Tuesday, August 5, 2014

15 Things You Learn When You Live Away From Home

Leaving home for work or studies always seems like an adventure trip. And in a way it turns out to be one, when the various ups and downs make us realize what is most important in our lives:

1. You realize that your hometown is much closer to your heart than you ever thought


2. You start valuing money and appreciate what you already have


3. You learn all sorts of management skills


4. You learn to solve your own problems

and it makes you more humble because life is a long lesson on humility.

5. You become independent: cooking, cleaning & taking care of yourself


6. You start to enjoy travelling

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You become a traveler.

7. You become more responsible

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8. Although you have the freedom to party like crazy, you start doing it responsibly

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9. You meet new people who challenge your opinions..

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..and it helps develop your own.

10. You learn how to deal with the real world. You get to know the true faces of people

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11. You realize the importance of having friends and how they become your family away from family

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12. You start valuing your relationships more

because the quality of your life is the quality of your relationships.

13. There is nothing warmer than a mother’s hug..

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..and nothing truer than your father’s words

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14. And when you finally earn and manage on your own, it makes you feel proud..

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..and your parents prouder

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15. It’s only then that you realize you have finally grown up!

Maturity is not when we start speaking about big things, it’s when we start understanding the small things. And putting up on your own teaches exactly that.

15 Silly Things You Do When You Have A Crush On Someone

We all have those short lived intense infatuation for that cute someone whom we never let our feelings know. And then we start doing weird things during that phase which keeps the ‘relationship’ going :P
So, if you have ever had a crush on someone, check how many of these are true

1. You constantly check your phone to see if your crush has texted you..

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even if it hasn’t buzzed

If they don’t reply, you are like

1a

And if they do, you read their messages over and over again

1b

2. Stalk your crush on social media

3b
..and try to find common friends to talk to him/her.

3. Your friends tease you until..

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..they get tired of your constant talks about him/her.

4. You know the daily schedule of your crush

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And try to bump into him/her.

5. You play FLAMES & Internet love calculators

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Scientifically proven methods of calculating love. True story. :P

6. You day dream about him/her a lot

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coz day dreams always have happy endings!

7. You imagine your fairy tale love story in a filmy style

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Songs, dance & all that bling!

8. Dress up for moments when there’s a chance to see him/her

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9. You try to read into the few lines you talk with your crush

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The eternal search for that ‘hidden message’ within a message. Sigh!

10. You would drop hints at him/her

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And they’ll always miss it.

11. Your parents will know there’s something fishy

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12. Your heart beats faster than ever when he/she’s near you

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13. You blush when he/she speaks to you

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But try to look calm & composed lest they know the ‘secret’.

14. You say this in your mind

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Confessing love was never so easy.

15. Finally, when your crush tells you that he/she knew it already, you be like

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Top 20 Inventions of India ....!

Indian inventions and discoveries have been instrumental in shaping the face of the current modern world. We picked up 20 such interesting findings out of a whole bunch that will make you go, “I didn’t know that”.

1. Buttons

buttons
image sources 12
Buttons were first used in Mohenjo-daro for ornamental purpose rather than for fastening. They were first used in the Indus Valley Civilization by 2000 BCE.

2. Chess

chess
image sources 12
Chess developed out of Chaturanga, which is an ancient strategy board game developed during the Gupta Empire in India around the 6th century AD. Now you know why Vishwanathan Anand is such a pro, rag rag me is tarah… ;)

3. Prefabricated home and movable structure

prefabricated-home-akbar
In 16th century Mughal India, during the reign of Akbar, the first prefabricated & movable structures were invented.

4. Ruler

ruler
Rulers were first used by the Indus Valley Civilization prior to 1500 BCE. Made of ivory, the rulers found during excavation, reveal the amazing accuracy of decimal subdivisions on it.

5. Shampoo

The word ‘Shampoo’ is derived from chāmpo (चाँपो). It was initially used as a head massage oil for the Nawabs of Bengal during the Mughal Empire around 1762. It evolved into shampoo over the years.

6. Snakes and Ladders

The game, Snakes & Ladders,  was invented in India as a game of morals. Later it spread to England and eventually introduced in the USA by game pioneer Milton Bradley in 1943.

7. Cotton cultivation (We clothed the world, yay!)

cotton
The ancient Greeks used to wear animal skins and were not even aware of cotton. But Indians were sort of cool ;) and started cultivating cotton during the 5th – 4th millennium BCE in the Indus Valley Civilization. The word spread to the Mediterranean and beyond and soon everyone was ordering one from Flipkart. Well, pretty much.

8. Fibonacci Numbers

fibonacci
The Fibonacci numbers were first described by Virahanka, Gopala  and Hemachandra as an outgrowth of earlier writings by Pingala.

9. Decimal System, Quadratic formula and Zero!

number-system
It was in 7th century CE when Brahmagupta found the first general formula for solving quadratic equations. The decimal system (or the Hindu number system), which was a precursor of the Arabic numeric system, was developed in India between the 1st and 6th centuries CE.

10. Suits Game

cards
The popular game of cards originated from India & was known as Krida-patram (which literally means “painted rags for playing”).

11. Cataract Surgery

Indian physician Sushruta (6th century BCE) had the knowledge of performing cataract surgery. It spread to China from India. Greek scientists would visit India to get operations done and also to learn the nitty-gritties.

12. Diamond Mining

diamond
Worldwide, India was the only source of diamonds until the discovery of mines in Brazil in the 18th century. Almost 5000 years ago, diamonds were first recognized and mined in central India.

13. Water on Moon

ISRO’s Chandrayaan-1 made the startling discovery that our moon is not a dry ball of rocks. The discovery of lunar water is attributed to the Chandrayaan mission.

14.  Radio/Wireless communication

We all know that Marconi received a Nobel Prize in Physics in 1909 for contribution to the development of wireless telegraphy. But the first public demonstration of radio waves for communication was made by Sir Jagdish Chandra Bose in 1895, two years prior to Marconi’s similar demonstration in England.
Sir Bose was posthumously credited (more than a century later) for his achievement. The fact remains that this discovery truly shaped the face of modern wireless communication.

15. Flush Toilets

flush-toilet
Flush toilets were first used in the Indus Valley Civilization. These existed in most homes and were connected to a sophisticated sewage mechanism. The civilization was prominent in hydraulic engineering.

16. Binary Code

Binary numbers were first described by Pingala (c. 200 BC). Pingala is the traditional name of the author of the Chandaḥśāstra, the earliest known Sanskrit treatise on prosody.

17. Ink

ink
Many ancient cultures and civilizations independently discovered and prepared ink for writing purposes. The source of carbon pigment used in Indian Ink (called musi) used in ancient India, was India. Since 4th century BC, the practice of writing with ink with a sharp pointed needle was common in South India.

18. Steel & Metal works

Ancient Indians were pioneers in metallurgy. High quality steel was produced, almost two thousand years before it was understood by the West. One of the most remarkable feat in metallurgy: creating a seamless celestial globe, was invented in Kashmir. It was earlier considered impossible to create a metal globe without seams.
So thanks to India, Iron Man can wear his suit now.

19. Fiber Optics

image sources 1, 2
image sources 12
Named as one of the 7 ‘Unsung Heroes’ by Fortune Magazine, Dr. Narinder Singh Kapany, is widely recognized as the ‘Father of Fiber Optics’ for his pioneering work in Fiber Optics technology. Watch him speak eloquently on his entrepreneurial journey.

20. Plastic Surgery

Yes, you heard it right. Indians were pioneers in Plastic Surgery too. It was carried out in India as early as 2000 BCE.
So, we’ve always been a cool country. ;)  History is testimony to it. So what’s stopping you from being innovative? Go, win the world.