Sunday, March 21, 2010

COMPARISON DEFINED

Dictionary Definition

An evaluation of the similarities and differences of two (or more) things

Noun

1 .Examining resemblances or differences [syn: comparing]
2 .Relation based on similarities and differences

Extensive Definition

Comparison may refer to:


  • Comparison,,,,grammar
  • Three degrees of comparison
  • Price comparison


Thursday, March 18, 2010

India, Pakistan: a comparison writtten by DR. ISHRAT HUSAIN


India and Pakistan are completing five decades of their independence. Since the partition, the relationship between the two countries has been uneasy and characterized by a set of paradoxes. There is a mixture of love and hate, a tinge of envy and admiration, bouts of paranoia and longing for cooperation, and a fierce rivalry but a sense of proximity, too....This article attempts to present an objective, empirically-based and balanced view of the economic achievements and failures of both the countries during the span of the last five decades. The strict comparison becomes somewhat problematic because of the separation of East from West Pakistan in 1971 but, the analysis and conclusions drawn by and large remain valid...ndia


The common successes shared by both the countries


Despite the prophets of gloom and doom on both sides of the fence, both India and Pakistan have succeeded in more than doubling their per capita incomes. This is a remarkable feat considering that the population has increased fourfold in case of Pakistan and threefold in India. Leaving aside the countries in East Asia and China, very few large countries have been able to reach this milestone.
The incidence of poverty (defined as $1 per day) has also been reduced significantly although the number of absolute poor remains astoundingly high. However, the level of poverty is lower in Pakistan.
Food production has not only kept pace with the rise in population but has surpassed it. Both countries, leaving aside annual fluctuations due to weather conditions, are self-sufficient in food. (Pakistan exports its surplus rice but imports small volumes of wheat).
Food self-sufficiency has been accompanied by improved nutritional status. Daily caloric and protein intake per capita has risen by almost one-third but malnourishment among children is still high.
The cracks in the dualistic nature of the economy -- a well-developed modern sector and a backward traditional sector -- are appearing fast in both the countries. A buoyant middle class is emerging. The use of modern inputs and mechanization of agriculture has been a leveling influence in this direction. But public policies have not always been consistent or supportive.


The common failures of the two countries.


The relatively inward-looking economic policies and high protection to domestic industry did not allow them to reap the benefits of integration with the fast-expanding and much larger world economy. This has changed particularly since 1991 but the control mind-set of the politicians and the bureaucrats has not changed. The centrally planned allocation of resources and "license raj" has given rise to an inefficient private sector that thrive more on contacts, bribes, loans from public financial institutions, lobbying, tax evasion and rent-seeking rather than on competitive behavior. Unless both the control mind-set of the government and the parasitic behavior of the private industrial entrepreneurs do not change drastically, the potential of an efficient economy would be hard to achieve. This can be accomplished by promoting domestic and international competition, reducing tariff and non-tariff barriers and removing constraints to entry for newcomers.

The weaknesses in governance in the legal and judicial system, poor enforcement of private property rights and contracts, preponderance of discretionary government rules and regulations and lack of transparency in decision making act as brakes on broad-based participation and sharing of benefits by the majority of the population.

In terms of fiscal management, the record of both the countries is less than stellar. Higher fiscal deficits averaging 7-8 percent of GDP have persisted for fairly long periods of time and crowded out private capital formation through large domestic borrowing. Defense expenditures and internal debt servicing continue to pre-empt large proportion of tax revenues with adverse consequences for maintenance and expansion of physical infrastructure, basic social services and other essential services that only the government can provide. The congested urban services such as water, electricity, transport in both countries are a potential source of social upheaval.
The state of financial sector in both countries is plagued with serious ills. The nationalization of commercial banking services, the neglect of credit quality in allocation decisions, lack of competition and inadequate prudential regulations and supervision have put the system under severe pressure and increased the share of non-performing assets in the banks’ portfolio. The financial intermediation role in mobilizing and efficiently allocating domestic savings has been seriously compromised and the banking system is fragile. Both countries are now taking steps to liberalize the financial sector and open it up to competition from foreign banks as well as private banks.

Wednesday, March 17, 2010

A comparison between two Poets and their Poems

Romantic love is an often-embraced theme of both ancient and contemporary literary works. From the tragic, frequently sacrificial and forbidden love of the ancient Greek times to more modern themes, love has always had a place in the written history of our cultures. A contributing factor to this enduring quality of love as a literary subject is its mutability. Due to the fact that so many different facets of the emotion can be depicted in a work, we never tire of reading about it. The various perceptions of love which are portrayed in works of literature always manage to keep our attention. Two major literary works which each illustrate an individual take on love are Christopher Marlow’s “Hero and Leander,” and Edmund Spenser’s “Epithalamion.” While Marlowe’s work has a logistical tone and seems to view love in a more superficial manner, Spenser’s poem is a celebration of love which elevates the beloved to a great height. The two main characters in Marlowe’s poem are both young people of a superlative nature. Each one possesses beauty which others seem to be in awe of. In the beginning of the work, Hero is described as “Hero the fair,” who has lovers committing suicide at her feet when she rejects them.
Spencer,s poem ,epithelamion is a work which is in stark contrast to Marlowe,s poem .While Marlowe concentrates on the physical and more superficial aspects of love and never really touches on the emotions of the two lovers, Spenser presents a more idealized portrait of the emotion. His poem is a wedding poem, discussing the hours before his wedding, the wedding itself, and the hopes and feelings that he is experiencing. Similarly to Marlowe, Spenser also cites comparisons to Greek mythical figures, but he does not do this in order to parallel the sacrificial nature and frequent suffering. He references the Greeks in his work in order to compare his bride-to-be to a goddess, “lyke Phoebe . This is only one of the many comparisons which he makes, also comparing her to “some mayden Queene . He pleads with the sun to continue shining all day in honor of her, and for the weather to be nice for the wedding day. If Spenser’s poem is about sacrificial love at all, it seems to be about the sacrifices which he would be willing to make in the name of the woman he loved, not ones that he would be forced to make. fact, there is not so much attention focused on her appearance in the poem as there is on the effect that her appearance has on others. Her breath is so sweet that “many would praise the sweet smell as she passed, and she was so similar to Venus in beauty that “Cupid pined, and looking in her face, was strooken blind. Leander does not escape the power of her appearance, either. At one point in the poem he recognizes the influence which her physical traits have, stating, “I would my rude words had the influence To lead my thoughts, as thy fair looks do mine. ” It is this beauty of Hero’s which at first brings the two of them together. At the great feast, Leander and Hero both notice one another and are at once hit with Cupid’s arrow. It seems that they both fall in love spontaneously upon first sight. Although many people view this occurrence as a strictly mythic happening, Marlowe states his belief that, “What we behold is censured by our eyes….Who ever loved, that loved not at first sight?”




well the debate on love is so far contrast two separate views on love ....

Sunday, March 14, 2010

The Male Brain vs The Female Brain


Men's brains are larger, but as they age, they also shrink faster than women's brains.

Women's brains operate at a higher temperature, due to burning more glucose.

Women use more of their brains when they think.

In general, men are better at math and women are better at language skills....

Friday, March 12, 2010



Now imagine yourself on some new planet, where nobody lived but you. Would you then be beautiful or ugly? Tall or short? Rich or poor? Without comparison, these words naturally lose their meaning. Because they are only concepts created by the mind ; they have no concrete existence.

Tuesday, March 9, 2010

Never mix things up or try something new

It can fool you into feeling that things are pretty OK. You have your pleasant, safe routine. But underneath there are fuzzy negative feelings of dissatisfaction that sometimes move up to the surface.

Remind yourself of the other times when you have tried something and how you most often don’t regret it at all. In fact, you probably had a pretty good time. Don’t fool yourself into complacency.

I’m not saying that need to go sky diving. But simply that it’s a good choice to mix things up, to get some diversity at least once in a while. The next time someone suggests trying something give a try. Or make a suggestion to your friends.

http://www.positivityblog.com/index.php/2008/01/14/9-great-ways-to-make-yourself-absolutely-miserable/

Sunday, March 7, 2010

think before u compare

comparison is not only among humans but we started comparing things like size of animals,pics sharpness,,,,,,,,,shorter biger why is this comparison i agree some comparison are good for us but somes lead to that phase of life from where we cant return

Thursday, March 4, 2010


people compare there loved ones with moon becoz the moon is beautiful but moon laso have stains on it so i belive there is a big difference between human and nature so dnt compare ALLAH given beauty with the things tht are stable they are alao made by ALLAH ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,when ALLAH dont compare us with one and other so why u compare ourselves with others

Sunday, February 28, 2010

think.........................


By looking to this pic ppl will definitly say the are on date but not necessary they are true friends y such thought comes to our mind n due to these thoughts we lose our happy life n comparison never lad us to live a successful life..........think about it why we think like this??????????

Tuesday, February 23, 2010

article on life comparison(Adrift: Seventy-six Days Lost at Sea,)

When Callahan was found offshore by three fisherman, they took him to their island in the Caribbean. Once ashore, they drove him in a Volkswagen bus to a hospital in another town. On the way there, Callahan was overwhelmed with color and sound and smell. While he was adrift on the ocean, he was surrounded for more than two months by nothing but blue sky and blue sea. He smelled nothing but the ocean and fish. Read his brief account of the car ride:

We pass long stretches of sugar cane fields. Ox carts are piled high with cut cane. I cannot believe how sensitive I am to the smells of the cut vegetation, of the flowers, of the bus. It is as if my nerve endings are plugged into an amplifier. The green fields, the pink and orange roadside flowers, practically vibrate with color. I am awash in stimuli.

The contrast between his previous situation and normal life on land was dramatic. He appreciated colors and smells we all take for granted every day. Why do we take them for granted? Because they've always been there. We haven't compared their presence with their absence.

During his voyage on his life raft, Callahan was often soaked in salt water for long periods of time during his time. So it was especially pleasurable to be dry. When he got to the hospital, they cleaned him up and put him to bed. His description is ecstatic. Why? Simply because of the comparison between a cold, wet, abrasive, salt-encrusted life raft and a simple, ordinary bed:

I lay back on the sheets, clean sheets, dry sheets. I can't remember ever feeling like this before, though I imagine that I might have felt this way at birth. I am as helpless as a baby, and each sensation is so strong that it's like seeing, smelling, and touching for the very first time.

Comparisons. Your mind makes them all the time. And whether you feel contentment or dissatisfaction largely depends on what you are comparing your life to.

The problem is, we live in a culture where advertisers are constantly giving us perfect images to compare ourselves with: people with perfect homes and cars and spouses and children, and they give us the illusion that this perfection is somehow possible.

The advertisers are taking advantage of the way our minds work naturally. You automatically and naturally compare yourself and your life to others and with your own ideals and aspirations.

Although the process of comparison happens without your active effort, you can assume control of it. Like your own own breathing, it happens on its own, but you can make it do what you want at any time. All you have to do is pay attention to it. Why would you want to bother? Because, as Robin Lloyd puts it after looking at the research:

People who positively evaluate their well-being on average have stronger immune systems, are better citizens at work, earn more income, have better marriages, are more sociable, and cope better with difficulties.

Okay, so it makes a difference to feel some contentment. And luckily, it can be accomplished pretty easily. It won't last for a long time, but neither does sleeping or exercising. The fact that the effect doesn't last is no reason to dismiss it. If you're willing to put a little effort out, you can feel more satisfied with your life.

Here's what to do: When you feel discontented, ask yourself What could be worse? And really try to think of something. You can always think of something, and it is usually pretty easy.

If you feel unhappy because you haven't advanced in your job as fast as you'd hoped, for example, imagine how you'd feel if you lived in a country or a time when advancement wasn't possible. Imagine being an "untouchable" in India, sentenced to generation after generation of poverty with no chance of escape. Imagine real situations other human beings have experienced that are much worse than anything you've ever had to endure.

Try this technique and you'll recognize that in many ways you're lucky to be where you are and who you are. It's a good feeling. It's relaxing and peaceful. It won't last very long, but you can always do it again. The technique works every time.

In a way, it is a good thing the feeling doesn't last because as wonderful as contentment is, motivation is also wonderful. Striving for a goal — physical fitness, self-improvement, financial success, whatever — is practical and worthwhile also. But when you want to feel some contentment, take a little time and think about how your situation could be worse, or think about what others have gone through, or think about how your situation used to be worse.

To help you find some real situations you can compare your own life with, read books like Endurance: Shackleton's Incredible Voyage, The Long Walk: The True Story of a Trek to Freedom, and Alive: The Story of the Andes Survivors. Their difficulties will help you see your own life with new eyes.

"I'm glad I'm not a..."

In an experiment, people were asked to do a simple task: To complete the sentence, "I'm glad I'm not a..." They completed the sentence five times.

After doing this simple exercise, they were happier with their lives. Their "life satisfaction" was improved after the exercise.

Another group of volunteers were asked to complete a different sentence: "I wish I were a..." After this exercise, they were less satisfied with their lives.

You have a lot of control over what you compare your life to, and if you would like to feel contentment, it behooves you to consciously exercise your control.

Another study, this time at the University of Milwaukee, looked at comparisons in a different way. A group of women were shown pictures of difficult living conditions from a hundred years ago. Another group were told to imagine and then write about what it would be like to experience a horrible tragedy like getting disfigured or terribly burned. Doesn't this sound like a fun exercise? Oddly enough, though, afterwards the women filled out a rating scale to measure their satisfaction with the quality of their own lives.

They were more satisfied with their lives after the exercise. Why? Because it gave them something worse to compare their own lives to.

You can do a comparison experiment at home. Fill one bucket with ice cold water and another bucket with pretty hot water. Fill a third bucket with room temperature water. Now soak one hand in the hot water and one in the cold water for a couple minutes. Then pull them both out and plunge them into the room temperature water. You'll get the strange sensation of that water feeling both hot and cold at the same time.

Compared to the hot water, the room temperature water feels cold. Compared to the ice cold water, it feels hot. Comparison makes the difference. It effects your direct perception of reality.

In Nelson Mandela's autobiography, he describes his time in prison. It was pretty bad. But, he says, sometimes he was put in isolation. When in isolation, the only food they got was rice water three times a day. Rice water is the water rice has been boiled in. That's it. That's all they got to "eat."

And when isolation was over, and he was back in the normal prison, the tiny amount of horrible food they usually ate seemed like a feast.

You and I come upon examples like this all the time. We've seen it in so many ways. But if you're like me, you have missed the vital lesson for the most part. I like to read true-life survival or adventure stories, as you can probably tell. One of the reasons I like to read them is that I feel so fortunate when I'm done reading. I get up and go about my day, freshly aware that I am not starving or freezing or dying of thirst, and it makes me feel rich and lucky and happy.

I like it when an author uses examples to illustrate a point, and I hope you do too, because I have another one for you: After returning to base camp from an arduous, intense brush with death in another true survival story, K2The Savage Mountain, the authors write about how relaxing and wonderful it was to be back in base camp.

At that moment we craved no delicacies, no entertainment, no luxuries. We felt like swimmers from a capsized boat who had just completed the long swim to shore. Merely being there was unspeakable luxury.

One thing interesting from studies on happiness is that after having enough money to supply yourself with the basic necessities, money doesn't have much of an impact on your happiness level. People who are very wealthy are only slightly happier than people living modestly. But there is an exception to this rule: If someone with a low income comes in frequent contact with people with higher incomes, it can make the lower income person unhappier with his circumstances.

People who are very poor in, say, India, and everyone in their village is very poor, can still be pretty happy. But a poor person in Beverly Hills who actually would be rich compared to the person in the poor Indian village, might be miserable because he is comparing himself to all the people around him who have so much money.

I have another example for you to illustrate what happens when you transfer a person from one circumstance to an entirely different one. A man named Sichan Siv escaped Cambodia during the Khmer Rouge blood bath. His escape was very difficult and took a long time. He eventually made it to the United States and got a job at the Friendly Ice Cream restaurant, washing dishes, mopping floors, and taking out the trash for 16 hours a day — and he was very happy. He felt like the luckiest man in the world. "I'm free!" he thought, "Nobody's trying to kill me!"

Those of us who grew up in the United States would find his situation — working at such a hard job 16 hours a day and making so little money — almost intolerable. But that's because we are comparing it to our own lives. But we are not stuck only making comparisons that come naturally. You can deliberately make any kind of comparison you want, and this is one place where your thoughts really make a difference.

looking into the future

My wife, Klassy, used to teach workshops for couples. She taught communication skills and put them through exercises so they could practice. One of the exercises she put them through used this principle of comparison.

Klassy would have each couple sit facing each other, and then start talking to them while slow, wordless, beautiful, moving music was playing, while they sat looking at each other.

"Imagine," Klassy would say, "that you two have lived a long life together. You're both very old. And your partner is now on their deathbed. Your mate's life will be over soon. Imagine how that will feel to you then. The two of you have been through so much together..."

Of course, this was a very moving experience for almost everybody. Klassy gave them plenty of time to fully imagine this scenario and to feel how sad it would (or will) be.

"What would you miss about your partner?" Klassy said, giving them long pauses of just music playing for them to think about this. "What special memories would you cherish?"

When they really couldn't take any more and the room was about two feet deep in tears, Klassy would say something like this:

"Imagine how much you would want to come back to this moment...to be here with your partner...to have your future ahead of you..."

Long pause. "And realize what you wished for is here. The two of you are here, together, alive, your future ahead of you." You've never seen so many people gaze at each other totally in love before. "Now," said Klassy, "take fifteen minutes and talk about your experience with each other."

People were extremely moved by this experience. Here they were — like most couples — to some degree taking each other for granted, comparing yesterday with today, or whatever. Not really appreciating each other. "You don't know what you've got till it's gone." Really? What if you imagined what it would be like if it was gone? Then realized it isn't gone? Guess what? You can know what you've got while you've got it! You can do it by the way you make comparisons. You can use it deliberately.

This is a way to make positive events more memorable than negative ones. It directly counters the neagtive bias that makes you naturally compare things in a negative way. When people say, "count your blessings," they are essentially telling you to compare your life to something worse, and feel grateful your life is the way it is. And it works. In one study, people who wrote in a diary for only five minutes a way, and wrote about only what they were grateful for, were measurably happier. To know what you're grateful for, you automatically imagine not having it.

http://www.youmeworks.com/comparison.html

I have measured out my life with coffee spoon............:)

our life is exactly like spoons because the people are always there and keep an eagle eye on our movements ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,why we can't stay out of comparison even if we do right thing an even it is appreciated by others but there is always a person who is never happy and compares our affords with others,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,when they compare we lose our victory ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,
THESE LINES ARE CUTE AND DELIVER A SILENT MESSAGE:
"Never chose me without understanding
and
Never lose me because of misunderstanding"
I believe comparison makes our life even worse ,,as if we have no other option to keep us correcting even when we are righttttttttttttt:::::::::::::::::::))))))))))))))0

Monday, February 22, 2010

What is life but the angle of vision??A man is measured by the angle at which he looks at objects(Ralph Waldo Emerson)...........

The society we live in we see people always comparing us with others no matter that is good or bad thing done by us,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,actually we cannot stay happy in any situation people always poke there nose in our lifesssss,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,we have no personal life in which we take our own decisions due too these decisions taken by our relatives lead us to losssssssssssss n profit also.......................................................................................................