with nervous energy. I feel it. The passion I looked for at the other cricket matches doesn’t exist around the sport, but it does in the Royal Gardenia lobby. Indians might not be obsessed with the sport of cricket per se, but they are with the Indian cricket team. They are unhealthy, myopic and without measure or self-control, and that’s just when they see their idols in the flesh.

I cannot imagine what it’s like when they’re actually watching them play.

CHAPTER FIVE: Game day
The morning of the India-England match, I wake up anxious. No newspaper, no television. No more hype. The more someone tells me something matters, the more suspicious I become. The game stands on its own today. It could bring my moment of rapture – or deep disappointment. What if the thing I’m hungry for is too rare to just happen upon? What if it no longer exists?

The driver picks me up outside the hotel. The traffic is terrible as we make our way toward the stadium. I can see the light stanchions in the distance. I wonder what they’ll shine on today. Somehow, on a lark to be introduced to a new sport, I’ve stumbled into a rapidly changing world. Things are being gained, and things are being lost. What if I’ve come to cricket too late? Other cricket reporters sense this fear; one asks me if I’ll be writing a positive or negative story. I’m not sure. It seems that the sporting future in India is the present in America. I can see their tomorrow.

The driver drops me at the main gate. I walk around for several hours. The air smells like fried food. Vendors sell Indian snacks and sugarcane juice. Cops, wary of another cricket riot, whack sticks against trees whenever someone stops. There is no still today.

“Sachin!” a man yells. “Sachin’s last World Cup!”

“He will not retire after the World Cup,” another insists.

A group of fans are being interviewed by a television reporter. They’re young and funny. They’re intentionally extreme, with knowing smirks.

“After 300 years of them ruling us,” one says, “it’s time we gave it back.”

“We’re gonna trash the English,” another says.

“They play like little boys,” says the third.

They seem so confident, not people who need any outside validation. Maybe Sachin isn’t needed any longer. Maybe Sehwag is more representative. That hasn’t occurred to me until now. Later I’ll talk to an Indian journalist, Vaibhav Vats, who is writing about cricket as a window into national self-esteem. He thinks Sachin isn’t as important as he used to be.

“It’s about wealth,” Vats says. “So you don’t look for external things to shore up your own sense of identity. There isn’t the identity crisis there was then.”

Fans wave Indian flags. For 10 rupees, about 22 cents, dozens of entrepreneurs paint Indian flags on people’s faces. Other kids take blue paint and, emulating a famous billboard around the country, tag themselves “Bleed Blue”. Sports marketing creating fan behaviour creating more sports marketing: a snake eating its tail.

A man chases me down. He’s wearing a long robe with the Indian flag painted on it, along with the cricket alpha and omega: “Sachin” and “Sehwag.” There’s a young boy with him. The boy opens up a binder. It’s full of stories about the man wearing the robe. They point to one. He’s offered to trade his kidney for a ticket to this game. He says he wants to watch cricket. I think he wants to be a star.

Finally, I slip through a gate.

It’s almost time.

Finally, the game is at hand
We hear the cheers as the Indian bus gets closer. The soldier on the tower with the rifle stands up from his red chair. Radios squawk. The bus pulls to a stop. Submachine-gun-toting troops in tight t-shirts and khaki fatigues form a wall of flesh and metal.

Sachin Tendulkar is third off the bus. I recognise him now. He’s wearing headphones, yesterday’s smile replaced by determination. We enter the stadium behind the team. The place simmers with anticipation. I trade my press-box seat for one in the bleachers. Today, I’m a fan. Andy Zaltzman, a cricket-mad British stand-up comedian, sits next to me. The speakers play music so loud we cannot talk when it’s on. “Don’t need it,” Andy says every time there’s some marketing flourish. The broadcast people interview some fans. “Dhoni’s hot,” a young woman says.

The broadcast people interview Dhoni. “How are you coping with the hype and the pressure?” the man asks.

“We’re looking forward to the national anthem,” Dhoni says.

The music begins, and the crowd comes to its feet. Here we go. Andy saw a game in this stadium on television once, India versus Pakistan, and the cacophony when an Indian player bowled his opponent seemed to come out of his television and transport his London home across two oceans and several lesser seas. That noise is something he cannot forget. He’s chasing that ghost, left a wife and two kids at home for six weeks to chase it halfway around the world. I’m chasing something, too. The appointed hour has arrived. I’ve heard it all week, from fans and writers, and now I hear it once more.

“Wait ’til Sachin comes to bat,” Andy says.

In case you were wondering: here, now, the rules
This time, I’m ready for whatever is about to happen.

After 10 days I know the basic calculus of cricket. Each team has 50 overs and 10 wickets. For baseball fans, think of it as 50 at-bats and 10 outs. All overs last six balls, whether any of them are hit or not. A player is out if just one of his hits is caught, or if he misses the ball and it strikes the wicket behind him, or if a fielder throws the ball into the wicket before he completes a run.

When either the overs or wickets are gone, the innings is over; an innings is a set of 50 overs, and each team, in one-day cricket, has one. Wickets and overs are the two resources a team has when setting a target, or, if it bats second, chasing it. Figuring out when and how to risk them is the chess match. A wicket can be gone with one moment of carelessness.

Sachin’s agent once brought a business partner to a game only to have Sachin get out on the first ball. The ball doesn’t care that there are executives in a luxury suite. There are 11 opponents constantly shifting around the green field, looking to trick, to trap, to slide into a spot where a ball is coming.

The cricket pitch is a dangerous ocean. The batsman is a tiny boat.

Constructing magic
Sachin’s name is lost in the cheers. The crowd roars even in anticipation of it. Once again Sachin walks onto the field. Sehwag is with him. They are leading off, alternating at-bats, an entire modern history of a country between them. Sunil begat Sachin begat Sehwag. From insecurity to confidence to aggression. Which will be best today?

Sachin looks up at the crowd. He rubs his hands together. Spits on them. Sehwag takes one practice cut. It’s time. Sehwag hits an immediate four, one that’s almost caught. The Indian fans jump, then laugh. Sehwag pops up, and it is again almost caught. He’s swinging for the fences.

Sachin plays slower, taking his runs where he can get them, defending the other pitches away. Shades of Gavaskar? “Sachin has this aura of calmness around him,” Andy says. “Federer has it. Brady seems to have it.”

Then, a victim of his own aggression, Sehwag is out. He slams the bat down. Gambhir, the hotel girl’s idol, comes in. As he gets comfortable batting, Sachin slows down more, protecting himself. When he sees a pitch to drive, he steps into it. His first four of the day. The speakers play Bon Jovi’s “It’s My Life”. Sachin hits another one, then gets conservative, taking no risks. He’s trying to bat 35 or 40 overs, to anchor his team, to give openings to the other batsmen by consuming the attention of the bowlers. The crowd senses something special and chants, “Sachin! Sachin! Sachin!”

A feeling arises, a rare one, that you are part of a group watching something special. The power of sport is that, on occasion, it redeems the messes we create around it. Cricket can be stronger than the forces changing it. Victories are fleeting, but the poems are what matters. I don’t know if cricket is about to be ruined, or if Sachin is no longer needed, if he’s retiring or if he’ll defy expectations and play 10 more years. These are things we can guess about but never know.

I do know this: I am a fan. I am sunburned but do not care. I lose track of time. That’s not a narrative flourish. Hours seem like moments.

Rapture comes to the people here. I see Sachin constructing a score, and I understand the planning, and the years of experience, that lead a man to this field on this day, and to the artistry he now holds as part of himself, like a chamber of his heart. We are congregants in a church. We are watching the son of a poet. The stand-up comedian is serious. This is a perfect at-bat, Andy tells me. This is art, and I am lucky to see it. Soon, Sachin will be gone. This feeling will be gone. Right now, it is alive. It has the power of a name, immortal and pure.

“You don’t have to know anything about it,” my friend Gokul says.

“It’s almost a religious experience,” Andy says, “seeing Tendulkar play so well in front of his home crowd. It’s a communal worship.”

England sends in Graeme Swann, the best spin bowler in the world. They are targeting Sachin. One mistake and he’s gone. The crowd grows tense. Swann winds up. The roar of the crowd rises, like the start of a football game. The ball arrives. The crack echoes through the stadium.

Sachin has hit it off the scoreboard.

It’s an uppercut. A knockout blow. A roaring Up yours! A six. Flags wave and shake. Three fans wearing clown wigs blow their whistles over and over.

Swann winds up again.

Sachin crushes it, another uppercut, over the fence. Two pitches, two sixes. The air is sucked out of the stadium, and Bon Jovi is played again. But now, incredibly, the crowd noise is louder than the sound system. The real finally trumps the fake. Swann looks broken.

Sachin is building toward a century. The crowd wants it for him, for themselves. The noise doesn’t ebb between bowls. He’s got 72, then a four gives him 76. The clown wigs go batty. Sachin goes up high to get 78. The crowd needs this. A wave passes five full revolutions around the grandstand. Eighty-two. Eighty-six. The people behind me are barking now. The noise is constant. I am inside the soul of cricket. I get it. I will be back again, like Andy, chasing this ghost. Across town, Sachin’s agent’s BlackBerry buzzes. “Wonderful moment,” one reads. An English friend writes, “Sachin is killing us. Awesome.” One executive wants to put his company logo on Sachin’s bat. The sister of Sachin’s first agent, the man who died in the car wreck, writes, “Hope this one was for Mark.”

Sachin gets to 98.

The sound system plays, “We Will Rock You!” The crowd pronounces the last two words as one. Rockyou! Rockyou! Rockyou! Everyone in the stadium is standing, again, and typing this 25 hours later, I get chill bumps. Again.

Sachin hits a four.

He’s done it. A century. I’ve never been in a stadium that feels like this one. Hindus and Muslims, Sikhs and Christians, people from different castes and classes, speakers of a dozen languages, all citizens in the Republic of Sachin. The stern cops give wide smiles and thumbs-ups. The chant goes from “Sachin! Sachin!” to “Hoo… ha… IN-DI-A!” They are interchangeable.

Finally, at 120, Sachin pops out. He walks off, and the crowd rises once again. The people lean over the railings, trying for one more moment with their hero.

He waves his bat and disappears.

Sachin’s gone.

Falling apart
The Indian players collapse without him.

They leave too many runs on the table, lost without their anchor. Their score is 338. They cannot play defence or bowl, and England steadily mounts a comeback, putting up run after run. The worrying begins. The fans sense something, a fatal flaw built into this team of sluggers. They can all hit the ball a mile, but they can’t get anybody out. Power has its limits. They are wasting Sachin’s brilliance. The noise dies down. The stadium is still. People look into themselves. The team is a proxy for the nation, so what does an Indian collapse tell them about India? About India without Sachin?

England scores, off big hits, off bad pitches, off lazy defense. The India outfielders don’t run down balls that go for fours. Next to me, Andy finds hope. With 15 overs left, England need 102 runs off 90 balls. “It’s bizarrely easy,” Andy says.

An Indian writer shakes his head. “We’ve lost this game,” he says.

The fans agree. People file, en masse, to the exits. The wire-service reporters type their stories. I’m spinning from the reversal in fortunes. A fourth of the seats are empty. Now a third. England needs 61 runs from 54 balls. Now 59 from 48.

Then India gets a wicket.

Then a second in a row.

The crowd comes alive. What does this revival tell them about their nation? About themselves? Andy shifts uncomfortably. The place shakes. The whistles are back out from the clown wigs. The barking returns. People howl. England needs 57 runs from 39 balls. An Indian player makes a huge diving catch. Hustle has returned. India has returned.

“I didn’t see this coming,” Andy says.

There is dancing in the aisles. The Indian team is getting more wickets, which eliminates the strongest English batsmen and puts pressure on the bottom of the line-up. England needs 50 from 28. Now 29 from 11. It seems finished. The local in front of me tweets: “It’s amazing to watch India in India.”

Suddenly, England counters. Two big-bang sixes, and it’s 14 runs from six balls. One more over. I can barely breathe. Nobody can. The noise is deafening now, rising in crescendo before each bowl. Imagine a football kickoff every 30 seconds.

The Indians are going to win. England needs 12 from five, then 11 from four. The “India” chant returns.

Then England hits a six, crushed, into the stands.

“Unbelievable,” the Indian writer says.

The target is now five runs from three balls. England singles. It’s four runs from two. The English get a double. We are down to the last ball. Two runs from one. That’s it now. All the hype, and the planning, and all these hours, down to a moment. The infield comes in. The crowd rises.

The stadium quiets.

A man folds his hands in prayer. The clown wigs are silent. One sits down. The local reporter puts up his notebook. The Indian bowler winds up, the English batsman swings, makes contact, crack, it’s happening so fast, the fielder rushes over, gets the ball in. England scores only one. India did it!

In the moments after the end, there’s confusion. I’m confused. The crowd noise is strange. I look around. The scoreboard is hard to read. We’ve spent eight hours and two minutes in these seats. Has India won? Has England? What happened? I’m looking to Andy, trying to understand. That’s when I realise: I did the math wrong. Two to win, which means, after all that drama, my God…

It’s a tie.

Carrying the hopes of a billion countrymen
One last stop remains before the airport. “We’ve got 30 seconds,” his agent says.

A special key card grants access to the 18th floor. Three plainclothes bodyguards look us over. A sign hangs on the door. “Shhh,” it reads, “I’m sleeping like a baby.” The agent knocks.

Sachin Tendulkar opens the door. “Come, come,” he says.

A tangle of wires covers the bedside table closest to his pillow. There’s a Diet Coke and a bottle of water. A Hindu shrine is on the other side. There’s a book across the room, The Last Nizam, about the end of one era and the beginning of another, about a king who lost his throne in a time of great change.

His agent explains my journey to Sachin. “He didn’t know anything about cricket before he came,” he says.

Sachin looks at me. He seems confused. “Hmmmmm,” he says.

His phone rings. The ringtone is U2. We chat, and he loosens. He doesn’t overtalk. It’s strange. There actually is an aura of calm around him. It must be how he’s survived. At the centre of this mania is a reservoir of peace, focus and determination. I ask if he spends a lot of time in America.

“Not really,” he says. “I have a lot of friends there, but it’s too far for me to travel.”

“I’m about to get on a 15-hour flight,” I say.

He laughs and grimaces with me. A trip to the states, he says, needs several weeks to be worth the flight. “I don’t have 15 to 20 days,” he says.

He’s carried the burden of a billion people for more than 20 years. Just outside the hotel is a billboard with his stern face looking down on the city. Its tagline is direct: “We’ve waited 28 years to hold the Cup. Hope that wait ends now.” Heroes don’t punch clocks.

Sachin Tendulkar says goodbye and closes his door, while, in every direction, a vast nation sees its hopes and dreams in him, for at least a little while longer. I step into the elevator, then a car, then three flights, then my car, then my house. I return from blind alleys and brightly lit fields, having found my moment of rapture and, at the end, the man who created it. I’ve found both the riddle and the answer, and I wonder what it must cost someone to be both of those things. One part of my conversation with Tendulkar will return to me every time India plays in this World Cup.

His agent told me he’s aware of what he means to people, of the symbolic importance of being both the beginning and end of something. He is a bridge, and it is vital to the psyche of a nation that he remains intact. He gets it. That’s why he never loses focus. Nothing, it turns out, is effortless. In his room, he seems tired, worn out mentally and physically. He needs a break. I ask when was the last time he had 20 days off in a row with nothing to do. No balls to hit or billions to represent.

“I’m waiting for that time to come,” he says.

Wright Thompson is a senior writer for ESPN.com, where this article was first published

© ESPN EMEA Ltd.

Once, when an American company executive contacted his agent and wanted to understand what place Sachin held in Indian culture, the agent didn’t quote the number of Test wins, or international centuries. He said, simply, that Sachin endorsed Audemars Piguet watches, and that the company made a model just for him. The executive was sold

Out on the edges of Delhi, huge apartment buildings stretch to the horizon. Ugly concrete boxes, row after row of them. If Bruce Springsteen were from India, he’d sing about these streets. There are things being built here. There are things being torn down

When India’s not playing, the stadiums are pretty dead. That game has explained itself, all right: Indians aren’t as cricket-mad as I thought. There is a surprising lack of street-level buzz. Sure, the televisions are going mad, and the newspapers and radio programmes and billboards. The hype machine is kicking at max RPMs. But it seems just that. Hype

The newspaper industry is still rising here. Competitive celebrity gossip is corrosive, and it leads, almost inevitably, to the taking down of heroes – the end of heroes, even, for deep earnestness cannot survive a daily diet of snark

He is a bridge, and it is vital to the psyche of a nation that he remains intact. He gets it. That’s why he never loses focus. Nothing, it turns out, is effortless. In his room, he seems tired, worn out mentally and physically. He needs a break

 

 
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Posted by on April 7, 2011 in Articles

 

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Anna Hazare begins fast against corruption

Source – www.newkerala.com

New Delhi, Apr 5 : Veteran social activist Anna Hazare today started his indefinite hunger strike demanding enactment of a comprehensive Jan Lokpal Bill against corruption.

e began his fast at Jantar Mantar after taking out a march from Rajghat where he paid tributes to Mahatma Gandhi. Activists Swami Agnivesh, Kiran Bedi and Sandeep Pandey were also present.

“We will fast unto death until the government enacts the Jan Lokpal Bill which is most necessary to fight corruption in our country,” the 72-year-old anti-corruption reformer told reporters here.

He appealed to people to fight for the cause and said, “Let the whole nation fast for a day today and pray for a corruption free India. Collective prayers are very powerful. Let the whole nation pray against corruption,” he said.

Mr Hazare, who has received a wide support from main Opposition party BJP, had yesterday said he was upset when Prime Minister Manmohan Singh rejected the demand by leading civil society members to include them and senior ministers in the joint committee to draft the Jan Lokpal Bill (Citizen’s ombudsman Bill).

“The views of eminent persons like Justice (Retd) Santosh Hegde, advocate Prashant Bhushan and Agnivesh were not considered important by the government and a minister like Sharad Pawar, who is known for possessing large amounts of land in Maharashtra, is heading a committee that will draft the bill,” he lamented.

Meanwhile, the Prime Minister had also expressed deep disappointment at the decision by the noted social worker to go ahead with his planned hunger strike and said he had enormous respect for Hazare and his mission.

“The Prime Minister’s Office has noted with deep disappointment that Anna Hazare, the noted social worker, is still planning to go ahead with his planned hunger strike,” the PMO had said.

Mr Hazare and his colleagues had met the Prime Minister, the Union Law Minister and other senior officials on March 7 urging for action against corruption.

During the hour-long discussion, the Prime Minister had told them that he appreciated and shared their concern on corruption.

“I appreciate and share your concern on corruption,” the Prime Minister told them.

Mr Hazare and his group had presented to the Prime Minister a draft of their proposal on Lokpal.

The group had accepted the Prime Minister’s suggestion that a sub-committee of the Group of Ministers (GoM) could interact and discuss the draft with civil society activists.

The Sub-Committee, headed by Defence Minister A K Antony, met Mr Hazare’s colleagues but the interaction proved fruitless as the activists were insisting on the Government accepting their draft in toto.

–UNI

Also check What is the Jan Lokpal Bill

http://tigershetty.wordpress.com/2011/04/06/what-is-the-jan-lokpal-bill/

 
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Posted by on April 6, 2011 in Articles

 

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Centre says it’s ready for talks with Anna Hazare

Source – The Hindu Newspaper by Sandeep Joshi

Show courage, fasting social activist tells Manmohan

Thursday, Apr 07, 2011 NEW DELHI: With more members of civil society and various political parties lending support for Anna Hazare’s fast, which entered the second day on Wednesday, the Centre said it was ready for a dialogue with the anti-corruption crusader and was open to suggestions on the Lokpal Bill.

Earlier in the day, Mr. Hazare wrote to the Prime Minister stating that he was pained that the government, rather than addressing the issue of corruption, was trying to allege conspiracies where there was none. “At a time when the country has witnessed scams of an unprecedented scale, the impatience of the entire country is justified. And we call upon you not to look for precedents but show courage to take unprecedented steps,” the social activist said in his letter.

Speaking to journalists here, Communications and IT Minister Kapil Sibal said: “The government was ready for a constructive dialogue on the issue. His [Mr. Hazare's] demand is fair… we also want the Lokpal Bill with teeth. Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and UPA Chairperson Sonia Gandhi are also committed to this cause.”

Mr. Sibal, who is also part of the Group of Ministers (GoM) on corruption, said the government should be given “reasonable time” to find a way out. “They want to be part of the drafting committee for the Bill… we have conveyed this to the Prime Minister. The government should be given reasonable time… they cannot bind the government,” he added.

Union Law Minister M. Veerappa Moily said the government was open to suggestions even though it was anxious to introduce the Bill in the next session of Parliament. “Even on their demand for a joint committee [for drafting the Bill], we said we were open to the idea. In principle, we did not say no,” Mr. Moily added.

On the other hand, the Congress said the Prime Minister had already initiated a mechanism to consider suggestions from civil society activists for the Lokpal Bill. Describing Mr. Hazare’s fast as “premature,” party spokesperson Jayanthi Natarajan said the Bill had been discussed in the party and by the Sonia Gandhi-headed National Advisory Council (NAC), which was drafting an alternative bill.

Meanwhile, support continues to pour in for Mr. Hazare, who is observing fast at Jantar Mantar here. The BJP and the CPI(M) as well as organisations and popular Bollywood stars are rallying behind the activist. Actor Aamir Khan wrote to the Prime Minister urging him to “pay heed to the voice of Mr. Anna Hazare.”

http://www.hindu.com/2011/04/07/stories/2011040763400100.htm

 
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Posted by on April 6, 2011 in Articles

 

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Happy Mothers Day

In ancient Greece, the people paid tribute to Rhea, the Mother of the Gods, each spring. A little later in history it is noted that England paid homage to mothers on “Mothering Sunday,” the fourth Sunday of Lent.

In 1872, Julia Ward Howe (who wrote the words to the Battle hymn of the Republic) suggested the idea of Mother’s Day, but it was Miss Anna M. Jarvis (1864-1948), of Philadelphia, who began a letter-writing campaign to a variety of influential people that made Mother’s Day a national holiday.

Why did Miss Jarvis think it was so important to have Mother’s Day?

Miss Jarvis was very close to her mother Mrs. Anna Reese Jarvis. Anna’s mother died in May of 1905, when Anna was 41 years of age. Anna was not married and from the time of her mother’s death cared for her blind sister, Ellsinore. Anna missed her mother very much and felt that children should appreciate their mother’s more while they’re still alive. Anna hoped Mother’s Day would increase respect and love and strengthen family bonds.

So when was the first Mother’s Day?

In 1907 Anna persuaded her mother’s church in Grafton, West Virginia to celebrate Mother’s Day on the second anniversary of her mother’s death, the 2nd Sunday of May. By the next year, 1908, Mother’s Day was also celebrated in Philadelphia.

In 1910 the first Mother’s Day proclamation was issued by the governor of West Virginia. Oklahoma celebrated Mother’s Day that year also. By 1911 every state observed Mother’s Day. The Mother’s Day International Association was incorporated on December 12, 1912, with the purpose of furthering meaningful observations of Mother’s Day.

When did Mother’s Day become official?

In May, 1913, The House of Representatives unanimously adopted a resolution requesting the President, his Cabinet, members of Congress, and all officials of the federal government to wear a white carnation on Mother’s Day. Congress passed another Joint Resolution May 8, 1914, designating the second Sunday in May as Mother’s Day.

On Mother’s Day the U.S. flag is to be displayed on government buildings and at people’s homes “as a public expression of our love and reverence for the mothers of our country.” President Woodrow Wilson issued the first proclamation making Mother’s Day an official national holiday.

Many people give roses on Valentines Day, is there a particular flower I should give my mom on Mother’s Day?

Miss Anna Jarvis’s mother’s favorite flower was the white carnation. This flower was chosen to represent the sweetness, purity and endurance of mother love. However, the red carnation has since become the symbol of a living mother while white signifies that one’s mother has died.

Do other countries celebrate Mother’s Day?

You bet they do! Denmark, Finland, Italy, Turkey, Australia and Belgium celebrate Mother’s Day on the same day as the United States. Other countries celebrate Mother’s Day as well, though not on the same day.

What can I do to make Mother’s Day special for my mom?

There are all kinds of things you can do to make Mother’s Day special for your mom. Here are a few suggestions:

Make mom breakfast in bed.
Do secret acts of kindness, this might include doing one of mom’s chores for her.
Be obedient.
Do your chores, without being asked.
Get along with your brothers and sisters.
Leave a love letter, for mom, on her pillow.

Some quote / Poem for a Mother

What Makes A Mother?
by Kay Green
Copyright 2001-2008

A mother can come in may forms:
~A mother can be a woman who conceives, births, and raises a child given to her by God. She is what we as a society see as a mother.

 ~A mother can be a young woman who finds herself pregnant, unable to parent, who chooses life for her child by placing him for adoption. In choosing life for her child she becomes a mother. She will not be that baby’s parent but she is his birth mother.

 ~A mother can be the one who prays for a baby she does not carry in her womb. She becomes the mother and parent to a child given in adoption. She is there in the night, in sickness, in health, in joy, and in sadness. She is her mother.

 ~A mother can be a woman who takes on the care of another’s children through foster care or guardianship. She gives her life to loving them. They see her as mother.

I read the story of a man who parented a little boy that he believe to be his biological son. At age 10 he found out he may not be his biological parent and considered leaving the child. I thought how sad. He is the only Father that child knows. He IS his father. Blood alone does not make you more of a father or not.

I am a blessed woman. God has blessed me by allowing me to be a mother to 4  wonderful children. Three of them I gave birth to. One we adopted. Yet I am mother to all of them. There is no difference. My love them will last a lifetime and is unconditional. I am their mother!

What a blessing from God to be called mother. It is my highest calling!

—————————-

“A mother is the truest friend we have, when trials heavy and sudden, fall upon us; when adversity takes the place of prosperity; when friends who rejoice with us in our sunshine desert us; when trouble thickens around us, still will she cling to us, and endeavor by her kind precepts and counsels to dissipate the clouds of darkness, and cause peace to return to our hearts. “
“A mother’s arms are made of tenderness and children sleep soundly in them.”

‎”A mother is the truest friend we have, when trials heavy and sudden, fall upon us; when adversity takes the place of prosperity; when friends who rejoice with us in our sunshine desert us; when trouble thickens around us, still will she cling to us, and endeavor by her kind precepts and counsels to dissipate the clouds of darkness, and cause peace to return to our hearts. “

“No one in the world can take the place of your mother. Right or wrong, from her viewpoint you are always right. She may scold you for little things, but never for the big ones.”

“All that I am or ever hope to be, I owe to my angel Mother.”

“The mother’s heart is the child’s school-room.”

“Youth fades; love droops; the leaves of friendship fall; A mother’s secret hope outlives them all.”

“The tie which links mother and child is of such pure and immaculate strength as to be never violated.”

“Mother’s love is peace. It need not be acquired, it need not be deserved.”

“The only mothers it is safe to forget on Mother’s Day are the good ones.”
Without You

Mom, without you, there would be no me.
Your love, your attention, your guidance,
have made me who I am.
Without you, I would be lost,
wandering aimlessly,
without direction or purpose.
You showed me the way
to serve, to accomplish, to persevere.
Without you, there would be an empty space
I could never fill, no matter how I tried.
Instead, because of you,
I have joy, contentment, satisfaction and peace.
Thank you, mom.
I have always loved you
and I always will.

By Joanna Fuchs

Here’s a love poem from mother to daughter. This mother to daughter poem can be used as a daughter Mother’s Day poem. If your daughter is not a mom, just leave our the second stanza, and you can use it just as a daughter from mother poem. This mother daughter poetry can strengthen that special bond.

Daughter of My Heart

You turned out even better
Than I often dreamed you’d be;
You’re more than I had hoped for;
You’re a sweet reward to me.

You grew up to be a mother
Full of wisdom, warmth and love,
A good and fine role model,
A blessing from above.

I couldn’t be any prouder
Than I am today of you;
You’re my daughter and my friend,
And a wonderful person, too.

You have my love forever;
I adored you from the start;
It’s a privilege to be your mother,
Dear daughter of my heart.

By Joanna Fuchs

Mother poems can express what mother means to her offspring. This mother poem is perfect for a Mother’s Day card or as a Mother’s Day poem.

What “Mother” Means

“Mother” is such a simple word,
But to me there’s meaning seldom heard.
For everything I am today,
My mother’s love showed me the way.

I’ll love my mother all my days,
For enriching my life in so many ways.
She set me straight and then set me free,
And that’s what the word “mother” means to me.

Thanks for being a wonderful mother, Mom!

By Karl Fuchs

 

My Miracle Mother

Mom, I look at you
and see a walking miracle.
Your unfailing love without limit,
your ability to soothe my every hurt,
the way you are on duty, unselfishly,
every hour, every day,
makes me so grateful
that I am yours, and you are mine.
With open arms and open heart,
with enduring patience and inner strength,
you gave so much for me,
sometimes at your expense.
You are my teacher,
my comforter, my encourager,
appreciating all, forgiving all.
Sometimes I took you for granted, Mom,
but I don’t now, and I never will again.
I know that everything I am today
relates to you and your loving care.
I gaze in wonder
as I watch you being you—
my miracle, my mother.

By Joanna Fuchs

You Let Me Know You Love Me

You let me know you love me
In so many different ways.
You make me feel important
With encouragement and praise.

You’re always there when I need you
To comfort and to care.
I know I’m in your thoughts;
Your love follows me everywhere.

Thank you for all you’ve done
And given so generously.
I love you, my wonderful mother;
You’re a heaven-sent blessing to me.

By Joanna Fuchs

 

Mother Prayer

Dear Lord,
today we pray for mothers–
our own mothers, and mothers everywhere,
who have made such a major contribution
to the good qualities we have,
sometimes through genetics,
more often through great effort and patient instruction,
and who have done their best
to gently polish away our rough edges.
Lord, please bless our mothers
for the endless hours of time they spent
and the boundless energy they invested in us.
Bless our mothers for their sacrifices on our behalf
as they often gave up or deferred their own dreams
so that we could have ours.
Bless our mothers for always being there for us,
for being the person we know we can turn to
when we need comfort, encouragement, or just a hug.
Bless our mothers for making a home for us
where we could feel safe, where we felt we belonged.
Most of all, Lord,
bless our mothers for their unconditional love,
for loving us no matter what,
and for frequently showing love
in ways that make us feel valued and cherished.
Lord, please bless our mothers mightily.
Strengthen them, soothe them,
wrap them in Your infinite love
and shower them with blessings
too numerous to count, too magnificent to describe.
We love them, admire them, respect them,
and we wish that You would give them back
many times the good they gave to us.
In Jesus’ name we pray; Amen.

By Joanna Fuchs
Mother Is The Best

My mom is really great;
She’s sweet as she can be;
When I need some help, I know
She’s always there for me.

Mom loves me all the time,
Even when I’m a pest;
She always takes good care of me;
My mother is the best.

 
Everything Mom

How did you find the energy, Mom
To do all the things you did,
To be teacher, nurse and counselor
To me, when I was a kid.

How did you do it all, Mom,
Be a chauffeur, cook and friend,
Yet find time to be a playmate,
I just can’t comprehend.
I see now it was love, Mom

That made you come whenever I’d call,
Your inexhaustible love, Mom
And I thank you for it all.
Happy Day Mom Love you
Wish all The Moms A Happy Mothers Day God Bless you all

 
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Posted by on March 21, 2011 in Articles, Tigerleak

 

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Article by Harsha Bhogle after India v/s South Africa match In the world cup March 2011

Article by Harsha Bhogle after India v/s South Africa match, must read it! – March 2011 league stage meet( world cup)

 

Remember when you failed an examination. How many people recall that, your class, friends, relatives? You failed to make it to the IITs or IIMs. Who remembers. How many times have you had the feeling of being the best in your class, school , university, s…tate….., you failed to get a visa stamped this quarter…, you missed a promotion this year…, how did it feel when you dad told you in your early twenties that you are good for nothing…..and now your boss tell you the same… You keep introspecting and go into a shell when people most of whom don’t matter a dime in your life criticize you, back bite you, make fun of you. You are left sad and shattered and you cry when your own kin scoffs at you. You say I am feeling low today. It takes a lot from us to come out of these everyday situations and move on. A lot??? really? Now here’s a man standing on the third man boundary in the last over of a world cup match. The bowler just has to bowl sensibly to win this game. What the man at the boundary sees is 4 rank bad bowls bowled without any sense of focus, planning or regret. India loses, yet again in those circumstances when he has done just about everything right. He does not cry. Does not show any emotion. Just keeps his head down and leaves the field. He has seen these failures for 22 years now. And not just his class, relatives, friends but the whole world has seen these failures. We are too immature to even imagine what goes on in that mind and heart of his. That’s why I would never want to be Sachin. True, he has single handedly lifted to moods of this entire nation umpteen number of times. He has been an inspiration to rise above our mediocrity. Nobody who has ever lifted the willow even comes close to this man’s genius. His dedication and metal strength is unparallel. This is specially for those people who would have made fun of him again last night when India lost. They are people who are mediocre in their own lives. Who just scoff at others to create cheap fun. Who have lived in a small hole throughout their lives and thought they have seen the oceans. Think about the man himself. He is 37 years of age. He has been playing almost non stop for 22 years. The way he was running and diving around the field last night would have put 22 year olds to shame. The way he played the best opening quickies in the world was breathtaking. He just keeps getting better which is by the way humanly impossible. Its not for nothing that people call him GOD. But still I don’t want to be in those shoes. We struggle in keeping our monotonous lives straight, lives which affect a limited number of people. Imagine what would be the magnitude of the inner struggle for him, pain both mental and physical, tears that have frozen with time, knees and ankles and every other joint in the body that is either bandaged or needs to be attended to every night, eyes that don’t sleep before a big game, bats that have scored 99 international tons and still see expectations from a billion people. And he just converts those expectations into reality. We watch in awe, feel privileged. Well I think its time that his team realizes that enough is enough. They have an obligation, not towards their country alone but towards sachin. They need to win this one for him. Stay assured that he himself will still deliver and leave no stone unturned to make sure India wins this cup. This is not just a game, and he is not just a sportsman. Its much more than this. Words fail here…..

 

— HARSHA BHOGLE

 
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Posted by on March 14, 2011 in Articles

 

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