Saturday, 3 January 2015

To god ,

To god ,
towards god
all our body, mind
feelings, emotions, intellect
every thing, what ever , 
our intelligence
our smiles, sobs
complaints, suggestions
requests, pleadings
justifications, gesticulations articulations
art painting dance music prayer
puja, dhyan, celebrations
-all go to him, flow to him
non stop, unconditional ,
logic, nologic
meaning, no meaning, more meaning
yearning, even yawning
he is ocean
i am the river flowing, flooding
to be in union with him
never to return
never to look back
in total surrender
with a flat pranam
my being uttering a silent song
in chithrasen style
‘’jo kuch hai so thera
mera muz me kuch nahi’’
God for me both and more -
a great great reverent , adorable , valuable, mystery, enigma,
and
god is just a play toy, a very familiar, ordinary, a straw, a nothing , a mastery,
is no lollipop, is lollipop,
No lollipop,
it is---- one master folder -----
containing infinite files describing all his great virtues, powers,
as big as infinity, in 33 crores of sub folders,
Is lollipop,------ i locate and access folders
i play with editing all sub folders,
i change the names of files names of folders,
call them gods , goddesses
i take files of a few qualities from that master folder
, copy them and store them in a separate folder, into that masterfolder i call this folder shiva
i take files of a few more other qualites ,
copy them and store them in a another folder folder, i call it vishnu
and so on
and now as devarishi
knew how to create new gods,
as per my choice can create as many new gods as i like
super god has created me
i can create sub gods
i take a few qualities as per my will and copy them in separate folder
and name it god x, and so on endless
so god is definitely a lollipop to play with
this play is highly enjoyable, useful, great art, great skill
So Agenda Of A Prophet For Gen Next
is just to play with god
a solo, with oneself
a duet, with you and your ista devatha
a brundagaan with multitude of gods
a hoping jumping walking running to excell yourselves
a tennis / a badminton with you and your god
a foot ball / cricket with you and many gods
a travel into space with infinite gods in pushpak viman

Sanskrit alphabet, pronunciation and language

Sanskrit alphabet, pronunciation and language

Sanskrit (संस्कृतम्)

Sanskrit is the classical language of Indian and the liturgical language of Hinduism, Buddhism, and Jainism. It is also one of the 22 official languages of India. The name Sanskrit means "refined", "consecrated" and "sanctified". It has always been regarded as the 'high' language and used mainly for religious and scientific discourse.
Vedic Sanskrit, the pre-Classical form of the language and the liturgical language of the Vedic religion, is one of the earliest attested members of the Indo-European language family. The oldest known text in Sanskrit, the Rigveda, a collection of over a thousand Hindu hymns, composed during the 2nd millenium BC.
Today Sanskrit is used mainly in Hindu religious rituals as a ceremonial language for hymns and mantras. Efforts are also being made to revive Sanskrit as an everyday spoken language in the village of Mattur near Shimoga in Karnataka. A modern form of Sanskrit is one of the 17 official home languages in India.
Since the late 19th century, Sanskrit has been written mostly with the Devanāgarī alphabet. However it has also been written with all the other alphabets of India, except Gurmukhi and Tamil, and with other alphabets such as Thai and Tibetan. The GranthaSharda and Siddham alphabets are used only for Sanskrit.
Since the late 18th century, Sanskrit has also been written with the Latin alphabet. The most commonly used system is the International Alphabet of Sanskrit Transliteration (IAST), which was been the standard for academic work since 1912.

Devanāgarī alphabet for Sanskrit

Vowels and vowel diacritics (घोष / ghoṣa)

Sanskrit vowels and vowel diacritics

Consonants (व्यञ्जन / vyajjana)

Sanskrit consonants

Conjunct consonants (संयोग / saṅyoga)

There are about a thousand conjunct consonants, most of which combine two or three consonants. There are also some with four-consonant conjuncts and at least one well-known conjunct with five consonants. Here's a selection of commonly-used conjuncts:
A selection of Sanskrit conjunct consonants
You can find a full list of conjunct consonants used for Sanskrit at:
http://sanskrit.gde.to/learning_tutorial_wikner/P058.html

Numerals (संख्या / saṇkhyā)

Sanskrit numerals and numbers from 0-10

Sample text in Sanskrit

सर्वे मानवाः स्वतन्त्राः समुत्पन्नाः वर्तन्ते अपि च, गौरवदृशा अधिकारदृशा च समानाः एव वर्तन्ते। एते सर्वे चेतना-तर्क-शक्तिभ्यां सुसम्पन्नाः सन्ति। अपि च, सर्वेऽपि बन्धुत्व-भावनया परस्परं व्यवहरन्तु।
Translated into Sanskrit by Arvind Iyengar
Transliteration
Sarvē mānavāḥ svatantrāḥ samutpannāḥ vartantē api ca, gauravadr̥śā adhikāradr̥śā ca samānāḥ ēva vartantē. Ētē sarvē cētanā-tarka-śaktibhyāṁ susampannāḥ santi. Api ca, sarvē’pi bandhutva-bhāvanayā parasparaṁ vyavaharantu.

Another version of this text

सर्वे मानवाः जन्मना स्वतन्त्राः वैयक्तिकगौरवेण अधिकारेण च तुल्याः एव । सर्वेषां विवेकः आत्मसाक्षी च वर्तते । सर्वे परस्परं भ्रातृभावेन व्यवहरेयुः ॥
Transliteration (by Stefán Steinsson)
Sarvē mānavāḥ janmanā svatantrāḥ vaiyaktikagauravēṇa adhikārēṇa ca tulyāḥ ēva, sarvēṣāṃ vivēkaḥ ātmasākṣī ca vartatē, sarvē parasparaṃ bhrātṛbhāvēna vyavaharēyuḥ.
Translation and recording by Shriramana Sharma

Translation

All human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights. They are endowed with reason and conscience and should act towards one another in a spirit of brotherhood.
(Article 1 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights)