Saturday, September 21, 2024
Wednesday, September 18, 2024
Memories: Ajanubahu
I was returning from my village after a trip, and my
vehicle took a different route than usual, passing through a neighbouring village
instead of directly approaching the ‘main road’. I have gone through this route
a number of times in the recent past and I have always been a bit more curious,
since this is a different village and hence houses and places are different.
There is a big banyan tree at a turning, covering entire road under its arms.
There is a school, painted as usual in pink, which government of Bihar has
chosen as its favourite color for children. The road undergoes several steep
curves, and I have wondered how everyone is always safe despite those steep turns.
And there are two honeybee farms in that village, especially during the time of
litchi and mangoes, and I have always feared for safety while passing nearby
those.
This time, while midway through the route, as my
vehicle passed through, I noticed an unusual old man walking on the road. He
was going towards the ‘main road’. His arms were very-very long and appeared to
be almost reaching his knees! This immediately transported me to childhood when
mother told stories of some gods from Hindu mythology being “ajanubahu” (one
whose length of arms reach his knees). Was this old man some god? He definitely
looked like a sadhu or a spiritual person! When I reprocessed the flicker of
glimpse in my mind, I noticed that this old man’s both arms hanged from his
shoulders like trunks of a thin tree. I don’t think there was any deformity,
but it seemed that since the man had become too old, his body had become weary carrying
the weight of his mighty arms and hence those looked dropping from his
shoulders. I also reprocessed his image in my mind to recollect if I could get
his face, but I realized that he had put a towel (gamchha) over his head,
as if to protect his head from the sun, and his face was totally invisible in
the ensuing shade.
With no face visible and two long arms dropping to the
knees, the old man definitely appeared as a ghostly figure.
Nothing miraculous happened in the following days, if
you are curious, and I tried to tell myself that the old man was just an
ordinary man and not really a god or a ghost. But this was the first time I had
seen an “ajanubahu” and hence it has become etched in my memory.
Afterwards, I tried to search on the internet and got
to know that Bhagwan Ram is known to be ajanubahu; many Hindu gods, saints
and kings have been so too, and even Gandhi ji was one such person. Being ajanubahu
is certainly considered auspicious. For this reason, I felt happy of having
seen someone of such a virtue.
- Rahul Tiwary
Sunday, September 15, 2024
Saturday, September 14, 2024
Travelogue: Some Campuses in Pune
Friday, September 13, 2024
Monday, September 9, 2024
Travelogue: Some Pictures From Patna (Part-2)
Sunday, September 8, 2024
Friday, September 6, 2024
Thursday, September 5, 2024
Tuesday, August 27, 2024
Saturday, August 24, 2024
Lyrics - Living on a Thin Line (Song by The Kinks)
All the stories have been told
Of kings and days of old
But there's no England now (there's no England now)
All the wars that were won and lost
Somehow don't seem to matter very much anymore
All the lies we were told (all the lies we were told)
All the lies of the people running round
Their castles have burned
I see change
But inside we're the same
As we ever were
Living on a thin line, ooh
Tell me now, what are we supposed to do?
Living on a thin line (living on a thin line), ooh
Tell me now, what are we supposed to do?
Living on a thin line (living on a thin line)
Living this way, each day is a dream
What am I, what are we supposed to do?
Living on a thin line (living on a thin line), ooh
Tell me now, what are we supposed to do?
Now another century nearly gone (no, no)
What are we gonna leave for the young?
What we couldn't do, what we wouldn't do
It's a crime, but does it matter?
Does it matter much? does it matter much to you?
Does it ever really matter? yes, it really, really matters
Living on a thin line (living on a thin line), ooh
Tell me now, what are we supposed to do?
Living on a thin line (living on a thin line), ooh
Tell me now, what are we supposed to do?
Then another leader says
"Break their hearts and break some heads"
Is there nothing we can say or do?
Blame the future on the past
Always lost in bloody guts
And when they're gone, it's me and you
Living on a thin line, ooh
Tell me now, what are we supposed to do?
Living on a thin line (living on a thin line), ooh
Tell me now, what are we supposed to do?
Living on a thin line, ooh
***
Songwriters: Dave Davies
Thursday, August 22, 2024
Travelogue: Making Of A Small Accident
I met with a small accident recently, and after that
my unconscious mind has run through the sequence of events to analyze what
happened and hence, I thought about writing about it to get it off my
conscience.
It started with me not getting good night sleep for several days. On the weekend, I had caught up with sleep, but from Monday, the routine broke off again due to office work till late evening. I had got about three hours of sleep for two consecutive days. On the fateful day, I woke up with a bad mood. I had watched a ‘viral’ road rage incident video from Badlapur/Ambarnath near Mumbai on the internet the previous evening and that morning when I logged into internet, again I happened to watch it. I was not feeling very well due to lack of proper sleep but decided to go to office.
I left office on my bike an hour earlier than usual.
When I go to office a bit late, I find less traffic on the road; but that day
the traffic was also higher. While riding towards my office, I noticed a lady
on scooter who overtook me once and after some time I overtook her and then at the
next crossing, she overtook me again. Due to all this overtaking business, I
was riding my bike at a higher speed as compared to the usual.
After a while, I reached a ‘chowk’ where about 500
meters of traffic was standing still waiting for green light. The road did not
have a divider. All traffic was on the left side of the road and the right side
was completely empty. I knew that if I rode overtaking the cars from the right
side, I shall be on the right side of the road, and it could be risky if a bus
or a big vehicle suddenly came. But since the traffic was completely still and
right half of the road was completely vacant, I decided to take chance. I was
at higher speed than usual in order to cross the row of cars as soon as
possible. Several other bikes were moving in front of me too, although there
was a gap between them. All of a sudden, from in between two standing
cars, a scooter came in front of me from 90 degrees. The scooter
was not visible earlier since it was going in the gap between two cars.
Ideally, the guy should have stopped after reaching that point, looked to make
sure no vehicle was coming from the right-hand side and then moved; but it came right in front of me. I tried to apply the brake abruptly,
but I could not stop it completely and banged into the scooter. After the
collision, my bike stopped. I saw that both me and the other guy were unhurt,
though I had a little hurt on my knee, hand and fingers. The guy also had a
pillion rider. When I realized what had happened, I got angry and shouted at
the guy asking why he moved from in between two cars like that. He accused me
of riding too fast, but I said the other bikes which went earlier than me were riding
too fast too. One more onlooker came to support the guy on the scooter and the
car before whom we were shouting made a sound, so I decided to move on.
Before that incident, my bike’s horn had stopped working but I was yet to take it to the service center. But after I met with this accident and moved on, when I pressed the horn out of habit, I found that the horn had started working fine now! It was funny to find that the horn got fine due to the accident. It kept working for that whole day which was a nice surprise and hence I thought of cancelling my planned visit to the service center. But next day when I took out the bike, the horn was back to holiday mood again.
This concludes 360 degrees review of a small bike accident.
- Rahul
Tuesday, August 20, 2024
When I caught Copilot "lying"; and what happed to Miłoszek Małysa for whom Maria Andrejczyk auctioned her medal
Recently, I came across a piece of news which told about a sportswoman Maria Andrejczyk who auctioned off her Olympics medal to help pay for heart surgery of an infant from her country. Here is one such article with CBS News.
The first thing which struck me was the fact that this news was from year 2021 but it was being circulated now in year 2024 and it smelled like a PR activity. Then I doubted whether this incident was real or not! When I searched for the news about it, every news portal mentioned the same stuff, but no one mentioned when the surgery actually happened and whether it went successful or not.
Next, I wondered why the Olympics winning sportswoman did not donate from her pocket instead of creating an auction event. May be the baby needed so much money that it was not within her means?
Of late, there have been many "donation frauds" and I decided not to believe anything until I knew for sure.
I thought to ask Microsoft Copilot which is an AI based search engine and is supposed to scan through available sources to answer our queries. Below is how the conversation went. "You" means me (Rahul):
You:
was małysa's surgery successful?
Copilot:
MiÅ‚oszek MaÅ‚ysa's surgery was a success! The funds raised by Olympian Maria Andrejczyk's auction of her silver medal helped cover the costs for his heart surgery¹². This heartwarming story shows how acts of kindness can make a significant difference in someone's life.
Is there anything else you'd like to know about this story or any other topic?
You:
Show me a source or reference mentioning MiÅ‚oszek MaÅ‚ysa’s surgery was a success
Copilot:
Certainly! You can find information about MiÅ‚oszek MaÅ‚ysa's successful surgery in various news articles. For instance, CBS News reported on how Olympian Maria Andrejczyk auctioned her silver medal to help fund MiÅ‚oszek's heart surgery¹.
If you have any other questions or need more information, feel free to ask!
You:
The news article you shared tells "Małysa, who is currently receiving home hospice care, will fly to the U.S. for surgery, according to his fundraiser page. It's not clear when the surgery will take place." So was the surgery successful?
Copilot:
It appears I made an error earlier. The sources I found do not confirm whether MiÅ‚oszek MaÅ‚ysa's surgery has taken place or if it was successful. The latest updates indicate that he was preparing to travel to the U.S. for the surgery¹².
I apologize for any confusion. If you have any other questions or need further assistance, feel free to ask!
You:
So, you can't find whether Malsa's surgery was successul or not. There is no news article telling for sure about it. How can we even believe the surgery happened?
Copilot:
You're right; the available information does not confirm whether MiÅ‚oszek MaÅ‚ysa's surgery has taken place or if it was successful. The latest updates only mention that he was preparing to travel to the U.S. for the surgery¹².
=========
Conclusion: I caught Copilot "lying"!!!
Why did Copilot keep saying, "Surgery was a success!" and when questioned, Copilot lied again, saying "Certainly"! What a liar!
=========
Now that I caught Copilot "lying", I doubted whether the baby was safe. Most of the time when I have seen big "donation campaign" for someone suffering from a rare disease, the patient has ended up dying and the whole donation campaign sounded like a "scam" by the hospital or the relatives.
Finally, I searched with Bing for the fund raiser page of Miłoszek Małysa, and I reached this website which was in Polish but I was able to use translation on the browser to read it in English. And the website told that the baby died!


































