Mirza Yawar Baig – Life lessons

Mirza Yawar Baig
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The speaker describes their life and experiences living in Guyana, the Amazonian rainforest, and the wild dog killing a friend and a wild dog. They later describe their experiences with learning to take life seriously while learning to extract every drop of learning, spending many hours on a horse and swim in the river, and eventually seeing a wild dog kill. They eventually went on a Royal Enfield in India and spent many hours on a motorbike, on a Royal Enfield, while they faced a white doe and saw a wild dog kill.

AI: Summary ©

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			In the name of Allah, Most Gracious, Most
		
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			Merciful, All praise is due to Allah, Lord
		
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			of the worlds, and peace and blessings be
		
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			upon the messengers and prophets, Muhammad, the Messenger
		
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			of Allah, peace and blessings be upon him
		
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			and upon his family, and peace and blessings
		
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			be upon him.
		
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			After this, this is a new kind of,
		
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			what is it, reminder that I want to
		
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			share with you, which is really sharing stuff
		
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			from my own life, which I hope will
		
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			be enjoyable, as well as a means of
		
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			learning, Inshallah.
		
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			On October 20, 2010, we are now in
		
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			2024.
		
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			On October 20, 2010, I was 55.
		
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			So I published a book on that day
		
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			called 2010-2010-55.
		
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			Because that's how we write dates in India
		
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			and everywhere in the world except the US.
		
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			We write the day first and then the
		
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			month.
		
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			In the US, we do it the other
		
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			way, which is the month first and the
		
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			day afterwards.
		
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			So this is written in the English or
		
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			the Indian way, if you like.
		
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			2010-2010-55, which was 55, the book
		
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			contained 55 life lessons that I learned in
		
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			my life.
		
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			So let me share some of these with
		
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			you.
		
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			Those who read the book, please forgive me,
		
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			or read the book, please forgive me.
		
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			And those who are motivated, read the book
		
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			and get it on Amazon.
		
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			Those who would like to learn more about
		
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			my life, there's another book of mine called
		
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			It's My Life, which is for the princely
		
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			sum of $7.
		
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			I'm most grateful to Allah that He gave
		
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			me the life that He gave me for
		
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			only $7.
		
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			Alhamdulillah, wajib.
		
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			So as I told you, I turned 55
		
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			on the 20th of October, 2010.
		
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			And that's the title of this book, 2010
		
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			-2010-55.
		
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			I reflected on the lessons that I learned
		
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			in my life, which I think has been,
		
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			alhamdulillah, an unusually rich and active and exciting
		
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			life lived in India, in Guyana, in America,
		
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			in Saudi Arabia, and in travels in other
		
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			parts of the world.
		
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			I wrote this book as a tribute of
		
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			thanks to all those who added value to
		
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			me and taught me formally and informally and
		
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			invested in my learning.
		
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			During my childhood and teens in India, through
		
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			the 60s and 70s, I spent all my
		
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			vacations walking in the jungles of the Sahyadri
		
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			Mountains in Adilabad district in Telangana, living with
		
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			my dear friend and mentor, Uncle Rama, Venkatrama
		
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			Reddy Sahib.
		
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			Imagine the excitement of a 15-year-old
		
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			with a .22 rifle or a 12-bar
		
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			shotgun walking with one golden companion, Shivaya, all
		
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			over the jungle, bordering the Karnapa River, just
		
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			Shivaya and myself.
		
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			At times, Shivaya and I would walk in
		
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			the night to witness a Sambar mud bath
		
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			and sit behind a tree, quietly watching majestic
		
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			Sambar stags roll in mud and then stand
		
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			up to shake off the excess, coated in
		
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			an armor of mud which, when dry, protects
		
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			them from biting insects.
		
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			Sometimes we would hear the call of the
		
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			tiger as it set out for work.
		
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			I learned to read tracts which tell the
		
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			story of all those who passed that way.
		
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			I learned the meaning of smells which tell
		
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			their own stories and sometimes can mean the
		
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			difference between life and death.
		
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			But the biggest lesson I learned was to
		
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			take life seriously while having fun and to
		
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			extract every drop of learning.
		
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			In the late 70s and early 80s, I
		
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			spent five years in the Amazonian rainforests of
		
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			Guyana bordering the river Burmese.
		
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			I went there when I was 19 or
		
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			20 and lived alone in Kokwani on the
		
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			river Burmese.
		
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			During weekends, my friend Peter Ram Singh and
		
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			I would take our boat on a trip
		
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			50 to 60 miles, sometimes 100 miles upriver
		
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			and camp on the bank or on the
		
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			sand bank and sleep in hammocks.
		
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			It was our code of honor to not
		
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			take any food on these trips and live
		
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			off the land from our hunting and fishing.
		
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			As an emergency fallback, we would take some
		
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			raw chicken guts in a plastic bag.
		
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			If we didn't manage to catch any lukanani
		
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			or to shoot any aguti or kanji pheasants,
		
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			we would trawl the chicken guts in burpees
		
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			and sure enough we would get a bite,
		
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			piranha.
		
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			Great eating as long as you know how
		
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			to keep clear of the teeth and retrieve
		
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			the hook.
		
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			I would see alligator eyes shining like diamonds
		
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			sprinkled on the dark waters during our night
		
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			patrols to check our fishing nets.
		
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			During one trip, Peter and I accidentally caught
		
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			a 22-foot anaconda in our fishing net.
		
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			It was so heavy that both of us
		
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			couldn't lift him clear off the ground.
		
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			I met people who lived 30 to 40
		
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			miles up the Burmese River in houses on
		
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			stilts in small forest clearings where they grew
		
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			a few vegetables, hunt and fish for their
		
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			meat and don't come to town for months
		
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			at a time.
		
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			No water except the river, no light except
		
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			the sun and the moon.
		
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			Sometimes it's a single family of Amerindians.
		
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			Sometimes it's a couple of families who live
		
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			by one another.
		
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			Their children play in the forest and swim
		
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			naked in the river.
		
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			Yet I never heard of a case of
		
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			piranha bite.
		
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			Never figured out that one as the river
		
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			is infested with piranha and they love to
		
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			bite.
		
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			Why that didn't happen with these people, I
		
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			don't know.
		
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			These families always grow the best honey, which
		
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			they would sell to people like me who
		
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			turned up on their doorstep or to take
		
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			to town in exchange for a couple of
		
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			bottles of country liquor.
		
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			Deadly stuff in more ways than one.
		
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			I spent 10 years in the 80s and
		
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			90s in the rainforests of the Western Ghats,
		
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			in the Annabelleys, in India.
		
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			And further south, planting tea, coffee, cardamom and
		
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			rubber.
		
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			I spent many hours tramping up and down
		
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			hills and valleys, sometimes at a height of
		
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			8,000 to 9,000 feet on the
		
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			famous grass hills.
		
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			At other times, wending my way in sweltering
		
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			heat through the thick forests on the Ghats,
		
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			where the sun almost never reaches the earth.
		
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			One day I escaped an angry charging bull
		
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			elephant by what could only be a miraculous
		
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			divine intervention.
		
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			All my tea garden workers believed that I
		
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			was divinely blessed from this day on.
		
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			A belief that, of course, I did nothing
		
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			to dispel, because who could object to being
		
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			divinely blessed?
		
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			On another instance, I walked up to a
		
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			red doe kill, a wild dog kill.
		
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			They moved away and sat in a circle
		
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			watching me while I ensured that the slumber
		
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			hind that they had brought down was dead.
		
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			They are very merciless killers, because they don't
		
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			have the ability to kill properly.
		
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			So, they do that in a way which
		
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			is not neat, to put it politely.
		
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			On a forest road in the Annabelleys, I
		
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			once had a face-off with a huge
		
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			Gaur bull.
		
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			I was on a motorbike, on a Royal
		
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			Enfield, but eventually he decided he didn't hate
		
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			me enough to eliminate me and moved away,
		
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			allowing me to move on, on my Royal
		
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			Enfield motorcycle.
		
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			My greatest joy was to camp on a
		
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			huge rock outcrop called Banjapare, in Lower Sethumudi
		
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			Estate, where I was the big boss, the
		
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			manager, sitting on a platform in a tree
		
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			to watch elephants come to drink in a
		
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			nearby stream.
		
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			When the elephants left, the Gaur would come,
		
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			bison.
		
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			Finally, when everyone had gone their way, my
		
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			companion Raman and I would descend and light
		
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			a fire against the bitter cold, smoke a
		
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			couple of beedis and drink hot sweet teas,
		
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			and wait for the sun to rise.
		
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			Gradually, the sky would lighten.
		
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			The orange glow would show, and then the
		
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			majestic ball of fire would come up over
		
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			the edge, the edge of the horizon greeting
		
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			us across an expanse of forest and tea
		
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			gardens.
		
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			What really is the value of such a
		
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			sight?
		
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			As I say, I was never good at
		
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			math.
		
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			Some things are simply priceless.
		
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			The important thing is, in all this, is
		
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			to ask yourself, what did you learn?
		
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			Out of all of this, I can say
		
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			that I learnt two extremely important lessons in
		
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			my life.
		
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			The first relates to the fact that, essentially,
		
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			we are all in control of our lives
		
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			and ourselves, and no matter how powerless or
		
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			powerful we may believe we are, there's always
		
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			something that we can do to make a
		
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			difference.
		
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			Therefore, my first lesson is, I will not
		
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			allow what is not in my control to
		
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			prevent me from doing what is in my
		
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			control.
		
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			Let me repeat that.
		
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			I will not allow what is not in
		
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			my control to prevent me from doing what
		
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			is in my control.
		
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			The second one relates to the fact that
		
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			everything we do counts and defines us as
		
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			human beings and becomes our legacy to the
		
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			world.
		
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			Therefore, the second lesson is, all that we
		
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			choose to do or choose not to do
		
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			defines brand value and character.
		
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			All that we choose to do or choose
		
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			not to do defines brand value and character.
		
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			I ask Allah to help us to live
		
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			a life that is worthy of the time
		
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			that He gave us and to end it
		
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			in a way where He is pleased with
		
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			us, at a time when He is pleased
		
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			with us.