Category: Us people

  • Some awesome things I learnt at the Valley of Words festivals.

    “When will you learn that there isn’t a word for everything?” ― Nicole Krauss, The History of Love That’s called being speechless, there was this amazing drive from Kurukshetra to Dehradun. After registering at the #BNLF counter we were free to saunter around the festival grounds. I was looking for the blogger street, I might have as…

  • Society Prepares the crime and the criminal executes it.

    Society Prepares the crime and the criminal executes it.

    Increasing criminal instinct in children who is responsible?   Criminal instinct, is somewhere quite different from criminal behaviour. The habitual committing of criminal acts or offences by a young person, especially one below the age at which ordinary criminal prosecution is not possible is delinquency.   Modern theories and speculation have linked many factors to…

  • Coffee-Cat

    I love my coffee. Over my lifetime I don’t know how many cups of coffee I’ve had but take my word for it – it’s a lot. Over all that time coffee has gone from just something I accepted as normal to hero or villain depending on what narrative was trendy at the time. […] via…

  • Why Kankadasa will always remain relevant.

    Why Kankadasa will always remain relevant.

    “How can we let a lowly Kurba in/” the Brahmins of the Mutta hurled at the man, Vadiraja Teertha decided it was time to humble the arrogant Brahmins. He had immense faith in the devotion of the man, so he kept quiet. The Man stood out and sang the praise of the Lord … Lo…

  • Mama’s guide to difference between sharing and giving.

    Mama’s guide to difference between sharing and giving.

    It is joy of giving week Mama shares the small but import difference between giving and sharing Without really thinking about it the word give always meant to put into possession of another for his or her use, As an intransitive verb it meant to make gifts or presents, When I heard of this day I…

  • Meet The World’s First Woman Programmer

    Meet The World’s First Woman Programmer

    The second Tuesday of October is the day the first ever woman computer program is remembered, it the known as the Ada Lovelace Day –ALD – in honour of Augusta Ada Lovelace, the daughter of Lord Byron and his wife Annabelle. Ada was born in 1815, as her mother feared that she might inherit her…