Latest News and Inspirational Stories From United States of America and All over the World
A Thirsty Crow
A Thirsty Crow : Once upon a time there was a crow flying all around the jungle to find water .The jungle was big and crow was thirsty.After long time crow found a pot and some water in it but there was very little water at the bottom of the pot.crow tried to drink but couldn't succeed.Ultimately crow got an idea and started to collect pebbles to put in to it. Finally water levels raised and crow drank as much water to quench thirst.
Visit Nepal 2020
Almost 26.4 million people live in this country.It is 48th largest country by population and 93rd largest country by area.Three borders of Nepal are surrounded by India. China has covered remaining northern border.The total area of Nepal is mainly divided in to three parts as geographical diversity.Upper parts of it is called Himalaya prades.World's top point Mt Everest is located with so many other highest Himalayas.Middle parts of Nepal is called Pahadi Prades which is the biggest part of Nepal and Terai Prades is the place with fertile land and crowded population . Most of the people in this country live in Terai Prades which is plane.
Kathmandu is the capital city of Nepal which is also called city of temple.There is one international airport in kathmandu.Foreign tourist can visit capital city of Nepal for the first time they land in Nepal .Kathmandu is crowded city with 2.5 millions people .There are many things visiters can see as an unique in the world. This is the country of bio-diversity as well as geo- diversity.
Pokhara is one of the most beautiful city of Nepal .We can enjoy boating in fewa lake and this city is also popular for paragliding,which starts from the top of mountain . You can view the entire city and lands in the side of Fewa lake.
Many tourists visit Nepal every years to see the highest mountain and mt Everest.
One horn rhinoceros are another unique thing tourist want to see.
There are so many hotels and restaurants with different quality and prices.we can get a stomach full meal in just 1 dollar .
On the other hand we can get anything or everything available in the world in expensive hotal restaurants.If tou are thinking to visit Nepal in this Visit Nepal year 2020, fell free to ask any questions .Nepal is a beautiful place with a-lot of natural beauties so enjoy tour free time in a peaceful place with kind, cooperative and helpful people.
Kathmandu is the capital city of Nepal which is also called city of temple.There is one international airport in kathmandu.Foreign tourist can visit capital city of Nepal for the first time they land in Nepal .Kathmandu is crowded city with 2.5 millions people .There are many things visiters can see as an unique in the world. This is the country of bio-diversity as well as geo- diversity.
Pokhara is one of the most beautiful city of Nepal .We can enjoy boating in fewa lake and this city is also popular for paragliding,which starts from the top of mountain . You can view the entire city and lands in the side of Fewa lake.
Many tourists visit Nepal every years to see the highest mountain and mt Everest.
One horn rhinoceros are another unique thing tourist want to see.
There are so many hotels and restaurants with different quality and prices.we can get a stomach full meal in just 1 dollar .
On the other hand we can get anything or everything available in the world in expensive hotal restaurants.If tou are thinking to visit Nepal in this Visit Nepal year 2020, fell free to ask any questions .Nepal is a beautiful place with a-lot of natural beauties so enjoy tour free time in a peaceful place with kind, cooperative and helpful people.
The Jackal and the Bear (Nepali Folk Tale)
Once upon a time a jackal and a bear met on a Ferris wheel at a village mela. The two had a jolly time together. They pushed each other on the giant swing. They drank and gambled and laughed and joked all night. By the following morning they had become such good friends they decide to become “meets.” To make this vow of friendship binding, they exchanged rupees and began to call each other “Meetju.” When it came time to part, the jackal said: “Meetju, we are like real brothers now. We must not separate. Let us live together under one roof and try our hand at farming.”
The bear thought this was a good idea, so the two set out together in search of a suitable home. Some distance above the village, in the jungle where people gathered wood, they found a shepherd’s hut which had been deserted for a long time. After covering the roof with a new bamboo mat to keep the hut dry, they bought a bull with the money they had won at gambling and began to clear the land. Now the bear was a good-natured fellow who worked hard, but he was very stupid. The jackal, on the other hand, was very clever but he did not like to work at all. By the time they had finished hilling their first crop of corn together, the jackal was sure he did not like sharing the life of a farmer with a bear. The next morning the jackal said: “Meetju, I will work in the fields now and you go out to graze the bull. In this way we will take turns and the work won’t seem so dull.”
The bear liked this arrangement. Every morning he would get up early and chew some parched corn and drink some beer for breakfast. Then he would climb up into the thickest part of the jungle to graze the bull. He watched the bull carefully all day long, so it would not get lost or eaten by tigers. Meanwhile, the jackal would lie in the shade all day while the corn grew. When it was time to harvest the corn, the jackal said: “Meetju, you have worked hard and long at grazing the bull. He looks very strong. Now I will take my turn with the grazing and you can work at home in the fields.”
The bear was always agreeable after a compliment, so he stayed home to harvest the corn while the jackal took the bull to graze.The bear worked steadily all day long. The jackal was less diligent. He found it too much effort to go into the thickest part of the jungle where the grazing was good. The climb was difficult, and he had to follow the bull all the time to see that he did not get lost or eaten by a tiger. To make things easier for himself, he took the bull down the mountain to graze in the open fields. It did not matter to him there was very little grass. The important thing was to be able to lie on the wall in the shade near the berry patch and watch the bull, without having to get up and chase him. Late in the evening, when he was sure it was too dark to help the bear harvest the corn, the jackal took the bull home
After several weeks of this kind of treatment the bull grew very thin. And although the bear was a dull fellow, he wasn’t blind.“Meetju,” he said one evening, “why our bull getting so thin?”The jackal was ready with an answer. “We are not all blessed with the same gifts. Meetju, I will never be the fine herder you are,” he replied with a sigh. “Wherever I have taken the bull, others have been before me-so he has had very little to eat. But today I made a great discovery! I found a place where the grass grows as high as the bull’s knees. Tomorrow I will take him there and he can feast until he can eat no more.”
The bear was happy to be recognized as the better herdsman so he said nothing more.The next morning when the jackal went out to untie the bull he noticed that all the corn would be harvested by nightfall. This was the day he had been waiting for. He drove the bull up to the jungle but he did not take him to the tall grass as he had promised. Instead, he took him up to a high, barren cliff where there was no grass at all. When the bull put his head down to chew on a small fern growing out of a rock, the jackal gave him a shove and sent him rolling over the cliff. Then he ran down the mountain as fast as he could, dragged the animal into a deep ravine where no one could see him, ad sat down to his feast.
All morning the jackal ate the bull. When he had stuffed himself as much as he could, he gathered everything that was left and carried it back up the mountain to a cave in the side of the cliff. He carefully placed the meat at the back of the cave and filled the entrance with stones until there was only a small hole left, just big enough for him to enter. Then he put the bull’s tail in the hole, with the end showing from the outside. When everything was arranged just as he wished, he lay down to rest. He did not move again until he was sure the bear had finished harvesting the corn. “Well, Meetju,” the bear said when he saw the jackal coming down the trail all alone, “where is the bull?” “Oh, Meetju,” whined the jackal in return. “Today I have had a terrible time. The bull got stuck in a cave and try as I would, I could not get him out. I am weak, Meetju, but you are very strong. Tomorrow, if you will go up there with me, I am sure you can get him out.”The bear, softened with flattery, could not refuse his friend’s request.The next morning the jackal took the bear to the cave. When they reached the entrance the jackal said: “Meetju, you are too big to go inside that hole. I will go in and push the bull from inside, while you stay out here and pull from the outside. But don’t pull until I tell you I am ready. Whey I say, ‘Meetju, here he comes,’ you grab the tail with both hands and pull as hard as you can.”
The bear agreed to this plan and the jackal went inside the hole. He picked up his end of the tail and prepared for the pull that was to come. When he had braced himself properly, he shouted: “Meetju, here he comes!”The bear grabbed the tail with both hands, put his feet against the sides of the cave, and pulled with all his might. When the Jackal felt all of he bear’s weight pulling against him, he let go, and the bear went tumbling over the cliff toward the river.
The jackal brushed his hands together and smiled to himself. He was delighted to think his plans had worked to successfully. The corn was all harvested, the bull did not need herding nay more, and the bear would no longer be around to eat anything or complain if things did to go his way. “Now,” thought the trickster, “I am free to do just as I please.” He ran down to the hut to get a basket and a kukari so he could cut up any meat that was left over and carry it home. He put some cornmeal in the basket to make his lunch complete and headed back up the mountain.
To his great surprise, there in front of the whole was the bear, sitting with his arms around his legs in a very humble manner. “Oh, Meetju,” moaned the bear as the jackal approached. “What happened to the bull?”
“You pulled much too hard,” was the quick reply. “you just don’t know your own strength. The bull fell into the river and drowned. He made a terrible splash!” “Dear, dear,” muttered the bear. “We will never see him again. I almost lost my life too!” Then he added, looking up at the jackal: “Why have you brought the kukari and the pack basket?”
“I decided to come up to the forest to cut some wood. I knew you would fell very sick after your fall and would not want to work. I was going to tell you to go home and rest.”
This news helped to cheer up the bear. It was nice to have such a thoughtful brother, he said to himself. Then he saw the cornmeal.
“But Meetju, why did you bring the cornmeal?”
“I thought you would be very hungry after such a fall, so I brought some food.” The bear smiled. He looked very happy.
“Oh, I have the best Meetju in the world,” he cried, jumping up and hugging the jackal. The jackal started to laugh. The bear, who thought perhaps he should be laughing, started to laugh too. Soon they were both rolling on the ground with laughter. When the brothers were too exhausted to laugh any more, they sat down on a rock together and ate the cornmeal. Then they went off to the forest to cut wood.
It is said they are still calling each other Meetju, although one cannot be sure. A stupid, hard-working bear is hardly the match for a cleaver, lazy jackal.
Once upon a time a jackal and a bear met on a Ferris wheel at a village mela. The two had a jolly time together. They pushed each other on the giant swing. They drank and gambled and laughed and joked all night. By the following morning they had become such good friends they decide to become “meets.” To make this vow of friendship binding, they exchanged rupees and began to call each other “Meetju.” When it came time to part, the jackal said: “Meetju, we are like real brothers now. We must not separate. Let us live together under one roof and try our hand at farming.”
The bear thought this was a good idea, so the two set out together in search of a suitable home. Some distance above the village, in the jungle where people gathered wood, they found a shepherd’s hut which had been deserted for a long time. After covering the roof with a new bamboo mat to keep the hut dry, they bought a bull with the money they had won at gambling and began to clear the land. Now the bear was a good-natured fellow who worked hard, but he was very stupid. The jackal, on the other hand, was very clever but he did not like to work at all. By the time they had finished hilling their first crop of corn together, the jackal was sure he did not like sharing the life of a farmer with a bear. The next morning the jackal said: “Meetju, I will work in the fields now and you go out to graze the bull. In this way we will take turns and the work won’t seem so dull.”
The bear liked this arrangement. Every morning he would get up early and chew some parched corn and drink some beer for breakfast. Then he would climb up into the thickest part of the jungle to graze the bull. He watched the bull carefully all day long, so it would not get lost or eaten by tigers. Meanwhile, the jackal would lie in the shade all day while the corn grew. When it was time to harvest the corn, the jackal said: “Meetju, you have worked hard and long at grazing the bull. He looks very strong. Now I will take my turn with the grazing and you can work at home in the fields.”
The bear was always agreeable after a compliment, so he stayed home to harvest the corn while the jackal took the bull to graze.The bear worked steadily all day long. The jackal was less diligent. He found it too much effort to go into the thickest part of the jungle where the grazing was good. The climb was difficult, and he had to follow the bull all the time to see that he did not get lost or eaten by a tiger. To make things easier for himself, he took the bull down the mountain to graze in the open fields. It did not matter to him there was very little grass. The important thing was to be able to lie on the wall in the shade near the berry patch and watch the bull, without having to get up and chase him. Late in the evening, when he was sure it was too dark to help the bear harvest the corn, the jackal took the bull home
After several weeks of this kind of treatment the bull grew very thin. And although the bear was a dull fellow, he wasn’t blind.“Meetju,” he said one evening, “why our bull getting so thin?”The jackal was ready with an answer. “We are not all blessed with the same gifts. Meetju, I will never be the fine herder you are,” he replied with a sigh. “Wherever I have taken the bull, others have been before me-so he has had very little to eat. But today I made a great discovery! I found a place where the grass grows as high as the bull’s knees. Tomorrow I will take him there and he can feast until he can eat no more.”
The bear was happy to be recognized as the better herdsman so he said nothing more.The next morning when the jackal went out to untie the bull he noticed that all the corn would be harvested by nightfall. This was the day he had been waiting for. He drove the bull up to the jungle but he did not take him to the tall grass as he had promised. Instead, he took him up to a high, barren cliff where there was no grass at all. When the bull put his head down to chew on a small fern growing out of a rock, the jackal gave him a shove and sent him rolling over the cliff. Then he ran down the mountain as fast as he could, dragged the animal into a deep ravine where no one could see him, ad sat down to his feast.
All morning the jackal ate the bull. When he had stuffed himself as much as he could, he gathered everything that was left and carried it back up the mountain to a cave in the side of the cliff. He carefully placed the meat at the back of the cave and filled the entrance with stones until there was only a small hole left, just big enough for him to enter. Then he put the bull’s tail in the hole, with the end showing from the outside. When everything was arranged just as he wished, he lay down to rest. He did not move again until he was sure the bear had finished harvesting the corn. “Well, Meetju,” the bear said when he saw the jackal coming down the trail all alone, “where is the bull?” “Oh, Meetju,” whined the jackal in return. “Today I have had a terrible time. The bull got stuck in a cave and try as I would, I could not get him out. I am weak, Meetju, but you are very strong. Tomorrow, if you will go up there with me, I am sure you can get him out.”The bear, softened with flattery, could not refuse his friend’s request.The next morning the jackal took the bear to the cave. When they reached the entrance the jackal said: “Meetju, you are too big to go inside that hole. I will go in and push the bull from inside, while you stay out here and pull from the outside. But don’t pull until I tell you I am ready. Whey I say, ‘Meetju, here he comes,’ you grab the tail with both hands and pull as hard as you can.”
The bear agreed to this plan and the jackal went inside the hole. He picked up his end of the tail and prepared for the pull that was to come. When he had braced himself properly, he shouted: “Meetju, here he comes!”The bear grabbed the tail with both hands, put his feet against the sides of the cave, and pulled with all his might. When the Jackal felt all of he bear’s weight pulling against him, he let go, and the bear went tumbling over the cliff toward the river.
The jackal brushed his hands together and smiled to himself. He was delighted to think his plans had worked to successfully. The corn was all harvested, the bull did not need herding nay more, and the bear would no longer be around to eat anything or complain if things did to go his way. “Now,” thought the trickster, “I am free to do just as I please.” He ran down to the hut to get a basket and a kukari so he could cut up any meat that was left over and carry it home. He put some cornmeal in the basket to make his lunch complete and headed back up the mountain.
To his great surprise, there in front of the whole was the bear, sitting with his arms around his legs in a very humble manner. “Oh, Meetju,” moaned the bear as the jackal approached. “What happened to the bull?”
“You pulled much too hard,” was the quick reply. “you just don’t know your own strength. The bull fell into the river and drowned. He made a terrible splash!” “Dear, dear,” muttered the bear. “We will never see him again. I almost lost my life too!” Then he added, looking up at the jackal: “Why have you brought the kukari and the pack basket?”
“I decided to come up to the forest to cut some wood. I knew you would fell very sick after your fall and would not want to work. I was going to tell you to go home and rest.”
This news helped to cheer up the bear. It was nice to have such a thoughtful brother, he said to himself. Then he saw the cornmeal.
“But Meetju, why did you bring the cornmeal?”
“I thought you would be very hungry after such a fall, so I brought some food.” The bear smiled. He looked very happy.
“Oh, I have the best Meetju in the world,” he cried, jumping up and hugging the jackal. The jackal started to laugh. The bear, who thought perhaps he should be laughing, started to laugh too. Soon they were both rolling on the ground with laughter. When the brothers were too exhausted to laugh any more, they sat down on a rock together and ate the cornmeal. Then they went off to the forest to cut wood.
It is said they are still calling each other Meetju, although one cannot be sure. A stupid, hard-working bear is hardly the match for a cleaver, lazy jackal.
How to Prepare For First Date
First Dates:
No matter how much you chat before you meet, they’re always a dive into the unknown. So, it’s normal to feel nervous. You may not be able to control how you feel, but you can control whatever you have prepared. It’s easy to tell yourself not to overthink things but not easy to perform what you thinking. When your imagination runs to wild, you need extra brain power to perform wisely.
While these tips may not guarantee you in this amazing chemistry but they will help you to make easier.
If you are preparing for online date, you need to be prepared more in your words and sentences. You can ask very few questions about her interest, favorites things and a hobby. You have to be very much careful about how your partner is talking. Some people pretend what they are not actually. That is their job just to make fun.
Plan Where to Go
It is very important for the first date to choose the right place. Try not to expense too much money in the first date. Not expensive clothes or place. it doesn't matter where you go but the place has to be much quiet or peaceful. Better chose a lonely place so that you can draw attention in your wish. If somebody or something draw your attention, you can have less time to impress.
Ask questions
Simply ask some questions having simple answer. Focused In particular interest so that your conversation can go longer. Don't ask long question having long answer.
This is what i think about first date if you have anything new and better ideas just share so that we can make more easier for those who need it
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