Greeting

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Markendeya Yeddanapudi

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Dec 15, 2025, 8:00:41 PM (2 days ago) Dec 15
to ggroup, thatha patty, vignanada...@gmail.com, viswanatham vangapally, Satyanarayana Kunamneni, kantamaneni baburajendra prasad, TVRAO TADIVAKA, Jayathi Murthy, tnc rangarajan, Nehru Prasad, S Ramu, rctate...@gmail.com, Anisha Yeddanapudi, Ravindra Kumar Bhuwalka, Padma Priya, Usha, Ramanathan Manavasi, Deepali Hadker, dr anandam, Narasimha L Vadlamudi, A. Akkineni


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Mar 

Greeting

In the free and healthy nature, every organism receives wonderful and positive greetings via feelings, the main component of the invisible spectrum. Nature speaks in smells and musics. Free nature inundates all with positive and approving reinforcement, not even allowing scope for words like pessimism in the Dictionary. The free nature does not give lectures; it simply injects health with wonderful enthusiasm. Failure is not part of free nature. And nature educates continuously, the lessons embedding automatically into hormonal communications in the bloodstream.

Nature does not allow any organism to fail. Nature has its own objectives of life, for the life of each organism. What all one needs in life is, the awareness of the basic fact that nature always helps. There are billions of connections that continuously enable your healthy living. Nature greets with teaching. And nature needs free and total access to teach.

You are limb of nature. Like your limbs which live as long as you live, you exist via voyages in births and deaths along with nature. You are not static. You change continuously, the organisms in you change continuously, the atoms and molecules of you leave and arrive, keeping you as you.

Economics is the worst misfortune that has befallen on nature. Nature lives ecologically creating emotions. Technology and Ecology cannot coexist. The economic man, the mechanized human, has no place in ecology and nature. In free ecology, the links are mainly emotional and the ecological chain is emotional chain. Like you every organism needs emotions to live, no organism can be a feeling-less machine. Breathing is automatically feeling.

Air poisoning poisons feelings and emotions. It destroys your diverse connections to nature. The most important fundamental right for everyone, actually for every organism, is the right for clean air. The flow of air is the flow of greeting from nature.

When you poison the air, then you get poisoned greeting from the air. The resulting negative emotions create anarchy in your internal hormonal communications. Imagine the poisoned and negative smell and sound communications from the diverse organisms via the air. One’s ability to develop a positive image of everyone else vanishes. Emotional relations get poisoned.

Economics dictates that you live mechanically and darwinally, in Social Darwinism. The economic man has to live like a rogue. Rogues do not and cannot trust. Greetings cannot be trusted.

Today almost all courses in every University are economics oriented, are anti ecologic. The jobs available in the economy destroy nature. Can you find today, a fruit which is not poisoned in the market?

Every University must start a Free Nature Park without human tampering, so that the students get the pure natural education from nature. The Universities have hijacked education completely and they are under the subjugation of Economics, Cartesian mechanics and harmful to nature.

YM Sarma

 

Rajaram Krishnamurthy

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Dec 15, 2025, 11:45:52 PM (2 days ago) Dec 15
to Markendeya Yeddanapudi, Chittanandam V R, Dr Sundar, Ravi mahajan, Venkat Giri, SRIRAMAJAYAM, Mani APS, Rangarajan T.N.C., Srinivasan Sridharan, Mathangi K. Kumar, Venkat Raman, Rama, Sanathana group, Kerala Iyer, ggroup, thatha patty, vignanada...@gmail.com, viswanatham vangapally, Satyanarayana Kunamneni, kantamaneni baburajendra prasad, TVRAO TADIVAKA, Jayathi Murthy, tnc rangarajan, Nehru Prasad, S Ramu, rctate...@gmail.com, Anisha Yeddanapudi, Ravindra Kumar Bhuwalka, Padma Priya, Usha, Ramanathan Manavasi, Deepali Hadker, dr anandam, Narasimha L Vadlamudi, A. Akkineni

Every Morning the Sun Greets, But Do We Notice?

 

    Every morning, without fail, the sun rises and spills its light across the world. It warms rooftops, glides through windows, and quietly announces the beginning of a new day. This daily miracle has occurred for billions of years, yet most of us pass by it without a second glance. The sun greets us faithfully—but do we ever pause to return the greeting?

    In modern life, mornings are rushed and restless. Alarms ring, notifications flash, and responsibilities immediately demand our attention. Our eyes open not to the sky, but to screens. In this hurried routine, the sunrise becomes background scenery rather than a moment of wonder. What was once a symbol of hope and renewal is reduced to an unnoticed certainty.

    Yet the sun’s greeting carries deep meaning. Each sunrise offers a quiet promise: another chance to begin again. It does not judge yesterday’s mistakes or tomorrow’s worries; it simply arrives, steady and generous. Noticing the morning light can ground us, reminding us that life continues beyond our anxieties and deadlines.

     When we take a moment to observe the sun—its color, warmth, and calm—we reconnect with the present. That brief pause can inspire gratitude and mindfulness. It teaches us that beauty does not always arrive dramatically; sometimes it appears softly, every day, waiting patiently to be seen.

     The sun will continue to rise whether we notice it or not. The real question is not about its reliability, but about our awareness. If we learn to notice the small, consistent gifts around us—like the morning sun—we may discover that life feels richer, calmer, and more meaningful. Perhaps tomorrow morning, we can pause, look up, and finally return the sun’s greeting.

           Surya Namaskaram, or Salutation to the Sun, is a sacred practice in Hinduism that blends devotion, discipline, and physical well-being. Rooted in ancient Vedic tradition, it honors Surya, the Sun God, revered as the source of life, energy, and consciousness. Performed at dawn, Surya Namaskaram aligns the practitioner with the natural rhythm of the universe, marking the day’s beginning with gratitude and reverence.

      Traditionally, Surya Namaskaram consists of a flowing sequence of twelve postures (asanas) synchronized with breath. Each posture corresponds to a mantra and a form of Surya, transforming the practice into a moving prayer. This harmony of body, breath, and mind reflects a core Hindu belief: spiritual growth arises through balance and self-discipline.

      Beyond its spiritual symbolism, Surya Namaskaram promotes holistic health. The sequence strengthens muscles, improves flexibility, aids digestion, and enhances circulation. More subtly, it cultivates mental clarity and inner calm. By facing the rising sun, practitioners acknowledge their connection to nature and the cosmic order (rita), a fundamental concept in Hindu philosophy.

      Surya Namaskaram also carries moral and philosophical meaning. It reminds individuals of humility—recognizing human dependence on natural forces—and encourages mindfulness in daily life. The act of salutation is not mere ritual; it is an expression of gratitude for light, time, and existence itself.

     In Hinduism, Surya Namaskaram stands as a bridge between the physical and the spiritual. It teaches that worship need not be confined to temples or words alone; it can be lived through conscious movement, breath, and awareness. As the sun rises each morning, Surya Namaskaram invites us to pause, honor life’s source, and begin the day with intention.

       Aditya Hrudayam is a sacred hymn dedicated to Lord Surya (the Sun God), found in the Yuddha Kanda of the Valmiki Ramayana. It is taught by the sage Agastya to Lord Rama on the battlefield, just before his final combat with Ravana.

    At that moment, Rama is weary and troubled. Sage Agastya advises him to chant Aditya Hrudayam, explaining that Surya is the source of strength, courage, wisdom, and victory. The hymn glorifies Surya as the creator, sustainer, and destroyer of the universe, and as the inner soul of all beings.

     The verses praise Surya’s brilliance, compassion, and cosmic role in maintaining order and life. They describe him as the light that dispels darkness, ignorance, fear, and sorrow. By chanting the hymn with devotion and concentration, one is said to gain mental clarity, confidence, health, and success.

    After chanting Aditya Hrudayam and saluting the Sun God, Rama is revitalized with renewed energy and determination. He then proceeds to defeat Ravana, symbolizing the triumph of dharma over adharma and light over darkness.

     In essence, Aditya Hrudayam teaches that faith, inner strength, and devotion to divine light can overcome even the greatest challenges. It remains a powerful prayer in Hindu tradition, often recited for courage, peace, and victory in life.

       Morning greetings enlightens the life every day

K Rajaram IRS 161225


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