Arjun/Shaheer AT#57 NOTE Page1: SHAHEER FC - Page 11

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--Royal-- thumbnail
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Posted: 9 years ago
Ok Guys may be u all already know that... 2day sum-one hacked Shaheer's Twitter and IG acc.😡😡😭 So plazzz unfollow his old acc. @Shaheer_S



and now follow his new acc. is.

@Shaheer_SheikhN
😊
Nonie12345 thumbnail
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Posted: 9 years ago
Thanks for sharing the news abhi-pundir
I can not understand that how can people hack other's accounts!!

Angry at the hacker who hacked shaheer's accounts😡
Nonie12345 thumbnail
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Posted: 9 years ago
Did you know that Arjuna was killed by his own son in a battle? Here is the story

Babruvahana and Arjuna

There is an interesting side story in Mahabharata about Babhruvahana who was even more skilled to his father, Arjuna. He succesfully stopped the Pandavas quest of performing Ashwamedha. This story may be treated as similar to Luv Kush stopping Rama from performing Ashwamedha yagya.
Here is the detailed story of Babruvahana.

Birth of Babruvahana

During exile, Arjuna travelled the length and breadth of India. His wanderings took him to ancient Manipura, an almost mystic kingdom renowned for its natural beauty. There, he met Chitrngad, the daughter of the king of Manipura, and was moved to seek her hand in marriage. Her father demurred on the plea that, according to the matrilineal customs of his people, the children born of Chitrngad were heir to Manipura; he could not allow his heirs to be taken away from Manipur by their father. Arjuna promised that he would take away neither his wife Chitrngad nor any children borne by her from Manipura and wed the princess. Babruvahana, was soon born to the couple and later succeeded his grandfather as king of Manipura.

Ashwamedha yagya by Yudhishthira

Long after the battle of Kurukshetra, Yudhishtira decides to conduct the Aswamedha Yaga. The yaga horse enters the dominion of Manipur,  with the horse intended for the Aswamedha, there was a battle between Arjuna and King Babhruvahana, and the latter killed his father with an arrow. Repenting of his deed, he determined to kill himself, but he obtained from his stepmother, the Naga princess Uloopi, a gem which restored Arjuna to life. He returned with his father to Hastinapura.

Babruvahana vs Arjuna

Arjuna's death in the battle is also attributed to the curse of the Ashta-Vasus. The Vasus, enraged by Arjuna's deceptive tactic of using Shikandi as a shield to kill Bhishma (an incarnation of one of the eight Vasus), curse Arjuna that he would be slain by his own son. This curse comes to pass during the battle between Arjuna and Babruvahana.
Babruvahana also killed Karna's son Vrishaketu in the battle. Vrishaketu had accompanied Arjuna in the Ashwamedha Yagna and was consequently killed. Later krishna revived Vrishaketu.
  Credit- Ristin.com
Edited by Bella02pie - 9 years ago
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Posted: 9 years ago
Shaheer has  got his Twitter acc.
Sheikh shaheer Nawaz @Shaheer_sheikhN  

Guess what guys.. '''


Sheikh shaheer Nawaz @Shaheer_sheikhN  

I got my Twitter account back..






Sheikh shaheer Nawaz @Shaheer_sheikhN  

Just to avoid any confusion will delete this account

Nonie12345 thumbnail
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Posted: 9 years ago
Thanks for the great news abhi-pundir👍🏼
devashree_h thumbnail
Posted: 9 years ago
A very Nice blog post about Arjun written by a writer at the The Economist

http://andreaskluth.org/2010/03/16/arjuna-our-inner-hero/


1) Arjuna as warrior

At first blush (and deceptively, as you will see), Arjuna's heroism looks familiar to us in the West.

He was a great fighter, an ambidextrous and precise archer, indeed an Indian Apollo with arrows. He practiced in the dark, the better to hit his victims during the day time. He won the hand of his wife, Draupadi, in an archery contest remarkably similar to the one Odysseus won against the suitors at Ithaca to regain his wife Penelope.

Arjuna was also the biggest hero in the biggest war of mythological India. What Achilles was to the Greeks at Troy, Arjuna was to the Pandavas at Kurukshetra (Kuru's Field) in northern India.

The Pandavas were leading a huge army in a righteous cause against their own cousins, the Kauravas, also with a huge army. The Kauravas had stolen a kingdom from the Pandavas in a rigged game of dice, humiliating Draupadi in the process. The Pandavas went into exile, but then came back, seeing their duty as fighting to reclaim their kingdom and honor.

For eighteen days, battle raged. Millions died and fewer than a dozen men survived. Blood turned the field of Kuru into red mud. Arjuna and his brothers shot so many arrows into one of their enemies that the man fell from his chariot and landed not on the ground but on the arrows sticking out from his body like the quills on a porcupine.

But Arjuna also lost his own loved ones. His sons and nephews died in the battle, just as the Greek and Trojan heroes lost their friends and family.

2) Arjuna's fear and duty

But the part of the story that is most famous " rather as the brief episode of Achilles' wrath in Homer's Iliad is the best known part of the story of the Trojan War " is a poem embedded into the Mahabharata just before the fighting began. And that is the Bhagavad Gita, or song of God. (Try one of these translations.)

On the eve of the battle, with the two armies already lined up against each other, Arjuna and his charioteer steered their war chariot into the space between the two armies to contemplate what was about to happen. The charioteer was Arjuna's friend and adviser, Krishna.

As Arjuna gazed from his chariot at the two armies, he suddenly lost his will to fight. He was afraid. Afraid not only of losing his own life, but also for the lives of his "fathers, grandfathers, teachers, uncles, brothers, sons, grandsons, fathers-in-law, and friends." Because this was a war within a family. He had loved ones in both armies.

Compare Arjuna's fear to Aeneas' despair in Virgil's Aeneid:

As I see my own kinsmen, gathered here, eager to fight, my legs weaken, my mouth dries, my body trembles, my hair stands on end, my skin burns.

Arjuna dropped his bow and arrows and collapsed on the floor of his chariot, sobbing.

***

And now Krishna began to talk to Arjuna. Gently but firmly, he reminded Arjuna of his duty. The Sanskrit term here is dharma, and it seems (in this context) pretty close to Aeneas' Roman virtue of pietas ("piety" derives from it but has come to mean something different).

3) Arjuna's mind

What follows in the Gita is history's most fascinating dialogue about how to yoke (as in yoga) the human mind into harmony with its situation.

Arjuna tells Krishna (as we all might say every day about our own minds) that his mind is

restless, unsteady, turbulent, wild, stubborn; truly, it seems to me as hard to master as the wind.

Krishna in turn teaches Arjuna how to make his mind calm, as a coach might try to get an athlete into "the zone". (As it happens, Krishna's advice is the same as Patanjali's, which is why those two texts together are considered the foundation of Yoga.)

What, in a nutshell, does Krishna tell Arjuna?

To "let go". To let go his fears of what might happen the next day, to let go the worries, the anxiety, and also the hopes and anger, and all the rest of it. In fact, Krishna wants Arjuna to

let go of all results, whether good or bad, and [to be] focused on the action alone... [to] act without any thought of results, open to success or failure. This equanimity is yoga.

4) Arjuna in your mind, my mind

And this is the essence of Arjuna's heroism: He shows us, with the help of his divine "inner voice" of Krishna, how to make our minds calm so that we can go on with life whenever it seems to overwhelm us.

Arjuna's heroism is, like Aeneas' but more so, an inner victory.

In fact, this applies at an even higher level. Here is how Mohandas Gandhi explained why he, a proponent of non-violence, saw truth in this story of war:

Under the guise of physical warfare it described the duel that perpetually went on in the hearts of mankind, and that physical warfare was brought in merely to make the description of the internal duel more alluring.

Arjuna, it turns out, is meant to be a part of my mind and your mind and everybody's mind. It is the clearest and best state of mind, called buddhi (as in: Buddha).

His brothers correspond to other positive states of mind (the ancient Indians were very precise on the subject), And all five were married to Draupadi, whom yogis understand to be Kundalini, the coiled feminine energy at the base of the spine. Freud called it libido, the Greeks called it Eros.

The Kauravas, the evil cousins, are the negative states of mind " anger, hatred, greed, vanity, envy, arrogance, fear and so forth.

So there it is:

  • Kurukshetra is the battlefield of our own minds, every day.
  • Arjuna's struggle is our daily struggle to let the noble in us prevail over the base, the serene over the angry, the courageous over the fearful.
  • Arjuna is the hero in us.


Nonie12345 thumbnail
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Posted: 9 years ago
Thanks for sharing this wonderful article with us devashree😊