Saturday, 30 June 2012

FACTS ABOUT LEARNING...!!

''I don't have time to learn accounting.'' I hear this every day. It's true - people are extremely busy these days. Between our day jobs,housekeeping,yard work, kids'
soccer games, church, and a hundred other things, it's hard tomake time for anything eise. Universal realized this years ago.
A teacher of mine once taught me the following simple lesson about managing time. From a bag she removed a large empty glass jar andplacedit on the table in front of the class.
Next she removed a bag full of colorful wooden blocks of different shapes and sizes. Last of all, she pulled a small metal bucket of sand from her bag and placed it in on the table.
Our teacher emptied the bucket of sand into the large empty glass jar so that the jar was about half-full of sand. ''Now, '' she said, ''Iwant you to come put these red,blue and yellow wooden blocks into the jar. We need to fit all of them in the jar. ''For the next few minutes, the five of us took turns trying to fit all of the blocks into the jar, but it just couldn't be done. There wasn,t enough room. After we'd all had a chance to try, our teacher announced that our time was up and sent us back to our seats. ''Do you want to know how to make it all fit, ''she whispered to us ? ''Yes,'' we responded enthusiastically, ''Show us!''
The teacher proceeded to remove all of the blocks from the jar and placed them on the table. Next, she poured the sand back into the bucket it came from. Teacher then placed the blocks back into the empty jar. With no sand in the jar, the blocks fit, but came allthe way to the brim of the jar. Next,the teacher poured all of the sand from the bucket into the jar blocks. The sand filled in the empty spaces between the blocks, and the sand and blocks all fit in the jar perfectly. ''Ooooh,'' we exclaimed.
''This is like life,'' our teacher said.''The blocks represent the most importent things in our lives like our families and school.''The sand is everything else, like playing with our friends and watching cartoons. When we put the sand in the  jar first, we can't fit all of the other ''fun'' things in too.
Though simple, that lesson was powerful to me and I have not forgotten it.

Sunday, 10 June 2012

WHY DONATE EYES.....?

To begin with, may be ,for a selfish reason; our eyes can live even after our death.
  • Secondly, more importantly, we can light the life of two blind people by donating our eyes after our death.
  • Thirdly, not to mention, eye donation is one of the noblest of all causes.
Over 90 percent of all cornea transplant operations performed each year successfully restores vision to people suffering from corneal blindness. Donated human eyes and corneal tissue are also used for research and education.
How do research and education help the cause, you may ask. This is a very important aspect of the eye donation movement. More than 35,000 eyes are used annually for research and education. Research into glaucoma, retinal disease, complications of diabetes and other sight disorders benefit from donations because many eye problems cannot be simulated and only human eyes can be used. These studies advance the discovery of the causes and effects of specific eye conditions and lead to new treatments and cures.
Other than these, there are a few more compelling reasons why you need to donate your eyes and these include:
  • 1.5% of the population are unnecessarily blind
  • 25% live below the poverty line
  • 2.5 million children are suffering, including those who don’t have the correct spectacles
  • 32% are under 15
  • 60% of blind children will not make it to adulthood. A cumulative economic loss to India’s GNP of US$11.1 billion
  • 75% live in rural areas
  • There are 12,000 ophthalmologists in the country but the majorities of them live and work in the urban areas
  • 40% live in rural areas in Central & Northern India where there is little access to quality eye care services.
Are you ready to gift a life? Become an eye donor!