Sunday, March 29, 2009

DJ;;;

When I first met DJ,it was quite unhealthy for me to talk with her.But I came to know her from heart ,I realised that she is certainly a person,who always know the way to support me.So I liked her nature.Many times ,I even made her pissed off,due to the diabolical statements,I made all the time.But after some time in this term,I felt she has also been discovered from a tough position.Due to her perseverance,I checked her most of the time.Finally made DJ join the way,which I owe....

Thursday, January 22, 2009

Spurred the right moment…….!!!

The habit of always be winner, is like running over it so consistently. The life, we begin never always be same set, but it gives out a turn after some moment, but we never trade off to find out the reason.
1st crush…..
Stay off, crush with anything doesn’t mean love-crush. But I have the same kinda crush gotten done some days back. Staring on the day, when my name was put on notice by a simple mean.Rather, I say the time turned out that moment was fortuitous developed. When I talked the very first day, it was shocking, that I wud be able to do it or not. But every time there is developed one opening after a dead closing. That day, I talked nonsenselessly, but I was sure these non-sense talks would one day bring in some development.
2nd day, Shivers flowed on for some large time over my body, and I was bit scuttled to talk to her.But,u know if u try and try, you will never lie down to faint. So this is what, I obsessed in to put my steps forward,becoz I was thinking that if this time, if I couldn’t perform, I will always be a loser, and my progress wud never take the spur w.r.t nowadays changes.

So guys,I am in 2nd day…..as the day will roll out,I will keep providing you this feed on and on

Sunday, December 14, 2008

every day is strange..

today,when I got over with some due work,I got an another load besides it.see my fortune,how it turned out towards some unwanting,but what can you do,its all a lay-off,bargained from GOD,so I shudn't play my own role.They are all the rules of GOD.I have always experienced,that GOD always befits you,where u are deserved to be.So I was placed in that couch.You know the behaviour,it shows are different ,but are very practical.The figment of imagination,we juxstapose along the line of sucess and failures,are nothing,but its role in order to make you fit in that position.

Thursday, December 11, 2008

Life never supports u....

The day,I landed in earth,I felt i wud make the whole journey a nice running ahead,but it has been a natural mind of everyone,who are first guided by bad conscience rather than by his gud conscience.So when someone tries out his/her wits on other thing,that are not a category of ur life style,they are considered as simply a few flaunts.The way your life turs the way out towards negative destinations,are not considered as right things,But there too also we do not compromise over it.Life as goes ,do not capture up so much thing,untill you have overapplied it by more than one flunk.

Tuesday, December 9, 2008

Whats this shit politics..

Every action has acquired an unimaginable, almost, ridiculous trajectory. A friend laughs and sits back in her chair and the question arises, will we meet again like this on a sunlit afternoon? A child runs towards its mother, the trajectory flashes out again: was there a child that was shot before it reached its mother? We brush the trajectories away. Foolish flights of imagination. Why think about them when the sun is out again and we are still alive? But the trajectories creep up on us repeatedly, reminding us that our lives are hemmed in by an invisible destiny. In the aftermath of 26/11 we have all subconsciously confronted those unimaginable trajectories that now exist in all our lives.
Assembly elections in the aftermath of 26/11 have sent out a dignified messageYet in a curious irony, while we were enduring the worst moments in India’s collective existence, we were also blessed with a glimpse of the best. The same days that brought horrifying tragedy, were also days in which that wonderful inheritance of 60 years came once again to touch our lives. India’s democratic process, the dream of Nehru, Ambedkar and Gandhi that every destitute woman, every bewildered orphan, every homeless man must have the right to vote — that inheritance came to stand quietly by our side at exactly the same time as the terrorists invaded our homes, as if to say, look, I am still here, the dream still lives.
Four states went to the polls days after the terrorist attack. As the events of 26/11 raged, Madhya Pradesh voted the very next day, Delhi on November 29, Mizoram on 30, Rajasthan on December 4. Pundits predicted that the assembly elections would be a ‘referendum on terror’, a frightened cowering electorate would not even bother to vote or else would vote for leaders who were ‘tough on terror’. Instead what happened? The voting public turned out in their thousands, the record turnouts (almost a 60 per cent turn-out in notoriously apathetic Delhi) were like a repudiation of any attempt to break India’s soul. And what kind of leaders did the Indian voter elect? The Indian voter shunned the big slogans of ‘terrorism’ and ‘economic slowdown’ and resoundingly elected plain homespun hardworking leaders.
The verdict of 2008 has redefined political charisma. In a stunning result, a 71-year-old lady with untidy grey hair and a crumpled sari, who walks in mohallas as easily as she does in drawing rooms, who slogs away at her city bringing change wherever she can, got the vote of the young, old, poor and middle class citizens of Delhi. For Sheila Dikshit to have won a record third term as CM in a city once considered a bastion of the BJP is remarkable. In her persona, she embodies a new kind of leader that perhaps the voter is looking for. Dikshit conveys an endless source of comfort to the stressed and traumatised residents of the Capital. She embodies a spirit of sincerity. Above all she is synonymous with hard work.
Shivraj Singh Chauhan of Madhya Pradesh and Raman Singh of Chhattisgarh also won in their respective states, beating back that dreaded ‘anti-incumbency’. What do Chauhan and Raman Singh embody? Chauhan is a ‘man of the sangathan,’ someone who describes himself as a humble party worker, who does not look good on TV, cannot speak English and yet has worked tirelessly to serve his people. He’s the ‘aam aadmi next door’ in MP, the worker ant, the low profile nondescript RSS member who has not made drama-filled speeches on Hindutva or terrorism or ‘minority appeasement’, but has worked at his development schemes quietly and constantly. The voter in electing Chauhan has elected a politician who does not look good on camera but who works hard all day, does not take money (except for the single allegation of favouring a business house on the purchase of dumper trucks) and is not seen to be overly flashy.
Raman Singh, now set for a second term as CM of Chhattisgarh is known as the ‘Chawal vale baba’. He may have won because of his populist promise of rice at Rs 3 a kg, but Raman Singh is another leader who is neither flamboyant nor telegenic. The ayurvedic doctor toured his state before elections and painstakingly changed MLAs to blunt anti-incumbency at the local level. In fact, the BJP CMs, whether Raman Singh, Chauhan or even B.C. Khanduri in Uttarakhand, are increasingly emerging as efficient and popular leaders. The ‘Narendra Modi formula’ of development, personal popularity and administrative efficiency is being used by them to become genuine leaders in their states. The ‘Modi formula’ does not include hard Hindutva any more. None of the successful BJP CMs emphasises hard Hindutva or takes an aggressive ‘anti-minority’ line. The BJP leadership would do well to take a few lessons in governance from its CMs.
The defeat of Vasundhara Raje in Rajasthan is once again a reminder of how verdict 2008 has redefined political charisma. This vote was for the ordinary hard worker. Raje, too, undoubtedly worked very hard for her state. But just her own glamorous persona may not have satisfied the humble and ordinary quality that the Indian voter is now looking for in leaders. In Raje’s case the gender bias inherent in the patriarchal politics of her state may also have played a role.
The Indian voter endures the unimaginable, yet he or she still sends out a sane and calm message. In this assembly election, the voter has voted for governance, for ordinariness, for a clean image, for individuals who are seen to be daily companions in our sorrows and sufferings. Politicians, take note: we are a democracy forged by fire and death. We do not tolerate phoneys and fakes anymore. We hanker above all for goodness and humility .

game is set

The Assembly poll results will have far-reaching implications not only for national politics but also for the Congress and the BJP. The results have shown that the electorate has become mature and has voted positively to elect three sitting Chief Ministers: Sheila Dikshit (Delhi), Shivraj Singh Chauhan (Madhya Pradesh) and Raman Singh (Chhattisgarh). The results prove that wherever the CMs could project positive achievements and development activities of their governments, their parties won.
The elections also proved that voters consider the Congress to be the biggest nationalist party in India, considering that some states went to the polls just after the terror attacks in Mumbai. The BJP, which tried to cash in on terror, discovered that its nationalist credentials are not as strong as those of the Congress. For the common man, the Congress had won the 1965 and 1971 wars against Pakistan and its governance generates a greater sense of assurance than the jingoistic stance of the BJP.
The result has also put a big question mark over the prime ministerial ambition of L. K.Advani and has raised doubts over the ability of Rajnath Singh to lead the party in the parliamentary polls. In fact, the NDA may be weakened further and some of its allies like the JD(U) may start looking for partners outside the fold. These developments could force the RSS and the BJP to have to review their strategy and rethink their decision of projecting Advani as the BJP’s prime ministerial candidate. The BJP enjoyed a lead over the Congress in Lok Sabha seats from MP, Rajasthan and Chhattisgarh in 2004. But from the rough data available on Monday, the number of seats could very well go down, thereby diminishing the BJP’s chances further. For the Congress, the victory has brought much-needed relief after a string of defeats in the Assembly polls. The outcome has also prevented the disintegration of the UPA. But the Congress still has a long way to go if it wants to win the parliamentary polls, given that it has a token presence in UP and Bihar, the two most populous states.
The polls results have made sure that Dikshit is likely to assume a far greater role at the Centre. With the kind of mega image she has acquired, she could become a major vote-catcher, perhaps second only to Sonia Gandhi. National politics, however, continues to be in a flux. The chances of an early general election have diminished. The semi-finals maybe over but it is evident that the finals will be contested by the Congress against several regional parties that may ultimately constitute a combination on the lines of the Third front. The BJP needs to review its strategy, if it wants to stay in the reckoning.

Life stunning down moment..starts here


The life has to begin from here........
See the hug above poured in pic,it seems that really we need such type of hug between india and pakistan .If we continue doing this toll forever,we won't be able to reach the situation,where we wud have everywhere lush with greenry.Finally,all we eversince think is to get out of all these nonsense activities,which have rammed our place very badly,and it has got so restrained power,that we can't even think of growing high ,and think of future gud alll the way.So atleast for one day we shud think that we need this cordial relationship always ever.