@mybmc@TataPower@AndheriLOCA@MumbaiPolice over the last few weeks we’ve been experiencing very frequent power cuts with no explanation from any authorities, this seems like an attempt to steal power by the local community living close by. Help!
Of service from such an esteemed company? Rude and ill mannered people who don’t want to help. Teach your customer care executive some manners and please solve my query
@MHI_Group@MitsubishiIndia I have been trying to schedule an AC repair and your customer case executive has hung up on me 4 times now. She refuses to check the status of my AC on the system and refuses to transfer my call anywhere else. This is the standard
even more grateful to know that I will continue to have it in my life. I believe this bond with the notion of a guru, real or otherwise, has meaning and purpose way beyond what I can comprehend even today.
This ensures in a way that I will forever be a student.
part of our training. The philosophy of it of course, has become apparent to me much later; and it keeps evolving. Today I find my guru in things that show me the larger purpose of my being, my life. I find my guru in nature, in my relationships, my students and my audiences.
A guru comes in so many forms. Several bandishes talk about finding your guru within yourself. Growing up i just learnt these compositions because i was taught them. Probably because firstly, they exist and secondly, celebrating & respecting your guru is a culturally essential
the reason I can see art the way I do.
I find the process of learning and then internalising so beautiful. A guru who _gives_ with this understanding, and allows you to grow with it is one who truly sees the value of this bond. I am extremely grateful to have that in my life;
I find my guru in my riyaaz and sadhana, even though it’s a part of me and comes from me. I see art as a personified being that is guiding me.
Of course, my gurus who have cultivated my thought process and musical approach, style & sense of aesthetics are all objectively
.@AvantiPatel7 (O Gaanewali) takes us on a musical journal about the stories and interesting anecdotes about tawaifs and women musicians and their immense contribution to preserving and nurturing India’s diverse musical repertoire of genres.
O Gaanewali is about women performers- courtesans, tawaifs, baijis, who popularised the forms of thumri, ghazal, dadra and so on. The show takes you through a musical journey looking at their lives against the backdrop of the British raj and the Indian Freedom Struggle