maximummax Posted July 28, 2015 Report Posted July 28, 2015 Found this empowered gem in yahoo site Dear Random Aunty, ‘Girls Like Me’ Are Shaping The Future Of India! “Aha… I didn’t know girls like you also come to the temples.” “Girls like me? What do you mean by ‘girls like me’, aunty?” “I mean, you stay with roommates, all in marriageable age, yet single. I often see you going out on weekends in short clothes and you come back real late. I know you go to nightclubs and you drink. Girls who go to the night clubs on Saturday nights, do not come to temples on Sunday Mornings.” Said our neighbour, who I accidentally bumped into at the temple last Sunday, and walked away with her thali of prasad. She left me wondering at the stairs of the temple if this was mentioned somewhere is the Vedas or the Upanishad or is it a the outcome of the generalizing mentality of a section of society that categorizes ‘girls like us’ as members of some outcast segment that neither has the right to God nor God’s prasad. This ‘aunty’, who resides at the apartment adjoining ours, doesn’t think very highly of me or my flatmates. For her we are just three girls, who are well above the age of 25, yet not married, staying in the city sans parents and living a life of disgust. Our qualifications, the kind of organizations we work in, the designations we hold, and the achievements we have made do not hold any significance for her. The only thing that bothers her is that we are not married, and we go to late night parties and drink. I wouldn’t have been affected by what this aunty thinks of us, but what disturbs me is that I am well aware of the fact that this aunty is not just a next-door neighbour. She is the representation of an entire thought process. This is the thought process that governs the attitude of majority of members of her generation and a large part of my generation as well. Yes, I drink. I love my vodka with cranberry juice. I love to slip into sexy dresses and make-up is something I swear by. And I know that there are many girls of my age who are just like me, in opinion and lifestyle. But what I absolutely fail to comprehend is how a certain part of my lifestyle is decisive of my character or my eligibility as a human being. Why would a section of the society brand ‘girls like us’ as reckless and averse to cultural norms? All this considering it is totally acceptable for men to drink, stay out of home till wee hours, marry at whatever age they wish to, and live alone in cities away from their home towns? Here we are in the 21st century and yet we are struggling to fill up the gap in the approach of people, which leads to different treatment and reaction to the same action when done by people of two different genders. Here I am labelled a ‘girl like me’! Am I any less cultural or devotional that those who submit to marriage at a younger age, cover themselves in yards of fabric, and immerse themselves in household chores? Am I supposed to believe that my culture, my rich Indian culture is so fragile that a slight stroke of my wine glass would break it into pieces? Or does the God whom I worship in the temple has lesser grave sins to deal with? What I have been able to conclude from my small rendezvous with this lady at the temple was, it was not the culture that had branded me – girl like me. It is the double standard that is still rooted in the minds of the people of this country. This is the mindset that testifies a girl wearing short clothes as the one ‘asking for it’. This is the mentality which will never open the gates for a fresh breath of ideas and opinions. This hypocritical mindset will always forbid the true modernisation of the half of the population of this nation – the woman folk. And if we really aim at bringing about a change in the outlook of this society, we will have to uproot this hypocritical thinking that has since ages laid down a different set of rules of both the genders.
Guest Mahesh_Fan_fan Posted July 28, 2015 Report Posted July 28, 2015 https://scontent-mxp1-1.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-xpa1/v/t1.0-9/11221784_10207347823036759_1117869248930526233_n.jpg?oh=1934e3aa78d30128629beeb9861fe24a&oe=565C5BF3
ajithkumarkarnathi Posted July 28, 2015 Report Posted July 28, 2015 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tIvSNlfDCXo
porsche911 Posted July 28, 2015 Report Posted July 28, 2015 Found this empowered gem in yahoo site Dear Random Aunty, ‘Girls Like Me’ Are Shaping The Future Of India! “Aha… I didn’t know girls like you also come to the temples.” “Girls like me? What do you mean by ‘girls like me’, aunty?” “I mean, you stay with roommates, all in marriageable age, yet single. I often see you going out on weekends in short clothes and you come back real late. I know you go to nightclubs and you drink. Girls who go to the night clubs on Saturday nights, do not come to temples on Sunday Mornings.” Said our neighbour, who I accidentally bumped into at the temple last Sunday, and walked away with her thali of prasad. She left me wondering at the stairs of the temple if this was mentioned somewhere is the Vedas or the Upanishad or is it a the outcome of the generalizing mentality of a section of society that categorizes ‘girls like us’ as members of some outcast segment that neither has the right to God nor God’s prasad. This ‘aunty’, who resides at the apartment adjoining ours, doesn’t think very highly of me or my flatmates. For her we are just three girls, who are well above the age of 25, yet not married, staying in the city sans parents and living a life of disgust. Our qualifications, the kind of organizations we work in, the designations we hold, and the achievements we have made do not hold any significance for her. The only thing that bothers her is that we are not married, and we go to late night parties and drink. I wouldn’t have been affected by what this aunty thinks of us, but what disturbs me is that I am well aware of the fact that this aunty is not just a next-door neighbour. She is the representation of an entire thought process. This is the thought process that governs the attitude of majority of members of her generation and a large part of my generation as well. Yes, I drink. I love my vodka with cranberry juice. I love to slip into sexy dresses and make-up is something I swear by. And I know that there are many girls of my age who are just like me, in opinion and lifestyle. But what I absolutely fail to comprehend is how a certain part of my lifestyle is decisive of my character or my eligibility as a human being. Why would a section of the society brand ‘girls like us’ as reckless and averse to cultural norms? All this considering it is totally acceptable for men to drink, stay out of home till wee hours, marry at whatever age they wish to, and live alone in cities away from their home towns? Here we are in the 21st century and yet we are struggling to fill up the gap in the approach of people, which leads to different treatment and reaction to the same action when done by people of two different genders. Here I am labelled a ‘girl like me’! Am I any less cultural or devotional that those who submit to marriage at a younger age, cover themselves in yards of fabric, and immerse themselves in household chores? Am I supposed to believe that my culture, my rich Indian culture is so fragile that a slight stroke of my wine glass would break it into pieces? Or does the God whom I worship in the temple has lesser grave sins to deal with? What I have been able to conclude from my small rendezvous with this lady at the temple was, it was not the culture that had branded me – girl like me. It is the double standard that is still rooted in the minds of the people of this country. This is the mindset that testifies a girl wearing short clothes as the one ‘asking for it’. This is the mentality which will never open the gates for a fresh breath of ideas and opinions. This hypocritical mindset will always forbid the true modernisation of the half of the population of this nation – the woman folk. And if we really aim at bringing about a change in the outlook of this society, we will have to uproot this hypocritical thinking that has since ages laid down a different set of rules of both the genders. evaru evariki enduku em septunnaro no ividea... hence no comments
maximummax Posted July 30, 2015 Author Report Posted July 30, 2015 evaru evariki enduku em septunnaro no ividea... hence no comments Time unte purthiga chaduvu Same style of rant
ajithkumarkarnathi Posted July 30, 2015 Report Posted July 30, 2015 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tIvSNlfDCXo
maximummax Posted July 30, 2015 Author Report Posted July 30, 2015 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tIvSNlfDCXo a bahubali cinema theater video ki e video ki chala theda undi face lo too much makeup a?
Tree Posted July 30, 2015 Report Posted July 30, 2015 aunties ni andharni line ninchopetti.... dhandam pettali..
vja_4u Posted July 30, 2015 Report Posted July 30, 2015 Found this empowered gem in yahoo site Dear Random Aunty, ‘Girls Like Me’ Are Shaping The Future Of India! “Aha… I didn’t know girls like you also come to the temples.” “Girls like me? What do you mean by ‘girls like me’, aunty?” “I mean, you stay with roommates, all in marriageable age, yet single. I often see you going out on weekends in short clothes and you come back real late. I know you go to nightclubs and you drink. Girls who go to the night clubs on Saturday nights, do not come to temples on Sunday Mornings.” Said our neighbour, who I accidentally bumped into at the temple last Sunday, and walked away with her thali of prasad. She left me wondering at the stairs of the temple if this was mentioned somewhere is the Vedas or the Upanishad or is it a the outcome of the generalizing mentality of a section of society that categorizes ‘girls like us’ as members of some outcast segment that neither has the right to God nor God’s prasad. This ‘aunty’, who resides at the apartment adjoining ours, doesn’t think very highly of me or my flatmates. For her we are just three girls, who are well above the age of 25, yet not married, staying in the city sans parents and living a life of disgust. Our qualifications, the kind of organizations we work in, the designations we hold, and the achievements we have made do not hold any significance for her. The only thing that bothers her is that we are not married, and we go to late night parties and drink. I wouldn’t have been affected by what this aunty thinks of us, but what disturbs me is that I am well aware of the fact that this aunty is not just a next-door neighbour. She is the representation of an entire thought process. This is the thought process that governs the attitude of majority of members of her generation and a large part of my generation as well. Yes, I drink. I love my vodka with cranberry juice. I love to slip into sexy dresses and make-up is something I swear by. And I know that there are many girls of my age who are just like me, in opinion and lifestyle. But what I absolutely fail to comprehend is how a certain part of my lifestyle is decisive of my character or my eligibility as a human being. Why would a section of the society brand ‘girls like us’ as reckless and averse to cultural norms? All this considering it is totally acceptable for men to drink, stay out of home till wee hours, marry at whatever age they wish to, and live alone in cities away from their home towns? Here we are in the 21st century and yet we are struggling to fill up the gap in the approach of people, which leads to different treatment and reaction to the same action when done by people of two different genders. Here I am labelled a ‘girl like me’! Am I any less cultural or devotional that those who submit to marriage at a younger age, cover themselves in yards of fabric, and immerse themselves in household chores? Am I supposed to believe that my culture, my rich Indian culture is so fragile that a slight stroke of my wine glass would break it into pieces? Or does the God whom I worship in the temple has lesser grave sins to deal with? What I have been able to conclude from my small rendezvous with this lady at the temple was, it was not the culture that had branded me – girl like me. It is the double standard that is still rooted in the minds of the people of this country. This is the mindset that testifies a girl wearing short clothes as the one ‘asking for it’. This is the mentality which will never open the gates for a fresh breath of ideas and opinions. This hypocritical mindset will always forbid the true modernisation of the half of the population of this nation – the woman folk. And if we really aim at bringing about a change in the outlook of this society, we will have to uproot this hypocritical thinking that has since ages laid down a different set of rules of both the genders. pattucheera kattukunte mahalakshmi antaaru , bikini veste sexy gaa undi antaaru...ade tedaaa.......cheera prostitute kadutundi and normal lady kadutundi , but katte vidhanam lo tedaa untundi....aa tedaaa teliste manchidi....lakshmi devi la kanabadaali ante cheera kattuko , sexy gaa kanabadali ante chinna nicker lu vesuko....ante simple....chinna nicker vesukuni lanfaa ni lanfaa anoddu ani matram cheppaku.....fafa.....neeku chinna nicker vesukovadam venaka motive yemiti?? comfort ayite matram kaadu gaa...naluguriki ninnu chudalane kadha....nuvvu chupinhcaavu , yelaa chudaalo adi maa ishtam....nuvvu yevarivi ilaa chudu ani cheppenduku....chinna guddalu vesukunna vallani paddatigaa chuste mammalni tedaa antaaru....maaku hormones unnayi , avi maaku chebutaayi....yelaa react avvalo....memu tedaa vallam kaadu , chupinchina chudakundaa unda daaniki, chusaaka yelaa ayina oohinchukuntaam....adi maa ishtam/...... ayina nuvvu pell ayina daanivi....nee andam nee moguduki chendite baguntundi....parayi vallaku kaadu..
vja_4u Posted July 30, 2015 Report Posted July 30, 2015 a bahubali cinema theater video ki e video ki chala theda undi face lo too much makeup a? mamuluga antemi bagodu.....makeup veyyalsinde....
Luppon_Gidigidi Posted July 30, 2015 Report Posted July 30, 2015 Vellu item panulu chesi andaru pativrata anukomante ela? Emaina ante judging ani edustharu.
Luppon_Gidigidi Posted July 30, 2015 Report Posted July 30, 2015 a bahubali cinema theater video ki e video ki chala theda undi face lo too much makeup a? mamuluga antemi bagodu.....makeup veyyalsinde.... Video ki kuda brightness/contrast filter veyali
Luppon_Gidigidi Posted July 30, 2015 Report Posted July 30, 2015 pattucheera kattukunte mahalakshmi antaaru , bikini veste sexy gaa undi antaaru...ade tedaaa.......cheera prostitute kadutundi and normal lady kadutundi , but katte vidhanam lo tedaa untundi....aa tedaaa teliste manchidi....lakshmi devi la kanabadaali ante cheera kattuko , sexy gaa kanabadali ante chinna nicker lu vesuko....ante simple....chinna nicker vesukuni lanfaa ni lanfaa anoddu ani matram cheppaku.....fafa.....neeku chinna nicker vesukovadam venaka motive yemiti?? comfort ayite matram kaadu gaa...naluguriki ninnu chudalane kadha....nuvvu chupinhcaavu , yelaa chudaalo adi maa ishtam....nuvvu yevarivi ilaa chudu ani cheppenduku....chinna guddalu vesukunna vallani paddatigaa chuste mammalni tedaa antaaru....maaku hormones unnayi , avi maaku chebutaayi....yelaa react avvalo....memu tedaa vallam kaadu , chupinchina chudakundaa unda daaniki, chusaaka yelaa ayina oohinchukuntaam....adi maa ishtam/...... ayina nuvvu pell ayina daanivi....nee andam nee moguduki chendite baguntundi....parayi vallaku kaadu.. i second that baa
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