My very first book is published
Finally after almost 6 months of working with the German publisher, my first book is published. My humble gratitude to all who made this possible. It seems like a long journey, since I first began my research in 2003 in the cool mountains of Cameron Highlands, Malaysia.
http://www.amazon.com/Hydrometeorology-tropical-montane-rainforests-Malaysia/dp/3639241673/ref=sr_1_8?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1282798365&sr=1-8
to purchase a copy or email me at sanath@kenviro.com to get a copy at discounted price.
Editorial Reviews
Product Description
About the Author
Product Details
- Paperback: 312 pages
- Publisher: VDM Verlag Dr. Müller (July 22, 2010)
- Language: English
- ISBN-10: 3639241673
- ISBN-13: 978-3639241679
- Product Dimensions: 8.7 x 5.9 x 0.7 inches
June 23, 2010
Coaching lessons from my children
Today is exactly ten days since I returned from the Foundations/TAPOC Conference #2 in Singapore. During the Conference #2 weekend, as a dad, I was amazed at how much I was missing my wife and children. The part that intrigues me is that I travel a lot as my job takes me away from home much of the time, and normally it takes me four to five days before I start missing my family. However, now, it takes about four or five hours only to trigger emotions (of being with them) and what my kids have already taught me – being in the present, loving unconditionally and best of all they are my flexibility ‘wibble-wabble gurus’.
I remember clearly how my daughter, Sanjnah (she is turning four in July 2010) used to invite me to dance and I used to resist her invitation. Now, I am an ever willing partner in flexibility. My son, Keshava, who turned two in January 2010, is all play. He has taught me how learning can be playful, and how play can be learning. I relate these experiences in the context of the Newfield journey.
“There are infinite lessons that I am learning from my kids every day. There is no right time or place for showing love, care and just having fun. All the lessons I learn from my children just spring to mind when I am off-center. As Julio says, “It only gets better”.
I remember watching Sanjnah and Keshava just running around in circles in the garden chasing each other. In the past, I used just sit watch them in awe and wonder. But now I join in the excitement of just playing, dancing, hopping, skipping and running with them without any purpose or meaning. Just to play for the sake of playing! My children coach me on being present and being flexible. I am a child again!
At night, just before going to bed, Sanjnah now requests that she lays on my laps and that I sing or read to her. I am enjoying every moment of granting her request. I experience joy and a rewarding feeling daily. I tell my wife, how grateful I am as both my children enrich me.
In the past I used to judge my performance as a dad against “being the perfect dad” and that I will never match up to becoming one. Then it hit me, that my assessments of perfection were rooted in my emotions and moods when I was a little boy, having a difficult childhood with my dad.
For me, on a daily basis, I observe my kids play as a valuable lesson and unforgettable “coaching moment with my children”. When I see the Observer that I am now, freedom is just within my reach. Choices are there for me to choose from. My kids, like all children, are 100% in the present, in the NOW, constantly exploding in their experiences. I celebrated father’s day this time around just being in reflection on how the bond between my father and I have created a gift of me as a father. This is the gift that I now bring with me in my coaching work.
I say from experience that my children are my coaches. They create my results. I find meaning in this coaching journey that I am going through now. My children bring tremendous learning for me as I carry that experience to my work environment. My kids are a mirror of me and a reflection of how I am learning and growing in their space.
For me as a trainee coach, the gift of fatherhood means a seamless supply of stories, abundance of excitement, awe and wonder that I can bring into coaching. Children are able to find wonder in the simplest of things — an earthworm in the garden, an unusual bug on the sidewalk, an airplane in the sky and throwing pebbles into a puddle. As I reflect on the many ways of how fathers and kids learn from each other and grow in each others space, I leave you with a question to ponder: How have your children enriched your coaching? …. I am off to play with my children
Here is an example of an amazing illusion!!!
If your eyes follow the movement of the rotating pink dot, the dots will remain only one color, pink.

However if you stare at the black ‘+ ‘ in the center, the moving dot turns to green. Now, concentrate on the black ‘ + ‘ in the center of the picture. After a short period, all the pink dots will slowly disappear, and you will only see only a single green dot rotating.
It’s amazing how our brain works. There really is no green dot, and the pink ones really don’t disappear.
Isn’t it true that this should be proof enough, in life, we don’t always see what we think we see…
Excerpt From: Living Enlightenment
Chapter 1: You Are Your Emotions
Section 1: Flow in Love – Living enlightenment is expressing overflowing love towards all.
Part 15: The unity of Love
___________________________________
Children feel that they are adults only when they say ‘no’ to their parents. It is a basic instinct. When they say ‘no’ they feel that they are established as an individual. That is why, all over the world, youngsters always rebel. Whether it is in the West or in the East, in all the countries all over the world, in all the cultures, the youth say ‘no’. When they say ‘no’, they feel they are strong.
But our love is dependent only on ‘yes’. As long as we receive ‘yes’, our love also is ‘yes’. When we get a ‘no’, we also start saying ‘no’. This is called horizontal love. It starts and ends horizontally. It starts again and ends again. It always ends with some reason or other. There is another love called vertical love. It never ends because it never starts. It is always there in the form of energy. It is consciousness. Vertical love is when we suddenly realize that we are living inside everybody just as we live inside our own body!
Sanath says: Get your copy of Living Enlightenment at any Nithyananda Galleria world wide or purchase online at:
http://www.lifeblissgalleria.com/servlet/the-858/LIVING-ENLIGHTENMENT/Detail
Imagine life as a game in which you are juggling some five balls in the air. You name them – work, family, health, friends and spirit … and you’re keeping all of these in the air.
You will soon understand that work is a rubber ball. If you drop it, it will bounce back. But the other four balls – family, health, friends and spirit – are made of glass. If you drop one of these, they will be irrevocably scuffed, marked, nicked, damaged or even shattered. They will never be the same. You must understand that and strive for Balance in your life.
How?
Don’t undermine your worth by comparing yourself with others. It is because we are different that each of us is special.
Don’t set your goals by what other people deem important. Only you know what is best for you.
Don’t take for granted the things closest to your heart. Cling to them as you would your life, for without them, life is meaningless.
Don’t let your life slip through your fingers by living in the past or for the future. By living your life one day at a time, you live all the days of your life.
Don’t give up when you still have something to give. Nothing is really over until the moment you stop trying.
Don’t be afraid to admit that you are less than perfect. It is this fragile thread that binds us to each together.
Don’t be afraid to encounter risks. It is by taking chances that we learn how to be pave.
Don’t shut love out of your life by saying it’s impossible to find time. The quickest way to receive love is to give; the fastest way to lose love is to hold it too tightly; and the best way to keep love is to give it wings!
Don’t run through life so fast that you forget not only where you’ve been, but also where you are going.
Don’t forget, a person’s greatest emotional need is to feel appreciated.
Don’t be afraid to learn. Knowledge is weightless, a treasure you can always carry easily.
Don’t use time or words carelessly. Neither can be retrieved. Life is not a race, but a journey to be savoured each step of the way…
–Brian G. Dyson
President and CEO, Coca-Cola Enterprises during his speech at the Georgia Tech 172nd Commencement Address Sept. 6, 1996
It has been more than a week since I added a new post. I had a compelling desire to share this posting sometime back, and I suppose the time is now.
When I was 16 years old around 1983, I had a fall from a height of about 13 feet in my house. This was more than 20 years ago. After the fall, I was rushed to the Malacca General Hospital. A full head to toe X-ray did not show any broken bones! The doctor said in a very candid manner, “You are ok to go home now, everything is fine.” I remember thinking to myself, “It is just a fall, so I know I am ok” without realizing that a fall from such a height can cause severe injury. However, ever since then, I occasionally experienced piercing pain in my lower back but the pain would disappear after a while. I was active in volleyball, tennis and badminton and during periods of vigorous physical activities, I did not experience any pain.
After completing my tertiary education, the piercing pain in my lower back returned with frequent intervals and high intensity. I did a MRI scan around 1992 and the doctor said there was nothing wrong with my lower back, although I was suffering in pain then. It was in 2005 that I was diagnosed with a disc prolapse of the lumbar region (slip disc in L4/L5) as a result of the injury sustained from the fall about 20 years ago. I was advised by the Spine Specialist to go on pain killers, when the pain is unbearable and go for regular physiotherapy every 3-6 months but after several months the frequency and intensity of pain increased. I was desperate for a cure and I tried Chinese traditional medicine, more physiotherapy and Ayurvedic massage but to no avail. In 2007, the Spine Specialist told me that there is no improvement in my condition and things will only get worse as age catches up.
One day in mid Sept 2008, I was invited to receive healing done by an initiated healer of Sri Paramahamsa Nithyananda. Skeptical, I told myself I will go with an open heart although internally, I was asking thousands of questions if this “healing” works. Arriving at the healing centre, I received a warm welcome. After the first healing session, I could already feel that the pain had almost disappeared, although I was skeptical of this experience. I kept asking myself, “Is this true?” I could feel that something is happening to me, and I couldn’t believe I am healing. I received healing about 6 times, after which there was a deep desire to meet the Enlightened Master himself, Sri Paramahamsa Nithyananda. Finally, on Saturday, 22 Nov 2008, I had the opportunity. Together with some close friends, I attended Kalpataru darshan in Bidadi ashram, the headquarters of Nithyananda Dhyanapeetam, Bangalore. That day was the most memorable day of my life, where I experienced the Enlightened Master’s overflowing grace, abundance and love. When my turn came, quite late, that Saturday night, I could experience his energy, freshness, grace and intensity. I introduced myself and mentioned to Swami about my slip disc which I have been suffering for many years. Gracefully, he touched my head and patted my spine area, gave me a big bear hug, and consoled me saying in Tamil, “It will be alright” and gave me 3 packets of vibuthi (holy ash) to apply there for 11 days.
After that, I visited Thiruvanamalai and did the Girivalam (14km walk around the Arunachala Hills) effortlessly. I felt that Swami had blessed me with high energy. When I returned back to Malaysia, I participated in the various meditation programs conducted under the auspices of the Nithyananda Dhyanapeetam Malaysia and derived spiritual benefit there from. Since then, I had the opportunity to lead a normal life, without the nagging pain of the slip disc, which seemed to have miraculously disappeared. I know that medically it is difficult to explain my healing experience.
I do the Nithya Dhyaan (Life Bliss Meditation) daily and feel completely refreshed and charged with high energy to face the day.
I feel totally cured and I ascribe this personal experience of mine to the Healing power and abundant grace of Sri Paramahamsa Nithyananda. My idea of sharing this in this forum is that if any of you are having any health problems or any other ailments; do receive Nithya Spiritual Healing carried out regularly by Nithyananda Initiated Healers all over the world with an open mind, faith and devotion.
A friend of mine shared this insightful story on how one can create success by having others win!
There was a farmer who grew superior quality, award-winning corn in his farm. Each year, he entered his corn in the state fair where it won honours and Prizes.
One year a newspaper reporter interviewed him and learned something interesting about how he grew his corn. The reporter discovered that the farmer shared his seed corn with his neighbours.
“How can you afford to share your best seed corn with your neighbours when they are entering corn in competition with yours each year?” The reporter asked. “Why bother?”
” The farmer replied, “Didn’t you know? The wind picks up pollen grains from the ripening corn and swirls it from field to field. If my neighbours grow inferior, sub-standard and poor quality corn, cross-pollination will steadily degrade the quality of my corn. If I have to grow good corn, I must help my neighbours to grow good corns.”
The farmer gave a superb insight into the connectedness of life. His corn cannot improve unless his neighbour’s corn also improves. So it is in the other dimensions and areas of life!
Those who choose to be in harmony must help their neighbours and colleagues to be at peace. Those who choose to live well must help others live well. The value of a life is measured by the lives it touches…
Success does not happen in isolation; it is most often a participatory and collective process. So share the good practices, ideas and new knowledge with your family, friends, team members and neighbours and all.
Now that you know why “Success breeds Success”, what are you committed to creating and/or causing? What specific action steps are you committed to take in your family, organization, neighbourhood, community so that we have a better place to live in?
HappY NeW YeaR 2010!!!
This article appeared in The Star papers here in Malaysia, July 7 2009. I was interviewed by Cheng Li, an old friend of mine. Scroll down to para, with red font.
Tuesday July 7, 2009
Sanctuaries sacrificed
By TAN CHENG LI
RUBBER trees – which dominated the Malaysian landscape a century ago only to be replaced with oil palms in the 1980s – are making a comeback. And this time they will not only yield latex but also wood, to make up for the shortfall of timber from forests.
Which all sounds like an excellent idea except that natural forests are being stripped bare for the plantations. Instead of being grown on idle land as intended, rubber trees are sprouting in Permanent Reserved Forests (PRF).
This alarming new trend appears to be widespread in Kelantan but forest reserves in Selangor and Johor have not been spared. The Star recently reported on the decimation of the Sungai Jelok forest reserve in Selangor and the Sungai Mas forest in Johor for rubber estates, while the Johor State Assembly has heard that 37,881ha of Terosot forest reserve will suffer the same fate.
Timber yields: Latex timber clone seedlings being prepared for planting.This boom in rubber estates is driven by the Government’s move to expand timber plantations of latex timber clones (LTC), sentang, teak, African mahogony, kelempayang, batai, binuang and Acacia. LTC, which can yield latex in the fifth year (intensively in the ninth) and timber after 15 years, is the favoured species.
Forestry Department reports show large expansions of forest plantations in recent years – from 83,464ha in 2006 to 108,512ha in 2008. Figures culled from Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) reports show 16,207ha of LTC plantations were planned this year alone, while 11,497ha were approved last year – and all are in Permanent Reserved Forests.
But figures could well be higher, Worldwide Fund for Nature Malaysia (WWF) chief technical officer Surin Suksuwan believes, as only plantations with larger areas will require EIAs. “When plans to expand timber plantations first came up some years ago, the key question was where they would get the land. Now, our greatest fear has been confirmed.”
Permanent Reserved Forests form the bulk of the forest cover of Peninsular Malaysia, at 4,815,529ha or 36.5% of the land area. As the name indicates, these are forests to be kept in perpetuity. Yes, they are largely “timber production forest” meant for logging but under sustainable forestry management, they are supposed to be “selectively logged” – this means only big trees of stipulated sizes are cut while smaller trees are left behind to mature, to be logged 30 years down the road.
“But what we are seeing today is wholesale clearing of PRF and massive conversion to plantations,” says Suksuwan.
Forest Plantation Development, a government-owned company that monitors and funds the industry, has guidelines that disallow plantations on PRF. “Before giving the loan, we will check the land status to ensure that it is alienated land, state land or land given for forest plantations,” says chief executive officer Zaini Ithnin A. Razak.
When showed a list of plantations located within forest reserves, Zaini says none are financed by his firm, which means that these projects fall outside its restrictive safeguards.
Severed spine
When natural forests give way to single-species tree farms, the forest’s ecology will begin to unravel. “Clear-felling natural forests and planting rubber trees inside forest reserves will impact many species that rely on these forests, many of which have endemic species,” says forestry researcher Lim Teck Wyn.
Although EIAs state that the PRF to be planted with rubber clones are logged and degraded, WWF believes that reasonably intact forest with considerable biodiversity are being cleared. In Kelantan, most of the affected reserves host endangered wildlife and even endemic species, and some are water catchment areas.
All gone: The Rantau Panjang forest reserve in Selangor, once planted with Acasia, is being turned into a rubber clone plantation.Wildlife officials say Lebir and Relai forest reserves are important green links for Taman Negara, and converting them to plantations will lead to more “human-wildlife conflict” involving elephants and tigers entering plantations and villages.
According to WWF and several forestry consultants, all of the PRF earmarked for rubber clone plantations sit within the Central Forest Spine, a network of forest running the length of the peninsula. The Town and Country Planning Department had identified the contiguity of this swathe of forest as vital for supporting wildlife and ecosystem functions such as watershed protection, soil erosion control and climate regulation.
“The loss of these forest reserves will mean failure of the Central Forest Spine plan,” says one wildlife official.
Loss of these forests will also damper tiger conservation efforts for these PRF are all within the three tiger refuges identified in the National Tiger Action Plan as crucial for the survival of the big cat. “All the forest reserves are important tiger habitats and likely to be important for other wildlife as well,” says WWF’s Suksuwan.
Tree farms or forests?
The irony is that these forest plantations are still categorised as PRF, although being planted with a single tree species, they are nothing like natural forests. This labelling has severe repercussion: Forestry Department figures will not show a decline in forest cover despite massive tracts of natural forest being turned into neatly planted rows of rubber saplings.
Also, the converted area is not degazetted and replaced with a similar-sized tract of forest, as legally required when alienating PRF for agriculture or development. What this means in the long term is further shrinkages of our natural forest cover but on paper, all looks well as PRF figures remain unchanged.
This quandary, says researcher Lim, stems from the Forestry Act which does not say specifically that PRF has to be natural forests. “Under the Act, most PRF are classified as ‘timber production forest’ under ‘sustained yield’. This can be interpreted to mean that a forest that is clear-felled and then replanted with rubber trees, will provide ‘sustained yield’, thereby justifying the conversion into plantations.”

Lim says plantations can be validated in certain circumstances, such as in a severely degraded forest, but even then, it is advisable to plant a mix of native species to mimic a natural forest rather than monoculture.
Environmental consultant Dr Sanath Kumaran points out that monoculture or single-species plantations come with a host of problems: clear-felling to harvest the logs will lead to soil erosion, susceptibility to fires, and low biodiversity.
In global talks on forestry management, Malaysia has always lobbied for rubber estates to be included as tree cover but conservationists disagree.
“Forest plantations cannot be compared with natural forests, which preserve biodiversity, carbon stock and the water cycle. We are not weighing the ecological functions of natural forests and instead, systematically turning them into forest plantations,” says forestry consultant Andrew Ng.
He finds the assertion that plantations are sited only on logged or degraded forest a poor excuse. “These areas can always be rehabilitated. And how degraded must a forest be before it can be converted, and how is it assessed? A degraded forest might lack biodiversity but it still provides connectivity between fragmented forests.”
Doubts over sustainability
The claim that only degraded areas are used for plantations further begs a question: why is there so much “degraded forest” available for conversion if, as Malaysian forestry agencies have been telling the world, we practise sustainable forestry management? Far from what is claimed, the reality on the ground is an entirely different picture.
“Our PRF are being pecked away like a piece of bread thrown to a flock of chickens,” says one forestry consultant. “Forests are logged until degraded and not allowed to regenerate, thus providing the excuse to convert them into rubber plantations. This pattern has been going on. It is a convenient way to legitimise the act of clear-cutting natural forests, and turning PRF into forest plantations.”
The threat is not only from rubber clone plantations. Despite governmental assurances that oil palms will only be cultivated on idle or degraded land, EIA reports show that estates will come up in these forest reserves in Kelantan: Batu Papan (2,000ha), Gunung Setong Selatan and Balah (4,307ha), Sungai Betis (2,626ha), Sungai Terah and Limau Kasturi (3,513ha), as well as Sokor Taku and Sungai Sator (808ha).
In Pahang, 2,142ha of Cereh forest reserve near Kuantan will be planted with oil palm.
Despite all that is said about sustainable forestry management, biodiversity and environmental considerations seem to be ignored when states make decisions with regard to converting forests to other land use, says environmental consultant Dylan Ong. Although the Department of Environment requires a detailed EIA for any logging of over 500ha, Ong has yet to see one done in clearings for rubber clone plantations.
“Also, PRF are classed as Environmentally Sensitive Areas Rank Two in the National Physical Plan whereby no development or agriculture is allowed. So all latex timber clone projects in forest reserves should not have been approved,” he says.
History repeated: Before independence, vast tracts of jungles were cleared for rubber estates. Now, the trend is being repeated.Pointing out the widespread conversion of forests into plantations, Ong says if the trend continues, our natural forest coverage will dwindle.
“The National Forestry Council should respond to this expansion of forest plantations within PRF,” he adds.
Indeed, if the matter is not addressed, more forest reserves risk being lost what with the Government planning to have 375,000ha of such tree farms by 2020. On paper, 44.4% of Peninsular Malaysia is still forested. But what kind of forests will these be in future?
Will they still be intact forests which can harbour wild species and provide a host of ecological services, or will they be merely forest plantations – or more accurately, tree farms?
Until press time, the Forestry Department director-general is not available for an interview.
Originally published in The Star on Tuesday July 7, 2009






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