Thursday, January 29, 2009

Not a child's play...

Was getting back home when I saw a group of kids playing Hide and Seek which is a rare sight now. A game which I used to play in my childhood days. Golden days!

Was wondering where the old fashioned games have gone? The Internet and video games have taken the place of these 'old fashioned' games. Sometimes, I hate the Internet! Anyways, the curious cat in me wanted to do some research on these old fashioned games. So, the Sherlock Holmes in me took over and I started my research on a cold winter morning, with a laptop on my table and a steaming cup of coffee to beat the winter blues. Got so many interesting stories about these games. Sometimes, I love the Internet! Um...er...it is a love-hate relation that I share with the Internet!

Hopscotch - Hopscotch was invented by Romans which was designed for as a training regimen for foot soldiers to improve their footwork. Wow! So much to a 'child's jump'!


Marbles - Marbles and marble games for children continued to be a popular form of entertainment well through the Middle Ages. Unfortunately, youngsters playing marble games came to be seen as delinquents, and efforts were made to restrict their marble-playing activities. Hence, the expression 'To lose one's marbles' originated which is used to refer to a senseless and stupid person.

Simon Says - This has a rather interesting story. In the 1930's Grossinger family owned a famous hotel. To keep the guests entertained, they invited Sheldon Seltzer, an old friend, to work as an onstage comedian. The guests were all old and to get them up and moving Sheldon invented the game 'Sheldon Says'. This became an instant hit. Soon, the name changed to Simon Says.What started as a game to get old ladies up and exercising ended up being a hit children's game.


Snakes and Ladders- This is considered to be a game of morality with ladders representing virtues and snakes representing evil. The squares of virtue on the original game are Faith (12), Reliability (51), Generosity (57), Knowledge (76), Asceticism (78); The squares of evil are Disobedience (41), Vanity (44), Vulgarity (49), Theft (52), Lying (58), Drunkenness (62), Debt (69), Rage (84), Greed (92), Pride (95), Murder (73) and Lust (99).


Noughts and Crosses - it is thought that the Roman Game Terni Lapilli was a similar game to Tic Tac Toe Grid Games like Noughts and Crosses have been found in ancient carvings in the ancient Roman Empire.

Hide and Seek - Interesting to know that this is the national sport of Estonia. This sport was
founded in England by Myles family. The father used to come home drunk and chase his six children around the home with a broken bottle. To avoid their father, the children used to run and hide themselves around the house. The first league was founded in England in 1866 and the first world championships held one year afterwards.

Sometimes I wish I could turn back time, impossible, but I wish I could!

Phew! It is not a child's play!

Pics Source: Wiki, abate-il.org, historyforkids.org

Sunday, January 18, 2009

A day filled with cheer...


It is my birthday today. Just wanted to post a blog on my this special day. It was indeed special as I got everything I wished for on this birthday :-)

Just one regret and that is the day ended pretty soon and I have to wait a whole year for this day to come again :-(

Thank you God and thanks to my entire family for making this day indeed special.
  • It is lovely, when I forget all birthdays, including my own, to find that somebody remembers me. - Ellen Glasgow
Pic Source:Web cliparts

Monday, December 15, 2008

Of secret societies and boarding schools...

Finally my exam is over. Spent days and nights preparing for it. I guess I wrote pretty well. But sometimes, I don't trust my luck. My luck played with me in many ways. I have stopped believing it now. Anyways, as soon as I had done with the exam , I came home and picked my favorite book, "The Naughtiest Girl is a Monitor" by Enid Blyton. I love all Enid Blyton books and I still read them when I am feeling very low or when I am in a relaxed holiday mood. Her books take me back to my school days. I feel like a kid again. Ah! I miss my childhood! Who does'nt!


“We plan our lives according to a dream that came to us in our childhood, and we find that life alters our plans. And yet, at the end, from a rare height, we also see that our dream was our fate. It's just that providence had other ideas as to how we would get there. Destiny plans a different route, or turns the dream around, as if it were a riddle, and fulfills the dream in ways we couldn't have expected." - Ben Okri

Coming back to Enid Blyton books, I love her "Famous Five" series the most. As a kid, I used to dream about the sort of adventures they used to face. Never had such a great adventure but still love to cosy up with one of their adventure books and imagine myself to be one of the characters in the book. Talk about wild imgination!

About "Famous Five", they are a group of children who have the sort of adventures most kids dream about, in a world where ginger beer flows and ham rolls are a staple diet. Julian, Dick and Anne get together with their cousin George and George's dog, Timmy form the Famous Five. I used to envy George a lot because most kids have pets, but George's parents own Kirrin Island and let her run around on it as if it were her play-thing. Wish I had an island of my own!

Coming back to Enid Blyton, I read that her first full-length children's adventure book, The Secret Island, was published in 1938. This fast-moving
story, woven around familiar characters, led to such series as The Famous Five, The Secret Seven, the Adventure series, the Mystery series, and the 'Barney' Mystery books.

Secret Seven is my another favorite. The Secret Seven are a children's secret society who hold regular meetings and try to solve mysteries. The Seven have a secret password, a badge, and a secret headquarters in a garden shed. The Seven are led by Peter and include Peter's sister Janet, and their friends Jack, Colin, George, Pam and Barbara. I once tried forming my own secret society when I was in my school but it fell apart as we could'nt get any mysteries to solve. That was the end of my secret society.

If you have dreams of forming a secret society here are some tips:
  • Recruit members by common interest—it doesn't have to be solving mysteries!
  • Think up a name that represents your society
  • Decide on a meeting place
  • Schedule regular meetings
  • Plan activities so that members will be interested
  • Most importantly, enjoy the company!
  • You can go further like the Seven, and come up with a badge, a secret password, themes etc. You can even build a tree house as your HQ.
I wish I knew the tips then!





My other favorites are Malory Towers, St Clare's, Naughtiest Girl Series and many more! The Naughtiest Girl stands apart for me because the setting, Whyteleafe School, is a very different kind of school. It is coeducational and extremely “progressive”. The students hold a weekly meeting, presided over by a Head Boy, a Head Girl, and a group of Monitors, at which decisions are made and troublemakers are disciplined. The children only apply to the teachers when there is a problem they feel they cannot solve.The Naughtiest Girl in the School is the first book in a series of school story by Enid Blyton, first published in 1940. The main character is Elizabeth Allen, a spoilt only child who is shocked when she discovers she is to be sent away to boarding school and decides to get herself expelled. Despite all her determination, she is not sent home, and ends up enjoying school life. I used to hate school too but soon I came to like it. I wish I was a student of Whyteleaf.


I do miss my childhood days. Enid Blyton's books takes me back to those days. Fills me up with a sense of warmth and joy! Her books lift my spirits when the day's going awful and brings in more cheer when the day's going just fine.


Thank you Enid Blyton!

Pics Source : Enidblyton.net

Friday, December 5, 2008


26/11 : My tribute to all the innocent people and to all those brave men and women who lost their lives. May their souls rest in peace.

Pic source:Christian Moutinho

Thursday, December 4, 2008

Good to the last drop!


Ah! Nothing beats the aroma of freshly brewn coffee in the morning. That works as a wake-up call for me in the mornings. This morning it was no different. But today, as I sat there sipping my coffee, I got curious about COFFEE. The three questions: WHY? WHEN? WHERE? started haunting me. To rest my inquisitive mind, I did a search on Coffee. As I found various interesting facts about coffee, I realized that I knew nothing about my simple cuppa. So, I decided to start my blogging journey by dedicating my first blog to my favorite beverage which inspired the lazy me to start blogging. Three cheers to coffee!!! This is for you.


The word 'Coffee' originated from the Italian word 'caffe'. The word Caffe inturn came from the Turkish word 'kahve' which in turn came into being via Arabic qahwa, a truncation of qahhwat al-bun or wine of the bean. Hmm, interesting!

Before the first French cafe in the late 1700's, coffee was sold by street vendors in Europe, in the Arab fashion. The Arabs were the forerunners of the sidewalk espresso carts of today.

Legend has it that an Abyssinian goat herder by name Kaldi noticed that his goats got friskier after eating red berries from a shrub.He did the same and he ended up being happier. Thanks to Kaldi! We got to taste coffee.

Ah! How sweet coffee tastes! Lovelier than a thousand kisses, sweeter far than muscatel wine! -"Coffee Cantata", J.S. Bach

The espresso has an interesting story behind its invention.It happened in 1901, when an Italian factory owner named Luigi Bezzera was looking for a way to speed up his employees’ coffee break time. Figuring that if he could brew the coffee faster, his employees would drink up and get back to work more quickly, he hit upon the idea of using steam pressure to force hot water through the ground coffee. His idea worked far beyond his wildest imaginings – at least in terms of the machine. Bezzera’s idea of forcing water through ground coffee under pressure launched a whole new way of making coffee. The first espresso machine had been born.

Now coming to my favorite filtered coffee, it seems that, Melitta Bentz a housewife from Dresden, Germany, invented the first coffee filter. She was looking for a way to brew the perfect cup of coffee with none of the bitterness caused by overbrewing. Melitta Bentz decided to invent a way to make a filtered coffee, pouring boiling water over ground coffee and having the liquid be filtered, removing any grinds. Melitta Bentz experimented with different materials, until she found that her son's blotter paper used for school worked best. She cut a round piece of blotting paper and put it in a metal cup.On December 15th, 1908, Melitta Bentz and her husband Hugo started the Melitta Bentz Company. Wish I get such ideas!

Legend has it that cowboys made their coffee by putting ground coffee into a clean sock and immersed it in cold water and then heated it over the campfire. When ready, they would pour the coffee into tin cups and drink it.

The percolator which is used by many of us was invented by James Mason.


The aroma and flavor derived from coffee is a result of the little beads of the oily substance called coffee essence, coffeol, or coffee oil. This is not an actual oil since it dissolves in water.

The first coffee shop that is known to have opened was Kiv Han in Constantinople (later Istanbul) in 1475 after being introduced to Turkey two years early by the Ottoman Turks. Coffee soon became a part of social life as coffee shops multiplied rapidly and within a few years there were hundreds of them in the city. People visited these coffee houses to talk, listen to music, watch dancing, play chess and other games, listen to the tales of wandering storytellers, or listen to other learned conversations and, of course, to drink coffee! Coffee houses in Turkey became known as the "Schools of the Wise", because so much could be learned there.

Vincent Van Gogh (a big frequenter of the café society) 'I have tried to show the café as a place where one can go mad.'

The Venetians were the first people to bring larger quantities of coffee into Europe. In 1615, Venice received Europes' first shipment of green coffee beans and the first coffee house there, Caffè Florian, opened in 1683.

The average age of an Italian barista is 48 years old. A barista is a respected job title in Italy.

While gathering this information I got to know another interesting fact. It was the coffeehouses of England that started the custom of tipping waiters and waitresses. People who wanted good service and better seating would put some money in a tin labelled "To Insure Prompt Service" - hence "TIPS". Wow! My favorite beverage has so much to it.


In England, the coffee houses were dubbed "penny universities". It was said that in a coffee house a man could "pick up more useful knowledge than by applying himself to his books for a whole month". A penny was the price of a coffee.

Jonathan’s Coffee House in Change Alley was the birthplace of the London Stock Exchange, and Edward Lloyd’s Coffee House eventually became the headquarters for Lloyds of London, still the world’s most famous insurance company.

The Civil War in the United States elevated the popularity of coffee to new heights. Soldiers went to war with coffee beans as a primary ration.

In 1902, the Barcolo Manufacturing Company – the company that eventually became Barcalounger – officially made a coffee break part of the benefits enjoyed by its employees. According to old newspaper stories, the employees negotiated for a short break in the workday in the morning and afternoon, and one of the employees volunteered to heat up coffee during those times on a kerosene fueled hot plate. Of course, the designation of ‘first official coffee break’ is contested.

Wherever the coffee break originated, Stamberg says, it may not actually have been called a coffee break until 1952. That year, a Pan-American Coffee Bureau ad campaign urged consumers, "Give yourself a Coffee-Break -- and Get What Coffee Gives to You."

Coffee is the largest traded commodity throughout the world - Even greater than Oil!

And of course, coffee shops are the best places to meet someone initially. All you need is to grab a cup of coffee and relax your nerves while you wait for your date. The beauty of coffee date is it is inexpensive and meeting someone over a cup of coffee gives you an opportunity to have a relaxed conversation. Inexpensive and best conversation starter! Imagine sitting with that someone in a coffee shop and a lovely love song playing in the background...Ah! There I go dreaming again! Time to have another cup to wake my senses...

An aromatic start to my blogging ! Good to the last drop!

Pics Source:Acclaim Images,Travel webshots