Empower Yourself with Prakash Shesh & Creative Trainers

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Empower Yourself with Prakash Shesh & Creative Trainers Empower Yourself by
1) Sharpening your curiosity;
2) Developing scientific temper;
3) Acquiring a fine sense of humor &
4) Maximizing your happiness.

I love people who think innovatively and who possess a high CQ (curiosity quotient). MBA from IIM Ahmedabad after doing MSc in Physics from IIT New Delhi. Leading Management Trainer in Central India. Have published over 350 articles in leading newspapers mainly on "day to day management techniques" to improve personal productivity & rational thinking. Have conducted over 700 management training pr

ogrammes. Am a delightful public speaker wedded to rationality. District Governor of Rotary International (2002-2003) of RI District 3030 (Eastern Maharashtra including Vidarbha, Khandesh and Nashik). Married to Alka. Have two sons - Amit - PhD in computer graphics and Prof in Dept of Computer Science at North eastern University , Boston & Nitin who is a Chartered Accountant & Country Manager - Internal Audit at Zamil Industries, Pune.

25/09/2025
10/03/2025

On fact checking today's meme about family pension, I have the following to report (courtesy my friend from Amrawati - Dr Radheshyam Sikchi)

Media reports, such as those from India Today and other outlets, inaccurately claimed that the court said, “The wife cannot be deprived of the family pension even if she murders her husband,” often accompanied by phrases like “Nobody butchers the hen giving golden eggs.” These statements do not appear in the official judgment text. Fact-checking by sources like SCC Times confirmed that the court made no such observation about a wife murdering her husband and still receiving a pension. The case hinged on the fact that the husband’s death was natural, not a result of murder by the wife.
Thus, the notion that the Punjab and Haryana High Court broadly ruled that a wife remains eligible for a family pension even if she murders her husband is a misrepresentation. The actual ruling is narrower: a widow’s conviction for a crime unrelated to her husband’s death does not disqualify her from receiving a family pension under the applicable rules. If a wife were convicted of murdering her husband, the Family Pension Rules, 1964 (Rule 4-A), explicitly suspend or disqualify her claim during criminal proceedings or upon conviction, aligning with principles like those in Section 25 of the Hindu Succession Act, 1956, which bars murderers from inheriting property from their victims.
In summary, the Punjab and Haryana High Court did not make the sweeping statement attributed to it. The misinformation likely arose from sensationalized reporting rather than the court’s actual legal reasoning.

https://youtu.be/f6UNZnRoYzU?si=tK4oNwp8b-fP1QHl*This is my smule song number 209*This is an amazingly energetic melody ...
15/02/2025

https://youtu.be/f6UNZnRoYzU?si=tK4oNwp8b-fP1QHl

*This is my smule song number 209*

This is an amazingly energetic melody composed by *Ram Laxman* and sung by *Lata and SP*. *Salman Khan and Raveena Tandon* are the lead pair in this successful film, *Pathhar ke Phool*. The lyrics are entirely made up of film titles.

*Vibjyor* has sung this duet with me. Do let me know how you liked our effort*

*For any of the previous songs, please click the relevant link below.*

*Mukesh* https://bit.ly/3z56c1w
*Hemant da* https://bit.ly/3IG8Uh2
*Kishore da* https://bit.ly/3z5d3rN
*Md Rafi* https://bit.ly/3z9Xkre
*Jagjit/ग़ज़ल* https://bit.ly/3T9qwrt
*मन्ना डे/Wadkar* https://bit.ly/3Igpzt6
*Mah Kapoor* https://bit.ly/3EBYy0D
*Sanu/Udit* http://bit.ly/3Ym4NxP
*Talat/पं.मलिक* http://bit.ly/3Ic7KLJ
*SP-Yesudas* https://bit.ly/3o7Z9iq
*DUETS* https://bit.ly/3AXwwMx
*Marathi* https://bit.ly/3yHbrmv
*Bhajan* https://bit.ly/3uU8lOr
*Others* https://bit.ly/3IEji94

*Please do not forget to like & subscribe to my you tube channel*.

Thanks. *Prakash Shesh*

This bubbly song is composed by Ram Laxman and sung by SP and Lata. It has been enacted on screen by Salman Khan and Raveena Tandon in the film Patthar Ke P...

https://youtu.be/MvKAjAf8S4M?si=Ya7wRL6DzgrkFKj9*This is my *Smule song number 190*.This is a superhit song from the sta...
26/10/2024

https://youtu.be/MvKAjAf8S4M?si=Ya7wRL6DzgrkFKj9

*This is my *Smule song number 190*.

This is a superhit song from the stable of *Nadeem Shravan*. *Salman Khan and Madhuri Dixit* have acted in this *1991* film, *Sajan*. *Kumar Sanu and Alka Yagnik* have sung it beautifully.

Please do let me know how you liked my presentation with *Saira Khan*.

*For any previous song, please click the relevant link*.

*Mukesh* https://bit.ly/3z56c1w
*Hemant da* https://bit.ly/3IG8Uh2
*Kishore da* https://bit.ly/3z5d3rN
*Md Rafi* https://bit.ly/3z9Xkre
*Jagjit/ग़ज़ल* https://bit.ly/3T9qwrt
*मन्ना डे/Wadkar* https://bit.ly/3Igpzt6
*Mah Kapoor* https://bit.ly/3EBYy0D
*Sanu/Udit* http://bit.ly/3Ym4NxP
*Talat/पं.मलिक* http://bit.ly/3Ic7KLJ
*SP-Yesudas* https://bit.ly/3o7Z9iq
*DUETS* https://bit.ly/3AXwwMx
*Marathi* https://bit.ly/3yHbrmv
*Bhajan* https://bit.ly/3uU8lOr
*Others* https://bit.ly/3IEji94

*Please do not forget to like & subscribe to my you tube channel*.

Thanks. *Prakash Shesh*

Sajan was a runaway hit of 1991 with Salman Khan and Madhuri Dixit in the lead. This memorable song was composed by Nadeem Shrawan and was sung by Kumar Sanu...

Cover letter for job application for the post of judgeBy Amrit Kaal Mishra, The Leaflet, September 10, 2024https://thele...
23/10/2024

Cover letter for job application for the post of judge

By Amrit Kaal Mishra, The Leaflet, September 10, 2024
https://theleaflet.in/cover-letter-for-job-application-for-the-post-of-judge/

A day after the Delhi High Court was reported as inviting courtroom humour for publication on its website, Amrit Kaal Mishra applies for the job of a judge. His cover letter covers all bases but soars high in humorous skies for a vocation weighed down by gravitas.

Respected Your Honour,

I have always wanted to be a judge. Ever since I was a child, people have told me I have everything it takes to make a great judge.

Initially, I was not inclined to believe them. But there were signs, right from the beginning. My very date of birth, for instance, saw multiple adjournments. When I was finally born, it was 27 days after my due date, and everyone said waiting for me to get out of my Mommy’s tummy was like waiting for a case to be heard.

The next sign, which manifested itself when I was a toddler, was my favourite toy— a wooden hammer. While my own memories do not extend so far back into my early childhood, people tell me I liked nothing more than to keep banging on every surface with the hammer, screaming, “Order, order!” or “Aayega toh!”

When I was 10, we moved to a farm. The farm had a stable. The stable had a horse. One day the horse escaped. I was just a kid but I had the presence of mind to lock the stable door after the horse had bolted. Everyone praised me for doing the right thing, especially when it was too late to make a difference. Following this success, I made it into a habit.

Last week, for instance, I was umpiring a tennis match between two teenagers in a local tournament. A wrong call from me on a crucial point caused one of the teenagers to lose the set and subsequently the match and the tournament.

I could have corrected my mistake immediately when everyone, including the spectators, the player concerned, and even his opponent pointed out that the ball was out. But I stuck to my guns.

However, once the match was over, I informed the losing player that I could grant him five match points in some other tournament. “No thanks,” he said, then added, “You should become a judge.”

Even he could see that my talent was getting wasted in judging line calls when they could be put to better use denying bail.

You may have noted from my CV that in school, right from Class 1 all the way to Class 12, I have sat on benches of varying sizes— two-student, five-student and nine-student benches; and sometimes I even managed to squeeze in with 14 students on one bench.

I believe this diversity of bench experience would make me an automatic choice when Your Honour constitutes Constitution Benches of whatever size.

You would be pleased to note that I love my summer vacations, and no matter how much holiday homework was given by the class teacher, I did not violate the sanctity of my vacation by doing studies at a vacation desk.

I am also hyper-allergic to the slightest note of contempt in anyone’s voice. Once my Class 11 maths teacher told me I would not understand trigonometry in a thousand years.

Although her observation was objectively valid, the note of contempt in her subjective voice made me complain to the headmaster who issued her a show cause notice— my earliest brush with a contempt notice, and yet another sign I was destined for judicial glory.

To get rid of anti-national topics like calculus, I switched from science to arts in Class 12 and became very good at making things with paper, scissors and cello tape. As you would expect, I became a whiz at making sealed covers— a hallowed tool of justice delivery developed indigenously in India.

After school, while my classmates chose to go to college, I did not— I went to a collegium instead. And there I learned the important lesson that satisfying the collective conscience of the nation is more important than upholding the Constitution.

I became a keen observer and an excellent speaker. These two capabilities would enable me to deliver sharp oral observations on constitutional morality in the courtroom and insightful lectures on judicial principles at the Oxford debating room, thereby liberating me from the burden of having to uphold those principles when I pass Orders.

I am also good at computers and carpentry. So I can help the judiciary with stuff like digitisation, and if anyone finds a bench uncomfortable, I can fix it pronto.

In conclusion, let me say that as a born generalist, I am constantly in agreement with any General, be it a Solicitor or Attorney, and appreciate the eternal truth that power trumps justice, and executive power executes justice.

Thank you for your kind consideration and look forward to sharing a bench with you soon.

A day after the Delhi High Court was reported as inviting courtroom humour for publication on its website, Amrit Kaal Mishra applies for the job of a judge. His cover letter covers all bases but soars high in humorous skies for a vocation weighed down by gravitas.

https://youtu.be/h9plJya_1xI?si=BcnnoJc10osqsB0Z*This is my *Smule song number 188*.This is a wildly popular song from t...
19/10/2024

https://youtu.be/h9plJya_1xI?si=BcnnoJc10osqsB0Z

*This is my *Smule song number 188*.

This is a wildly popular song from the film *China Town* which had *Shammi Kapoor* gyrating to the beats and tune composed by the legendary *Ravi* and sung by the immortal *Mohmd Rafi*. *Shakeela* was the heroine of the film.

Please let me know how you liked my presentation.

*For any previous song, please click the relevant link*.

*Mukesh* https://bit.ly/3z56c1w
*Hemant da* https://bit.ly/3IG8Uh2
*Kishore da* https://bit.ly/3z5d3rN
*Md Rafi* https://bit.ly/3z9Xkre
*Jagjit/ग़ज़ल* https://bit.ly/3T9qwrt
*मन्ना डे/Wadkar* https://bit.ly/3Igpzt6
*Mah Kapoor* https://bit.ly/3EBYy0D
*Sanu/Udit* http://bit.ly/3Ym4NxP
*Talat/पं.मलिक* http://bit.ly/3Ic7KLJ
*SP-Yesudas* https://bit.ly/3o7Z9iq
*DUETS* https://bit.ly/3AXwwMx
*Marathi* https://bit.ly/3yHbrmv
*Bhajan* https://bit.ly/3uU8lOr
*Others* https://bit.ly/3IEji94

*Please do not forget to like & subscribe to my you tube channel*.

Thanks. *Prakash Shesh*

Shammi Kapoor sings this typically robust song on screen in the 1962 blockbuster China Town, where he acts opposite Shakila. The song was actually sung by th...

I clicked this hoarding installed on an  auto rickshaw. The name of the centre "takes the cake".
17/10/2024

I clicked this hoarding installed on an auto rickshaw. The name of the centre "takes the cake".

08/10/2024

Kerala was the first state where Hindus got converted to Christianity.
Saint Thomas, who was one of the disciples of Jesus Christ visited Kerala in 52 AD.

How did St Thomas convert Keralites to Christianity ?

St Thomas said, "Jesus healed the sick ".
Mallus didn't believe .

He said, "Jesus died for you".
Mallus said "Oh pinne!".

He said, Jesus fed 5000 people from 5 loaves and 2 fishes".
Mallus said , "Podaa! ".

Then he said, "Jesus converted water
to wine". 🍷

63% Malayalees converted to Christianity .🍷🍷😂😂🍻🍻

Address

Plot No 153, Ramdaspeth, Behind SBI Personal Banking Branch, Also Behind Hotel Tuli Imperial
Nagpur
440010

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