Skip to main content

Re: Re: Re: Blog@Viewpoint:Your take on how to handle job related stress?

Thursday, 9 April, 2009 10:43 PM

From:



To:
"Team Jagruti"
Hello Tushar

Thanks for your prompt reply.
I think we can look for a broader outlook and try to form a common platform for bloggers who write about social awareness and issues that make difference to life of society around us.
I think we can go ahead with that and i personally will look to play an active role to build it up.Let me know how you plan to go ahead with it.

THanks
Salil



On Thu, 09 Apr 2009 Team Jagruti wrote :
>Hey,
>We have several ideas lined up for the blog to progress,
>One is to get together with more bloggers who write about social
>awareness and merge thier blogs with ours, so as to build a solid
>platform
>Then registering our group into a society is yet another goal.
>
>Tushar
>
>On 05/04/2009, Salil Dhawan wrote:
> >
> > Hi
> >
> > Yes i think our goal is same:to bring awareness among the masses.
> > Going forward i am also look to professionalize Viewpoint to a awareness
> > website then being a blog only.
> > We can definitely take it forward.Before that can you give me an idea about
> > your plans and how you plan to go forward.
> >
> > Thanks
> > Salil
> >
> > On Wed, 25 Mar 2009 Team Jagruti wrote :
> >>Hey,
> >>Sorry for replying so late.
> >>Its a great blog, you made there.
> >>Would love to form some sort of association between Jagruti and View -
> >> Point.
> >>Any ideas as to how can we do it?
> >>Regards,
> >>Tushar
> >>
> >>On 22/03/2009, Salil Dhawan wrote:
> >> >
> >> > Hello

> >> > YOurs is a nice website.
> >> > Do visit my blog at

> >> > http://views-point.blogspot.com

> >> > Hope we can have association of some type as my aim is also to make a
> >> > difference through my blog.

> >> > Do have a look at my blog and maybe get back to me

> >> > Thanks
> >> > Salil
> >> > http://views-point.blogspot.com/

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

An epidemic of loneliness: Why are we lonely in a world so full?

In the town of Havenwood, an unusual epidemic takes over—not one of physical illness, but an outbreak of loneliness. When Lina, a fiery yet secretly tender-hearted skeptic of romance, meets Quinn, a free-spirited artist questioning the same ideas, they are forced to confront whether real connection lies beyond romantic love or if they are truly doomed to solitude. It was a crisp day in Havenwood, and the sky was brooding—dark clouds laced with impatient energy before a thunderstorm, as if even the heavens felt the town’s growing melancholy. It was not the kind of town you would expect to be cloaked in loneliness. Stone cottages lined the narrow, winding roads, and the trees had that sage-like stillness that you only see in stories and dreams. I hadn’t been here long when the problem struck me like a slap in the face: everyone was obsessed with finding The One, as if every single person was but half a person, wandering through life like a lost sock in search of its pair. How did a town ...

The Sympathy Beggar: A tale of a heart seeking true love

In a quiet, mysterious Asian town, Mili, a self-professed “sympathy addict,” yearns for genuine love amidst the enchantment of lush landscapes and eccentric locals. A poignant journey, she faces harsh truths, introspective questions, and surprising warmth along the way. Will she transcend the “sympathy trap” or remain a beggar of borrowed love? In a place so mystifying it could have existed in a daydream, perched in the fog-draped hills of Valanpur, where wild jasmine bloomed beneath a veiled sky, there lived a young woman named Mili. Valanpur, mind you, was not an ordinary place; it was a town small enough for secrets to survive but large enough for whispers to travel. Picture Credits: Sergey Romanenko And here, under a canopy of lush forests and swaying tamarind trees, Mili—a petite woman with eyes that sparkled with the misplaced audacity of someone searching for love in all the wrong places—was about to confront the thorniest of human desires. But first, let me make one thing v...

Epitome of Equality

First of all This is not to demean any religion.. I am a Hindu by birth, but yes I respect all religions .I offer my daily prayers , fast on holy days , but there was something that was disturbing me . God as per me was a Friend, someone who was by my side always , someone who was a dear friend , but this is not what everyone else thought , for others he was the Judge who gives his verdict always and punishes anyone and everyone . Walk into any temple and you would see , if you have money , you will be treated in a way as if you are the ONLY disciple of the God . I have had too many experiences where I was treated as a second class citizen in the temple . Why? Well I could not afford giving thousands as donation. This is not how it should be , God looks at each one of us with the same divinity .As I mentioned God for me is a friend, so tell me, do we chose friends based on their bank balances? Do we give our verdict on them ? then how can God do it? I know many of us would ...