Tuesday, 14 April 2026

*HTDO*

*HTDO* Manoj, a hotshot Sales Manager, on a Sunday evening, was in the parking lot of a shopping mall. The parking lot was packed. Cars were crawling with anxious drivers looking for that one vacant slot. Manoj, sharp & aggressive as he was known to be, spotted a vacant space ahead & quickly zoomed in. He could see another car trying to reverse into the same slot, but Manoj was determined to beat the other man to it. And he did! Manoj felt jubilant, as we all sometimes do with life's little victories. The old man driving the car was disappointed. He looked Manoj in the eye & continued his search for another parking slot. Two days later, Manoj was preparing for one of the biggest moments of his career. He was close to winning a big contract for his company. All that was left now was the formal handshake meeting with the client's CEO. As Manoj walked into the client's office & saw the CEO, he felt a sudden sense of discomfort. Yes! It was the same man from whom he had snatched the parking slot on Sunday. _And you can guess what happened thereafter._ *Alas! If only Manoj had grown up with the HTDO habit!* *SO WHAT IS HTDO?* It has probably happened to you before.As you walk towards the door of an office or a hotel, the person walking in front holds the door open for you. Remember how good it made you feel, if only for that moment. Isn't it surprising that although we all feel good when someone holds the door open for us, we seldom do the same for others! How come? It's probably because we are all preoccupied with ourselves & obsessed with getting ahead.Here then is a life-changing lesson that they don't teach you in any B school. *'Hold The Door Open'*. The world can be divided into two types of people. Those who push open a door, walk through & let it slam behind them.That's 98% of the population. And there's the 2% who hold it open to allow the next person to walk through. Learn to do that & you too could join the select 2% club. *HTDO doesn't merely make other people feel good. It makes you feel good too. HTDO translates into a behaviour of helping & caring._* *Winning in life is less about naked ambition & more about helping other people win.* *Someone once said, _"It's nice to be important. But it's more important to be nice"_* Make a beginning... *Hold The Door Open!* Have an awesome & Happy day

๐Œ๐š๐๐ซ๐š๐ฌ ๐‡๐ข๐ ๐ก ๐‚๐จ๐ฎ๐ซ๐ญ – ๐…๐‚๐‘๐€ ๐‘๐ฎ๐ฅ๐ข๐ง๐  (๐‚๐จ๐ซ๐ž ๐Œ๐ž๐š๐ง๐ข๐ง๐ )

๐Œ๐š๐๐ซ๐š๐ฌ ๐‡๐ข๐ ๐ก ๐‚๐จ๐ฎ๐ซ๐ญ – ๐…๐‚๐‘๐€ ๐‘๐ฎ๐ฅ๐ข๐ง๐  (๐‚๐จ๐ซ๐ž ๐Œ๐ž๐š๐ง๐ข๐ง๐ ) The Madras High Court ruled that teaching or promoting the Bhagavad Gita, Vedanta, and Yoga does not constitute “religious activity” under Indian law, and therefore cannot be used as a ground to deny or cancel foreign funding under the FCRA (Foreign Contribution Regulation Act). What the Court clarified The Court made three crucial legal distinctions: 1. Bhagavad Gita The Court held that the Gita is primarily a work of moral philosophy and ethical guidance, not a sectarian religious text. It teaches: • Duty (dharma) • Self-discipline • Self-realization • Ethical action Therefore, teaching the Gita is education in moral science, not religious preaching. ⸻ 2. Vedanta Vedanta was classified as a philosophical system concerned with: • Consciousness • Reality • Self-knowledge It is comparable to Western philosophy, not to religious ritual or worship. ⸻ 3. Yoga Yoga was held to be a civilisational and scientific discipline, dealing with: • Physical health • Mental discipline • Psychological well-being It is not religious instruction. ⸻ Why this matters Under the Foreign Contribution Regulation Act (FCRA): Foreign money cannot be used for religious propagation, but can be used for education, research, culture, and social development. The Court ruled that: Teaching Gita, Vedanta, or Yoga falls under education and cultural activity, not religion. So NGOs teaching these subjects are legally entitled to receive foreign funding. ⸻ Constitutional significance The judgment reaffirmed that: • India’s civilisation predates modern religions • Its philosophical traditions are part of national culture, not sectarian faith • The State must not misclassify Indian knowledge systems as “religion” to suppress them ⸻ In one sentence The Madras High Court held that Gita, Vedanta, and Yoga are civilisational systems of knowledge—not religious preaching—and therefore cannot be restricted under India’s FCRA. ๐ŸชทExcellent Judgement๐Ÿชท

The Art vs Science of Logistics : Where Experience Beats Theory❗

The Art vs Science of Logistics : Where Experience Beats Theory❗ “Logistics is not simple. Logisticians make it look simple. That’s the art of logistics.” ~ This hit me hard. Because on paper, logistics is a science. ๐Ÿ“Š Demand Forecasting ๐Ÿ“ฆ Inventory Management ๐Ÿšš Route Optimization ๐Ÿ“… Resource Management "Clean. Structured. Predictable." But step into real operations … and that “science” gets tested fast. A truck breaks down. • A crew calls in sick. • A customer changes scope last minute. • Weather decides it has its own plans. ๐ŸŒง️ • A job that should take 6 hours suddenly takes 10. No model teaches you how to handle that. That’s where the art comes in. ๐ŸŽจ The art of reading situations before they become problems ๐ŸŽจ The art of assigning the right crew—not just available crew ๐ŸŽจ The art of building buffers without killing efficiency ๐ŸŽจ The art of communicating calm when everything behind the scenes is chaos In logistics, experience isn’t just valuable — it’s everything. Because real operations are not run on perfect data. • They’re run on judgment. • The best operators I’ve seen don’t just follow systems… • They interpret them. • They know when to stick to the plan — and when to break it. ๐Ÿ‘‰ That’s the difference between managing logistics … and mastering it. So yes—logistics is a science. But the people who make it look effortless ? They’re artists

The Dunning-Kruger Effect: The least skilled are often the most confident

The Dunning-Kruger Effect: The least skilled are often the most confident The Dunning-Kruger Effect describes a pervasive cognitive bias where individuals with limited knowledge or skill in a specific area tend to significantly overestimate their own competence. This happens because the very skills required to excel in a field—such as critical thinking and nuanced judgment—are the same ones needed to evaluate one's own performance accurately. Without those skills, people suffer a "double burden": they make errors and lack the metacognitive ability to recognize them, leading to a persistent illusion of superiority that can hinder both personal and professional growth. Interestingly, the path to true mastery often begins with a sharp decline in confidence. As people gain more knowledge, they start to grasp the sheer vastness and complexity of the subject matter, leading them to realize how much they actually have left to learn. This dip is a sign of psychological progress, marking the transition from blissful ignorance to informed awareness. Eventually, as genuine expertise is developed, confidence rises again, but it is now grounded in reality rather than a misunderstanding of the task at hand. source: Kruger, J., & Dunning, D. (1999). Unskilled and unaware of it: how difficulties in recognizing one's own incompetence lead to inflated self-assessments. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 77(6), 1121-1134.

The Dunning-Kruger Effect: The least skilled are often the most confident

The Dunning-Kruger Effect: The least skilled are often the most confident The Dunning-Kruger Effect describes a pervasive cognitive bias where individuals with limited knowledge or skill in a specific area tend to significantly overestimate their own competence. This happens because the very skills required to excel in a field—such as critical thinking and nuanced judgment—are the same ones needed to evaluate one's own performance accurately. Without those skills, people suffer a "double burden": they make errors and lack the metacognitive ability to recognize them, leading to a persistent illusion of superiority that can hinder both personal and professional growth. Interestingly, the path to true mastery often begins with a sharp decline in confidence. As people gain more knowledge, they start to grasp the sheer vastness and complexity of the subject matter, leading them to realize how much they actually have left to learn. This dip is a sign of psychological progress, marking the transition from blissful ignorance to informed awareness. Eventually, as genuine expertise is developed, confidence rises again, but it is now grounded in reality rather than a misunderstanding of the task at hand. source: Kruger, J., & Dunning, D. (1999). Unskilled and unaware of it: how difficulties in recognizing one's own incompetence lead to inflated self-assessments. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 77(6), 1121-1134.

REJINCES

REJINCES Posted on April 9, 2026 by Azad Sameer Indian Army Of Mystics and Military Secrets By Brig Azad Sameer (Retd) In 1991, as a young and relatively innocent Major, I was posted to the Army HQ Military Secretary’s (MS) Branch. Our section in South Block dealt with the Promotion Boards for Majors and Lt Colonels. Essentially, our job was to retrieve Confidential Report Dossiers (CRDs) from the sections that filed and held them—curiously referred to as Libraries, though they contained more dust than literature—and perform the secretarial alchemy required for selection boards. In the MS Branch, the hierarchy of the CRD is sacred: the Officer signs for it, but the Clerk holds it. It is a beautiful system of plausible deniability that works perfectly—until the music stops and you’re the one left holding the baby. One morning, the music stopped. A CRD had vanished and I had signed for it!! Now, in MS Branch lore, a CRD is never lost. To suggest such a thing is heresy, punishable by professional excommunication. It is merely misplaced – much like the Holy Grail, the city of Atlantis, or a politician’s sense of ethics. But as weeks turned into months, my misplaced file began to look suspiciously like a permanent disappearance. It had simply evaporated into the thick, bureaucratic ether of the Army HQ. Over the next few months, our section – four officers and half a dozen clerks – transformed into high-stakes archaeological explorers. Long before COVID-19 made N95 masks a fashion statement, we were pioneers of the lifestyle. Clad in masks to survive generations of silt and the ancient plague bugs that had merrily colonised the dossiers, we swung into unenviable action. In those days, the Indian Army was still suspicious of futuristic gadgets like vacuum cleaners. Instead, mask clad, we spent our afternoons bent double, scouring the dark crevices behind steel almirahs. We searched places so obscure I’m fairly certain we discovered a lost platoon from the ’71 war, but of the CRD, there was no sign. The drill continued indefinitely, a slow-motion descent into madness. Six months in, the Additional MS – the Big Boss – decided he’d had enough of our archeological adventures. A Court of Inquiry (C of I) was being drafted. In the Army, a C of I is usually a formal invitation to your own professional funeral. Just as the gallows were being readied, a colleague leaned over his desk, looking like a man pushing contraband. “Go to Green Park,” he hissed. “There’s a Baba. He’s occult. He sees things. He specialises in exactly this kind of disaster.” Now Azad Sameer the irreverent, did not believe in mystics. But when your career is flashing before your eyes, you don’t ask for a peer-reviewed second opinion. So it was the proverbial straw. The next day, with the unofficial (and slightly embarrassed) blessings of my superiors, I slipped into civvies and headed to Green Park. The waiting room was packed with people whose lives had also apparently fallen behind a steel cupboard. There were even a few souls looking for relatives lost at the Kumbh Mela, Bollywood-style. Finally, I was ushered into a dimly lit room where a fragile old man sat in a lotus position atop a chair. He looked as though he hadn’t seen direct sunlight since the British Raj. He didn’t even open his eyes. “Fauji ho?” (Are you a soldier?) I looked at my posture – ramrod straight – and my haircut, which was a 0.5mm tribute to one of our commanding officers, a man who viewed any hair longer than a mustard seed as a personal insult. It wasn’t exactly a Sherlock Holmes-level deduction. “Yes,” I croaked. “Document ka pata chahiye?” (Looking for a document?) I nearly fell over. This was better than any Intelligence Bureau brief I’d ever read. He proceeded to describe the folder with the terrifying precision of a man who had personally filed it. He knew the shape, the size, and the exact shade of Bureaucratic Buff on the cover. Then came the invoice. “One hundred rupees,” he whispered. At 1991 prices, this wasn’t pocket change, but I’d have paid in gold bars to get that albatross off my neck. He took the note, vanished into a back room to consult the celestial archives, and returned with the most frustratingly vague SITREP in military history: “Don’t worry. It will be found very soon. Come back and tell me when you find it.” I walked out feeling like I’d been pickpocketed by the divine. “Very soon?” I wanted GPS coordinates! I wanted a room number in South Block or Sena Bhavan! I returned to South Block, mentally rehearsing my minimum damage statement before the C of I. Alas! There was no way out. But as I neared the office, I saw my colleague – the one who had suggested the Baba – performing a frantic, one-man bhangra in the corridor. “Mil gaya! Mil gaya! CRD mil gaya!” (We got the CRD) The document had been found. Accidentally. That very morning, in the basement of South Block, at the bottom of a stack of old covers destined for reuse. We had searched that exact pile five times in three months. Logic had no seat at this table. Before I could process the miracle, I was summoned by the Deputy MS, a man who rarely smiled and possessed a naturally sinister aura. I walked in, spine stiff, ready for the Even though it’s found, you’re a liability lecture. The room was silent. On his vast, polished desk sat the missing CRD. Beside it sat a beautiful, amber-filled bottle of Peter Scott whisky. He looked at the file, then at me, then back at the bottle. He didn’t ask about the Baba. He didn’t ask about the search. He simply pushed the bottle toward the edge of the desk. “Go get drunk,” he growled. I didn’t need a second order. I took the bottle and beat a hasty retreat, realising that in the Indian Army, some things are governed by the MS Branch, some by the Gods, and the very best things are governed by a well-timed bottle of whisky.

*A road to Dwarka: When the Sky Turned to Bronze*

_For your weekend _ *A road to Dwarka: When the Sky Turned to Bronze* ... describes that the puranic memory of Yadavs leaving *Mathura for Dwaraka* actually remembers an ancient Indian history of how the *Harappans were forced to leave Indus valley for Bet Dwaraka* around *2200 BCE*. Science has proved that the it's not the Aryan Invasion but an extreme climate change - a *200-year-long mega drought* ,in which the river Saraswati dried up, forced our ancestors to leave Indus Valley and disperse to South India. I have quoted the relevant Scientific literaure at the bottom. Here's the draft blog for your comments ๐Ÿ‘‡๐Ÿป ... ... *A Road to Dwaraka: When the Sky Turned to Bronze* “The ruins of Harappa are not a tomb of a failed people; they are a 4,000-year-old 'Unread Message' sitting in our collective inbox.” ( _“History repeats itself because Man makes—but today, we are making the very disaster we refuse to see.”_ A 4,000-Year-Old Warning from the Indus valley civilization.) For nearly 8,000 years, the Indus Valley was the laboratory of human genius. While their contemporaries in Egypt and Mesopotamia labored to build towering Pyramids and Ziggurats to glorify kings and gods, the Harappans dedicated their mammoth engineering to the common citizen. Their 'monuments' were masterpieces of public welfare: the *Great Bath of Mohenjo-daro*, massive communal granaries, and gridded streets with drainage systems that wouldn't be matched for another three millennia. But around 2200 BCE, the sky turned to bronze. Science has finally replaced the myth of the *'Aryan Invasion'* with a far more harrowing reality: The *200-Year Megadrought*. The Oxygen-18 isotopes hidden in ancient snail shells tell a story of a slow, agonizing tightening of the throat. Agriculture collapsed. The life-giving rivers retreated. The Saraswati died. Even the Harappans—the greatest water managers of the ancient world—could not engineer their way out of a two-century dry spell.". By 1900 BCE, the cities became ghosts and a massive exodus began—a prehistoric 'Road to Dwaraka.' Just as the Puranas recall Krishna leading the Yadavas from the turmoil of Mathura to the safety of the Gujarat coast, archaeological evidence shows the Harappans moving southward and eastward. They carried their children, their cattle, and their culture with them. The *'Great Bath'* of the Indus likely evolved into the temple tanks of South India; their DNA remained, but their urban dream was shattered. The Bhirrana Breakthrough and the Rakhigarhi DNA prove that this was a 6,000-year-old proud civilization that did nothing "wrong" to deserve its fate—it simply could not withstand the wrath of a shifting climate. Today, our modern civilization is barely 3,000 years old, yet we have tinkered with the global climate more in a century than our ancestors did in six millennia. We are hastening our own end, forgetting that history is not just a record of the past, but a lesson for the future. The Harappans had the vast, empty plains of the subcontinent to disperse into. In our crowded, bordered world of 2026, if the wells run dry again, *where will we go?* Bibliography: 1. *The Bhirrana Breakthrough* (Antiquity of the IVC): Sarkar, A., et al. (2016). "Oxygen isotope compositions of anthropogenic aragonite shells of Macrochlamys indica from the Holocene Harappan levels at Bhirrana, India: Evidence for a multi-centennial weakened monsoon." Scientific Reports, 6, 26555. (This study discusses the dating of Bhirrana and the isotope evidence for the weakened monsoon.) 2. *The Rakhigarhi DNA"* (Indigenous Continuity): Shinde, V., et al. (2019). "An Ancient Harappan Genome Lacks Ancestry from Steppe Pastoralists or Iranian Farmers." Cell, 179(3), 729-735. (The definitive study confirming the genetic profile of the Indus people and debunking the Aryan Invasion theory.) 3. *The Oxygen Isotope Studies- The Megadrought* Dixit, Y., Hodell, D. A., & Petrie, C. A. (2014). "Abrupt weakening of the summer monsoon in northwest India ~4100 yr BP." Geology, 42(4), 339-342. (A key paper using oxygen isotopes from lake sediments to prove the 200-year drought that led to the de-urbanization of the IVC.) Please take time to go through and give your comments and corrections. เฌฐเฌฎାเฌ•ାเฌจ୍เฌค เฌฎเฌนାเฌชାเฌค୍เฌฐ (The disappearance of the great Indus Valley Civilization has finally been attributed not to Aryan invasion but to a harsh climate change.)