Sunday, 11 August 2024

Original Quotes

 We should not denounce our idols just because someone else is calling them pagan. #Hindenberg #SEBI 

******* 

I just realised that basically, Jane Austen is the mother of all Mills and Boon plots - average girl, very talented, roasts the rich, handsome, ideal bachelor and he falls for her hook, line, and sinker. Then, couple of mis communications, one separation, and then reunification.

****

You cannot hide the shine of a diamond by smearing it with coal. Shine on!!!!

****** 

My memory is a worse than my ingenuity. So, i get great ideas, but forget them. 

****** 

Middle managers are the teens of the corporate world - they are dying to assert their individuality, but struggling to make sense of this brave new world. 

******** 

The trouble with democracy is that we expect great marketers to be great administrators. 

****** 

The ecosystem is, and has always been, the enabler and the disabler for all human enterprise. 

******** 


What Shrimati ji means

We often address the wife as "Shrimati ji" in India. 

Ever wondered what the term Shrimati means? 

Shree(big ee sound, not the small i sound)  means Lakshmi and Mati means brain or wisdom of. 

So, Shrimati means one with the wisdom of Shree Herself. 


Some other ways to address wives: Bhagyawam (the lucky one), Karmaanwaaliye (the one with good karma). 

It was written in our scripture that the wife is the one who brings good luck to the husband, and his destiny begins only after marriage. 

Air Vistara and Air India

The merger of Air India and Vistara reminds me of an old Khushwant Singh joke.

When Giani Zail Singh became the 7th President of India, his lack of fluency in English led to some embarrassment. So, Mrs. Gandhi personally appointed an English tutor for him. He was to receive instruction every evening.

After 3 weeks, Mrs. Gandhi called up the Singh household and asked to speak to Giani ji. She found that his English was halting, if that. She then had a word with the tutor and asked him to expedite the progress.

Three weeks went by, and Mrs. Gandhi called again. With the same result. This time, her words to the tutor were stronger.

Since Mrs. Gandhi was travelling, she could only call after a month. As luck would have it, the tutor picked up the phone.

"Oh, hello, Martin. Does your student speak English now?" she enquired.
"O seekh jayega haule haule. Kaali kyun karni hai?" Martin replied. (Translation: Punjabi for - He will learn gradually. Why the rush?)

Short version: Air India may be learning a few things from Vistara, but Vistara is learning a lot from Air India.
hashtagSundayHumour hashtagFlyingExperience

Thursday, 8 August 2024

More listings for Probe8

 https://booksplea.se/probe8-8-modern-mysteries-of-detective-fiction-by-nidhi-arora-9798890026521/?setCurrencyId=1



https://www.waterstones.com/book/probe8/nidhi-arora//9798890026521











Book Review: The Secret of a Telltale Diet

This book reads like a series on TV, screenplay intact. That is to say, the writing is very visual - one can totally imagine each scene being played out. That is one of the biggest strengths of the book. 

The characters are easy to imagine, partly because they are monochromatic. 
I am not sure if we needed all of them though. The story telling might have been more fluid with fewer characters. 

The book tells the story of a certain section of society, and tells it rather well. If one does not belong to that section, the book acts like a window to peek into morning coffees, gym sessions, dinners and parties with family friends, open conversations about attraction (and lack thereof), flirting, and attention. 

It also delves into the many emotions a middle aged (?) woman has to go through - friendship, comfort, insecurity, envy, cattiness, judgement, camaraderie, professional accomplishment, a sense of companionship with the partner... and does so in a rather effortless, non-preachy way. 

At just about 252 pages, the book is an easy breezy two hour read. The writing is effortless and flows naturally. The emotions are expressed just so and are easy to understand. There is neither too much melodrama nor too much stiff upper lip. 

The highlight of the book, however, is the love story of Samar and Siya. Their arguments are glossed over, their good-natured banter, their frank, honest conversations, and way that they are always there for each other. What is unreal is that Samar never reaches out to Siya for help on anything. Maybe I would have liked a little bit of that. 

#SpoilerAlert: 
Oh, and an AND size 6 is a mistake the editor should have pointed out. AND dresses start at size 8. A size 8 is not likely to fit a 52-kilo petite 5 foot 2 or five foot 3 person. More likely a Size 10.  

Monday, 5 August 2024

https://www.indiainfoline.com/blog/key-mutual-fund-trends-observed-in-june-2024

Madam Finance Minister 

FnOs are not leading to the bulging of your equity markets. SIPs are. 

Quoting from this report: 

SIP flows in June 2024 touched a record ₹21,262 Crore. This is the third consecutive month that the mutual fund monthly gross SIP flows have been above ₹20,000 Crore. The month of June 2024 also saw 55.13 Lakh fresh SIP accounts, compared to 49.74 Lakh fresh SIP accounts added in May.

 Active equity funds saw record monthly inflows of ₹40,608 Crore, after setting a record of ₹34,697 Crore in May 2024. 


Now, if you are a mutual fund manager, and you have this much money coming into your equity fund, what will you use it for? Well, buying equities!! 


This is how much FII brought into and took from the country: 

https://www.cdslindia.com/Publications/FIIFPIInvstmntFinYrData.aspx



Sunday, 4 August 2024

Book Review: Queen of Earth by Devika Rangachari

First of all, let it be said that this is a children's book, and I am reading it as an adult. To that extent, the review should be taken with a pinch of salt. 

The book is an easy breezy interesting read. I did not feel like picking up the phone even once during this book. 

While the writing style is fluent and easy, the story itself, not so much. There are many things that leave one wondering. Also, the historical note is, sadly, inadequate. 

Devika Rangachari's series on lesser known queens of India is definitely a favourite series. The Queen of Ice, about Queen Didda of Kashmir, was awe-inspiring. But this is the story of a queen who barely ruled, and then left the kingdom for reasons entirely unknown. We get some glimpse into her thoughts and how they work, but their quick contradiction is hard to understand. As is the idea that she had no idea of the conspiracy being hatched by her father. 

Intrigued, I researched the queen and came upon this information: 

The next queen to ascend the Bhaumakara throne was Prithvimahadevi who assumed the title of Tribhuvanamahadevi II. Her reign must have been very short since it was disputed by her nephews. She ruled in her own right, although in most other dynasties the throne would have gone to her husband’s nephews. 

A somewhat singular occurrence recorded in copper plate in Baud says that she gave grants to a common woman who petitioned that she wanted to build two temples in her father’s memory. It is noteworthy that such instances are usually not given much prominence in history books but to me it shows the queen had agency to take decisions, and the one that she took here was to help another woman, a commoner at that.

Source: https://savitanarayan.blogspot.com/2021/04/bhaumakara-queens-of-odisha.html


This book is ideal for history fans, but not for people who need an in-depth exploration.

Its an easy breezy read that could also be perfect for teen book clubs.