Mechanism of Inflammation

*Mechanism of Inflammation – Nature’s Defense Mechanism:*

By Ramu, 26/1/2025

Recently, I stumbled upon a fascinating insight about a process we all experience but rarely appreciate—inflammation.

*What Happens When We Get Injured?*

Whenever we get a cut, bruise, or any injury, we might notice swelling, redness, or even pus at the affected spot.

While these symptoms can feel irritating, they’re actually nature’s way of protecting us.

Inflammation is an evolutionary gift—a defense mechanism that helps our body heal. Instead of being annoyed by it, we should understand and embrace its purpose.

*Why Does Inflammation Happen?*

Inflammation has two key roles:

1. Healing the Injury: Inflammation  or injury is just the signal or alam to invite immune cells, and other healing components to the injury / infectious site.

2. Protecting Our Body: It works to remove harmful substances like germs or damaged cells and begins the repair process.

For example, swelling happens because blood vessels in the area temporarily become “leaky,” allowing immune cells to pass through and reach the site of damage.

*The Bigger Picture:*

Inflammation is like our body’s alarm system.

When cells are injured, they send out distress signals to alert our immune system.

Immune cells then rush to the site and amplify the process to fight infections, clean up debris, and repair the tissue.

*In Summary:*

Inflammation may feel uncomfortable, but it’s a crucial part of our survival.

*It’s our body’s way of saying, “Help is on the way!”*

Understanding this natural process reminds us of how wonderfully evolved our bodies are to protect and heal us.

So next time you notice swelling or redness after an injury, think of it as a sign that your body is hard at work, taking care of you.

(My above Understanding is from a book “Good Energy”)

Sincerely yours,
Ramu

Letter to Parthiban

January 25, 2025

Dear Parthiban,

I want to clarify certain things about my style of interaction.

I am often misunderstood by friends and relatives because I tend to speak spontaneously, using casual and unfiltered words without fully considering how they might be interpreted differently. While this has unfortunately cost me several close relationships, I came to realize during my MBA program that “spontaneity, quickness, and wit” are actually my strengths.

If I suppress my spontaneity out of fear that my words might be misunderstood, I feel like I am losing my originality—and that makes me unhappy. Over time, I’ve limited my close relationships to a small circle of people who understand me well. With them, I don’t have to filter my words, and even if I say something inappropriate, they trust my intentions and know my tone might be wrong but my heart is in the right place.

Today, I unintentionally said something that upset you:
“கண்டவன்லாம் refer பண்ணுகிற புக்ஸ்லாம் படித்து டைம் வேஸ்ட் பண்ணாதீங்க. Our time is limited.”

I acknowledge my mistake, and I’m not defending my fault. I only request you to understand that while my tone may have been off, my intentions were not.

*On Stress and Misconceptions:*

You often seem to perceive me as someone free of stress or major problems because I don’t face financial struggles and don’t have typical work-related pressures. However, I want to correct this misconception.

1. *Financial stress:*
It’s true that I don’t have significant financial woes, but the reality is that managing wealth brings its own set of challenges. The more wealth one has, the greater the risks. When dealing with large finances, it’s hard to seek advice since very few people operate at this level. Relying on the wrong person can lead to devastating losses. Managing wealth responsibly is far more stressful than it might seem.


2. *Work-related stress:*
Every entrepreneur faces mental stress that can outweigh physical stress. While I don’t exert myself physically, the mental burden of responsibilities—such as ensuring salaries are paid, taxes are filed, and payments are made—can be overwhelming. For entrepreneurs, every day is a challenge.

Generally most of the People might face losses once or twice a year. In my case, I might lose money multiple times a week due to the risks involved, including being cheated by people I trusted. As the saying goes, “ants are drawn to sugar,” and handling these challenges is an ongoing struggle.

*On the Curse of Life and Happiness:*

The harsh truth of human life is that no one is completely joyful all the time. As the filmmaker Mysskin once said, “If we calculate the moments of true happiness in our entire life, they might not exceed 100 hours over 80 years.”

I face my own stresses—broken relationships, betrayal by my own parents and siblings, and financial losses caused by employees I nurtured and trusted since they were young. These employees, who should have been grateful, have caused significant damage. Despite this, I’ve evolved and learned to manage better.

For example, I’ve learned to work harmoniously with Kasi, which wasn’t easy for my sister. Similarly, I’ve adjusted my approach with many employees, even when it was challenging.

In Closing

Parthiban, I want you to know that you’re not alone in feeling stress. We are in the same boat, though the nature and levels of our struggles may differ. My words earlier were not meant to hurt you, and I sincerely apologize for any offense caused.

Please know that my intentions are always centered around your well-being and keeping you cheerful.

Warm regards,
Ramu

Farewell to RMC – Bid Adieu

*Bid Adieu to My Life’s First and Foremost Role Model – My Father-in-Law:*
By Ramu, 18/1/25

For the first time in my 57 years of life, I found myself beside someone whose soul was preparing to depart—and then, finally, departed.

Witnessing this profound moment reminded me how ageing and death humble human arrogance, ego, and pride. Ageing erodes one’s own arrogance, while death forces neighbors to confront theirs.

My uncle, an incredible entrepreneur, lived a life brimming with ventures and lessons. Over his lifetime, he experimented with nearly 30 small businesse by the association with 20 odd partners, ranging from tea shops in theaters to hardware stores, betel manufacturing, cutting tool production, real estate development, and finally, gasket manufacturing—a sole proprietorship that I now manage.

He was a cult figure in our family, a guiding light for over 15 families who leaned on his wealth.

Our association began in 1989 when I married his eldest daughter. Over the last 37 years, our relationship evolved into something extraordinary—a roller-coaster ride of shared emotions. We experienced smooth highways and still waters, as well as bumpy roads.

Being similar in temperament—sensitive, loving, short-tempered, fiercely independent, and deeply family-oriented—we often clashed, but those moments only added depth to our bond.

*Indelible Lessons from My Father-in-Law:*
Though he imparted countless lessons, two stand out: one in business and one in life.

1. *Business Lesson:*

When I joined his small enterprise in 2006, the VAT regime had just been introduced. I suggested the company transition to computers and Tally accounting software, as we were still using typewriters for invoices and manual accounting.

Skeptical of my corporate background at Tata Steel, he questioned whether such changes would generate sales, reduce labor, or cut inventory costs for a manufacturing unit.

At the time, I couldn’t convincingly defend my stance, though my intuition told me it was the right move. Over time, I understood his entrepreneurial philosophy—investing only in areas that directly impacted the product.

This shaped my own business thinking and laid a solid foundation for my journey.

2. *Life Lesson:*

He disbursed assets worth several crores to his daughters over the years but remained a man of simplicity. He never owned a car, nor did he travel in AC compartments. His frugal, almost ascetic lifestyle was a reflection of his values.

When I questioned his choices, he would say,

*”Our net worth should be at least five to ten times what the world estimates it to be.”*

These words left an indelible mark on me, teaching me the essence of understated wealth and quiet dignity.

*A Living Obituary:*

Last year, on his 79th birthday, I penned a tribute to him, capturing my heartfelt gratitude:

*9/7/2024 – 79th Birthday Wishes:*

Dear Uncle,

From the beginning till now, you have always been my role model. Many of the decisions I have made in life are influenced by you.

When I was young and my parents were not supportive for me, your care and support kept me from being lost.

During my time at IIT and in Delhi, without your support, Thenu and I would have faced many difficulties.

Without your presence and help, I doubt Thenu’s marriage would have been so satisfying, from finding a groom to arranging a wonderful wedding.

It’s rare for any father-in-law to sign over a whole company in their son-in-law’s name – that’s truly remarkable.

In short, without you, my life would be empty.

For the past twenty years, I have been running the company you gave me without tarnishing your good name. Also, just as we hoped, our Thenu is leading a satisfying married life. This is the gratitude we can return to you.

My heartfelt thanks to you are my only birthday gift.

Always grateful,
Ramu

Letter to Prof Palaniappan emphasized mediation

January 7, 2024

Dear PP,

Please bear with me for this final attempt to persuade you, as I strongly believe in the principle: “If we encourage someone to think logically and shed psychological barriers, they will never regret their present decisions in the future.”

Since I know you value logical analysis, let me present a clear perspective of your current situation.

*Understanding the Real Dispute:*

The conflict between you and K is not about the divorce itself—both of you want it finalized for the sake of your children.
The core issue is a lack of trust between you and K. Both sides, understandably, have incidents to justify their distrust.

*Your Concern:*
You fear that if you hand over the jewelry to K, they might demand a hefty alimony settlement, leaving you helpless. Hence, you feel it’s fair to hold on to the jewelry until K’s daughter signs the divorce documents.

*K’s Concern:*
K fears that if the divorce documents are signed before receiving the jewelry, you might withhold some of it to offset expenses like legal fees.

This mutual distrust is preventing both of you from achieving the mutual consent divorce you both deeply desire.

*Analyzing Two Scenarios:*

*Scenario #1: Contesting in Court:*

If the matter goes to court and K fails to provide sufficient evidence regarding the jewelry, or if your lawyers successfully challenge their claims, here’s the likely outcome:

*Monetary Gains:*
You may retain jewelry worth ₹75L to ₹1Cr, but after deducting hefty legal fees (₹5L-₹10L) and a potential court-ordered settlement (₹25L), your net gain would be ₹45L-₹65L.

*Definite Losses:*

1. Your son may lose 4-5 precious years of his youth due to prolonged litigation.

2. Your family will bear the lifelong burden of being perceived as having wronged a woman.

3. Your conscience (மனசாட்சி) will erode your peace of mind daily.

4. Your hard-earned professional and family reputation will take a severe hit.

*Ask yourself: Is gaining ₹50L worth all these consequences?*

*Scenario #2: Court Rules Against You:*

If the court accepts K’s evidence, the consequences will be more severe:

1. Monetary Losses:
Huge legal fees and a potentially larger settlement as determined by the court.

2. Non-Monetary Losses:
The same psychological toll, social stigma, and reputational damage as in Scenario #1.

*Proposed Solutions:*

*Solution #1:* Mediation Through a Trusted Neutral Party

1. Choose a socially reputed individual, such as a respected professor, principal, or college colleague, to mediate.

2. Allow K’s side to verify the jewelry in your possession.

3. File a mutual consent divorce petition and release the jewelry after the process is completed.

*Solution #2:* Traditional Process with Community Support

1. Involve your pangali and follow a traditional mediation process.

2. Legalize the process to ensure fairness for both parties.

*Solution #3:* Fixed Deposit as Security

1. If you fear K may demand additional settlements later, ask K to create a fixed deposit of ₹25L-₹50L under a neutral third party’s custody.

2. This deposit can be released only after the divorce is finalized, ensuring protection for both sides.

*Why Friends Over Lawyers:*

Advocates often have vested interests in prolonging disputes. In contrast, friends and family with high moral standards want to resolve issues peacefully and fairly.

I sincerely urge you to consider these options with an open mind. Trust in the support of your friends and relatives for a solution that brings peace, rather than relying solely on legal battles.

Looking forward to your thoughtful decision.

Warm regards,
[Your Name]

Letter to muppogam – mailan g chinnappan

Ramu, January 4, 2025

Dear Dr. Mailan G. Chinnappan,

Warm New Year wishes to you!

I am Ramu (57, Engineer and Entrepreneur from Chennai). I had the pleasure of meeting you at the “Vishnupuram Festival” last month. Inspired by your candid interview, I purchased your book Muppogam and have just finished reading it.

As a passionate reader, my preference has traditionally leaned towards non-fiction. However, I have also explored the works of Ashokamitran, TJ, Balakumaran, and others. Despite this, Muppogam offered me a refreshingly unique reading experience.

In my assessment, Muppogam may present a slight challenge for budding readers, particularly if they do not complete it in a single sitting, given its “enmeshed” narrative style, with the story traveling back and forth in time.

Drawing parallels from my reading experience, the novel reminded me of The God of Small Things by Arundhati Roy. Additionally, your narrative style brought to mind the storytelling approach of director Vetrimaran in films like Aadukalam and Vada Chennai.

While I thoroughly enjoyed your writing style, I feel compelled to reserve my final verdict until I read your Prabakaran’s Postmortem.

In the meantime, I seek your clarification on a few points:

Many characters in Muppogam—such as Revathi, Trimurthy’s murder, Kathiresan, Parimalam’s past, and the president’s family—seem to be left unresolved, their stories hanging without a definitive conclusion.

Was this intentional? Did you aim to craft an open-ended novel, allowing discerning readers to piece together the narrative as they see fit? Or was this approach meant to elevate the novel into the realm of literary fiction?

Reading Muppogam also vaguely reminded me of VS Naipaul’s Half a Life, which I read in 2000 as a budding reader. That novel explores the theme that life rarely offers perfect beginnings or endings. Instead, each of us is born into a world that has already undergone countless changes and will continue to evolve long after we are gone.

Was a similar philosophy your objective while writing Muppogam? Is that why many of the characters and storylines remain unresolved?

I would be delighted to hear your thoughts on these questions. Thank you, Doctor, and I look forward to staying in touch.

Sincerely,
Ramu
9884384425

Layman’s explanation and detailed calculation of Losses due to interruption of compounding

*Layman’s explanation and detailed calculation of Losses due to interrupt the compounding of money frequently:* – Ramu 2/1/2025

One of our senior managers in our company is so cautious and highly conservative in investments and thus he invests only in Bank Deposits – Fixed Deposits.

I suggested him to go for some safer Debt Instruments, so that he can gain 1 or 2% more returns than FD as “payment of taxes” can be postponed till he needs money.

He argued with me that both type (1) Taking interest every year and Reinvesting the same again and (2) Allowing it to cumulative for 10 years must fetch the equal final amount as one has to pay higher taxes for the (2) type.

Though I am conceptually sure, I have never calculated how much loss in % terms may accrue over a decade.

This is the first time I take it up as a challenge to explain in simple terms without using any complex formulas and that simple Layman’s explanation is in the following XL sheet.

Sincerely yours,
Ramu

Letter to Professor Palaniappan – Kasi Sambandhi

Ramu, Chennai, 31/12/2024

Dear Palaniappan Annan,

I am writing this letter based on the understanding I gathered from your advocate, Ms. Sridevi, who conveyed to me this evening that you have confidence in me.

As I shared with you earlier at your residence, I do not wish to take sides in favor of my brother Kasi, and I have already explained the reasons for this.

My humble request to you and Achi is to kindly consider being magnanimous regarding the 3 lakh cash part and help bring this stressful episode to a peaceful resolution.

Your decision to be generous in settling the 3 lakh amount would amount to just a month and a half of your salary. If I were in your place, I would not hesitate further, especially when family harmony and personal reputation are at stake.

Consider the benefits of expediting the divorce process from your son’s perspective:
In just six months, you could begin searching for a bride for your son without any lingering complications.

On the other hand, Kasi’s situation is far more complex. She needs to complete one year of studies, find a job, and repay her 30-lakh loan. Only after these hurdles will she be able to start looking for a groom for her daughter.

Dear Annan and Achi,

Once again, I humbly appeal to you to kindly be magnanimous regarding the 3 lakh cash part, along with all items listed, so that we can proceed with a mutual agreement. Please help us all move past this stressful chapter. I humbly request you to bring the happy ending with golden shakehands finishing to this episode.

Thanking you sincerely,
Ramu

Inspirational thoughts

*Food for Thought:* – Ramu

Isn’t it ironic that the only time we eagerly hope for a *”negative”* outcome—

….despite having paid few thousands for it—is when we’re waiting for medical test results, scans, or reports – may be Master Health Check reports or suspected critical illnesses?

(This rare gem of thought has occurred to me while collecting my Master Health Check-up reports.😛)

*Inspirational Thoughts:*
(Not my original) – Ramu – 14/12/2024

(1) Spend more time making the big decisions. Three really big decisions you make in your early life: (1) where you live (2) who you’re with and (3) what you do

(2) You have to say NO to everything and free up your time so you can solve the important problems.

(3) Value freedom above everything else. All kinds of freedom: freedom to do what you want, freedom from things you don’t want to do, freedom from your own emotions or things that may disturb your peace

*Inspirationaly yours,*
Ramu

Boxing Day @ Melbourne: A defining moment for Virat Kholi and Rohit Sharma in Test Cricket

*Boxing Day @ Melbourne: A Defining Moment for Virat Kohli and Rohit Sharma in Test Cricket:* – Ramu – 29/12/2024

The last four days have once again proved that no other sports, not even T20, can match the enduring allure of Test cricket.

India appeared on the brink of losing to Australia after the first day’s stumps, and the situation worsened with the collapse of the top order by the second day’s end. Yet, the depth of India’s batting lineup shone through, as Nitish Reddy’s century and Washington Sundar’s half-century guided India to a respectable total of 369 in the first innings.

Despite Jasprit Bumrah’s magical spell during Australia’s third innings, hopes of restricting them to under 150 runs were dashed as Australia’s tailenders, Pat Cummins and Nathan Lyon, wagged impressively.

One can only imagine the intense discussions in the Australian dressing room between the tea session and stumps on the fourth day. Any sensible captain and coach would have declared the innings with a 300+ lead, allowing India to face at least 30 minutes before day’s end. However, Australia hesitated, haunted by past experiences with India’s fifth-day performances.

For India, this is a pivotal moment. Senior players like Rohit Sharma and Virat Kohli must capitalize on Australia’s apprehension. While the match tilts in Australia’s favor, India must not play for a draw. Playing for a draw would almost certainly lead to a loss.

This is a rare opportunity for Virat Kohli to solidify his legacy. If he can stand patiently, score a century, and lead India to victory, he might surpass legends like Sachin Tendulkar and Brian Lara. Similarly, for Rohit Sharma, this could be a defining moment to establish himself as one of India’s greatest captains across all formats.

Let’s hope tomorrow brings glory to India.

— Ramu

20 களில் நம்மிடம் இருக்கும் நேர்மை… 50 களில் எங்கே எப்படி ஏன் தொலைந்து போனது?

*20 களில் நம்மிடம் இருக்கும் நேர்மை, அறம்…50 களில் ஏன் அல்லது எப்படி தொலைந்து போகிறது?:* – ராமு – 20/12/2024

நான் காலையில் அலுவலகத்தில் சாப்பிடும் பழக்கம் உடையவன். இன்று காலை என் மேஜையில் நல்ல “வெஜ் புலாவ்” நறுமணத்துடன் கூடிய டிபன்பாக்ஸ் சூடாக இருந்தது. ஏன், எப்படி என்று திகைப்புடன் விசாரித்த போது…..

(பிளாஷ் பேக்)
என்னுடைய முந்தைய “தென்காசி சுற்றுலா” பதிவில் எங்கள் பயண அனுபவங்கள் பற்றி குறிப்பிட்டு இருந்தேன்.

மற்ற சிறுதொழில் நிறுவனங்களின் சுற்றுலாக்கள் எப்படி என்று எனக்கு தெரியாது. நாங்கள் வாகன செலவு மற்றும் தங்கும் இடம் போன்ற பொதுவான தேவைகள் மட்டும் கம்பெனி மூலம் பொதுசெலவில் கவனித்துக் கொள்வோம். சாப்பாடு மற்றும் இதர செலவுகளுக்கு தாராளமாக இருக்கும் வகையில் தனித்தனியாக வங்கி கணக்கிற்கு அனுப்பிவிடுவோம்.

சைவமோ, அசைவம், இதர தேவைகள் அனைத்தும் அவர்களுக்கு பிடித்த குழுக்களுடன், சுதந்திரமாக அவர்கள் விரும்பிய இடங்களில் செலவு செய்து கொள்ளும் வகையில் இந்த ஏற்பாடு.

எங்களுடன் பயணித்த 3 பெண்களுக்கும் தங்குமிடம் தென்காசியில் எங்கள் அறைக்குப் பக்கத்திலேயே ஏற்பாடு செய்யப்பட்டு இருந்தபடியால் நாங்கள் 5 பேருமாக சாப்பிட, தேனீர் அருந்த என ஒன்றாக சென்றோம். அப்போது எங்கள் ஐவருக்குமான செலவுத் தொகையை நான் செலுத்திவிட்டேன்.

அந்த 3 பெண்களும் மிகவும் பிடிவாதமாக அவர்களுக்கான சாப்பாடு செலவிற்கான தொகையை ஹோட்டலிலேயே வாங்கிக் கொள்ளுமாறு வற்புறுத்தினர். நான் வாங்க மறுத்ததால் என் மனைவி நீ எங்களுக்கு ஒரு நாள் சாப்பாடு கொண்டுவா என்று சமாதானம் செய்தார்.

அவ்வாறாகக் கிடைத்த பரிசுதான் அந்த சூடான சுவையான “veg pulav with mushroom masala”.

ஹோட்டலிலேயே அவர்களின் நேர்மையைக் கண்டு ஆச்சிரியமாக கண்கள் கலங்கி என் 20களின் நினைவுகளை நோக்கி நான் செல்ல நேர்ந்தது.

எனக்கு திருமணமான புதிதில் என் மனைவி சம்மந்தப்பட்ட ஒரு திருமணத்திற்கு, என் மனைவி பிள்ளைப்பேரு காலத்தில் இருந்த படியால்,  நான் தனியாக செல்ல வேண்டியதாக இருந்தது.

என் மாமனார், அவருடைய நண்பர்களுடன் தொடர்வண்டியில் முன்பதிவு செய்து இருந்தபடியால் என்னை TTR யிடம் “அட்ஜஸ்ட்” செய்து கூட்டிக் கொண்டு போனார்.

நாங்கள்  திருமண அரங்கிற்கு வந்தபோது என் மாமனாரிடம் டிக்கெட்டிற்கான தொகையை நான் நீட்டிய போது அவர் என்னை குழப்பத்துடன் என்ன என்று நான் ஏதோ செய்யக்கூடாத தவறு ஒன்றை செய்துவிட்ட தொணியில், நான் என் அலுவலக பெண்களை நோக்கிய படி, அவர் என்னை நோக்கினார்.

இவ்வளவு நேர்மையான மாப்பிள்ளையா இவன் என்று கூட அன்று அவர் பெருமைப் பட்டிருக்கக் கூடும்.

(பிற்காலத்தில் என் மாமனாரிடம் இருந்து நான் அன்புடன் பெற்ற சில பல லகரங்கள், நேர்மையாக சில, தந்திரமாக சில என்று அது ஒரு தனிக்கதை. பிற்காலத்தில் எங்களுக்குள் சில முரண்பாடு ஏற்பட்ட போதெல்லாம் கூட “அவனா இவன்” என்று கூட நினைத்து இருக்கக்கூடும்.)

பலர் நம் இருபதுகளில் நம் வீட்டிற்கு வரும் நண்பர்களிடம் நம் பெற்றோர்கள் சாதி பற்றி கேட்கும் போது பெற்றோர் மீது சினம் கொள்ளும் நாம், வேலை செய்யும் பெண்மணிக்கு சற்று தரக்குறைவான காபி, தேநீர் தருவதை கண்டிக்கும் நாம், சாதி, மதம், அந்தஸ்து பார்க்காமல் எல்லோருடனும் சகஜமாக பழகும் நாம், சாதி, மதம் தாண்டி காதலித்து திருமணம் செய்யும் சக நண்பர்களுக்கு உறுதுணையாக இருக்கும் அதே நாம் தாம்,  நாம் நம் 50 களில் பெற்றோர் ஆனவுடன், நம் 20 களில் எதெற்கெல்லாம் அறச்சீற்றம் கொண்டோமோ, நம் பெற்றோர்கள் தவறு என்று அவர்களிடமே வாதாடினோமோ அந்த அனைத்து தவறுகளையும் ஒன்று விடாமல் நாம் பெற்றோர் ஆன பிறகு, ஒவொருவரின் சாதி என்ன, அவர் முதலாளி தானே – செலவு செய்தால் என்ன என்று “அப்படி இருந்த நாம் இப்படி மாறிவிடுகிறோம்.”

நம்முடைய 20 வயது வெகுளியான, கள்ளம் கபடம் இல்லாத போட்டோவை 50 டன் ஒப்பீடு செய்யும் போது நம் உருவம் சற்றே அகலமாகி, தோல் சுருக்கமாகி, முகம் களை இழந்து காணப்படுவது வயதாவதால் மட்டுமல்ல.

“ஆண்டு ஒன்று போனால் வயது ஒன்று” மட்டும் ஆவதில்லை. ஒவ்வொரு ஆண்டும் நம் தந்திரங்களின் அளவும் கூடிக் கொண்டே போவதும் நம் களை இழந்த உருவத்திற்கு அடையாளம்.

மகாத்மா காந்தியின் வார்த்தையில் சொல்வதென்றால், *”இந்த பிரபஞ்சம் அனைவருக்கும் தேவையான (NEED) எல்லா வளங்களையும் கொண்டிருக்கிறது. ஆனால் அனைவரின் பேராசையை பூர்த்தி செய்து கொள்ளும் அளவிற்கான வளங்களைக் கொண்டிருக்கவில்லை.”*

Greed includes not only money, but also status bias, ego, position, religious bias, caste bias, racial bias, hoarding all resources by using power, immorality, etc…
பல நிகழ்வுகளை உற்று நோக்கும் போது 50 கள் 20 களுக்கு தந்திரங்களைத் தான் கற்றுக்கொடுக்கிறோம்.

50 கள் 20 களுக்கு கற்றுக்கொடுக்கும் நிலையில் 20 கள் இல்லை. 50கள் 20 களிடம் இருந்து கற்றுக்கொள்ளும் நிலையில் இருக்கிறோம் என்பதை புரிந்து கொண்டால் நல்ல வளமான, அமைதியான, ஆரோக்கியமான வாழ்வும் பொன்னான உலகம் வாய்க்கப் பெறும்.

இப்படிக்கு,
தந்திரங்களில் இருந்து மீள விரும்பும் உங்கள் ராமு