Sunday, 16 April 2017

[www.keralites.net] Meena Manek - This 63-YO Mumbai Woman Makes Us Believe In Power Of Giving [1 Attachment]

 

Meena Manek - This 63-YO Mumbai Woman Makes Us Believe In Power Of Giving As She Has Been Cooking For Orphans For 15 Years

63-year-old Meena Manek wakes up in the wee hours every Sunday, or sometimes even stays up all night to feed about 400 people every Sunday. She has been doing this for about 14 years now and is determined to continue this work for a long time.

Fun & Info @ Keralites.net

Every Sunday, about three orphanages and one old age home receive breakfast from Meena Manek and her group of friends. Some orphanages house blind children as well.

"We usually get funds from people who want to help out the needy and poor. Sometimes, we adjust with our own money if the funds run low," Manek tells us.

"Mothers prepare meals that their children demand. Those without parents do not have that luxury. Taking care of that has what's kept me going for almost 15 years now and could keep me going for 50 more," Manek shares.

Manek, mother of two, and grandmother of one, has a group of friends of about 10-12 people, who regularly volunteer every Sunday and go to all the orphanages to give lip-smacking dishes to the kids and elders alike. Manek begins at 7 am on a Sunday from her residence in Kandivali East to the shelters in Andheri.

"I try to give as much of variety to kids as I can. Poha, Upma, Batata Vada, Chaat like Bhel Puri and Pani Puri, Chhole Samosa, Potato Sabzi and Poori, etc," Manek informs. The amount of effort that goes into making a Pani Puri or Batata Vada is known to all those who cook. However, Manek manages to make about 40 Kgs of Batata Vada on some Sundays.

"The Pani Puri we make costs as much as Rs. 5,000 because we use the best quality ingredients," she informed. And in a case of having Pav Bhaji on the menu, she wakes up at 3 am in the night and with some help from family, and readies everything by 7 am.

http://www.indiatimes.com/ news/india/this-63-yo-makes- us-believe-in-power-of-giving- as-she-has-been-cooking-for- orphans-for-15-years-275569. html


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Posted by: Ravi Narasimhan <ravi.narasimhan.in@gmail.com>
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[www.keralites.net] Successful People Go Through A Lot Of Failures On Their Way!

 

Successful People Go Through A Lot Of Failures On Their Way!

Henry Ford

Net Worth: $199 Billion (Adjusted for inflation) Ford had a love for automobiles that started at a very young age. Before the "Ford Motor Company," he started two automobiles companies that quickly failed. People complained that his vehicles were low quality at a high price.

Steve Jobs

Net Worth: $10.2 Billion (At death) After starting Apple, the board fired Jobs. He then started NeXT, a computer and software company that was later acquired by Apple.

Thomas Edison

Net Worth: $12 Million (At death) Before creating the light bulb, Edison was known to have 1,000s of failures under his belt.

Arianna Huffington

Net Worth: $50 Million In her 20's, Huffington wrote her second book that ended up being turned down by 36 different publishers. She then became the co-founder of The Huffington Post.

Colonel Harland Sanders

Net Worth: $3.5 Million (At death) Sanders was a man trying to get rich quick and encountered multiple failures along the way. His wife even called him a failure and left him.

In 1952, Sanders created Kentucky Fried Chicken (KFC). He ended up selling his state in the company in 1964.

Walt Disney

Net Worth: $5 Billion Before creating the iconic characters loved by millions, Walt was fired from a newspaper for lacking creativity.

George Steinbrenner

Net Worth: $1.4 Billion Steinbrenner owned a small basketball team called the Cleveland Pipers, that eventually went bankrupt. He went on to own the New York Yankee's and has since become one of the most profitable teams in the MLB.

Bill Gates

Net Worth: $78 Billion At age 17, Gates created Traf-O-Data with Paul Allen. Designed to read data from roadway traffic counters and create reports for traffic engineers. The two went on to start Microsoft a few years later.


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Posted by: Kakdi Raita <kakdiriata@gmail.com>
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[www.keralites.net] Very Popular Things That Have Been Designed Very Poorly!

 

Very Popular Things That Have Been Designed Very Poorly!

Touch screens in cars

This doesn't mean that all touch screens are bad. The problem is that in some newer cars, the touch screens control almost everything, including the air conditioning and radio. Why is that bad? Because the physical buttons were easy to use while keeping your eyes on the road. Putting everything on a touch screen can be dangerous and distracting.

The button on top of baseball caps

It serves no purpose; it hurts when you bump your head; and it makes wearing headphones harder.

Sticker glue that is stronger than the sticker paper

This is especially annoying when you buy someone a gift on the way to their house. Now you either have to leave the sticker on, hide the price with a marker, or risk ripping it off and leaving a sticky mess.

Lamps that have the switch on the cord instead of the base

So whenever you try to turn the lamp on in the dark you have to fumble around with the cord.

Blinds that have a cord on each side

Why would anyone ever want to only pull up one side of the blinds? Just have one cord that pulls the blinds up in their entirety so you don't have to struggle with two cords at once.

Toothbrushes that you can't put down

Toothbrushes have become so advanced that some of them even have mini-computers embedded in the handle. But you want to put the toothbrush down on its back? Good luck.

No pockets on women's pants

Or even worse…fake pockets.

The line left by the dustpan

Apparently they fixed this problem by inventing something else…the vacuum cleaner.

Wine glasses

Even though they hold expensive liquid that stains very easily, wine glasses were designed with an elevated center of gravity, a small base, and a very fragile mid-section. This make spills much more likely. How did nobody realize this beforehand?

Note: wine lovers will argue that the shape and size of the glass greatly influences taste. On the other hand, scientists will argue that everything influences taste…including perceptions about the glass shape. At least the glasses could be made out of a sturdier material.

Rectangular shopping baskets with the handle crossing the width

This means that you either have to twist your arm or hold the basket away from your body. It would make much more sense to have the handle go length-wise. Then you could actually hold the basket normally.

Faucets that don't extend far enough

So then your hands end up touching the back of the sink and you have to bend your wrist weird ways to get all the soap off.

Motion sensors on hand sanitizer pumps

This goes for soap dispensers too…you only touch the dispenser before actually sanitizing/scrubbing your hands. It would be better to put a motion sensor on the door so that you don't have to touch the handle when you're walking out of the bathroom. Or require all bathroom doors to open outwards.

Glass ketchup bottles

Actually…glass anything. How are you supposed to squeeze out the last drops?

Location of the steering wheel in cars

In the UK the driver's seat is on the right. In the US it's on the left. Neither is where it should be…in the middle. Having the driver's seat in the middle would drastically decrease the likelihood of people having blindspots on the road.

Note: the McLaren F1 actually fixed this. You steer from the middle with one passenger on each side. The catch? It's probably out of most of our price range.

Stove tops that don't give exact temperatures

Instead, they just have numbers. So…do you want to cook that broccoli on temperature 5 or temperature 6?

Note: changing the knobs to give degrees wouldn't work for obvious reasons (how long the food has been on the stove, type of pan, etc), but a thermometer of some sort would be useful.

Stickers on fruits

Even Tony Fadell (a lead designer at Apple) noted that these stickers unnecessarily added one step to the fruit-eating process. Why can't the stickers go on the stem instead of the body?

Western toilets

Human beings are actually designed to poop in a squatting position. This is why some experts suggest pooping with your feet on a stool.

Video controls that cover the captions

You try to rewind the video so that you can re-read the subtitles…but the DVD/Youtube/etc controls cover all the words.

Un-select buttons on elevators

Poor design examples include things that don't exist, and this is a classic case. Unfortunately the vast majority of elevators lack this ability.

Tide pods

To adults they look cool, but to kids they look like candy. And that is not healthy for the kids.

Nail clippers

What's wrong with nail clippers you ask? They send your nails flying everywhere.

Note: apparently there are some nail clippers that attempt to contain the mess, but they can be hard to clean.

The "spacebar" being right next to the "period" on some keyboards

It.makes.typing.really. annoying

Micro USB ports

They pop out all the time, and with just a little nudge on the wire, the port can break. USB-C tries to fix these issues, but unfortunately, it's taking some time to catch on.

US bank notes all being the same size

One of the most classic design flaw examples, this makes it impossible for blind people to differentiate them.

Note: many countries have different size bank notes, or even braille.

Toilet flushing handles

You have to flush 99.99999% of mechanical toilets with your hand. Why can't they all have foot pedals to flush?

Note: public toilets quite often have automatic flush sensors, but these activate quite easily…often while you're still sitting!


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Posted by: Kakdi Raita <kakdiriata@gmail.com>
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