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Saturday, October 17, 2015

After attending a funeral, why to take bath and why cooking is not done in those houses?

After attending a funeral both men and women stay outside the house. 
Then they go to the well and have a bath, wash all their clothes and then only enter the house. This is preventing any infection from the funeral house. 

This is more prevalent in the villages. I.e. Every person visiting the house of the dead person during the mourning period is believed to suffer from pollution. The first thing; he is expected to do on leaving the house of the dead person is to have purificatory bath. 

Only after this bath, they have to drink off even a glass of water or to eat and enter the main parts of his own house. The house where death was occurred is considered polluted and cooking is not done for few days. The neighbors supply them food.


Sunday, October 11, 2015

Bottled water in your car is very dangerous!

People should not drink bottled
water that has been left in a car. The heat reacts with the chemicals in the plastic of the bottle which releases dioxin into the water.

Dioxin is a toxin increasingly found in breast cancer tissue. So please
be careful and do not drink bottled water that has been left in a car.
Use a stainless steel canteen or a glass bottle instead of plastic!
This information is also being circulated at Walter Reed Army Medical Center …  
No plastic containers in microwaves. No plastic water bottles in freezers. 
No plastic wrap in microwaves.
Dioxin chemical causes cancer, especially breast cancer. 
Dioxins are highly poisonous to cells in our bodies. 
Don’t freeze plastic bottles with water in them as this releases dioxins from the plastic. Recently the Wellness Program Manager at Castle Hospital , was on a TV program to explain this health hazard.
We should not be heating food in the microwave using plastic containers…..
This especially applies to
foods that contain fatThe combination of fat, h
igh heat and plastic releases dioxin into the food.
Instead use glass, such as Pyrex or ceramic containers for heating food… 
You get the same result, but without the dioxin.. So, such things as TV dinners, 
instant soups, etc., should be removed from their containers and heated in something else.
Paper isn’t bad but you don’t know what is in the paper. It’s safer to
use
tempered glass, such as Pyrex, etc.
A while ago some of the fast food restaurants moved away from the styrene foam containers to paper. The dioxin problem is one of the reasons….
Plastic wrap, such as Cling film, is just as dangerous when placed over foods to be cooked in the microwave. As the food is nuked, the high heat causes poisonous toxins to actually
melt out of the plastic wrap and drip into the food. Cover food with a paper towel instead.

Friday, October 9, 2015

Important Tips To All Ladies !

1. Do not shave off your eyebrows only to redraw them with a pencil… it makes no sense
2. Do not put on too much make up, you end up looking like you came out of the make-up factory.
3. Do not wear a vest or sleeveless top without shaving your armpits or without a bra underneath
4. Do not leave chipped nail polish to wear off on its own, there's a reason why they sell nail polish remover.
5. If you can’t afford good quality weaves, don’t bother.
6. Do not do artificial nails that makes you look like a drag queen, simple is always sexy.
7. See-through leggings or a top used as a dress when you are out in public is a hell-to-the-no!
8. Never do things for a man with a hope of getting something in return, expectations are dangerous. Do it because you simply want to.
9. Never contradict what your man says - in public.
10. Never stalk the man that left you for the other woman
11. Do not share your best friend's personal life with every Tom, Dick and Harry.
12. Women should never act on distress in relationships like checking your man’s phone, nagging him to death, and acting like a paranoid freak. You will simply release him to someone else by doing so.
13. Never dish out your entire family drama on a first date. The guy just wants to know about you.
14. Stop obsessing over your body. It’s good to eat healthy. and work out but let's leave it at that.
15. Say No to wearing over accessories; stop looking like a Christmas tree.
16. Never leave home without lip gloss, your phone and most of all, your dignity.
17. Never leave your used sanitary towel in the toilet for the next person to see. Women please!
18. Never wear very high heels if you can’t do the Naomi Campbell walk. You look like a drunk grasshopper.
19. Never wear short skirts and low cut tops when off to an Interview. You will create the wrong impression.
20. And finally, 'Never wish to be like any other woman. There are others out there envying you for who you are'
21.Be good. Be yourself. Be Nice.

Thursday, October 8, 2015

Tamil words changed to English ?

appam 
from Tamil
அப்பம் appam (Source: OED)
cash 
The primary meaning of the word cash, paper money, or money in general, comes from Latin capsa, chest. A secondary meaning of cash, referring to any of various coins used in southern India and China, comes ultimately from Tamil
காசு kācu (Source: OED, AHD, MWD)
catamaran 
from Tamil
கட்டுமரம் kaṭṭumaram("kattu"=tied up, "maram"=wood) (Source: OED, AHD, MWD)
cheroot 
from French cheroute, from Tamil
சுருட்டு curuṭṭu, roll or rolled (Source: OED, AHD, MWD)
corundum 
from a Tamil word for 'ruby',
குருந்தம் kuruntam or குருவிந்தம் kuruvintam (Source: OED)
coir 
from the Tamil word kayaru '
கயிறு' for rope or thread or to be twisted. (Source: The American Heritage Dictionary)
curry 
from Tamil
கறி kaṟi, sauce (Source: OED, AHD, MWD)
godown 
from
கிடங்கு kidangu/kodangu a Tamil word for store room (Source: OED)
illupi 
from Tamil
இலுப்பை iluppai (Source: OED)
kabadi/kabaddi 
from Tamil
கபடி kabadi (Source: OED)
Maldivian 
from Tamil
மாலத்தீவு malaidhivu(மாலை "maalai"=garland, தீவு "theevu"=island), (Source: OED)
mango 
from Tamil
மா Manga (Source: OED)
Moringa 
from
முருங்கை murungai , a Tamil word for drumstick (Source: OED, AHD)
mulligatawny 
from Tamil
மிளகுத்தண்ணீர் miḷaku-taṇṇīr from miḷaku black pepper taṇṇīr, water (Source: OED, AHD, MWD)
nadaswaram/nagaswaram 
from Tamil
நாகச்வரம் nagasvaram (Source: OED)
pariah 
from Tamil
பறையர் paṟaiyar , plural of பறையன் paṟaiyaṉ (Source: OED, AHD, MWD)
pandal 
from Tamil
பந்தல் pandal (Source: OED)
pongal 
from Tamil
பொங்கல் pongal
poonga oil 
from Tamil
புன்கு punku, oil from pungam tree (Source: OED)
poppadom 
from
அப்பளம் appalam a Tamil word for a crispy side dish (Source: OED)
portia tree 
from Tamil
பூவரசு puvaracu (Source: OED)
sambar 
from Tamil
சாம்பார் sambar (Source: OED)
sangam 
from Tamil
சங்கம் sancam, (Source: OED)
Tamil 
from Tamil
தமிழ் Tamizh
tutenag 
from Tamil
டுட்டனகம் tuttunagam (Source: OED)
vetiver 
from Tamil
வெட்டிவேர் vettiver; a tropical Indian grass; Botanical name: Vetiveria zizanioides; its aromatic roots are used for weaving screens and baskets and the oil in perfumery (source: AHD);


Tuesday, October 6, 2015

Poombuhar - The 11000 Years Old Lost Civilisation ?

11000 Years Old Man Made Structure Found in Indian Sea


The place is called Poompuhar. It lies on southeast India’s Coromandel coast facing the Bay of Bengal between modern Tamil Nadu and  Sri Lanka. Its immediate offshore area has been the subject of marine archaeological investigations by India’s National Institute of Oceanography since the 1980’s — and numerous non-controversial finds of man-made structures dated between the third century AD and the third century BC have been made in the “inter-tidal zone” close to shore at depths down to 6 feet (approximately 2 meters).
These finds of structures in shallow water (some so shallow that they are exposed at low tide) have been quite widely written-up in the archaeological literature. But for some reason other discoveries that the NIO has made in deeper water off Poompuhar have attracted no attention at all. Most notably these other discoveries include a second completely separate group of structures fully three miles from the Poompuhar shore in water that is more than 70 feet (23 metres) deep. The lack of interest is surprising because to anyone with even minimal knowledge of post-glacial sea-level rise their depth of submergence is – or should be – highly anomalous. Indeed according to Glenn Milne’s sea-level data the land on which these structures were built last stood above water at the end of the Ice Age more than 11,000 years ago.

Is it a coincidence that there are ancient Tamil flood myths that speak of a great kingdom that once existed in this area called Kumari Kandam that was swallowed up by the sea? Amazingly the myths put a date of 11,600 years ago on these events — the same timeframe given by Plato for the end of Atlantis in another ocean.

Like the cities in the Gulf of Cambay the underwater structures three miles offshore of Poompuhar were first identified by an instrument called side scan sonar that profiles the seabed. One structure in particular was singled out for investigation and was explored by divers from India’s National Institute of Oceanography in 1991 and 1993. Although they were not at that time aware of the implications of its depth of submergence — i.e. that it is at least 11,500 years old — the 1991 study confirms that it is man-made and describes it as:

a horse-shoe-shaped object, its height being one to two metres. A few stone blocks were found in the one-metre wide arm. The distance between the two arms in 20 metres. Whether the object is a shrine or some other man-made structure now at 23 metres [70 feet] depth remains to be examined in the next field season.
The 1993 study refines the measurements:
The structure of U-shape was located at a water depth of 23 metres which is about 5 kilometres off shore. The total peripheral length of the object is 85 metres while the distance between the two arms is 13 metres and the maximum height is 2 metres Divers observed growth of thick marine organism on the structure, but in some sections a few courses of masonry were noted

Kumari Kandam
After 1993, no further marine archaeology was conducted along the Poompuhar coast until 2001 when I arranged with the NIO to dive on the U-shaped structure with funding from Channel 4 television in Britain and the Learning Channel in the US. Exclusive footage of the structure was filmed and is shown in episode 2 of the Underworld television series. Chapter 14 of the book is a report of our dives at Poompuhar, and what we found there.
Dr A.S. Gaur of the NIO told  on camera that it would have required “a very great technology” to build the U-shaped structure — one far beyond the abilities of known cultures in India 11,500 years ago. For Dr Gaur this is a reason to doubt the accuracy of the sea-level-data which suggests that the structure was submerged so long ago. However the NIO have not yet been successful in recovering any datable materials or artefacts that could tell us its age more directly (for example by C-14 or TL tests).
My own expedition to Poompuhar with the NIO in 2001 was limited to diving on the U-shaped structure and one neighbouring structure. But what’s really exciting is that more than 20 other large structures are known to be located in the same area down to depths of more than 100 feet. These have so far been identified only by sidescan sonar and never yet explored by divers. I’ve organised an expedition jointly with India’s National Institute of Oceanography and John Blashford-Snell’s Scientific Exploration Society in Britain to map and investigate these other structures in March/April 2002.
The Cambay and Poompuhar discoveries are both reported in depth for the first time in Underworld and set into the proper context of the flood myths and inundation history of the broader regions to which they belong.
If they are what they seem to be — a caution I must repeat since so little research has actually been done by anyone — then they signal an exciting new era in Indian archaeology in which the investigation of submerged ruins will play an increasingly important role. How do the Poompuhar finds compare with those in Cambay? Are they both parts of the same lost civilisation? Or do they perhaps represent two separate Ice Age cultures, one based in the north and the other in the south of the subcontinent?
Further exploration, involving divers, sonar scans and the recovery and analysis of artefacts will provide the answers.
And for reasons that I explain in Underworld, I think India’s most ancient scriptures, the Vedas, also have a lot to tell us. There are tremendously good reasons to disbelieve the scholarly consensus (certainly the consensus amongst Western scholars) that the Vedas were composed as late as 1500 B.C. Parts of them probably do date from then; but some of the hymns could be much older than that — carried down by oral traditions from much earlier times. I think it all goes back to the Ice Age.
 -Tamilan comes

Monday, October 5, 2015

Who wrote the formula for water?


It is said that the formula for water is H2O. i.e., water is a compound of two parts of Hydrogen and one part of Oxygen. We think that this is discovered by today’s science.

But, this formula was first handled in our Adharvana Vetham many thousand years back. A slokam, “pranam egammanyathve, is there in that Vetham.

‘Pranam’ means Oxygen, ‘egam’ means one, ‘anya’ means another and ‘thve’ means two. i.e., it means that, one part of Oxygen and two parts of Hydrogen in water.

The facts in our Vetha only, written in English by foreigners.  This atrocity happened because of our refusal nature to know the Spirituality.