Thursday, April 30, 2015

Love after Love

The Zen teacher Thich Nhat Hanh has written beautifully about why learning to love others begins with learning to love ourselves; a sentiment that the cynic might dismiss as rhetoric or preaching of how-to books......... but one which more considered reflection reveals to be deeply truthful and deeply uncomfortable.

Love after Love is a poem by Derek Walcott, a 1992 Nobel for Lit; a poetic ode to the same sentiment, on being at home in ourselves.......

The time will come
when, with elation,
you will greet yourself arriving
at your own door, in your own mirror,
and each will smile at the other's welcome,
and say, sit here. Eat.
You will love again the stranger who was your self.
Give wine. Give bread. Give back your heart
to itself, to the stranger who has loved you
all your life, whom you ignored
for another, who knows you by heart.
Take down the love letters from the bookshelf,
the photographs, the desperate notes,
peel your own image from the mirror.
Sit. Feast on your life.


Monday, April 27, 2015

To my dad.....

Well, this is coming out of my dad’s visit with me. It was just him and me for a few days, and I guess it gave me an opportunity to all over again acknowledge the depth of the relationship and what it’s meant to me. And yes, in also recognizing his gene handover ...... in the wonderful things....as also in the not necessarily so wonderful things :)

A couple of things that just stayed.....he's sitting in the balcony and says: you can always hear birds here...  it was interesting, because since then I haven't stopped hearing them and to think he could still direct me to something as interesting...

Then he calls an old friend of his and says 'come and spend the day with me'. A friend from college, that's like  sixty years back. What struck is the authenticity and depth, not just a catch up over coffee. I could so identify..... especially when it goes with an 'Asocial tag' that both of us carry :)



Kudos to this achievement !!

And while I'm at it,  I thought I'd also put out here some things I’d like to say to you, which I may or may not have said all these years. And just so I don't get carried away, I'm picking ten which mean much to me and the learning of which I'm grateful for:

1. Your ability to go after what you wanted irrespective of whether or not it made sense to the world.
2. Your trust and faith in life
3 Your courage to take big decision even against great odds
4. Your knowledge on just about anything....it made life so interesting
5. Your ability to laugh .........and to cry
6. Your making friends and keeping it genuine, and the priority you gave it in life
7. Your passion for trains, animals, books, travel .....that's still so alive
8. Your standing by your principles, the fights right into court so many times
9. Your sheer intelligence and capacity to learn .....like when that lawyer in high court told me.... your father knows more law than most of the lawyers here...amazing
10. Your ability to be happy and positive

I wonder for how many others I could write a list like this in less than a minute flat…..trust me there’s not too many….and what’s more I had to condense it down to ten. You are special.

And on a more personal level, your constant push to make me think, only the intensity of the questions changed over the years I guess...or maybe even not :) 

1) Why does a glass frost outside?
2) Why does the sun move across the horizon (not sky)?
3) Which is the nearest star?
4) Why do droplets of water particles flow towards other drops?
5) Would you want to be born again?

and on and on...even today

and through that you taught me the greatest gift of all......curiosity and wonder

eternally thankful, as I think I live a more enhanced life for it

Ronk zonk..... Am Cadaam 

Friday, April 24, 2015

Ādi Shankara - Advaita Vedanta

Today's the eve of Ādi Shankarā's birthday. He dates 788 AD to 820 AD.....the dates feel weird to even write. It's like the mind can't immediately calculate how long ago that was.

Ādi Shankarācharya ...even as I say it, I feel the awe.......of Advaita, the concept, the philosophy, him. It's Ādi Shankarācharya who gave us the essence of the core teachings of Vedanta, Non Dualism or Advaita as we know it today. His works form the foundation of Advaita. He has written several commentaries on the Upanishads, the Brahmasūtras and the Bhagavadgita. In fact he is said to have written 300 commentaries, and all within the 32 years of his short life. The most important of Shankarācharya's works are his commentaries on the Brahmasutras, the Brahmasūtrabhāshya considered the core of Shankara's perspective on Advaita, and Bhaja Govindam, a poem written in praise of Govinda or Lord Krishna, a Sanskrit poem that forms the center of the Bhakti movement and is said to epitomize the Advaita Vedanta philosophy. It is believed that he wrote all these treatises before the age of sixteen.

At a personal level, he was huge influence on my own belief system. It's through him that I started my journey of Atheism..... Spiritualism...all that deep stuff. Advaita is still core to my belief system.

When I did Advaita in college, I was so influenced by his writings, that I took a private course in Sanskrit so I could read the Brahmasūtrabhāshya in Sanskrit. I remember sitting on my terrace late at night learning the Bhaja Govindam by rote. Sounds nuts, but I also made a trip to Kāladi, his birthplace in Kerala because I just had this intense need to connect. Yes, it ran that deep. So today, I just had to pay tribute. Though one aspect of it is puzzling. No one is sure of his time of existence, forget the year, not even the century is agreed upon. Some say 788 AD, while others believe it is 509 BC and some even 44 BC, so I wonder where a date came from :)


Kāladi - Ādi Shankarācharya's birthplace

Vedanta has been interpreted in three major ways, Dvaita, Vishishta Advaita and Advaita. They center around the concept of Brahman (the ultimate reality) and Atman (the Individual self)

Dvaita, founded by Madhavacharya, was a strong religious system which believes in the dichotomy of the creator and the created; God and Humanity as distinct and unrelated entities. Brahman here is the purely personal omniscient god. Vishnu, as an avatar, controls the world and our duty is to worship him. Dualistic philosophy is simple and clear. There is you and there is god, he is superior to you, and you surrender to him.

There was then the Vishishta Advaita of Ramanuja, which still talks of two entities, but where the world is not separate from Brahman, it is formed as part of it. Brahman is still omniscient and has created the world out of himself. The best analogy to describe this is the sea and the waves.The sea is Brahman and the waves are the world. Practice is the same, Vishnu, or his avatars, is God, man worships him and he will grant deliverance.

Advaita on the other hand is non dualism ( a dvaita)...complete Monism. Brahmn and the Ātman are the same, its all One. The analogy used is that of a rope (reality) and a snake (maya). We see the rope think its a snake, the fear, the reaction, the belief ...its all real , but its Maya. Once we know its a rope we no longer see the snake in it, and we see the rope for what it is, a rope. 

The devotional element of Advaita, which is Isvara, is a concept of God as a means to connect to the ultimate reality; a tool used by a finite mind in its effort to grasp the infinite concept of Brahmn. The Brahman of Advaita is an impersonal entity, and the practice of religion is an intellectual practice, a religion of the mind. Bhaja Govindam says that best. A long long poem. Alternatively, is the mahakavya that says it with equal eloquence....Aham Brahmā Smi. 

Thursday, April 23, 2015

We're all terrible at understanding each other



It's a book excerpt, and pretty long. It's quirky and interesting, so I'd say a worthwhile read, atleast the excerpt. :)

Whatever you may have heard to the contrary, Chip Wilson is not an idiot. The founder and former CEO and Chairman of Lululemon Atheltica is, in point of fact, a highly successful entrepreneur, philanthropist, innovator, and self-made billionaire. Idiots are very rarely any of those things.

But a 2013 Bloomberg TV interview with him and his wife Shannon, Lululemon’s original athletic wear designer, was not one of his finest moments. When he was asked about reports of customers complaining about “pilling” in the company’s newest line of high-end yoga pants, he defensively replied that “some women’s bodies just actually don’t work” for yoga pants, and that the problem was “really about the rubbing through the thighs, how much pressure is there.” Translation: If your fat thighs are ruining your pricey Lululemon yoga pants, that’s your problem. Maybe my pants are not for you. (Incidentally, if you watch the video, you will see Shannon Wilson shoot him a look at that moment that would have surely turned him to stone had he noticed it, which he did not.)

It was, of course, horribly offensive – but was it Chip Wilson’s intention to be offensive? Did he even think what he said was offensive? In a video apology he later issued before stepping down as Lululemon’s Chairman, Wilson said that he was “sad for the repercussions of my actions” and that he “accepted responsibility,” that ubiquitous post-disaster PR phrase that everyone repeats but no one ever seems to mean. But nowhere did he actually acknowledge that there was anything wrong with what he had said, or that he personally had been wrong to say it.

I’m going to go out on a limb and suggest that Chip Wilson did not intend, with those poorly chosen words, to insult and alienate his loyal customer base. (Or to seriously irritate his wife.) It just doesn’t make sense to assume otherwise. So, if that wasn’t his intention, and if he’s not an idiot (self-made billionaire, people), then what happened?

The uncomfortable truth is that most of us don’t come across the way we intend. We can’t see ourselves truly objectively, and neither can anyone else. Human beings have a strong tendency to distort other people’s feedback to fit their own views. We know this intellectually, and yet we rarely seem to recognize it as it’s happening.

That can cause you big problems in your personal and professional life.  If you have ever felt yourself underestimated or misjudged, if you have stepped on toes without meaning to and been called to task for it, if you have wanted to cry out “That’s not fair!” when false and hurtful assumptions have been made about you, I’m here to tell you that you are right. The way we see one another is far from fair. In fact, much of this process of perceiving other people isn’t even rational. It is biased, incomplete, and inflexible. It is also largely (but not entirely) automatic.

And yet no one is entirely unknowable either. In fact, some of us are actually easier to understand than others. These people seem to express themselves in ways that allow others to perceive them more accurately. Psychologists refer to this as being more or less “judgeable” .What actually makes someone more judgeable? Funder has argued that in order for people to be accurate in their assessments of someone else, four things need to happen. The target must (1) make information available and (2) make sure that information is relevant. Then, the perceiver must (3) detect, or pay attention to that information and (4) use it correctly.

Let’s focus for now on the parts that are in the your (i.e., the target’s) control. To be judgeable, you are going to need to make information about yourself available to others, and it should provide evidence of the particular qualities you are trying to convey. (In other words, just knowing that you graduated at the top of your class at Harvard tells me nothing at all about how personable, trustworthy, creative, or resilient you are). So if you are a very shy and reserved person, who reveals next to nothing about your thoughts and feelings to the people around you, then they will know very little about you – aside from the fact that you are shy and reserved, obviously. The danger there is that people will generally fill in the blanks themselves, imagining a whole personality profile for you that may or may not – probably not – be accurate.

Manipulative people can use this dynamic to their advantage. For instance, I had an office mate in graduate school who was famous for his reserve in romantic relationships. He was a completely closed book. I once asked him if this caused problems for him with the women in his life, and he told me, with remarkable candor, that he did it intentionally – he had found that women would usually interpret his silences in positive ways. (He’s so mysterious. He’s a deep thinker. Maybe he’s been hurt before – I’ll bet he’s really sensitive…) The personality they would invent for him, he said, was in fact much better than his actual personality. As a psychologist, I found this fascinating. As a single woman, on the other hand, I found it more than a little terrifying.

Ignoring my former office mate for the moment, it is definitely better to be judgeable – to have other people read you easily and accurately. Research consistently shows that more judgeable people are psychologically better adjusted – they are happier; are more satisfied with their personal and professional lives; have more lasting, positive relationships; and have a greater sense of purpose. They feel they are able to live more authentically and are more confident in their self-knowledge. This makes a lot of sense. If people are seeing you the way you see yourself, then you aren’t getting all the unsettling, self-doubt-inducing feedback that the chronically misunderstood have to endure. Life is simply easier and more rewarding when people “get you,” and provide you with the opportunities and support that are a good fit for you.

But surely someone who knows you firsthand will see the real you – the self that you see, right? To answer that question, researchers asked nearly 400 college roommates to describe their own personality along with their roommate’s, to see if actually knowing each other, along with time spent living together, would have an impact on perception. Specifically, they wanted to see if over time, your roommate was more likely to begin to see you the way you see yourself. The answer was yes: so long as you have lived together for a minimum of nine months. It takes that long for perceptions to even begin to get in sync. And even then, the correlations between how college students saw themselves and how their roommates saw them were surprisingly low, in the .2-.5 range (remember, 1 would be a perfect correlation).

What about people who really know each other – like married couples? They share a life together, experience the same ups and downs, the same joys and worries, and (usually) sleep in the same bed. Surely, with all that intimate knowledge of you, your husband or wife must see you the way you see yourself, right?

Alas. There are, in fact, significant differences in perception among spouses, too. Interestingly, these differences are also highly predictable. These biases were nicely illustrated in a study of forty-four married couples, roughly half of whom were currently in marriage counseling. Those in counseling (or, as the researchers referred to them, the “distressed” group) were more likely to have a negative bias – they saw their partner in a far less flattering light than the partner did and tended to hold the partner more personally responsible for any bad behaviors they engaged in. So while Larry may see himself as a fairly conscientious guy who occasionally forgets to take the garbage out (who doesn’t?), his wife, Susan, sees him as irresponsible and inconsiderate, leaving her (once again) to pick up the slack.

The couples who were not in counseling — the “nondistressed” group — tended to have a positive bias, and were more forgiving. So when Bob forgets to take out the garbage, Mary sees him as merely a bit absent-minded, but really that’s understandable given how hard Bob has been working, and really, brilliant people are often a little absent-minded, aren’t they?

Now, maybe Susan is right and Mary is being a fool. I’m not saying that one of these biases is right and the other is wrong – in fact, any bias is by definition sometimes wrong. (On the other hand, a negative bias in a marriage is apparently quite likely to land you in marriage counseling… so that’s food for thought.) But taken together, it’s easy to see why misunderstandings between friends and lovers are so common, and why our relationships – the keys to our ultimate success and happiness – can be so stressful.

Now you may be asking yourself, if even married couples can’t understand each other – or even roommates, or leaders with teams of communications professionals, don’t come across the way they intend to – what hope do I have of ever getting my boss to see my potential, or my colleague to see how hard I work?

The first step is to understand how little we actually pay attention to each other, and how much we rely on assumptions.

In the 1980’s, psychologists Susan Fiske and Shelly Taylor were looking for a way to describe what research was showing to be a ubiquitous tendency among humans: to think only as much as they feel they need to, and no more. And so the metaphor of the cognitive miser was born, with each of us an Ebenezer Scrooge – except instead of sitting on piles of money and refusing to pay for an extra lump of coal to keep the house warm, we sit on reserves of mental energy and processing capacity, unwilling to spend much of it unless we really have to. We rely on simple, efficient thought processes to get the job done – not so much out of laziness (though there is some of that, too), but out of necessity. There is just too much going on, too much to notice, understand, and act on for us to give every individual and every occurrence our undivided, unbiased attention.

Human thought, like every other complex process, is subject to the speed-versus-accuracy trade-off. Go fast, and you make mistakes. Be thorough and diligent, and you take an eternity. We are, as Fiske later called us, motivated tacticians – strategically choosing ease and speed, or effort and accuracy, depending on our motivation. Most of the time, just the “gist” will do, so we choose the speed.

The cognitive miser’s favorite shortcut tools are heuristics and assumptions. Heuristics are rules of thumb like “Things that come to mind easily happen more frequently.” In other words, if I ask you “Does your Uncle Phil lose his temper a lot?” and you can remember a lot of times when your Uncle Phil lost his temper, then you will probably conclude that yes, Phil loses his temper quite often. But if you have a hard time recalling such an instance, you would conclude that Phil is gentle like a lamb. Like most rules-of-thumb, this heuristic will steer you toward the right answer much of the time. But it can also lead you astray.

Quick – which is more common, getting struck by lightening or getting bitten by a shark? Most people think shark bites are more frequent, when in fact roughly 5,000 people in the U.S. are struck by lightening each year, compared to only ten to fifteen who are attacked by sharks. (On the National Geographic Shark Week website, I also learned the fun fact that in 1996, only thirteen people were injured by sharks, while 43,000 were injured by toilets, and 2,600 by room fresheners.)

Why do we think sharks are a much bigger source of danger than lightening strikes and toilets and room fresheners? Because whenever someone is bitten by a shark, you hear about it on the news. There’s something so primally terrifying about shark attacks (thank you, Steven Spielberg) that it makes for a great infotainment story. When is the last time you saw a story about a lightening victim on the news, or a guy who fell and hit his head on the toilet lid, or … I’m honestly not sure how you get injured by a room freshener, but you see my point.

Assumptions, the cognitive miser’s other favorite shortcut, come in many varieties, too. They guide what the perceiver sees, how that information is interpreted, and how it is remembered – forming an integral part of his or her perception of you. There are some assumptions so universal and automatic that you can count on other people making them about you (and you can count on people to have no idea that they are doing it):
You are who they expect you to be, in light of their past experience with you.
The first impression you give is the “right” one, and it shapes how everything else about you is perceived.
You are like the other members of groups to which you appear to belong.
If you have a very positive trait — if you are smart, beautiful, funny, kind, and so forth — you are likely to have other positive traits.
You share the opinions, feelings, and foibles of the perceiver, but not necessarily his or her ethical standards and abilities.

So you’re never really starting from scratch with another person, even when you are meeting them for the first time. The perceiver’s brain is rapidly filling in details about you – many before you have even spoken a word. Knowing this gives you a sense of what you’ve got going for you and what you might be up against. And the more you can know in advance about your perceiver’s likes, dislikes, strengths, and weaknesses, the better equipped you will be to anticipate what’s being projected onto you.

You don’t have to take all of this passively. For example, you can deliberately emphasize your group memberships or your good qualities, to benefit from positive stereotypes and halo effects. You can take pains to make the best possible impression right out of the gate, to use the primacy effect to your maximum advantage. You can make your opinions and values explicitly known. When you have made the wrong impression, or have changed in ways you want the people who know you to notice,you can use strategies that will get them to update their beliefs about you. But however you choose to use the information, it’s essential to start by knowing where you probably stand.

Wednesday, April 22, 2015

Gardner's Theory of Multiple Intelligences




Intelligence is typically defined as the ability to learn or understand things or to deal with new or difficult situations. IQ tests which are globally accepted as the standard for testing intelligence are gradually being seen as limited in their reach. IQ tests would be good for those who are good with words and logic, but not necessarily so for those who don't have words and logic as their strong skills, and are yet really good at what they do. Here, traditional IQ scores do not seem to be reflecting  true intelligence.

The study of intelligence began in Paris in the late 1890s and was then readily accepted worldwide. Schools began testing children and adopting curricula that would help students improve their IQs. Getting into the right college or university is still often dependent on IQ, and on tests like the SAT and GMAT that are derived from IQ tests.

In the 1970s, Howard Gardner, a professor of education at Harvard University, started questioning the traditional definition of intelligence on which such tests were based. He found that people had many other gifts and talents that weren't necessarily reflected in the traditional ideals of intelligence. In 1983, Gardner published the book "Frames of Mind," which outlined seven different types of intelligence. Ten years later, he added an eighth type. This multiple intelligences (MI) theory became a popular model for understanding the many ways in which human intelligence exists.

The multiple intelligences theory claims that all humans have eight intelligences, to a lesser or greater extent, and that we each have a different intelligence profile. This profile is based on our genetics and our experiences, and it makes us unique from others. The intelligences are as follows:

Linguistic intelligence – This is the ability to use spoken and written language effectively to express yourself. Lawyers, writers, and speakers tend to have high linguistic intelligence.
Logical-mathematical intelligence – This is the ability to analyze problems logically, work effectively with mathematical operations, and investigate issues using the scientific method. 
Musical intelligence – This is the ability to perform, compose, and appreciate musical patterns, including changes in pitch, tone, and rhythm. Successful musicians, composers, and people involved in music production have high levels of musical intelligence.
Bodily-kinesthetic intelligence – This is the ability to use the body for expression. People high in this intelligence use their physical coordination to master problems. Professional dancers and athletes are good examples of this.
Spatial intelligence – This is the ability to recognize, use, and interpret images and patterns and to reproduce objects in three dimensions. Successful architects, sculptors and designers are likely to have high spatial intelligence.
Interpersonal intelligence – This is the ability to understand people's intentions, motivations, and desires. This intelligence allows individuals to work well with others. Professions like therapy, teaching, and sales attract individuals with high interpersonal intelligence.
Intrapersonal intelligence – This is the ability to understand yourself, and to interpret and appreciate your own feelings and motivations. Therapists, actors, caregivers, and writers are all people who can bring high levels of personal awareness to their work.
Naturalist intelligence – This is the ability to recognize and appreciate our relationship with the natural world. Astronomers, biologists, and zoologists are examples of professions with a high level of naturalist intelligence. 

Spiritual and Existential (asking the big questions) intelligence are two other areas that have been proposed, but these haven't been confirmed as "official" intelligence types.

Howard Gardner's theory of multiple intelligences has created a new understanding of intelligence. It also emphasizes the importance of understanding what intelligence really is, and it's forced us to question the way we perceive intelligence.

And these studies are now paving the way to question our entire educational paradigm. The way we test ability, the efficacy of the learning system, the correlation of academic success to career growth and further onto happiness and achieving life's objectives.

People may instinctively known this to be true, but the meaning and aspiration of intelligence has become so deep rooted and conditioned that it now walks rigid paths, and those that break through get called outliers. The norm is what potentially needs to change.....we need more (acceptance of) Howard Gardners and Ken Robinsons.

Tuesday, April 21, 2015

Another SELCO Incubatee - Dev Kishore Soraisam

Dev's story is another differently fascinating story. A lanky, carefree, longhaired youngster, you’d never associate with the serious hard work of entrepreneurship with a committed social objective.

He passed out of  college in Bangalore a couple of years back, and like he was telling me the other day with this most mischievous smile.....'I was an outstanding student.....you know out of the class all day long kinds?.  College was all about bunking, growing hair, catching movies, pubs, girls, and all of that............soon college was done and it was time to go back home to Manipur as I was the only son and was expected back'.

That’s when, he said, he really saw the contrast to Bangalore and how bad the energy situation in his state was and recollected having heard of Selco.  He researched, got in touch, proved his intention, and thus started his brilliant growth story of an enterprise and an entrepreneur of the unlikeliest kind.

Over the last two years he's proved a lot of biases wrong :)

Dev on the extreme left, the long haired one

And what’s more, he is working in the tough and complex terrain of the North Eastern State of Manipur. Apparently, that small state has 31 languages.......one small state and thirty one different languages! Inspite of being born into the diversity that is India, I was myself taken aback that one state could have so many different languages. After all we know Karnataka has Kannada, AP has Telugu, Tamilnadu Tamil and so on right?

And apparently the factions and communal differences are so extensive, that he cannot sell in an area of another community. He first needs to scout for an alliance, hire someone from that local community and only then do business there. There’s so much insurgency and infighting that everything is viewed with suspicion, and what's worse, the police have the right to shoot at sight. So, when he’s hiring he needs to make sure none of them are aligned to any particular faction as it otherwise puts him also under the radar. 

Then the banking system is so under developed that enabling end user finance is extremely challenging. We have colleagues from Selco who have travelled to Manipur on regular basis to enable Dev along his journey, and in the two years of his existence he has shown great promise. An entrepreneur of the true jugad kind :)

Dev's team
Mangaal Sustainable Solutions Private Limited , that's what his company is called.

Some of his achievements to date:

- Provided reliable lighting solution to about 200 households through solar home lighting systems
- Supplementary lighting solution through portable solar lamps to more than a 1000 households.
- Increasing income in about 60 rural households through extra working hours because of solar home lighting systems.
- 3 Solar powered sewing machines piloted, household income multiplied. 
- Solar solution for a TB clinic in Yangon, Myanmar for a TB Diagnostic machine because of which patients are being given test results in just 2 hours as compared to 3 days earlier.
- Supplementing the income of 6 local women ‘business associates’ of Mangaal.


Sangeeta, Ima Leimarel Sidabi Weavers' Co-Operative Society


Sangeeta, weaving under Solar Light, and her words:

"After getting solar lighting system installed at our weaving centre, we can now work more number of hours and whenever we want to, unlike before, when we had to plan our working hours around the load sheddings.

Because of this, our income has also doubled. The society used to earn around Rs 15000 a month. Now, we earn Rs 30000. Very happy with the solar light" 

Sunday, April 19, 2015

The Journey

A poem by English Poet and Philosopher David Whyte:

THE JOURNEY

Above the mountains

the geese turn into

the light again

Painting their

black silhouettes

on an open sky.

Sometimes everything

has to be

inscribed across

the heavens

so you can find

the one line

already written

inside you.

Sometimes it takes

a great sky

to find that

first, bright

and indescribable

wedge of freedom

in your own heart.

Sometimes with

the bones of the black

sticks left when the fire

has gone out

someone has written

something new

in the ashes of your life.

You are not leaving.

Even as the light fades quickly now,

you are arriving.



A poem he apparently wrote for a friend undertaking the immensely harrowing yet hopeful act of leaving a wounding relationship and rewriting what was once a shared future into a solitary turn toward the greater possibilities of the unknown.

I've never really been too much into poetry, but this one was like an immediate connect. And I'm now wondering if it takes a lot of empty mind space to be able to understand poetry......maybe yes, maybe to me as I obviously took really long getting there,..........anyways, whatever it is, there's no taking away the simplicity and depth of  'The Journey'.

Saturday, April 18, 2015

A Perspective


A friend sent this to me a while ago., saying it reminded her of me. Guess I could tell why....... There's a lot of stuff in there that I do identify with and consciously try to live by...... keeping the exceptions also as a conscious choice.  Anyways, I thought it was well articulated too. I was like, well Meryl Streep is not just a great actress, she's so sorted as well.

Later I learnt that this was originally written by José Micard Teixeira, a Portuguese author, but a blogger put it on her blog as Meryl Streeps words, and it got controversial and stuff. Doesn't matter I guess. The quote is still powerful, and a pretty face only adds to it, huh ? Whatever, it's good stuff..

Thursday, April 16, 2015

Susmita Bhattacharjee - A Selco Incubatee

Susmita in the center
Susmita’s talk really touched one and all in the room. She started with "Until I was eight, I lived without electricity. And the strongest memory I carry of the time is of the fear of going to the toilet in the dark. It was away from the house as toilets in villages used to be (and to a large extent still are), and we used to carry a small kerosene lamp, which we couldn’t take inside the toilet as the water could put it out. So we had to leave the lamp outside and the only light was what came in through the bamboo shafts that the bathroom was made of. And it was an Indian style toilet, which you felt you could even fall into, or from which snakes and scorpions could come out, and that is a fear that was so deep, I have not forgotten it to this day. And I think it’s what made me come back to India" 

From there, she went on to complete her education, right upto a PhD in Germany, living in Amsterdam, Canada, and the US for 17 years. Until, and one fine day it struck her that there are still children who must be experiencing the same fear, and that was the defining moment of her decision. She decided to quit corporate, quit the American dream and come back to India. Come back and do something for those she could. She started to research online, and that's what led her to Selco. 

She also sat with the map of India to figure out which State she’d come back to, and she picked Madhya Pradesh.  Sixty percent of the state does not have proper access to electricity. She works in the Narmada Valley region which also has the dubious distinction of the lowest female literacy in India.

She started a venture called Pushan Renewable Energy

This was three years back and it’s been one big uphill task since then. She realizes the real tough challenge is not as much in selling the product as much as it is in letting people understand the need and benefit. For these low-income rural communities living in remote parts of the state electricity is not a necessity since they have lived generations in entire darkness.

She found that one motivating factor that worked best was TV.  Light was secondary. And after a few such sales, there was this one woman who came and asked her if it was possible to have light in the kitchen, and she told susmita not to tell her husband that she’d asked. It was like the woman's needs not only didn't matter, they weren't even to be acknowledged.  After that incident, Susmita makes sure she gets a light installed in the kitchen whichever household she electrifies. 

She is also having a really tough time building a team as nobody wants to work in such tough terrain, and the locals were just not working out. She had so many bad experiences with the hiring she did, that she says she’s gone through a personal crisis of sorts wondering where her judgment was going wrong. But in and through all that she has stuck it out.

Over the last two years, the impact she's achieved:

· 500 women have light in their kitchen
· 650 girls and boys getting to study at home
· 25 local businesses like poultry and dairy now work with solar power.
· 1500 children learning computers at solar powered schools.
· 5 local entrepreneurs trained with a new skill set
· 2  hamlets with 50 households have light for the first time


Tulsi Bai told her 'It’s so much fun to cook in the evening since we installed solar power '

Susmita, a real kudos to your grit and commitment !! 

Sustainable Investments

The week has been a lot of conferences and workshops.

Last week was the Sankalp Global Summit 2015, at Delhi.A huge event that brought together over a thousand people, on a meet called 'Fueling the Innovation Economy'. 

Last two days was our own Sustainable Investment Workshop at Bangalore. Selco brought together Investors, Practitioners and some Government Banking Sector for discussions on Sustainable Investments. A small cohesive group of around forty passionate and committed individuals from varying walks of life, come together with a common social objective. Inspite of some widely differing opinions on the how of things, the positive energy in the room was palpable and I felt a deep sense of glad to belong. 

Just so I don't get carried away into the abstract, as I'm so wont to do, I'll cover some disconnected specifics. One statement from Richenda, executive director United Nations Foundation says a lot 'Í wish I could take SELCO and put it in Africa'. And now, that’s on the agenda too.

The week gave me my first macro level peeps into the world of social enterprise and social objectives, and it was extremely informative and enlightening, so to say. 

It’s almost like this huge gap of poverty alleviation that’s actually a government mandate, pretty much unfulfilled, the bane of the gap between policy and implementation; while the percentage of the poor has gone down over the years, in actual numbers its higher. 400 million with no access to electricity is one such statistic. We are so protected that we don't even see it today. What we see may at best be the working class, the maids, the drivers. That is not even classified as poor anymore. Beyond that is the poor, the very poor and the abject poor. This is a large large segment being addressed by private partnerships and enterprise, to the extent possible.

It’s such a large landscape that I don’t know where to begin.

It’s like what Harish loves to say ‘Google created the best possible search engine, because the internet existed. We need to create not just the product but the entire internet.’ Meaning to say, the eco system for social enterprise is so not conducive, that to achieve what we want to, we need to work not just on our own product but on the entire eco system, be it policy, technology, human resources, end user finance, enterprise finance, all of it, and that's what makes it so much more challenging.

Selco has been around twenty years, and while it has seen organic growth, maybe even robust growth, it’s been far from steady growth. It’s been lots of trials and errors, and learnings and it’s through all of this that it has developed a holistic approach to addressing the issue, and that’s what we now hope to scale, scale not just at the organic level by extrapolating growth, but by replicating the story and looking for exponential growth.

And this is why we're looking to create more and more such enterprises to cover the rest of the country. We have an Incubation center which enables this process, and we had three of our incubatees come and tell us their stories, absolutely fascinating stories. 

I'll do each story separately, but to close down a brilliant two days were the children from the Kalkeri Sangeet Vidyalaya, who brought in some really amazing music. Like what our mc said, there were no words to describe the experience of hearing these children from the really underserved communities, from the remote hills of north karnataka render chaste hindustani classical music. Here are a couple of pictures and short video clips just to give you a flavour of what they did.

What opportunity can do !





Link to the video:

https://plus.google.com/photos/116296832109747352208/albums/6137787253864481121?authkey=CPini8HQodOXmQE


That's Visalakshi, Sunil and Ravi. Here's the link to a short clip, (couldn't figure out how to embed the videos): 

Sunday, April 12, 2015

Smile Foundation

Smile Foundation is a small family effort at doing our bit of giving back. It was set up with the objective of facilitating education of children from under served backgrounds, through funds from family and friends.

This evening saw a touching validation of all our efforts. But before I go into that, let me put in some context.

Smile here is an acronym for Saraswati Mahadas Indira Learning and Education; Saraswati Mahadas being my great grandmother and Indira, my grandmother. This was started by Kamlesh, my aunt, Sukrutha, my mother ( daughters of Indira) and me, way back in 2003; yes, women power all the way :). This was during the phase when I’d quit IDBI and was wondering what else I could do in life.

It came out of a conversation I overheard between our driver, Subbareddy and his wife, Chinni. They were discussing some financial issues, and Subbareddy was saying they would need to withdraw their son from private school to send him to a government school (which meant they saved on fees). For those not familiar, all Government Schools in India offer education only in vernacular language, plus the quality is mostly sorely lacking, be it infrastructure or teaching. His wife says ‘No, never, we’re not withdrawing him from the English medium school, I want a better future for him than ours, and I’ll do anything in my capacity to give him that, even if I have to go without food’.  And there was this despair and finality in her voice which said she would go without food if forced.

At that point, my aunt was already funding school fees of her maids children. My mom was, post retirement, helping out at a shelter for street children. We decided to put our energies and resources together and that’s how Smile Foundation came into being.

The idea was to visit such schools within a radius of 5 kms of our house to identify potential school dropouts. Most of these schools won't let the kids who don't pay, take their exams.  That's the list I’d get and then do some more research to identify the really deserving children, (as our resources were also limited ) and then we’d fund the educational needs of those children, be it fees, bus pass, books, private tuition, whatever be the gauged need.  And the intent was to back those kids through to college. 

Back to the present; this evening my mother called to say that one of our first students, Geethika who we’d picked up in school and had seen through college, came back today, searching for our house, to donate Rs.4000 to the foundation. A lump in the throat moment.

I distinctly remember Geethika, because back then, when asked what her ambition and goal was she’d said, I want a home which has a door. At first I hadn’t understood. And then she explained that they lived in a shack under a bridge, and their shack didn’t have a door, and how that was always a worry as their father was an alcoholic and it was just she and her mother at home. Today she has a decent job and is able to rent a house for Rs.4000 per month, bought herself a scooter and is able to sustain the entire family. Real impact that.

In those first years, when kids would still drop out a couple of years after we'd started to help, or girls were just pulled out of studying, and I’d go through helpless frustrating times, I remember Kamlesh aunty saying, If you can make a difference to one life, if that one family comes out of poverty only because of what you did, think that your achievement’. Geethika would be one there aunty.

Thanks Aunty and Ma, for enabling this beautiful effort. And Ma, more for keeping it going even after I moved out of Hyd. I know we still have discussions on how difficult it is, the last one being three days back, but through all those downs, it's still been so worthwhile. Let's hang in there to do what we can. God willing, there will be more Geethikas'. 

Tuesday, April 7, 2015

Startup Mistakes to Avoid

A link on Startup mistakes to avoid. Very interesting, and vouched for by what we've seen on the ground, at SELCO Incubation and from friends with Startups as well.

http://edition.cnn.com/2015/03/31/africa/gallery/business-startup-mistakes-to-avoid/index.html


Sunday, April 5, 2015

Sophie's Choice (1982)

                             
A movie that will haunt you for a long while after the watching. A story of human resilience through the worst of human suffering, so intelligently and profoundly brought out in the midst of romance and mystery. It unfolds gradually through what is seemingly an eccentric and fun romance, through flashbacks of Sophies survival through the concentration camps.


It’s an intertwining of three lives, which chance to come together to mingle and mesh in many different layers; there's love, hate, jealousy but above all a deep friendship that surpasses all else. Sophie and Nathan are in a volatile and intense romantic liason, and there’s Stingo an aspiring writer from the south who comes into the same apartment. He gets drawn in from the moment he enters, getting besotted by them, as their deep and complex pasts unfold and inevitable falling in love with Sophie while simultaneously caring deeply for Nathan.

Sophie is a polish refugee, from world war 2, carrying the ghosts of the Auschwitz, and when she escapes and attempts suicide she meets with the eccentric and very charming Nathan, to find life again. Must add, it's by far Meryl Streep's most astounding performances. 

Stingo grows up through the experience with Sophie and Nathan, from an adolescent dreamer with the freshness of life to being exposed to the pits of human suffering through Sophies experiences and the schizophrenic Nathan.

And somehow, though its all about really sad stories of pain and suffering and deceit, there’s a zip and exuberance to the movie which bring out human resilience at its best. 

As titled, they are each faced with the most complex and bewildering of choices, some tragic, some frivolous yet you totally go along with them to understand each. 

I've consciously stayed away from anything to do with the Auschwitz, yet this one just grew on me. Strongly recommended for its insights on human resilience, dynamics and complexities of relationships and needless to say, the simply brilliant portrayals. 

Friday, April 3, 2015

SELCOs latest - Kalkeri Sangeet Vidyalaya

Last week saw the inauguration of SELCOs largest single system installation; a 14KW mini grid at Kalkeri Sangeet Vidyalaya at Dharwad. 

This was one of our really tough projects and Senthil the project lead, who ate, slept, breathed Kalkeri for months now, has tons of fascinating stories to tell about the challenges of setting up the installation, so a real kudos to him and the team, they did a brilliant job.

Apart from the excitement of the solar customized design solution, The Kalkeri Sangeet Vidyalaya itself is a really interesting story: 

Founded in 2002, it's set up in a quiet valley, off Kalkeri, a small village close to Dharwad in Karnataka. The institute provides education in music, and also academics to children from villages of the surrounding areas. also providing accommodation, food and healthcare, at no cost whatsoever.

           The Kalkeri Sangeet Vidyalaya at Kalkeri, Dharwad


KSV is the brainchild of four founders across three countries. The idea was conceptualized by one Mathieu Fortier from Quebec, Canada. Another founder is Ustad Hameed Khan, who hails from Dharwad and is part of an unbroken music tradition; 6th in line of the generation of musicians in a family honoured for its great contribution to hindustani classical music. His grandfather, Sitar Ratna Rahimat Khan, was the innovator of the contemporary sitar. He was a disciple of legendary Ustad Bande Ali Khan of the Indore Beenkar Gharana. The other two founders are Agathe Meurisse Fortier and Blaise Fortier, Agathe is a fine arts graduate from the Sorbonne University in Paris and Blaise, Mathieu’s brother is a Directors of Young Musicians of the World (Canada).

Mathieu Fortier and his wife Agathe travelled extensively in India, during which time they spent two years at Shanti Niketan, West Bengal, learning yoga and Indian languages. Mathieu spent several years learning Hindustani Shastriya Sangeet. This musical journey took Mathieu and Agathe to Benares, and then finally to Dharwad.

In Dharwad Mathieu started to take classes with Shri Rajshekar Mansur, the son of the late Pt Mallikarjun Mansur. It's there that he met Ustad Hameed Khan Principal of the Music College. Mathieu, Agathe and Ustad Ji got together in 2001 and started to give free evening tuition classes in vocal, harmonium, sitar and tabla. It was not long afterwards that Mathieu heard about a farm house on five acres of land to rent just outside the village of Kalkeri which was how and where the Kalkeri Sangeet Vidyalaya was born.

Some pictures of  the installation, the school and the kids.







                                       
The institute has not only a great academic record, but also a 100% passrate in the Gandharva Mahavidyalaya music exams which they all take.

Here's one of their stories:

Sharda: a talented young vocalist
Sharda is 14, the youngest of four children. Before joining Kalkeri Sangeet Vidyalaya, Sharda had never experienced a regular school day and couldn’t read, write or count. And coming from the poor banjaran community, she rarely had even three meals a day. 

Sharda is now in 9th class, has passed the Government Junior Music Exam and the 3rd level exam with the nationally recognised Gandharva Mahavidyalaya. She has gone from being a quiet withdrawn girl with few opportunities, to a confident young person with outstanding singing abilities and an impressive academic success with an 82% average.

Upon completion of her school education Sharda has ambitions to go on to university to study music.

Stories that touch you deep within.

Wednesday, April 1, 2015

Lucid Dreaming

It’s interesting how the thought about Lucid dreaming got triggered. Two days back I had a really vivid and intense dream experience, and that's pretty usual for any of us, but what followed is what triggered thought. The same evening three friends, who’d all also had extreme dream experiences that night called to talk about their dreams. Each disconnected, but with each call I was just getting more and more amazed. Interesting, right? Don’t throw coincidence at me, not part of my vocabulary anymore :)

In fact some dream experiences are so intense that it makes me wonder why we don’t experience the same level of intensity in real life, as in waking life. Then you realize that in waking life our sensory interpretations interfere with the essence of the experience and could potentially actually take away from it. And this is where lucid dreams could actually enable a higher level of lucid in real. A higher level of self awareness.

Now what is Lucid Dreaming? Lucid dreams are dreams in which you KNOW that you're dreaming. And what's more, they can be controlled.

I’m sure a lot of us have experienced the knowing we're dreaming bit. But what could be new to many is the fact that lucid dreams can be actually controlled, and that this is an acquired skill. Once you're lucid, you can consciously dream about anything you desire. Lucid dreaming is your chance to play around with the extraordinary abilities buried in unused parts of your brain.

                                     

Dream expert Beverly D'Urso says 'someone who has become lucid has much higher levels of awareness, and that’s one of the biggest benefits of lucid dreaming.' 

The first scientific proof of lucid dreaming emerged in 1975 from the British parapsychologist Dr Keith Hearne. He recorded a set of pre-determined eye movements from his lucid volunteer, Alan Worsley, via an electro-oculogram (EOG). It was a basic communication between the dreamer and the outside world. 

More recently, this 2009 study by the Neurological Laboratory in Frankfurt revealed significantly increased brain activity during lucid dreams.

With techniques perfected during Stephen LaBerge's 20 years of pioneering research at Stanford University, now anyone can learn to consciously explore and use their dreams for self-discovery, creativity, fantasy fulfillment, emotional healing, and profound spiritual insight.

Indeed, some argue that it supports the need to classify lucid dreams as a new and separate state of consciousness.

You could also watch this Ted Talk if you want to know more.

And it's apparently not new, Tibetan dream yoga is the original form of lucid dreaming. It is a philosophical practice created in Tibetan Buddhism at least 1,000 years ago. Just like lucid dreams, the aim of this is to awaken the consciousness in the dream state.

Fascinating stuff beyond the real :)