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Showing posts from October, 2020

Some paradoxes: The Pursuit of Happiness makes you unhappy:

 - *SOME PARADOXES* πŸ˜• Moms want their daughters to control their husband and expect their sons to control their wives. πŸ˜•Everything that is run by the Government looks very bad except Government jobs. πŸ˜•A huge country of more than 20 languages..... united by a foreign language  πŸ˜•Seeing a policeman makes us nervous rather than making us feel safe. πŸ˜•We often say "Atithi Devo Bhavah" but we do not allow visitor parking in our residential societies. πŸ˜•We are Always in a hurry but never on time..! πŸ˜•Holy places are very interesting places: The POOR beg outside and the RICH beg inside. πŸ˜• Institutions become bad after we retire..! πŸ˜• While in service, one who handed over charge is always bad and projected as Villain.. πŸ˜• Employees start liking you once you get transferred..! πŸ˜• Best of friends become enemies in social media for nothing.. we post so many morals in whatsapp ..... but never follow a single one  πŸ˜‚πŸ˜‚πŸ˜‚πŸ˜‚πŸ˜‚πŸ˜‚ Source: received through whatsapp

If a man has assets worth Rs 18,000 crore, what can be his next dream in life?

 - 🌹*What exactly is a happy man's chair?*🌹 If a man has assets worth Rs 18,000 crore, what can be his next dream in life? After all, who doesn't dream of going to a small village in Tamil Nadu, teaching poor children and feeding them twice a day, playing cricket with the village children and drinking tea together on tapri ... But the fragrance of our soil after years of tradition and culture led a man across the seas to dream like this, and the owner of a huge company in Silicon Valley, USA, came directly from California to a small village called 'Mathalamparai' in Tamil Nadu's Tenkasi district. *Sridhar Vembu.* Born into an ordinary Tamil family. From a student at IIT Madras to the owner of a large software company, Zoho Corporation, the CEO is now seen cycling through the small streets of Mathalamparai wearing a plain shirt and traditional white veshti. The experiment, which started with three children in free time during lockdown, has now grown to four teacher