Jump to content

Leaderboard

Popular Content

Showing content with the highest reputation on 06/17/2017 in all areas

  1. Preeet, There's a way of life that is perfect for you........Hinduism.
    2 points
  2. Here you go, Destruction. Found the PDF on Gatka website: http://docs.wixstatic.com/ugd/bd5529_0ad27fa7939c47ccb5faf521ecfb0ac4.pdf Please kindly share your thoughts after reading it.
    1 point
  3. Waheguru ji ka khalsa waheguru ji ki fateh you only have to do that if you inhaled 2nd hand smoke intentionally, if you take your kirpan of (airport) if you accidentally consumed eggs or meat, or if your are separated from any of your kakkars except for the kachera. Because if you take your kachera off even on accident you have to go pesh. Bhul chuk maaf waheguru ji ka khalsa waheguru ji ki fateh
    1 point
  4. For the Sikh community, the impact of social media and its use by individuals and organisations to discuss Sikhi and the concerns of the community is proving to be far greater than had ever been imagined and is in fact changing interpretations of history and scripture. https://blog.bham.ac.uk/cpur/2017/06/02/the-rise-of-social-media-and-new-cultures-and-strategies/
    1 point
  5. Right attitude. A person once went for an interview, in a very reputed Company. While entering the room, he slipped and fell on the ground. Documents scattered all over the place. One might think of being humiliated. The man picked himself up. And with a smile on his face he spoke out loudly: "Finally, I have fallen into the right place !" He was hired the very next moment. A negative happening also can be converted into positive, if we develop right attitude.
    1 point
  6. COURAGE When I arrived to have my legs amputated, I was wearing bright purple nail polish on my feet. Might as well go out in style, I figured. A month had passed since my right arm decided to auto-amputate, just dropping off into my brother-in-law’s hands. A few months before that, my left arm had been amputated as well. Now it was time to move on. I had been a successful 32-year-old, doing well at work, happily married and newly pregnant. I was just back from a vacation in Cambodia and reveling in ticking one off the bucket list when I fell sick with a fever. It all began rather innocently. And then it escalated, and how. Fever became organ failure. Organ failure became a brush with death. Months later, I had lost both my arms and legs to a bacterial infection that the doctor had heard of only in his exam. I raged. I was angry and hurt and upset. Why did this happen to me? What had I done wrong? I thought it was karma, but I couldn’t think of anything I had done this wrong. But finally, I decided it was time to move on. And so I ran. In the beginning, it was just to lose weight and get fit, but the challenge was addictive. When I run, I feel like I win over my body. I can look back at Destiny and swear at how wrong it was about me. It didn’t win. I still get to call the shots. My life, my decisions, my dreams; limbs or no limbs. Author : Shalini Saraswathi
    1 point
  7. Question: What is the best advice your mother ever gave you? Answer By Jonathan Pettit I was about ten. My mom had just finished creating one of her amazing meals, and I thoroughly enjoyed it. Delicious. Later, as I was washing the dishes, my mom came up to me. “Sorry dinner was so awful again,” she said. I was shocked. “What? No, it was great. I loved it.” “Really?” she said, with mock surprise. “You always eat so quietly, never saying anything. You’ve never told me you liked my cooking, so I thought you hated it.” “No, you’re the best cook I know.” “Then you should tell me that,” she said. “Whenever someone does something nice for you, you should thank that person. If you don’t, then she might think she’s not appreciated and stop doing those nice things.” Something clicked right then. From that day forward, I thanked everyone for literally everything. If you did something that even vaguely helped me, I thanked you profusely. It became a habit, something I didn’t even think about, and that’s when the magic started happening. People liked me more. They talked to me more, shared with me, were more friendly. In my first year of high school, during the final week, I came home and found a giant freezie (a kind of sweet frozen snack) waiting for me. “Thanks, mom,” I said instinctively. “This isn’t from me, she said. “This is from your bus driver.” He had been driving that bus for years, and my siblings and I were the first people to ever thank him as we got dropped off. Those two simple words made a huge difference, so much so that he went out of his way to tell our mom and give us a present. That’s the power of appreciation. When you have it, all is right in the world, but when it’s missing life is empty. My mom taught me many things, but taking two seconds to say ‘thank you’ every time, in any situation, was the best. Debriefing of this Story You would have met people who call themselves as good critics but have you ever a person who says I am good at appreciating others? Isn't that a sad part of our society? Let's start appreciating people more frequently especially people who are close to us.
    1 point
  8. S4NGH, How do you know he is married or amritdhari?
    1 point
  9. Bhein ji life is all about choices ! Bibi can either be homely or career oriented. Problem starts when you mix both lifestyles. Alpha females usually end up with sissy husbands or toy boys. They are also called home breakers by in-law's coz they are not wired to live in joint families.
    1 point
  10. Bhein ji whether she's Hindu, Muslim, Christian it shouldn't matter ! Thing is, she makes a valid point regarding career & contributing to house expenses. Either girl's should opt for a home maker lifestyle and forget about this article or look into the above advice.
    1 point
  11. Very true. I wouldn't even find this funny if they were males instead. Seriously shows the perception they have of women deeply integrated in their head without realising.
    1 point
  12. If you see these women as sisters, it's not funny. Replace this with singhnia (Guru Gobind Singh Jee's daughters), no one would find this funny but extremely offensive.
    1 point
  13. Ha! Do you need women to be delivered to you because you have no charm to attract them. And who was the douchebag that liked this? You guys don't mind shaming yourselves. Making yourselves appear cheap without any discipline.
    1 point
  14. Clearly these women can't be gursikh/amritdhari if they prefer to marry clean-shaven men. The real question here is who did they survey.
    1 point
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

Terms of Use