Shortlisted!
Two days back I recieved an email from the Asian Institute of Management, Manila mentioning that I was shortlisted for the next round of assesment as part of the application process. The next round, as I was informed contains a round of Group Discussion and a round of Interview. However, I'm not sure whether a GD will be necessarily followed by the Interview. This I say because, god forbid, if I do not make it through the GD, I will not qualify for the interview. Nevertheless, I'm pretty sure that I will make it through the GD, for my track record with past GD's has been 100% sucessful.
Moving on to the format of the GD, I must confess I know very little or nothing of it. AIM is one such institute on which one manages to find little or no information whatsoever. And even if you do, the source providing that information might itself lack credibility or is not willing to share information wholeheartedly. I'm not sure of the funda behind the shroud of secrecy but from what I have heard from an current student of the institute, it makes for one hell of learning destination. Hearing his narration of experiences at AIM makes me feel that the choice I made in applying to AIM would not be an effort in futility.
Let me rewind a little bit and go back a few months. It was in August or September of 2006 that I decided to pursue my MBA as a vehicle to further my career prospects. The first thing I did was log on to Google and search with the keyword "MBA". The flood of search results took me aback, though I had faintly expected it to happen. Seeing the deluge of information, I was not sure of which link to pursue. I then remembered a few links that I had acessed some years back during my failed pursuit of IIM - CAT. Those links were of IMS India and TIMES. I went to their website and found some links to sites such as the mba.com. From there on I went to one URL after another and finally came across a site that gave me a list of top MBA programs in Asia and the World. Not sure whether the rankings were of any authority, I checked some other sites on program rankings. A few institutes were shown more predominantly over others and that made me to reasearch more on those highlighted ones. Helping me narrow my research on the institutes was a conversation I had with a few friends and my own readings of newpapers and current affairs, were I came across tons and tons of articles hinting towards an Asian MBA and its worth in the new global business melieu. I thus started looking towards institutes such as the AIM, Nanyang, NUS, MBS, etc.
A week past since my initial research I was chatting with a friend of mine and came to know of a mutual friend(let me call him the guy) who had started for the AIM to pursue his MBA. That news sprang me in to action. I got in touch with the guy and started to get more information on how AIM operated. I came to know of the institutes application and selection processes and ofcourse the teaching philosophy. The first phase on the process involved the AIM AptitudeTest. AIMAT was a 3 1/2 hour test covering Quants, Verbal and a Analytical Writing. I took the test on the 26 Nov 2006. I found the test to be fairly easy when compared to the GMAT for which I had already begun preparing. AIM would accept either a GMAT or an AIMAT score as a prerequiste before being considered for the next levels of assesment invloving a GD and a Interview.
And so coming to the present moment, I find myself getting ready for the impending GD and Interview, the schedule of which I'm yet to recieve. More on this in my next blog.
Let live or kill to live?
Recently, in my home town- Bangalore, residents of a locality witnessed a gruesome incident. A 6-year-old girl was viciously attached and killed by a bunch of street dogs. The incident rekindled debates between the people for euthanasia and people against euthanasia. The debates are not a new affair. They have been happening for a long time and have been given a greater impetus by the aforesaid gruesome incident. Post the incident many more such incidents have come to the view of citizens and the Bangalore Mahanagar Palikke (BMP-the municipal authority in Bangalore) has become active in catching and mercy killing dogs (Mercy killing is word coined in the West where the killings were done mercifully, but what I have seen of BMP’s ways, its anything but merciful).
No matter how much we feel about this topic being commonplace, we as the caring citizens have a responsibility in participating in the debate, for it is the question of lives, not just human but also non-human- with street dogs being accepted as a part of Indian human life.
I for one have always believed in a humane approach towards this problem. Sterilization, with all its slowness and sometimes ineffectiveness, can be the only way out. For it is a fact that, when a human is murdered by another, we do not set out killing all the other human beings. The same should hold true with dogs as well, with the above incident as a case in point. You just cannot afford duplicity on this issue, as it sounds too hollow to have different actions for different beings.
Now the question is do you have a stand or are you going to live with a big “?” in your mind? Do you want the canines be a part of your lives, as they have been all this while or do you want to terminate their lives to secure your own life in the face of changing dog-human dynamics or for that matter human-non-human dynamics? To put it succinctly, do you want to let live or kill to live?
PS: While I’m writing this article dogcatchers from the BMP are actively catching all the street dogs, in the most brutal fashion possible, right in front of my own house!!!
The Awe Inspiring Wild World
How beautiful can it get? How melodious can it be with its screeches and tweets all at the same time? How disciplined can it be during the creation and destruction process? How mysterious can its ways be? How can it bring together things seemingly so far fetched and totally unrelated as into one single entity? Yes! You guessed it right. I’m referring ‘it’, to Nature- its ways and means that has held us spellbound for centuries and will hold us in awe for many a generation to come. And facilitating our awing experiences are the diehard nature lovers, conservationists and cinematographers, who make it possible for us to see the Spring Bucks of the Savannah, the burly Siberian Tigers of the freezing northern Russia, the majestic Elephants of the tropical Western Ghats of India, the Mountain Lions of the spring time North Americas, the Dingoes of the dry and arid Australian down under, the stealthy Leopards of the thick and lush green Amazonian South America, and the highly sensitive Barn Owls of the chilly Europe, all at the click of a simple TV remote button while sitting some place far from real action and yet so close to the breath taking actions of the “wild world” through modern electronics. This article is in toast to those brave hearts and wildlife aficionados who go to the ends of the earth for our “pleasure and awes”.
My early recollections of programs on wildlife and nature as a whole, involved a program on Discovery Channel that focused on the big cats of the world. Tigers, Lions, Cheetahs, Leopards, Pumas, Black cats and other felines were covered and each of them were talked about vis-à-vis their habitats, social nature, availability of prey, and the kind of threats they faced. My recent recollection however is about a program on the baffling world of insects and their parasitic behaviors in pushing for the cause of their specie’s survival. It is this second recollection that has acted as an immediate inspiration to me to write this article.
Narrated by the world famous entomologist, Sir David Attenborough, the program “Life in the undergrowth” on Discovery Channel, addressed the parasitic behavior among insects such as The Wasps, the Blue Butterflies, Cattle flies, etc. The most bizarre aspect about these insects is the interdependence among them as a cause for their respective species survival. A Blue Butterfly lays it eggs on plants. And once those eggs hatch, the larvae falls to the ground giving out pheromones to attract certain kind of ants. The ants from the nearby colonies take in to those pheromones- and start thinking that the Butterfly larvae are the larvae of their own specie, somehow lost and to be brought back to the colony! In fact the pheromones reconfigure the ant’s brain so much so that they give more attention and care to the Butterfly’s larvae than their own! Once inside the colony the larvae grow at blistering pace feeding on what has been provided to them by their loving, albeit tricked, foster parents. The larvae also develop a cocoon around them which hardens as time passes.
During their growth the Butterfly larvae may be visited by another of the strange bugs-the Wasps. The female Wasp with her belly full of eggs has devised a way of providing her progeny a safe birth. In a way, still not understood by entomologists, the female Wasp finds the exact ant colony where the larvae of the Butterfly are developing. In fact Sir Attenborough mentioned that the female Wasps have this knack of finding the right colony among a thousand other ant colonies!
Once into the colony, the female Wasp is, as expected, attached by the soldier ants of the colony and just when you thought that the Wasp would be killed by the ant stings, the female Wasp releases pheromones into the air to create pandemonium in the colony, making the ants to fight among themselves! It is at this opportune moment that the Wasp starts looking for the Butterfly larvae. On finding, the Wasp lays a huge number of her eggs inside one Butterfly larva after another and once done flies off out of the colony-assured of a safe birth for her progeny. A few weeks later, the Wasps eggs hatch into larvae inside the cocoon of the Butterfly larvae feeding on the liquid available and at the same time seeing that they do not harm the Butterfly within the cocoon. Astounding isn’t it? The two species in fact use each other for a safe birth. By eating the excess liquid inside the cocoon the Wasp larvae saves the Butterfly larvae from dying through rotting and the Butterfly in turn gives the Wasp a safe heaven.
A few weeks later a fully grown Butterfly emerges out of its hard cocoon shell and stumbles its way out of the colony onto a nearby plant to expand and flutter its wings and fly away to begin the cycle of life all over again. Meanwhile, the crack left by the Butterfly acts as an opening for the dozens of Wasps inside the cocoon to emerge. The emerging Wasps then go onto create their own cycle of life just as the Blue Butterflies did, all to begin a new circle of sharing and living.
Whatever I narrated above was just part of an hour’s program but the actual time taken to prepare such a program would have been in months, if not years. Phew! What amount of dedication and come to think of it, the awing experience occurs just for the simple fact that the whole understanding of the word Parasite takes on a new turn, for parasitic behavior does not necessarily mean sustenance of one life at the cost or termination on another, it also means the propagation of two or more lives through co-existence. And thus, is it any wonder that we owe so much to wild life enthusiasts such as Sir David Attenborough, Steve Irvin, et al., because of whom ordinary folks like you and I have a better understanding of the wild world of the past, present and hopefully with more such people being born and more discoveries made by them, the future too.
So go ahead, get awed and inspired in the company of the master depicters of the wild world!