Thursday, March 21, 2013

Golden Quotes: Here to the crazy ones Steve Jobs

Here is the famous quote of Steve Jobs, Here is to the crazy ones...


Here's To The Crazy Ones. The Misfits. The Rebels. The Trouble-makers.
The Round pegs in the Square holes. The Ones who see things differently.
They're not fond of rules, and they have no respect for the status-quo.
You can quote Them, disagree with Them, glorify, or vilify Them.About the only thing you can't do is ignore Them. Because They change things.
They push the human race forward. And while some may see Them as the crazy ones, we see genius.Because the people who are crazy enough to think they can change the world - are the ones who DO !

These golden words have been the the source of inspiration for Great Lakes family. You will find these quotes on frames prominently visible on walls in Great Lakes campuses.



Thursday, March 7, 2013

My writings: A smile, a touch, a gesture of love...

Note: 
I wrote this article while I was in MindTree, Bengaluru. It was reviewed by Subroto Bagchi, then Gardener of MindTree. Then it was published on MindTree's internal portal with some of the portions taken out due to space restrictions. The complete writing is published here.

Mind: In MindTree, an employee is addressed as 'Mind'.
TSA: Technologists for Social Association. This is an internal community in MindTree who spend time with inmates at Missionary Of Charity and Sri Lankan refugee children at Indira Gandhi International Academy on every second Saturday. Corporate Social Responsibility is at the heart of MindTree's vision. In fact,  Mindtree's old logo was created by a student Chetan, who has cerebral palsy!

It was April 11, 2008 evening, the day before the second Saturday of the month. I was at my cubicle when the telephone at my nearby desk rang up. Hello! Is Siddalingesha there? an elderly, gentle voice I heard, when I picked up the receiver. Sidda is on leave today. Could I know who is speaking? Anything urgent?, I asked. “Moses. I want to talk to Sidda regarding TSA. Do you have his number?” was the reply. TSA and Moses are synonymous names in MindTree! I had been thinking to go on a TSA trip myself but my conviction was not firm. On the spur of the moment,  I decided to go. After giving Sidda’s cell phone number, I showed my interest to be a part of TSA and Moses gracefully accepted.

The next day, I reached our Banashankari office at 8:40 am, five minutes before the usual time of departure for TSA’s second Saturday trip. Like me, a few Minds had come without our ID cards. Somehow we managed to convince the security personnel near the gate that we would not get inside the company; we had come for TSA trip only; they let us in. I was very happy to see some people from other organizations joining TSA; some even had been coming for years! “We have some personal attachment with them. This attracts us to come and meet them again and again”, told Ravindran, who was not a MindTree Mind and has been coming for two and half years! “Is it so?”, I questioned myself. We started our journey.

Fig: Subroto Bagchi (Source: Wikimedia Commons)

Around 10:45 am we reached Missionary of Charity (MoC), Yelahanka. “Geogie! What are these three books? Could I have a look?”, I asked  one of my team members just after we got down from the cab. “Yeah! Sure”, he replied while handing over three ISKCON published books adding, “Parag gave me. He told me to give it to one lady here”. This is the first instant, I saw personal relationship of my team members with MoC people. We were moving towards the entrance of the building. 

In MoC there are well trained nuns, serving people for whom there is nobody in society. They follow Mother Teresa. None of them are paid employees like us; this is the most surprising fact about MoC! Still these nuns are satisfied with their work!! They take anyone who comes for help irrespective of caste, creed and religion; this is what is called Principle of Christianity.
 
Fig: Subroto's handwriting

Reaching the entrance, anxiety of seeing something unknown made me walk fast inside the building with Ravindran. There we saw around twenty old ‘men and women’ sitting in a row, some on the floor and others on a long bench. I was taken aback by seeing their woeful condition. As if they were struggling to live with their disintegrated and miserable body. For a few moments I was thinking Why these poor have been abandoned by their relatives? Would not old age come for their relatives?”. Seeing us, they started smiling; some raised their hands slowly waving towards us to greet us. Though I was unable to understand their language (Being from Odisha, I was not so familiar with Kannada or Tamil in which those people were talking.), I was enjoying their conversation with my team members. Few of my friends were making fun with them and they were laughing uncontrollably. Their happiness filled my heart with joy.

After that, we started serving lunch. One old woman kept on refusing me an additional helping in her own language. I could understand from her facial expressions and body language that she wanted very little to ensure that there was no wastage of food. So when I offered the lunch plate with less food, she happily accepted. I silently remembered our cafeterias thinking about the ‘food waste chart’ pasted a few months back!

Then I moved to an extreme corner of the verandah where a very old woman was having her lunch. She was about to finish when Anulekha came, sat in front of her (Anulekha is TSA regular. She joined MindTree in 2005, two years before me) and asked something lovingly. The old woman raised her head, stared at Anulekha with her eyes gradually filling up with tears and emanating love as if she had some earlier relationship with Anulekha and had been longing to see her! Suddenly she started sobbing unconsolably like a child! Anu hugged her, kissed her forehead with her palms around her cheeks and was telling something lovingly to soothe her grief stricken heart! I could not hold myself and moved away to control myself. After few minutes I came back. “What happened Anulekha?”, I asked. “Whenever she sees me, she starts crying”, Anu replied. “You still can’t help coming to her, talking to her, sharing her sorrows, giving her a hug, a kiss. Ravindran was absolutely right. You do have personal attachment with these people!!”, I heard my inner voice reply. It was a great experience that day and I learnt a lot from others.

A gentle touch, a hug, a smile, and few loving words... they cost you nothing but are priceless when you share them with others. They can create a ray of hope for the hopeless, give strength to the weakest and helpless who cannot help themselves. Never ask “Why are these people  suffering?”. It is we people, their kins, who have made their lives miserable by not paying attention. Service to mankind is service to God! Our selfishness, false pride and incessant desire for momentary pleasure makes us blind to ignore those who have once sacrificed the most for us. At this point, a beautiful poem, one my dearest teacher wrote for me when I was in MindTree, comes to my mind. I reproduce it as it is:

O son! Satyaranjan!
Kindle the flame of compassion
Barring every odds and confusion
And tearing the clouds of selfish vision
Mind the mind and MindTree
Embracing you to a greater degree
Enlarging your success horizon
Brightening the path of destination
Let love not lust drench the thirst of your breast
Allow you to enjoy your profession
Foster the spirit of appreciation
And devotion in God’s creation



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