Wednesday, July 15, 2026

The Nuisance of Free Time!!

 We often think of loneliness as a shadow that only falls on the isolated. We imagine it belongs exclusively to those who live entirely alone, far from the hum of society. But the truth is much more democratic: loneliness is a universal human tax. You can feel it in a crowded room, within the warmth of a large family, or surrounded by a sea of digital "friends."

Recently, I came across a video of an elderly woman talking openly about her own loneliness. It felt like a quiet hand on my shoulder - a gentle reminder from the universe saying, “See? It is not just you.”

And it made me reflect on my own journey, and how I arrived at this quiet space.

For a long time, I didn’t have the luxury to feel the weight of leaving my career.

When I walked away from my corporate job in January 2020, it wasn't a casual choice; it was the end of an exhausting, year-and-a-half struggle. As a new mother working the second shift, I was caught in a painful web of logistics. No caretaker would stay past 7:00 PM. My parents stepped in to fill the gap, a sacrifice that required me to stay at my brother's house with them because my in-laws, while wanting me to work, could not accept my parents staying under our roof.

To complicate matters, my project was sold, and the company demanded I relocate to Pune or Chennai. I was already drowning trying to manage in Hyderabad; handling it alone in a new city was an impossibility. I begged for an internal transfer or a work-from-home option. I was flatly denied.

The sharpest irony? I resigned in January, and by March, COVID-19 swept the globe. Suddenly, the entire world was working from home, the very accommodation I had been denied just weeks prior.

But I didn't have time to sit with the bitterness or the sudden lack of an office routine. Life demanded my presence elsewhere. My father fell ill and required dialysis twice a week. My days immediately filled with hospital corridors, doctor consultations, and caretaking. I shifted seamlessly from corporate professional to medical anchor.

Because of this, I didn't actually feel the true pain of losing my job, my routine, or my professional identity when I first walked out the door. The adrenaline of crisis kept me moving.



It was only a year and a half later, after my father passed away and the caretaking stopped, that the silence finally rushed in. It was only then, when the dust settled and the house grew completely quiet, that I looked around and realized: I am alone with my time now. Who am I without the noise?

Transitioning from a bustling corporate routine to having expansive, unstructured time is a profound shift. Free time, without the forced structure of an office, can indeed feel like a vast ocean that is hard to cross.

Some people have the gift of slipping into a nap to pass the quiet hours. But for those of us who cannot easily sleep during the day, the question looms: How much can one read? How much television can one watch before the silence of the house starts to hum? It is an unexpected phase of life -feeling a depth of solitude you couldn’t have predicted in your busier years.

But instead of fighting the emptiness, I have learned that we can design it.

1. Manipulating the Mind Through "Corners"

The elderly woman in the video shared a beautiful, practical secret: she divided her home into distinct, functional corners. A coffee corner. A reading corner.

This isn't about having a massive house; it is a brilliant bit of psychological architecture. By physically moving from one spot to another, we signal to our minds a shift in activity and mood. We create destinations within our own four walls.

For me, this aligns deeply with my love for minimalism. I prefer clean, empty walls over cluttered decor. But within those clean lines, creating small, sacred spaces—a specific chair for the morning paper, a spot for writing, or a quiet area for art—gives the day a gentle rhythm.

2. Protecting Your Energy: The Company We Keep

The elderly woman also spoke of a strict rule: avoid negative people.

When you are already feeling vulnerable, sitting with people who only search for problems, complain, or project negativity is like drinking saltwater to quench your thirst. It only makes the loneliness sting more.

But finding positive, genuine connection in the modern world is a challenge of its own. Today, friendships are too often measured by status, power, or social standing. It can feel incredibly disheartening to realize that people are checking boxes of "worth" before offering a genuine smile.

Because of this, I find immense comfort in looking backward. I prefer talking to my old friends—the ones who knew me before I ever had a job, a title, or a resume. Those friendships are pure; they are anchored in who we are, not what we have.

3. Finding Flow in the Small Things

When the boredom sets in, we don't need grand, elaborate gestures to find our footing. We find it in quiet, daily rituals:

Selective Reading: Reading a book, or diving deeply into the editorial section of the daily newspaper (strictly skipping the negative news headlines to protect my peace).

Writing & Creating: Putting pen to paper to let the thoughts flow, or creating simple crafts to define those special corners of the home.

Simple Cooking: Food doesn't have to be a grand production. There is a peaceful, grounding simplicity in basic, nourishing cooking—especially minimal evening meals that honor my nature as a morning person.

Yet, even with the perfect corners, the clean walls, and a stack of books, there are moments of honest longing.

Sometimes, the heart simply misses having someone to sit across from, hold a warm cup of chai or coffee, and talk about nothing and everything all at once. And that is okay to admit. Acknowledging that longing doesn't mean we are failing at being independent; it just means we are beautifully, undeniably human.

If you are sitting in your own quiet corner today, holding a warm cup and wondering how to fill the hours—know this: the space you are sitting in is shared by millions of us. We are all just learning how to build our corners, one cup of tea at a time.

Saturday, July 11, 2026

सौदा और स्याही

 दो दिल जो खुद से जुड़ बैठे,

उन्हें दुनिया ने आकर तोड़ दिया।

फिर नाप के दौलत, जात, नसब,

एक अनचाहा रुख मोड़ दिया।


जो कम पड़ जाए हुस्न कहीं,

तो तराजू में दहेज ढल जाता है।

फिर महफ़िल हंस कर कहती है—

"जोड़ा तो ऊपर से बन कर आता है।"


पर सवाल यही रह जाता है,

इस झूठे जग के मेले में -

क्या जोड़ी वो थी जो खुद महकी?

या वो, जो बिकी झमेले में?




जो कह न सके इस दुनिया से,

वो ख़ामोशी को चुनते हैं।

दिल के छाले, जज़्बात अपने,

वो कागज़ पर फिर बुनते हैं।


जो लिख न सके वो पढ़ते हैं,

उन बहते हुए अलफ़ाज़ों को।

इक आह भर के सहलाते हैं,

अपने ही दबे आवाज़ों को।

Thursday, July 9, 2026

Beyond the Canvas: Giving New Life to Old Cake Bases (Two New Lippan Art Pieces!)

 Hello, art lovers!

Today, the creative spark took over, and I finally sat down to complete a brand-new art piece. I’ll admit, I got a little lazy about posting my previous work, so today you are getting a double treat! I am sharing two completely different Lippan art pieces, each with its own unique vibe.

But before we dive into the designs, I have to talk about the canvas itself. If you know me, you know my work heavily focuses on reusing and repurposing.

Here is my latest favorite hack: instead of buying brand-new MDF boards from the store, I used old cake bases! Most cake bases these days are made of thin, sturdy MDF. So why throw them away when they can be the perfect foundation for beautiful art? Next time you bring a cake home, save that base and use it as your next canvas!

Now, let me introduce you to the new pieces.

Piece 1: Traditional Lotus

The piece I finished today is deeply rooted in tradition. It is inspired by the timeless lotus motif, a classic in Indian art. To elevate the design and add a layer of texture, I blended traditional Lippan work with a little bit of dot mandala art. The combination makes the whole piece look incredibly intricate, detailed, and elegant.



Piece 2: Modern Geometric Vibrancy

In complete contrast to the first, last week’s piece takes a plunge into the modern art form. There are no traditional motifs here—just clean, rectangular lines intersecting to form a bold geometrical pattern. I used vivid, bright colors to give it a striking, contemporary edge that really pops.



I love how different these two turned out, despite using the exact same recycled material as a base. It just goes to show how versatile Lippan art can be!

Which one appeals to you more? Are you team traditional lotus, or team modern geometric? Let me know in the comments below!

P.S. If you love the idea of eco-friendly crafting, don’t forget to check out my posts from last year. I uploaded three other Lippan art pieces made entirely from waste materials. Go check them out for more upcycling inspiration!

Saturday, July 4, 2026

The Joy of Negligible Cooking

 In most modern urban homes today, having a cook or a live-in maid is the standard template of daily life. Yet, for over fifteen years—ever since my marriage—I have chosen a different path. I handle the kitchen myself.

My reasons are less about culinary perfection and more about protecting my peace. I absolutely refuse to fuss around with anyone early in the morning. I deeply crave a serene, calm start to my day. My maid arrives at 5:00 AM—a time often referred to as Brahma Muhurta, the sacred, quiet hours before dawn. Frankly, who wants to begin a day born of that stillness by pointing out mistakes or managing someone else? So, she does what she needs to do, and I prefer to dose off on my couch, keeping the morning speech-free and quiet.

By 8:30 AM on any given day, breakfast and lunch are completely done.

But I am only human. There are absolutely mornings where I look at the stove and think, “Oh, I wish I had a cook. I wish someone else would just handle this today.”

And today, the universe granted that wish in its own sweet way. Today was a rare, beautiful day of negligible cooking.

I can’t claim it was a "no-cooking" day, because the kitchen wasn’t entirely abandoned. The ritual of morning tea still happened, and I rolled out rotis for dinner. But beyond that? Nothing. The heavy lifting was entirely off my hands.



Instead of the usual kitchen routine, the day filled itself with life’s gentler rhythms:

Family & Food: We went out shopping and enjoyed a great meal. I got to step back and just enjoy the moment, watching my son proudly tackle a plate of biryani all by himself, followed by a sweet ice cream treat.

Creativity: I managed to finish a new piece of artwork. It’s sitting there just waiting for a few final touch-ups, and I can't wait to share it soon.

Preparation: Even the laundry got cleared out of the way, intentionally making room for a completely unburdened Sunday.

Between the shopping, the art, the whole day just felt... relaxed. Unhurried.

Some days just feel that way, I guess. When you step away from the daily rituals of caretaking, even just a little bit, you realize that a break doesn't have to be a grand vacation. Sometimes, the deepest rejuvenation comes from a perfectly ordinary day with just a tiny, negligible amount of cooking.

Monday, June 29, 2026

A Hug in a Cup: Finding Joy in the Mini Moments!!

 Sometimes, the best kind of creativity is the one that doesn't require a grand plan. It’s the kind that sparks spontaneously on a quiet afternoon, born out of a simple craving for warmth, comfort, and a good brew.

Yesterday, I felt compelled to make something small, sweet, and entirely for myself.




This is my latest mini canvas painting—a little tribute to my absolute love for tea. I wanted it to feel alive, so I used a 3D relief texture to give the teacup, saucer, and rising steam a physical, sculptural presence against a bright, cheerful background. Every time I look at it, it feels exactly like what the text says: a hug in a cup.

Right now, it’s sitting fresh on its little wooden easel right on my workspace. I initially thought about waiting until I had the "perfect" kitchen corner styled and ready before sharing it. But art isn't about perfection; it's about the raw joy of the process. Why wait to share a blessing when it's beautiful right now?

It will find its permanent home near the kettle soon enough, but for tonight, it’s a perfect reminder to slow down, appreciate the little things, and always make time for a comforting cup of tea.

How do you take your comfort on a rainy or quiet day? Let me know in the comments!

Saturday, June 27, 2026

The Bees, the Flies, and the Toxic Trap of Endless Patience

 ​We’ve all heard the classic mindset parable about bees and flies. I read a variation of it in a newspaper column just today. The columnist argued that the human mind often acts like a fly—not because it loves garbage, but because it willfully leaves a perfectly good environment just to land on a negative spot. The example given? A woman who acknowledges everything else in her life is fine, yet still complains about her in-laws.

​The moral we are fed is simple: Stop letting your mind wander to the negatives. Focus on the good.

​It sounds beautiful on a motivational poster. But as I read that neatly packaged advice, the pristine logic cracked. The column left me with questions that "pop-psychology" completely fails to answer.

​Because in the real world, life isn't just about ignoring a flaw to enjoy the rest of the room. It’s about how we endure, how we react, and when we finally decide that a "small" complaint is actually a major boundary issue.

Let’s be honest: nobody reacts badly to every single flick in life. Most of us don't start out as "flies." In fact, the vast majority of people spend years trying to be the ultimate bee.

We ignore the slights. We overlook toxic behavior. We actively mine for a single drop of goodness in a desert of bad situations. We stretch our patience, believing it to be a bottomless virtue.

But patience is an unknown entity. It has a shelf life, and enduring a bad situation without change eventually leads to a breaking point.



One fine day, you wake up completely exhausted. The honey is gone. You finally speak up, set a boundary, or express your pain. And what happens? The system instantly labels you a "fly."

That isn't right. You didn't seek out the garbage; you were just forced to live in it for too long. Labeling someone as negative the moment they stop enduring is a subtle form of social silencing. It demands absolute submission under the guise of "virtue."

In the newspaper article I read, the columnist used a familiar trope to illustrate the "fly mentality": a woman complaining about her in-laws.

Frankly, it pissed me off.

Why is it always a woman used as the blueprint for domestic negativity? Why not men? Do men never complain about their in-laws, or does society just frame their boundaries differently? When a man distances himself from a difficult family dynamic, he’s often seen as "protecting his peace" or being independent. But when a woman gives voice to systemic discomfort, she is instantly pigeonholed as a bitter, complaining fly.

This weaponizes a mindset metaphor to police women’s emotions. It implies that if she just "looked for the flowers," the underlying friction would magically disappear.

But ignoring what is fundamentally wrong doesn't make it right. It just makes it quiet.

A healthy human ecosystem needs both responses. If you live entirely as a bee, refusing to acknowledge danger or toxicity, you walk straight into traps. Sometimes, noticing the garbage—the fly's domain—is an act of survival. It’s how we identify what needs to be cleaned up, changed, or walked away from.

Life is a complex summation of everything. It’s how you respond to the good, how you endure the difficult, and how you stand up for yourself when boundaries are crossed. It cannot be reduced to a binary choice between two insects.

Does it even matter if someone tags you as a "fly" if standing your ground brings you the peace and boundaries you actually need? Conversely, what is the point of being praised as a virtuous "bee" if you are entirely hollowed out inside?

True peace isn’t about maintaining a flawless, fake positive outlook while your boundaries are being crushed. It isn't about ignoring reality to keep others comfortable.

Being happy within means giving yourself permission to be human. It means knowing when to look for the flowers, and exactly when to call out the trash.

Monday, June 22, 2026

Finding the "Pasta Moments": Why We Should Teach Our Kids the Art of One Good Thing!!

 There is a quiet magic that happens in a kitchen as evening sets in.

A few days ago, after a long, busy week, I found myself standing over the stove, cooking a simple bowl of pasta for my son and myself. Nearby sat a freshly brewed cup of tea. It wasn't an extraordinary evening by any standard calendar, but as the steam rose from the bowls, a deep sense of comfort settled over me. Looking at that simple spread, I felt a wave of pure gratitude.



It made me think about how often we, as adults, search for big milestones to feel happy, when true contentment usually hides in these small, quiet pockets of the day. And more importantly, it made me realize how urgently we need to teach our children to find those pockets, too.

If a simple bowl of pasta can turn a chaotic day into a comforted one for an adult, imagine what a similar shift in perspective can do for a child.

As parents, we often ask our kids, "How was your day?" and we secretly hope for a glowing report. We want to hear that they listened perfectly, completed every task without complaint, and excelled in everything they did.

But childhood, just like adulthood, is filled with messy transitions. There are days when kids are easily distracted, days when they resist doing their writing or schoolwork, and days when they just want to retreat into their own worlds.

If we only teach them to celebrate the "perfect" days, they learn to overlook the value of ordinary ones.

That is why we need to encourage children to keep a gratitude journal—or at the very least, engage in a daily gratitude ritual. We need to remind them to look for at least one thing that made them feel good.

Why the "One Good Thing" Rule Works for Kids

It Removes the Pressure to Perform: A gratitude practice shouldn’t feel like another piece of homework. By asking a child to find just one small highlight, we shift the focus away from their achievements and look instead at their inner joy.

It Builds Emotional Resilience: When a child has a tough day—maybe a lesson felt too hard, or they felt stubborn and frustrated—identifying one good moment teaches them a vital life skill: a bad moment does not mean a bad day. It teaches them that comfort and frustration can exist at the exact same time.

It Opens a Low-Pressure Window into Their World: Sometimes, children aren't in the mood to talk or write a long summary of their day. But asking, "What was your pasta moment today? What was the one thing that made you smile?" lowers their guard. It’s a gentle, non-invasive bridge into their thoughts.

We don’t need elaborate journals with leather covers to start this practice (though a dedicated notebook can be a wonderful creative outlet for them later). We just need a moment of pause.

Tonight, whether you are sitting down for dinner, driving home, or tucking them into bed, ask your child to share just one thing that felt good today. It might be a game they played by themselves, a funny joke they heard, or simply a favorite food they enjoyed.

Let’s teach our kids that no matter how loud or overwhelming the world gets, there is always a quiet, beautiful detail waiting to be noticed.

Feature Post

The Nuisance of Free Time!!

 We often think of loneliness as a shadow that only falls on the isolated. We imagine it belongs exclusively to those who live entirely alon...