Thursday, May 31, 2012

Mom, The only Goddess.

There is no second life next to you in the days of yore and the days to come. I have consumed decades and decades not bringing in about your devotion to me, but you haven't paused a second without thinking what would befall next to me. For nine months, you didn't bother not carrying me in order to make me look like one. You gave me priceless but a precious life.

It didn't cease there. You imperiled everything, when it rained on you didn't care yourself of getting drenched, when the sun scorched you didn't care of getting burnt, when hail stormed you didn't care of getting hit, when in war, you didn't care of your life, when a hunger stroke, you didn't care about eating, when I ailed you soaked me in care, feeding the best possible and yelling for help, and when luxury came you gave it all away, just for one flickering life, me. I can never afford back such kindness in years and years to come simply because it is countless with a physical gadget. You did better than the best and bore out everything to show that you are the only one capable of fostering me.

It might have been a torn doily, passed down socks and shoes, a porous diaper, unbroken wooden toys, wool woven blankets, and a leaking umbrella but neither can I afford a single one of it out of the penny I have earned nor can it be sold. It is just matchless to be bought with money as it is done all with love.

However, life can't be better shaped without a piece of advice which you gave me unceasingly anytime when I needed and now with I have everything of my own to take care of and my age seemingly closing you, I can only keep an empty chair in my heart waiting for you to come and sit on; this chair is always for you. There are no such things a hate to you. You are my inspiration and everything I do is for you. You are the only Goddess I would ever see.

Wednesday, May 30, 2012

Tuesday, May 29, 2012

PERSONAL INFORMATION
Name:Jigme Tenzin
Birth place: Madeywa
Nationality:Bhutanese
Civil state: Single
Permanent Address: Vill: Madeywa,
                                Geog: Kangpar
                                Dungkhag:Thsimshing
                                District-Trashigang
                       #00975               Bhutan


STUDIES

Primary School-Pasaphu Primary School
1992-2001

Pasaphu Primary School





Lower Secondary School-Thungkhar Lower Secondary School, Thungkhar. 


                                        2002-2003



Lower Secondary School-Tashitse Higher Secondary School, Wamrong. 
                                        2004-2005

Tashitse Higher Secondary School


















Higher Secondary School:  Jigme Sherubling Higher Secondary School, Khaling.
                                        2006-2007
Jigme Sherubling Higher Secondary School














Bachelor's Degree-All India Institute of Medical Sciences(A.I.I.M.S.), New Delhi.
                             2008-present
All India Institute of Medical Sciences

Bhutanese Monks, the mastered Assasins.

Firstly, I disclose I am a Buddhist, by birth, and I am glad having known much about this particular religion than any other religions in the world. It jogs my dead-eye of Gautama Buddha, cheerlessly. From his early age, he picked up the meaninglessness of life without being consequential to others, which saw him to the foundation of "Buddhism." Bhutan chanced under its influence and of course with much love, devotion, and enthusiasm. People embarked going to temples, rounding clock-wise around religious monuments, anti-clock-wise rotation of rosaries, building monsters of Statue like the one in Thimphu, hoisting thousands of prayer flags on mountain tops, and all in our ingenuity was Buddhism. Above all we believed in enlightenment. But, have we regarded Buddhism well? Have we done enough to become one? Only the retired monks have answered these questions. Regrettably, I am not a withdrawn monk to make it all right.

I passionately deny agreeing the practice of Buddhism. Today most of the religious sites have become a whore house, and a one numbered dating places in the country. What we formerly believed has turned us down. What we didn't believe has become a life for us and what we regarded is being denied by us. Secluded monks have danced a whopping role in the moderation of face of Buddhism, and it has become like a disease corrupted by an ill virus. The virus infecting the ailing monk pushes him to retirement and when he cracks into the society, he can't anymore hold on the virus. All he needed to do to salt away his bad conscience is to kill people, rape girls, rock with artificial hairs in the clubs, drink gallons of cheap beers, wear C-graded out fashioned Indian T-shirts & fast fading black jeans and first-generation sunglasses. Monks are widely known to bird-dog religious practice, aimed at enlightenment of self and other beings meanwhile. However, today I have mastered their true color. I am not always blown away by news headlines such as a retired monk stabs a boy, a monk impersonates some great figures; a monk is charged for rape; a monk is suspected for laptop thief, and much such relevance. I can only be hopeful of definite next headlines by a monk. That is all I have learnt about so far.

I was quite taken away by the news headline "Four charged for killing a 26-year-old man." However, my fidelity in Buddhism didn't settle me wrong since one of the four was an ex-monk, and in-fact it was an emeritus monk who actually stabbed the boy. This is all about Buddhism preachers. Robed monks might battle it but never can they deny this hideous truth. Most of the crime-related headlines in BBS and www.kuenselonline.com are of Lord Buddha's direct followers; I mean monks. Lord Buddha himself might be ashamed of it, seeing them evolving into military monks ready to perish for the country. After all, Lord Buddha would at least want a country to live in, although he is renowned for non-possession of materials.

These monks would constantly catch a sight of and prevail in heart of society. Bhutanese monks are the true inspiration for the ancient warlords. I prefer the phrase "the mastered Assassins."

Sunday, May 27, 2012

10 tallest buildings in the world






1) Burj Khalifa, 828 m, Dubai. 




2) Makkah Royal Clock Tower Hotel, 601 m, Saudi Arabia.




3) Taipei 101, 509 m, Taiwan. 




4) Shanghai world financial center, 492 m, China.




5) International commerce centre, 484 m, Hongkong.




6 & 7) Petronas tower 1 & 2,  452 m, Malaysia. 



8) Zifeng tower,  450 m, China.




9) Willis tower, 442 m, Chicago, USA.




10) Kingkey 100, 442m, China.

Tuesday, May 22, 2012

7 interesting facts about life.

1) In our life we eat 6 Elephant size food, which is more than 60,000 pounds.

2) High car accidents occurs mostly in left turning vehicles in a traffic. So, watch out left more carefully.

3) Surprisingly, letter Q is not found in any one's name in Americans.

4) The Olympic flags are always red, black, blue,green and yellow rings on the white background, i.e. because      one of these colors appear at least in every nation's flag.

5) Kea bird loves to eat strips of rubber around car window.


6) If you see anywhere a statue of the man riding on a horse we would come to 3 deductions; if both front legs of the horse is in the air then the person died in the battle field, if only a leg is in the air then he died of injury, and finally if both the front legs are on the ground then he died of natural causes.


7) In the caribbean there are Oyster that climbs tree.




10 beautiful waterfalls of the world


1) Angel Falls in Venezuela.
     height-979 metees, making it highest in the world.

2) Iguazu falls in Brazil
     height- 80 meters, length- 3 km, making it largest in the world.

3) Waterfalls plitvice lake in Croatia

4) Niagara Falls in USA

5) Victoria Falls in Zimbawee 

6) Falls of Yosemite in USA

7) Kaieteur Falls in Gunyana in South America
     height-226 meters

8) Gallfoss Falls in Iceland
     height-30 meters

9) Waterfall Dettifoss in Iceland
     height 40 meters

10) Sutherlands Falls in New Zealand
      height- 580 meters



Monday, May 21, 2012

10 Highest mountains on the planet

  1. Mount Everest, 8850 metres above seal level-Tibet & Nepal
  2. K2 ( Godwin Austen), 8611 metres above sea level-China & Pakistan
  3. Gangchenjunga, 8586 metres above sea level-India &Nepal
  4. Lhotse,8516 metres above sea level-Nepal & Tibet
  5. Makalu,8463 metres above sea level - Nepal & Tibet
  6. Cho Oyu, 8201 metres above sea level -Nepal & Tibet
  7. Dhaulagiri, 8167 metres above sea level -Nepal
  8. Manaslu, 8163 metres above sea level- Nepal
  9. Nanga parbat, 8125 metres above sea level- Pakistan
  10. Annapurna, 8091 metres above sea level- Nepal

Wednesday, May 2, 2012

Bhutan, a country frozen in time.





Sandwiched between the world's most populated countries, India and China the kingdom of Bhutan is buried in the eastern Himalayan Mountains. Bhutan is almost impossible for the first timers to locate in the world map. Until 17th century, Bhutan existed as a salad of struggling fiefdom when Zhabdrung Ngawang Namgyel pooled the country. Although Bhutan did measurably fall under the British Empire in 20th century sickening war against the empire Bhutan couldn't action back more than its brusque mountains did, and later it proved costly as mountains couldn't fight for the plain Duar areas? However, still we enjoy the bilateral relation with government of India since its independence.

The state religion is Vajrayana Buddhism, and population barely 700000, predominantly Buddhist, second to which is Hindu. The total area is deflated to 38,394 square kilometers from 46,500 km2 after a dubitable humble Chinese bite. Thimphu is the capital and the national language is Dzongkha. Bhutan is a constitutional monarchical country with the reigning King Jigme Khesar Namgyel Wangchuk and is a member of United Nations and South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC).

For occasional visitants, Bhutan is honestly a Shangri-la, allegorical country cloaked in bluffs, but we are very much cool that such a landlocked can’t genuinely be a Shangri la with day to day reality at hand there is less time for dreaming. The lives of the peasants are fossilized with household chores, field works and livestock care, scarcely mechanized. The only moments of rest are the religious festivals, pilgrimages and secular holidays, which punctuate the reckless life.

With 80 percent of the population trucked within agriculture or raising livestock, Bhutan remains a sylvan country almost devoid of industry except few in the South. The beauty of the pastoral landscape is beyond ABCs, and it can seem hallucinatory to wayfarers from the industrialized world: houses inked with elaboration and roofs shingled, patch works of paddy fields and plots of maize closed off and fostered from oaks and boars by intricately woven fence. A man watching keen on his aged cabin waiting for the harvest, a woman stitching her torn in the open air, a baby laced into a horse’s saddle bag, butterflies dating the spring flowers, grasshoppers hoping green in the grass, cattle busy browsing in the bushes and birds singing harmoniously free in the vault of heaven.


Such scene would never stop you from dreaming forever. However, it is the symbols of Bhutan’s religion, which leave the deepest impression: the Chortens and monasteries freckling the mural, prayer flags wobbling, prayer wheels gyred by cracking mountain streams. Red robed monks preside over all events: wedding, departures, festivals, ceremonies, promotions and foundations.

Religion, tradition and ancestral custom constitute Bhutanese seemliness, the most notable elements being respects for all religious institutions and wearing of national dress. These emphases on traditional values are rather a deliberate policy of the government for the better socio-economic development and environmental preservation, which forms the base of Gross National Happiness (GNH).

Gross National Happiness (GNH) is originally coined by Jigme Singye Wangchuk, the fourth King of Bhutan in a hope to calibrate holistically the social progress in addition to GDP. It is now the vital cog in Bhutan's five years developmental planning processes. The four pedestals of GNH are:

  1. Promotion of sustainable development,
  2. Preservation and promotion of cultural values,
  3. Conservation of natural environment and
  4. Establishment of good governance.
Although commoners are churned to confusion by the GNH concept, they are all satisfied without keeping up the true meaning of it. This concept has interested some other nations in the world but the musical buzzer has also the tail sting, criticisms. Critics point out it as being very introverted and a difficult model for international well being analogy. I would say these critics have nothing to do with it since it was primarily put into practice for the people of Bhutan.