Tuesday, February 3, 2026

The Tales of James Harrison

 In 1951, a 14-year-old Australian boy named James Harrison woke up in a hospital bed with 100 stitches across his chest.

Doctors had just removed one of his lungs. To survive, he needed 13 units of donated blood from complete strangers—people whose names he would never know.


His father, Reg, sat beside him and said something that changed his life:


"You're only alive because people donated blood."


Right there, James made a promise. The moment he turned 18, he would donate blood. He would pay back the gift that saved him. There was just one problem. 


James was terrified of needles.


But in 1954, the day he became eligible, he walked into a blood donation center anyway. He sat in the chair, looked at the ceiling, and let the nurse insert the needle.


He never watched. Not once. Not in 64 years.


What James didn't know was that his blood was different.


After a few donations, doctors discovered something extraordinary. His plasma contained an incredibly rare antibody—likely developed from all those transfusions he received as a boy. 


This antibody could prevent a deadly condition called Rhesus disease.


Before this discovery, thousands of Australian babies were dying every year. When a pregnant woman with Rh-negative blood carries an Rh-positive baby, her body would attack the child's blood cells. 


Miscarriages. Stillbirths. Brain damage. James's blood held the answer. Doctors asked if he would switch to plasma donation. It meant longer sessions—90 minutes instead of 20. It meant coming in every few weeks for the rest of his life.


James thought about his fear.


Then he thought about the babies. He said yes. 


For 64 years, James Harrison never missed an appointment.


He donated through joy and heartbreak. He donated while working as a railway clerk. He donated after retiring. He continued even after his wife Barbara passed away in 2005—what he called his "darkest days."


Every single time—all 1,173 donations—he looked at the ceiling. He chatted with nurses. He studied the walls. Anything to avoid watching the needle. The fear never left him. But he showed up anyway.


In a beautiful twist, his own daughter needed the very medication created from his blood when she became pregnant. His grandson Scott exists because of the choice his grandfather made decades earlier. 


In May 2018, at age 81, Australian law required James to make his final donation. 


The room was filled with mothers holding healthy babies—living proof of his quiet heroism. They thanked him through tears. James sat in the chair one last time, looked away from his arm one last time, and gave his 1,173rd donation.


Over 3 million doses of Anti-D medication containing his blood have been issued since 1967. Scientists estimate his contributions helped save approximately 2.4 million babies in Australia alone.


When people called him a hero, he shrugged it off.


"I'm in a safe room, donating blood," he said. "They give me a cup of coffee and something to nibble on. And then I just go on my way. No problem, no hardship."


James Harrison died peacefully in his sleep on February 17, 2025. He was 88 years old. We often search for heroes in movies or history books—people with superpowers, wealth, or fame.


But sometimes a hero is just someone who keeps a quiet promise for 64 years. Someone who feels fear—deep, trembling fear—and does the right thing anyway.


Millions of people are alive today because one man decided his fear mattered less than their lives.

Sunday, April 21, 2024

Sylvester Stallone's Rocky & Success

 Back in the day, Sylvester Stallone was a struggling actor in every definition. At some point, he got so broke that he stole his wife’s jewellery and sold it. 

Things got so bad that he even ended up homeless. Yes, he slept at the New York bus station for 3 days. Unable to pay rent or afford food. His lowest point came when he tried to sell his dog at the liquor store to a stranger. 

He didn’t have money to feed the dog anymore. He sold it for $25 only. He says he walked away crying.

Two weeks later, he saw a boxing match between Mohammed Ali and Chuck Wepner and that match gave him the inspiration to write the script for the famous movie, ROCKY. 


He wrote the script for 20 hours! 


He tried to sell it and got an offer for $125,000 for the script. But he had just ONE REQUEST. He wanted to STAR in the movie. He wanted to be the MAIN ACTOR, Rocky himself. But the studio said NO. 


They wanted a REAL STAR.


They said he “Looked funny and talked funny”. He left with his script. A few weeks later, the studio offered him $250,000 for the script. He refused. They even offered $350,000. He still refused. 


They wanted his movie, but NOT him. He said NO. He had to be IN THAT MOVIE.


After a while, the studio agreed, gave him $35,000 for the script and let him star in it! 


The rest is history! The movie won Best Picture, Best Directing and Best Film Editing at the prestigious Oscar Awards. He was even nominated for BEST ACTOR! 


The Movie ROCKY was even inducted into the American National Film Registry as one of the greatest movies ever!


NO ONE KNOWS WHAT YOU ARE CAPABLE OF EXCEPT YOURSELF! 


People will judge you by HOW you look. And by WHAT you have. But Fight on! Fight for Your place in history. Fight for your glory. 


NEVER EVER GIVE UP!


Even if it means selling all your clothes and sleeping with the dogs, IT’S OKAY! 


But AS LONG AS YOU ARE STILL ALIVE, Your STORY IS NOT OVER.


Keep Up the Fight. Keep your dreams and hope alive. Go get it !!!


P.S. After the movie came out he tracked down the guy who bought his dog and bought it back for 10k.

Saturday, July 17, 2021

Holi Beyond Colors

The story behind the festival, Holi, starts with Holika, the sister of Hiranakashyap, the father of Prahalad. Hiranakashyap had declared himself as GOD and wanted his son Prahlaad to worship him and not Vishnu. 

When Prahlaad refused to do the same, he was made to sit with Holika in an open fire. Holika had been granted a boon that she would not be burned even if she was on live fire. When she was made to sit with Prahalad on the live fire, the opposite happened. She lost her life and got burned but Prahalad came out alive from the fire. 


The above story has a deep spiritual meaning. Hiranakashyap represents the "ego" which when takes control makes one forget about their own consciousness and makes one think of themselves as the supreme power. 


The same symbolic representation is seen with Ravana in Ramayana and Kansa in Mahabharata.


Prahlaad symbolises a person with self-realisation or the son of God or one’s consciousness or one’s true self. The consciousness cannot be burned, cut, dried or made wet by anything. It is imperishable and everlasting. All those people who have acquired self-realisation utilising any of the pathway (Bhakti, Karma and Gnana) are in a state of GOD acquaintance and nothing can destroy them. The obstacles to the pathway of self-realisation are mentioned as "attachment, anger, desire, greed and ego". 


When all these negative factors overpower any individual, it leads one away from self realisation or away from God. Holika represents the sum total of the negative forces in the body that can kill you if not controlled in time. Getting attached to any of the 5 senses can end in a vicious cycle and one can get burnt in this ‘chakravyuh’ of attachments. 


If you are truthful, and have attained a state of one–point contemplation on a known truth, all the negative forces will stay away. All such negative forces if repressed within the body can burn you out over a period of time and that is one of the reasons why all negative emotions should never be suppressed or repressed. 


The practice of burning Holi a day before the festival symbolises burning of all your negative thoughts or emotions embedded in the mind and neutralise all the poison arising due to the negative feelings. As soon as negativity is removed from the mind, spiritual vision or the knowledge of the consciousness is attained. 


Once this is done, only positive thoughts remain, which is celebrated as sharing and loving each other, the next day. Sharing love is the biggest thing one can do in removing all the above mentioned 5 obstacles to self–realisation. Spreading love reduces anger as well as desires, detaches one from various attachments, reduces greed and brings humility in a person. By burning one’s ego and other negative qualities, we can also burn the ill feeling amongst each other and make everybody a friend. During Holi, the practice therefore, is to visit and meet not only your friends but also those people with whom you are not friendly. 


The festival therefore, is an opportunity to spread brotherhood and happiness in the society. WHO defines health as not mere absence of disease but a state of physical, mental, spiritual, social and environmental well-being. Holi, therefore, is a classic example of a custom to create and enhance "social health" amongst the general society. The habit of throwing water on each other also has a deep spiritual meaning. It basically means removing dirt from each other. Dirt here does not means bodily dirt but mental dirt, which once removed leads to spiritual cleanliness. 


The whole meaning is not to play Holi superficially or meet each other at a superficial level but to get rid of the negativity at the level of the mind as well. There is no point in celebrating Holi and meeting people unless you remove your negative thoughts about them from the mind. 


When you lovingly smear ‘gulal’ (coloured powder) on others, they reciprocate with doubled love and affection. Similarly, always think of good things about people. Express your positive thoughts about these friends loudly – not only in front of them but also in their absence. 


Don’t you think your heart will throb with pleasure when they reciprocate?