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“What you can see you can Photograph”

WELCOME to my blog.This blog contains some #RandomClicks and some Articles on Nature,Life & LifeSTYLE of people.

Learn from what you see…

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We get to learn a lot from nature. Let’s observe the above scenario for a moment.

  1. Waves teach us to overcome the difficulties in our life and always move forward, no matter how hard the path may be irrespective of the number of obstacles…
  2. The sunset teach us that life is meant to be in a loop of winning and losing, one who falls down in life, will get another chance to rise too… learn to accept what you’re going through and don’t loose the hope for tomorrow’s rise..
  3. The sand teach us to treat everyone with calm and be soft to the creatures, no matter how rude or harsh you get from life..

Photography By SAILEE SALKAR

GANESH CHATURTHI

Ganesha

Ganesh Chaturthi is a ten-day Hindu festival celebrated to honour the elephant-headed God Ganesha’s birthday, younger son of Lord Shiva and Goddess Parvati.

Ganesha is known by 108 different names and is the Lord of arts and sciences and the deva of widsom. He is honoured at the start of rituals and ceremonies as he’s considered the God of beginnings. He’s widely, belovedly known as Ganapati or Vinayaka.

There are two different versions about Ganesha’s birth. One has it that Godess Parvati created Ganesha out of dirt off her body while having a bath and set him to guard her door while she finishes her bath. Shiva who has gone out, returned at that time, but as Ganesha didn’t know of him, stopped him from entering. An angry Shiva severed the head of Ganesha after a combat between the two. Parvati was enraged and Shiva promised Ganesha will live again. The devas who went in search of a head facing north of a dead person could manage only the head of an elephant. Shiva fixed elephant’s head on the child and brought him back to life.

The other legend has it that Ganesha was created by Shiva and Parvati on request of the Devas, to be a vighnakartaa (obstacle-creator) in the path of rakshasas (demonic beings), and a vighnahartaa (obstacle-averter) to help the Devas.