Wednesday, 22 April 2026

Dr. Abraham, a well known cancer specialist,

Dr. Abraham, a well known cancer specialist, was once on his way to an important conference in another city where he was going to receive an award in the field of medical research. He was excited about the award and so boarded a plane to the venue. However, two hours after the plane took off, it made an emergency landing at the nearest airport due to a technical problem. Afraid that he would not make it in time to the conference, he immediately went to the reception to make enquiries. He found out that he would have to wait ten hours for the next flight to his destination! He rented a car and drove himself to the conference city which was four hours away. Soon after he left, the weather changed and a heavy storm began. The downpour made it difficult for him to see so he missed a turn he was supposed to take. Driving in the heavy rain on a deserted road, feeling hungry and tired, he frantically began to look for any sign of civilization. He came across a small tattered house and knocked on the door. A beautiful lady opened the door. He explained his situation and wanted to use the lady's telephone but she had no telephone. She however asked him to come inside and wait till the weather improved. The doctor who was hungry and exhausted accepted the offer. The lady offered him something to eat and drink. She asked him to join her in prayers but he declined. According to him, he believed in hard work, not in prayers! Sitting at the table and sipping his tea, the doctor watched the woman pray many times beside a baby's crib. Feeling that the woman might be in need of help, the doctor asked her what exactly she needed from God and asked if God ever listened to her prayers. When he inquired of the child in the crib, the woman explained that her son was down with cancer. And they had been advised to see a doctor named Abraham who could cure him but she did not have enough money to afford his fees. She said that God had not yet answered her prayers but said that God would create some way out one day. She added that she would not allow her fears to overcome her faith! Stunned and speechless, Dr. Abraham began to weep! He was forced to say out loud, "GOD IS GREAT" and recollected to the woman, all the sequence of bad events: malfunction on the plane, a thunderstorm and how he lost his way. All of which had happened because God answers prayers, wanted to give him a chance to come out of his bondage of materialistic career pursuit and give some time to a poor, helpless woman who had nothing but rich prayers! Oh! What a God! *God may not answer your prayers YOUR WAY but he will always answer HIS way.* _*Behind the scenes, he will move men, the weather, events, circumstances, etc. in order to work out the best for you!_* Do not stop trusting! Do not stop hoping! God is busy planning your dancing this year! Hold on! Hold out! Look up daily! This touched and still touches me. I hope it touches you too,

In 1951, a 14-year-old Australian boy named James Harrison

In 1951, a 14-year-old Australian boy named James Harrison woke up in a hospital bed with 100 stitches across his chest. Doctors had just removed one of his lungs. To survive, he needed 13 units of donated blood from complete strangers—people whose names he would never know. His father, Reg, sat beside him and said something that changed his life: "You're only alive because people donated blood." Right there, James made a promise. The moment he turned 18, he would donate blood. He would pay back the gift that saved him. There was just one problem. James was terrified of needles. But in 1954, the day he became eligible, he walked into a blood donation center anyway. He sat in the chair, looked at the ceiling, and let the nurse insert the needle. He never watched. Not once. Not in 64 years. What James didn't know was that his blood was different. After a few donations, doctors discovered something extraordinary. His plasma contained an incredibly rare antibody—likely developed from all those transfusions he received as a boy. This antibody could prevent a deadly condition called Rhesus disease. Before this discovery, thousands of Australian babies were dying every year. When a pregnant woman with Rh-negative blood carried an Rh-positive baby, her body would attack the child's blood cells. Miscarriages. Stillbirths. Brain damage. James's blood held the answer. Doctors asked if he would switch to plasma donation. It meant longer sessions—90 minutes instead of 20. It meant coming in every few weeks for the rest of his life. James thought about his fear. Then he thought about the babies. He said yes. For 64 years, James Harrison never missed an appointment. He donated through joy and heartbreak. He donated while working as a railway clerk. He donated after retiring. He continued even after his wife Barbara passed away in 2005—what he called his "darkest days." Every single time—all 1,173 donations—he looked at the ceiling. He chatted with nurses. He studied the walls. Anything to avoid watching the needle. The fear never left him. But he showed up anyway. In a beautiful twist, his own daughter needed the very medication created from his blood when she became pregnant. His grandson Scott exists because of the choice his grandfather made decades earlier. In May 2018, at age 81, Australian law required James to make his final donation. The room was filled with mothers holding healthy babies—living proof of his quiet heroism. They thanked him through tears. James sat in the chair one last time, looked away from his arm one last time, and gave his 1,173rd donation. Over 3 million doses of Anti-D medication containing his blood have been issued since 1967. Scientists estimate his contributions helped save approximately 2.4 million babies in Australia alone. When people called him a hero, he shrugged it off. "I'm in a safe room, donating blood," he said. "They give me a cup of coffee and something to nibble on. And then I just go on my way. No problem, no hardship." James Harrison died peacefully in his sleep on February 17, 2025. He was 88 years old. We often search for heroes in movies or history books—people with superpowers, wealth, or fame. But sometimes a hero is just someone who keeps a quiet promise for 64 years. Someone who feels fear—deep, trembling fear—and does the right thing anyway. Millions of people are alive today because one man decided his fear mattered less than their lives. What small act of courage could you commit to, even when it scares you. Hats off to this great and humble personality.🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻

70 years back, Gurudev sri Sri Ravi Shankar

70 years back, Gurudev came to this planet under the auspicious “ardra” nakshatra. It coincided with both Shankara Jayanthi and Ramanuja Jayanthi. Love, wisdom, joy and grace consolidated and manifested for the benefit of all of humanity. What a blessing for all of us! In the early years, Maharishi ji once took Gurudev with him to meet Anandmayi Maa in Rishikesh. When she saw him she proclaimed, “You have brought me the Ganga!” The Ganga washes away the sins of everyone who comes to her. in response Maharishi ji said, “ The sun( Ravi) has risen and there will be light everywhere!” And Shankara is the one whose very presence bestows peace. Today, we bow in infinite gratitude to Gurudev, our beloved Master whose presence shines the light of wisdom and anchors us in absolute peace and joy; whose words and silence bring serenity and tranquility to our mind; whose glance fills our heart with absolute bliss; whose benevolence showers the nectar of grace every moment; whose smile makes our life a celebration! He is the sacred essence of life! And we are so blessed and grateful that it flows in such abundance in ours. Millions of lives continue to blossom in their smiles with his blessings and grace. Thank you Gurudev for this wonderful and precious life! Jai Guru Dev -Smt Bhanumati Narasimhan (Gurudev's Sister)

I am having an affair and don't want my husband to find out. What do I do?

I am having an affair and don't want my husband to find out. What do I do? Im conflicted. Because you know that ole adage, what's done in the dark blah blah blah. So here goes your only 2 options: Leave your husband to find the woman who will truly love and honor him. Cause let's face it, you've proven not to be her. Stop having the affair. Now see the thing about this choice is that it dont guarantee he wont find out. You of all people should have realized by now, and ESPECIALLY based on your own actions, that people and their actions CANNOT BE CONTROLLED. (You never know a person til you live with them - in your case you never know a person until you share a secret with them. And the thang bout secrets is that the person with the least to lose holds the power. Make of that what you will but I hope you saw something deep in that sentence. Now. It would be remiss not advise of a third option. But given your behavior, I doubt that you would be brave or honorable to do it. Let alone the sincerity and accountability one would take if this option was chosen. Respect him enough to tell him the truth and accept his response/choice. Sure the respect comes too little too late but at the very least, it could show that you sincerely are out of the business of causing further harm. Its not an easy thing to do. But trust me, that level of accountability is LIFE CHANGING.

My wife had a secret affair with a man for 5 years

My wife had a secret affair with a man for 5 years before I found out. Can she really stop seeing him again? Very unlikely. I’ve been in an affair for a very long time (longer than your wife’s). I have even left him for long stretches of time, he has tried to leave me to “work on his marriage”. We always end up back together. This is painful now. I’m sure it’s excruciating. However, you’ll later see all the ways you weren’t compatible that are difficult to analyze now because of the shock. It’s very hard to accept that a person you love deeply is capable of hurting you in such a deliberate manner- at first. Take care of yourself and don’t swear off love for life because of her. Someone out there will love you the way you should be loved.

*The Strait of Hormuz may be the America’s end.*

*The Strait of Hormuz may be the America’s end.* *Ray Dalio* , a researcher of 500 years of imperial history and a manager of billions of dollars, published an article today. One sentence in it sums up everything: “Losing control of the Strait of Hormuz for America could be like Britain losing control of the Suez Canal in 1956.” Before you understand this sentence, I need to talk about 1956. Because what happened then may happen again today. ⸻ 1956: The End of Britain For 200 years, Britain was the world’s superpower. The British pound was the world’s currency, and its navy controlled the oceans. The key to its power: the Suez Canal A large portion of global trade passed through this canal. Whoever controlled it controlled global trade. In 1956, Egypt nationalized the canal, saying: “It’s ours now.” Britain threatened: “Reopen it or we’ll come.” Egypt refused. Britain, along with France and Israel, launched an attack. But then something happened. America said: “Enough.” The Soviets said: “Enough.” The United Nations said: “Enough.” Britain was forced to retreat. On that day, the world saw something: Britain was no longer a superpower. What happened next? The pound collapsed. Allies distanced themselves. Colonies began declaring independence. Capital fled Britain. Within 20 years, Britain became an ordinary country. A 200-year empire ended because of one canal. But not just a canal—it ended because of a perception: “This country is no longer strong.” The moment that perception took hold, money fled, allies withdrew, and the system unraveled. Dalio says the same could happen to America now. ⸻ Why is the Strait of Hormuz so important? 20% of the world’s oil supply passes through it. Oil from Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Kuwait, and Iraq all flows through this narrow passage. What happens if it’s blocked? Oil prices surge. The global economy stalls. Gulf countries can’t export. Europe faces an energy crisis. Asian factories shut down. Imagine it like this: There is only one tunnel on a highway. All trucks pass through it—food, fuel, raw materials—everything. Someone sits at the entrance and says: “No one passes without my permission.” That’s what Iran is doing now. Dalio says: if America cannot reopen that tunnel, everything changes. ⸻ Dalio’s Historical Formula Dalio studied 500 years of history and found a pattern: It always ends the same way. A superpower controls global money and trade routes. Everyone trusts it. Then a smaller power challenges it at a critical trade route. The superpower threatens: “Open it, or I will force it open.” The world watches. If the superpower succeeds, trust strengthens. Money flows in. The system continues. If it fails, everything flips. Trust collapses. Allies withdraw. Capital flees. Debt crises begin. The empire falls. This is how Portugal fell. The Netherlands fell. Britain fell. Dalio says: “When great powers are heavily indebted and show declining military and financial control, watch how they lose the confidence of allies and creditors, lose reserve currency status, and see their currency weaken—especially against gold.” Read that again. Now look at America. ⸻ America’s Situation Debt: $38 trillion Interest payments: over $1 trillion annually—about a quarter of tax revenue goes to interest. It lost in Vietnam. Withdrew from Afghanistan. Spent 20 years in Iraq, leaving chaos behind. The world increasingly believes America is no longer as strong. Now it confronts Iran. What did Trump say? “If mines are laid and not removed immediately, the military consequences will be unprecedented.” What does Dalio say? “I often hear senior politicians in other countries say privately: ‘Trump speaks forcefully—but when it comes to real conflict, can he fight and win?’” ⸻ The Critical Point Dalio’s key insight: In war, your ability to endure pain matters more than your ability to inflict it. ⸻ What are the Iranians doing? They are trying to prolong the conflict and escalate gradually. Why? Because they believe the American public and leadership have limited tolerance for prolonged pain and long wars. Iran’s strategy is simple: extend the war, make it painful enough—and America will withdraw. That’s what happened in Vietnam. That’s what happened in Afghanistan. For Iran, this is existential—a matter of honor, revenge, and survival. For Americans? Fuel prices. Midterm elections. This imbalance deeply concerns Dalio. ⸻ Is a deal possible? Dalio’s answer: No. “Everyone knows that not reaching a deal won’t end this conflict.” Whether Iran keeps control of the Strait or loses it, the coming period will be the worst phase of the conflict. Iran has stated: “All oil, economic, and energy facilities in the region linked to or cooperating with the United States will be immediately destroyed and turned to ashes.” This final war is approaching. Dalio says its outcome will reshape history—not just the Middle East, but the entire world. Trade flows will change. Capital flows will shift. China, Russia, North Korea, Europe, India, and Japan will all be affected. ⸻ If America wins: Confidence in the dollar rises. Demand for bonds increases. Allies align more closely. Trump’s power strengthens. U.S. dominance continues. ⸻ If America loses: The dollar collapses. Bonds are sold off. Gold skyrockets. Alliances fracture. BRICS strengthens. China’s rise accelerates. Dalio’s lesson from 500 years: Money and power always flow to the winner—and flee from the loser. ⸻ Conclusion Ray Dalio says clearly: The Strait of Hormuz is America’s final test. If it wins, its dominance continues. The dollar strengthens. Trump’s power grows. If it loses, a “1956 Britain” scenario begins: dollar collapse, gold surge, alliance breakdown, and the end of the American era. Five hundred years of history tell the same story: Empires end when they lose control of critical trade routes. Portugal fell. The Netherlands fell. Britain fell. *_Is it America’s turn?_* *_The answer lies in Hormuz._*

👆🏿An anthropologist

👆🏿An anthropologist once devised a simple game for children in an African tribe. He placed a basket of fruit beneath a tree and told them that whoever reached it first would win all the sweet rewards. When he gave the signal to run, the children didn’t race against each other. Instead, they joined hands, ran together, and reached the tree as one. Then they sat down and shared the fruit happily. Surprised, the anthropologist asked why none of them tried to win for themselves. The children replied, “Ubuntu—how can one of us be happy if the others are sad?” In their culture, Ubuntu means: I am because we are. Perhaps they understand something many modern societies have forgotten—that true happiness is found not in individual gain, but in shared joy.