Wednesday, June 24, 2009

your favourite colour and your personality- please check yourself

Adapted from “The Healing Power of Color” by Betty Wood (Inner Traditions, 1998).

Whether we’re a vibrant Orange, or a peaceful Blue, our color preferences are a key to understanding our personalities. Find out what this color expert has to say about your favorite color. What does it reveal about who you really are?


White: Symbolic of purity, innocence and naivete, white has strong connotations of youth and purity. If you are an older person, your preference for white could indicate a desire for perfection and impossible ideals, maybe an attempt to recapture lost youth and freshness. It may also symbolize a desire for simplicity or the simple life.

Red: The color of strength, health, and vitality, Red is often the color chosen by someone outgoing, aggressive, vigorous and impulsive—or someone who would like to be! It goes with an ambitious nature but those who choose it can be abrupt at times, determined to get all they can out of life, quick to judge people and take sides. Red people are usually optimistic and can’t stand monotony; they are rather restless and not at all introspective, so they may be unaware of their own shortcomings. They find it hard to be objective and may blame others for any mishaps. Quiet people with a preference for red may feel the need for the warmth, strength and life-giving qualities of the color, or they blanket their true feelings under a sober exterior. Red is usually chosen by people with open and uncomplicated natures, with a zest for life.

Maroon: Harsh experience has probably matured the Maroon person into someone likeable and generous. It is often a favorite color of someone who has been battered by life but has come through. It indicates a well-disciplined Red personality—one who has had difficult experiences and has not come through unmarked but who has grown and matured in the process.


Pink: This color embodies the gentler qualities of Red, symbolizing love and affection without passion. Women who prefer Pink tend to be maternal. Pink desires protection, special treatment and a sheltered life. Pink people require affection and like to feel loved and secure, perhaps wanting to appear delicate and fragile. Pink people tend to be charming and gentle, if a trifle indefinite.


Orange: This color of luxury and pleasure appeals to the flamboyant and fun-loving person who likes a lively social round. Orange people may be inclined to dramatize a bit, and people notice them, but they are generally good-natured and popular. They can be a little fickle and vacillating, but on the whole they try hard to be agreeable. Orange is the color of youth, strength, fearlessness, curiosity and restlessness.

Yellow: The color of happiness, wisdom and imagination, Yellow is chosen by the mentally adventurous, searching for novelty and self-fulfillment. Yellow usually goes with a sunny and shrewd personality, with a good business head and a strong sense of humor. It is the color of intellectuality and all things to do with the mind. Yellow folks are usually clear and precise thinkers who have a good opinion of their own mental capacities and who have lofty ideals. They may at times tend to shun responsibility, preferring freedom of thought and action.


Green: The color of harmony and balance, Green symbolizes hope, renewal and peace, and is usually liked by the gentle and sincere. Greens are generally frank, community-minded people, fairly sociable but preferring peace at any price. Green people can be too self-effacing, modest and patient, so they may get exploited by others. They are usually refined, civilized and reputable.

Blue: Soft, soothing, compassionate and caring, Blue is the color of deliberation and introspection, conservatism and duty. Patient, persevering, conscientious, sensitive and self-controlled, Blues like to be admired for their steady character and wisdom. They are faithful, but are often worriers with somewhat inflexible beliefs and can be too cautious, and suspicious of flamboyant behavior.

Blue-Green: Exacting, discriminating, poised and attractive, the Blue-Green person tends to be sensitive, intellectual and refined, persevering and stable if rather detached. Blue-Greens have excellent taste, and are usually courteous and charming, capable but often refusing help or guidance.

Turquoise: Complex, imaginative and original, Turquoise people drive themselves hard and may be in a state of turmoil under their outwardly cool exterior.

Lavender: This is often chosen by a person who lives “on a higher plane,” who never notices anything sordid and who is always impeccably and beautifully dressed. Lavender people may be on a continual quest for culture and the refined things of life, high and noble causes but without the necessity of getting their hands dirty. A Lavender person is usually creative, charming, witty and civilized.

Purple: Purples are highly individual, fastidious, witty and sensitive, with a strong desire to be unique and different. Temperamental, expansive and artistic, a Purple person may become aloof and sarcastic when misunderstood. If you chose Purple, you tend to be unconventional, tolerant and dignified, likely to achieve positions of authority.

Brown: A Brown person has stamina and patience, tending to be very solid and substantial, conscientious, dependable, steady and conservative. Browns are not impulsive, and may be inarticulate and tactless but they love responsibility and are reliable and kindly. If you chose Brown, watch out for a tendency to be obstinate and inflexible.


Gray: The color of caution and compromise, diligent Grays search for composure and peace and often work hard without reward. Older Grays like life to run on an even keel with few ups and downs. Young Grays may be withdrawing from life and suppressing their personalities. Grays often have good business ability and tend to work too much.

Black: Dignified and impressive without being showy, Black people want to give the appearance of mystery, but their preference may also indicate a suppression of desires and worldly aims, suggesting hidden depths and inner longings

"Too often we underestimate the power of a touch, a smile, a kind word, a listening ear, an honest compliment, or the smallest act of caring, all of which have the potential to turn a life around."

Favourite Love Quotes for u!

Top ten famous cute love quotes:


Favourite Funny Loves Quote #1

i know that somewhere in the Universe exists my perfect soulmate--but looking for her is much difficult than just staying at home and ordering another pizza.

-Alf Whit



Favourite Funny Loves Quote #2

i was nauseous and tingly all over. i was either in love or i had smallpox.

-Woody Wllen



Favourite Funny Loves Quote #3

Gravitation can not be held responsible for people falling in love.

-Albert Einstein



Favourite Funny Loves Quote #4

There is a place you can touch a woman that will drive her crazy. Her heart.

- Melanie Graffith, Milk Money





Favourite Funny Loves Quote #5

i recently read that love is entirely a matter of chemistry. That must be why my wife treats me like toxic waste.

-David Bissonnette



Favourite Funny Loves Quote #6

Love is grand; divorce is a hundred grand.

-Subash



Favourite Funny Loves Quote #7

Happiness is the china shop; love is the bull.

-H.L. Mencken



Favourite Funny Loves Quote #8

What the world really needs is more love and less paperwork.

-Pearl Bailey





Favourite Funny Loves Quote #9

you cant buy love but u can pay heavily for it.

-Henny Youngsman



Favourite Funny Loves Quote #10

You cant' put a price tag on love, but you can on all its accessories.

-Melani Clark

Romantic Love poem!

When most people think of love poems, they think of serious and soulful expressions of passion. Long sonnets by Shakespeare or romantic poems by Browning and Lord Byron are the norm for love poetry. However, funny love poems can be good for a laugh. They may not be romantic, but they do give your friends something to enjoy.

Some of the best funny love poems are limericks. Limericks started in Ireland and follow a standard form of five lines and a rhyme scheme of aabba. Here are a few limericks written by anonymous authors:

There once was an old man of Lyme
Who married three wives at a time
When asked "Why a third?"
He replied, "One's absurd!
And bigamy, Sir, is a crime."

There was a young fellow named Hammer
Whose had an unfortunate stammer
"The b-bane of my life"
Said he, "Is m-m-my wife
D-d-d-d-d-d-damn ‘er!"

She made friends with a young undertaker;
Her last boyfriend had forsaken her.
But she started to curse
When he turned up in a hearse.
She said next time I'll date a baker!

There was a young lady named Constance,
From boys she wouldn't stand any nonsense.
If her partners grew deft
She would lead with her left;
The results would not weigh on her conscience.

My sweetheart and I are just wed.
Already I wish I were dead.
Two weeks she's been spending.
It was time never ending.
We are thousands of pounds in the red!


Get Your Dander Up
When someone annoys you
And you want to have a go
When your hackles go up
Firstly count to ten or so

But if they get under your skin
And you want to let rip
And you feel your temples throb
Firstly just bite your lip

But if all else has failed
And you do lose your temper
Keep your words soft and sweet
In case you have to eat them later!

Thursday, June 18, 2009

Bawarchi’s timeless delicacies!

KATHMANDU: Sanjay Nangia and his wife Rena Nangia own Bawarchi, Sanjay said, “Seeing what’s happening in India I realise that home deliveries are an expanding niche market and Indian food is getting hugely popular as Nepal and India come closer”.
Sanjay Nangia, my friend whose Bawarchi in Maharajgunj opposite the Teaching Hospital has a clientele of senior doctors and heads of medical departments at lunch time and a database of free home delivery food comprising 50-60 families at dinner.
New Bawarchis are going to be springing up so Sanjay is increasingly busy and his wife looks after the children at home as well as the Bawarchi in Maharajgunj.
Sanjay recommended the specialty of the house, an old Kolkata favourite The Kathi Roll and he said, “The best combination is the egg and chicken combination because the egg moistens the paratha or bread that then makes a delicious envelope for the marinated chicken”. So we had one.
However distant my own Kolkata days The Kathi Rolls were as soft as succulent and as mildly spiced as I remember them. I tasted my youth. Both the roll and that past of mine were mesmerising. It is said that the Kathi Roll was the result of some quick thinking on a busy day, when the number of customers purchasing kebab and parathas outstripped the rate at which plates could be washed, so the chef decided to wrap some of the kebabs in parathas rather than serve them on plates. The basic Kathi Roll begins with paratha toasted on a tava or pan. Whipped egg is poured in the tava’s centre and topped with the bread. Fried vegetables or marinated meat are roasted in butter and stuffed inside. Spices, red onion slivers and lime are sprinkled on top.
We avoided the chicken, mutton, fish and paneer platter called the Kebabi Kebabs despite our remembering it as brilliant the first time we had it and moved into Sanjay’s suggestion of the mutton Seekh Kebab one of my favourites.
Created by the Mughals in Delhi its basically minced meat and almost tandoori spices cooked in a tandoor clay oven. Bawarchi’s Seekh Kebabs have an enviable juiciness which the mint sauce adds too with its mingled tastes. You don’t get Seekh Kebabs as good as Bawarchi’s anymore.
Said Sanjay, “Now try the Hyderabadi Biryani which is different from other Biryanis in India because it is moist whereas you eat the others with a yoghurt and onions and chilli mixture”. The Hyderabadi Biryani we were eating could be devoured in great quantities without anything it was wondrously delicate with a hint of saffron and the mutton was as tender as a touch: the potatoes are an essential part of the dish and there was a little gravy which was unique. It was beyond yumptious.
The Chicken Dopiyaza which accompanied the Hyderabadi Biryani was made different by the taste of capsicum. The soft tasting reduced gravy of Bawarchi’s Chicken Dopiyaza goes back to its Muslim creator Tipu Sultan and is typically a dish from Bengal. Food writer Camellia Panjabi says of Dopiyazas, “The term describes a dish using twice the normal proportion of onions or in which onions are used twice in the cooking process.”