Posts

Image
Concerns About COVID-19 (Coronavirus) and Epilepsy While  most people who may develop COVID-19 (novel coronavirus)  will have only mild to moderate symptoms, some people may need to see a health care provider or be hospitalized. The focus by the  Centers for Disease Control and Prevention  (CDC), and all of us, is on  slowing down the spread of COVID-19  and ensuring people can receive the care they need. The word “community mitigation” is used to describe the process of slowing down the spread of the virus. Each community is or will be offering guidance for their area, and the  CDC has updated recommendations about what people and community leaders should know and do . Below are the latest answers to questions you have been asking us about COVID-19 and epilepsy. We will continue to update this page as new data reveals more information. Are people with epilepsy at higher risk of developing COVID-19 (coronavirus)? Epi...

Quotes on attitude and personality for Facebook and WhatsApp.

BEL IEVE IN   YOU RSEL F Only put off until tomorrow what you are willing to die having left undone. 😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅 Motivation is what gets you started. Habit is what keeps you going. 😎😎😎 Learning is like rowing upstream not to advance is to drop back. 🙌🙌🙌 Learn from yesterday,😔 live for today,🙌 hope for tomorrow.😇 Confidence is silence.                    ðŸ‘‰ Insecurities are loud. Stay Motivated! Stay Inspired!💪

Wordsmith Samhita Arni (Ramayana in life)

Image
Author Samhita Arni :  A magical  novelist When Samhita was eight years old, her family shifted to India from Pakistan, where her father had been posted as an Indian Government officer. "I used t read a lot - especially The Ramayana and The Mahabharata. this was one of the way to stay connected to the culture that I had left behind," she recalls."But when I came back, I felt that my identity as an Indian has been questioned. It was 1992, and there was a lot of tension in the country," says the author of Sita's Ramayana and The Missing Queen. In school in India, she was ostracised by her peers because she had come from Karachi. The epics were her respite: "it was therapy. The Mahabharata felt so familiar, because it reflects the situation between India and Pakistan," says Samhita. The character which she identified with the most was Karna- "who was the brother of the Pandavas, yet on the side of Kauravas. There is sometimes a se...

NEW PUBLISHED BOOKS OF 2020

Image
THE DRUNK BIRD CHRONICLES MALAY CHATTERJEE Speaking Tiger RS-499 Allegro Armstrong Bragenza, the avain chronicler, recoerds for over 100 years the lives of the essentric Englishmen Gareth Armstrong; his daughter, Rachiel; and five generations of a British-Goan family in this irreverent and funny novel. KOHRA GHANA HAI: NOTHING PERSONAL NAVEEN CHOUREY PENGUIN RS-199 Naveen Chouey'sslam poetry is on burning issues of the say like linching, political blockades and the condition of soldiers. His idealism and vision for an egalitarian world fire his poetry. The book, in flip book form, is in both Devnagari and Roman script.   THE REVISIONERS MARGARET WILKERSON SEXTON COUNTERPOINT RS-1498 Two women from the American South deal with recism in different eras. In the 1920s, Josephine becomes friends with Charlotte, the white woman with ties to the Ku Klux Klan. A century later, Ava moves in with her white grandmather and faces dange...

GLOBAL TERROR The making of a jihadist group

Image
GLOBAL TERROR The making of a jihadist group To expand its geopolitical interest Pakistan’s most dangerous outfit is the Lashkar , points out a writer Stanly Johny. The world woke up to the dangers posed by the Lashkar-e-Tayyaba (LeT) only after 2008 terrorist attack in Mumbai that kill more than 160 people, including foreigners. Though the group was recognised as foreign terrorist organisation by the U.S. Government in December 2001, the U.S. saw that it largely as India’s problem. The Mumbai attack changed that approach. There was a pile up of literature of LeT, and U.S. started putting more pressure on Pakistan to take action against the group. But despite the efforts, the LeT’s operation were largely unaffected. C. Christine Fair explains in her book, In Their Own World: Understanding Laskar-e-Tayyaba , why and how the group survived the global anti-terror campaign. Pakistan’s designs Fair, an associate professor at Georgetown University, U.S., tells the st...