Friday, November 19, 2010

Back to the Winter days..

"Smiling by the long dry paths
Leaves and buds are bright again
Waiting for the warmest hug
From the chillest dew drop grain!!
Fauna too is set to bid
Welcome to the foggy days
Set with wish and hopes all new
In their variant wonder ways.."

And yes, the winter days are back, though a bit late this year. The season of paparazzi’s delight, Winter is back again with nature’s most wonderful views. The beautiful sights of the snowy Siberian cranes sweeping the blue sky while migrating to the east earth are back again to take away the hearts of squillions of nature lovers like me.
The season of gardening too is here. The most vivid flowers are also all smiles in the fecund lands wherein the cool breeze and dew drops serve as the plant food throughout the season.
When the thin rays of the early winter sun transit through the prismatic dew drops, the onlookers spontaneously turn into natural poets. With fog suspended along the roads, the season provides us with a beautiful cloudy view.
High on the tree branches the birds nestling in their cozy husky homes take a pleasant sunbath throughout the day. The hill stations would become the hotspots for tourists with a marked snowfall all over. 
Last, but never the least, the season of love is here. The bright red roses in the rose gardens are waiting hard to capture their beauty and create an aroma of love for the lovers of all ages.
The time is to fuel the hearth and feel the snugness at our places. It’s time now to get into the thick attires. Let’s now take a dip into the season of hot beverages. Let all of us welcome the wonderful winter season with a positive gesture of love, hope, hard work and sincerity.   

Wednesday, November 3, 2010

The Festival of Lights

I recently developed a huge respect for this friend of mine, who's been showing a remarkable concern for our mother earth through her slow but steady endeavor to battle Global Warming.   

Turning off lights before leaving a room, buying things with eco-friendly product scan and returning the polythene bags  to the shopkeepers while carrying a personal handbag are the few of the many little things that she follows to bag the courage to stare hard at Global Warming.
Every birthday she plants a sapling in her locality and takes a deep breath of freshness and satisfaction as she passes by the grown-up trees. I felt that if there exits some nature God looking at her lavish attitude towards Him, then she in her coming days would never be enlisted in the suffering tolls of Global Warming.

But along with her over-generous character she also carries with herself a neglected side that I would like to torch upon.

Out of 365, she spends her 364 days not only in bundling love and care for nature, but also bundling stacks of notes that would blast away the prior bundle into flames. This is one dark side which she 'celebrates' on that day with the bursting crackers and smokes all over.

Now if my Indian friends who are reading this are not the patients carrying the "zero IQ virus", then by now they would have easily made out which day I am referring to. Yes, the 365th day of the year that I am talking about is "Diwali".

"Diwali", commonly referred to as a festival of "lights" is a "dark" day for me and many others who think like me. Just like my friend who I referred to earlier, there are many other so called 'eco-buddies' who show their concern only on the other days. But what they don't realise is that amidst their loud and pollution-loaded celebration, they gift their mother earth an incurable disease called "Global Warming".
I feel I need not ink down further lines to strengthen my point. I am not against celebration, as I too love to be a part of the celebration party. But I am a nature-lover at heart too. Celebration shouldn't be manifested in such a voracious form. Light should be in each one of us, in each of our lives.

My friend who earned her mention in the beginning of this article could have become an epitome of an eco-buddy figure but for her one day long nature-tarnishing activity that striked her name off the list.

I won't say to stop bursting crackers as I know no one would by just reading an article like this.
Instead, I would suggest to use the less harmful and less smoke & sound producing ones.

Money is all ours. It's our choice whether to earn or burn our fortune. Hence this is my humble request to my readers to put the selfish and destructive mood to a side and think about the atmosphere which is the only life-supporting layer of the universe. 

Now if my readers have developed a taste for my peaceful curry, I owe a promise from them to make this Diwali a better festival proving its tag- 'A festival of lights'.