Sunday, May 31, 2026

​The Billion-Dollar Illusion: Why Are India’s Richest Icons Selling Slow Poison on World No Tobacco Day?

 Tonight, an estimated 450 million people across India are glued to their television and smartphone screens. The country is holding its collective breath, watching a high-stakes IPL 2026 finale at the Narendra Modi Stadium. It is a spectacle of pure human potential, fitness, and aspiration.  

But every time the over ends, the illusion shatters.

A commercial break hits, and suddenly, some of the most recognizable, wealthy icons in the history of Indian cinema—Shah Rukh Khan, Ajay Devgn, Hrithik Roshan, and Tiger Shroff—glide onto the screen. They aren't promoting a movie; they are walking through slow-motion frames of slick, silver luxury, step-by-step associating an ultra-luxurious lifestyle with a small, familiar packet.

The screen calls it elaichi (cardamom) or a mouth freshener. But every adult in the room knows the truth. It’s surrogate advertising for Pan Masala.

The deepest irony? Today is May 31st: World No Tobacco Day.  

While the World Health Organization (WHO) spends global resources on this year's theme, “Unmasking the Appeal – Countering Nicotine and Tobacco Addiction,” India's media houses and cultural "gods" are busy doing the exact opposite. They are masking the grim, cancerous reality of addiction behind a multi-crore facade of cool, elite sophistication.






If you opened the morning newspaper today, you likely saw massive, data-driven, four-page spreads detailing the horrors of tobacco addiction, oral cancer statistics, and moving personal testimonies.

But let’s ask a brutally honest question: Who actually reads the newspaper anymore?

The vast majority of our youth will completely bypass those four pages of health warnings, yet they will sit through four hours of the IPL finale. In the battle for the minds of the next generation, a dry newspaper layout stands zero chance against a high-octane, star-studded television commercial broadcast during peak sports programming.

When a glittering commercial outpaces a medical warning by a ratio of millions of viewers, it's easy to see who is truly winning this war for attention. The tobacco conglomerates aren't just bypassing the law; they are dominating the cultural narrative.

There is a dangerous, defensive argument often thrown around by media executives: "Everyone knows it's just a surrogate ad. People are smart enough to know the stars don't actually consume this."

This assumption is entirely false.

An impressionable teenager watching their favorite cinematic hero code-switch into a silver-clad symbol of wealth doesn’t process the corporate loophole of "surrogate marketing." They don't analyze the legalities. What they internalize is a subconscious permission slip. They absorb a simple, toxic equation:

THIS BRAND = SUCCESS+COOLNESS+ ULTRA LUXURY LIFESTYLE 

By wrapping a hazardous substance in the imagery of expensive suits, high-end cars, and absolute power, these celebrities are giving our youth an aesthetic to mimic. We aren't just selling mouth fresheners; we are leading an entire generation down a path of normalized addiction.

This brings us to the most frustrating question of all—a question that ordinary citizens ask quietly from their living rooms, yet rarely gets addressed on a public stage.

Shah Rukh Khan sits on a net worth estimated between $1.5 to $2 billion. Ajay Devgn, Hrithik Roshan, and Tiger Shroff possess wealth that will comfortably sustain generations of their families. Their money multiplies at a velocity that far outpaces their ability to spend it. They do not need this money.

So, what is the moral obligation that compels them to sign these dotted lines even today?

If money is supposed to grant you the ultimate freedom—the freedom and independence to choose better, to say "no" to harmful things, and to protect the people who worship you—why do these icons choose the easiest, most compromised option available?

Is it a deep-seated fear of missing out (FOMO), a desperate urge to remain at the absolute top of the financial pyramid at any human cost? Or is it simply that when they give grand, motivational speeches about ethics, hard work, and character, they don't actually care about the real-world weight of their own words?

We live in an era where celebrity culture peddles endless inspiration. We listen to their podcasts, read their interviews, and watch their fitness journeys, trying to learn how to build discipline and character.

Yet, this massive commercial machinery reveals a stark, disappointing truth: People say one thing, but they do another.

To the global icons executing those synchronized slow-motion walks on our screens tonight: if you could look past the glare of the studio lights and the multi-crore paychecks, do you ever feel a single hint of genuine guilt? Can you truly defend why you chose to use your unparalleled social capital to legitimize a public health crisis?

Perhaps to the media conglomerates and the elite talent agencies, an individual blogger or an ordinary viewer expressing this frustration is considered a "nobody." But millions of "nobodies" make up the fabric of this country. And tonight, as we watch the final balls of the IPL season being bowled, we are choosing to see past the glamour. We are choosing to see the compromise for exactly what it is.


Thursday, May 28, 2026

Setting Social Media Boundaries: What a Recent Online Post Taught Me!!

 ​These days, it feels like you can’t look at a screen without being hit by a wave of bad news. It gets exhausting, doesn’t it? To protect my own peace of mind, I’ve had to make some strict rules for myself. I stopped reading the daily newspaper, except for the editorial section. I even went through my social media and blocked negative feeds, setting a strict timer so I don’t end up mindlessly scrolling my life away.

​But even with all those walls up, the internet has a way of sneaking past your defenses.

​The other day, I stumbled across a post that I just haven’t been able to shake off. It was written by a lady from my own state. She is a retired high school teacher, and by all accounts, she comes from a good, well-respected family. I only read two or three lines before I realized what it was and skipped past it, but the weight of her words stayed with me all day.

​She was talking about a dispute between a husband and wife—complete strangers to her. What shocked me wasn't the gossip, but the language. The sheer amount of vulgarity and cheap slang she used was something I never expected from someone of her background.

​It really made me stop and think. I know that after retirement, people suddenly have a lot of free time on their hands, and social media becomes a quick way to pass the hours. But I couldn't help but wonder: Why does someone with so much education, life experience, and social standing need to use such filthy language? Was it just a desperate cry for attention? For a few "likes" and comments?

​As someone who loves to write and blog, I know for a fact that you don't need vulgar words to make a point. People who journal, people who write stories—we all know that you can express deep thoughts, or even disagreements, with dignity. If you are just using social media to pass the time, why not do it in a way that respects yourself and others?



​When I was younger, I used to naively think that people from "upper-class" or highly educated families were just naturally more refined and intelligent. I thought it was almost in their genes. But seeing things like this has completely broken that illusion for me. True character has absolutely nothing to do with your family name or your social status. Anyone, no matter how "good" their background is supposed to be, can choose to act shamelessly crude.

​The post disappointed me, but honestly, it did one good thing. It was the perfect reality check. Instead of scrolling until my daily timer went off, I closed the app right then and there.

​Sometimes, when the world online gets too loud and cheap, the best thing we can do for our own sanity is to just log out and walk away.

Tuesday, May 26, 2026

The Cost of Running Away!!

 I recently came across a news story that has stayed with me. It wasn’t a major global event, just a small, uneventful headline about a wedding. The entire Hindu ceremony had been completed, every ritual, every vow. But, just before the bidaai, right when the bride was supposed to leave for her new home, she fled with her lover. The news showed a picture of the groom sitting there in his wedding finery, a look of complete, hollow sadness on his face.

We hear about marriages breaking during the ceremony quite often now. Sometimes, it’s a sudden dispute over dowry; other times, it's because someone was involved with another person and couldn't bring themselves to commit. Years ago, this hit close to home for me. A distant relative of mine actually eloped with a bride-to-be, just two days before her scheduled wedding.

When people read these stories, they usually focus on the gossip, the drama, or the sheer shock of it. But, I find myself thinking about something else entirely: the emotional destruction left behind.



What was the fault of that person who was left sitting at the altar? What did they do wrong? They showed up with an open heart, ready to build a life, and in a single moment, their entire future was wiped out. The pain of that kind of betrayal is hard to put into words. Every dream you built just shatters like a water bubble. It’s moments like these that make people bitterly say that emotions have no value.

In a monetary sense, of course they don’t. You can't put a price tag on a feeling. But, if we strip emotion out of a long-term relationship, what is actually left? Just a cold, empty transaction.

It feels like these incidents are on the rise. Part of it is because we are so hyper-connected now; every local incident gets reported and shared online, whereas in the past, it would have stayed private. But it’s more than just the news cycle. It feels like the emotional climate around us is shifting, just like the weather. People’s words and actions are becoming harsher, and we hurt each other so easily.

The most painful part of this dynamic is how unfair it is. The person who causes the damage,the one who runs away often moves on quickly, maybe completely unaware of the depth of the ruin they’ve left in their wake. Meanwhile, the person on the receiving end is left trapped in a useless, unprovoked pain that takes months, or even years, to overcome.

Traditional wisdom tells us to forgive and move on, but human nature doesn't work that easily. When you are wronged that deeply, it’s completely natural to wish that the person who hurt you could experience a fraction of the misery they caused. Not out of pure malice, but just for a sense of balance. Maybe if the people who recklessly break hearts were forced to see the real consequences of their actions, it would bring some kind of relief, or at least a sense of closure, to the innocent people left behind.

Wednesday, May 20, 2026

Yagyavalkya, Maitreyi, and the Ultimate Question of a Billionaire Sage

 The air in the forest ashram was heavy with the scent of crushed eucalyptus and dry earth. For decades, Yagyavalkya had been the most celebrated mind in ancient India. Kings showered him with gold; rival scholars feared his sharp wit. He was, by all accounts, a spiritual billionaire.

​But on this particular evening, the brilliant sage was doing something unexpected. He was packing.

He called his two wives, Katyayani and Maitreyi, to sit before him. Katyayani was a practical woman who understood the material world. Maitreyi, however, was different. She was a seeker, someone who looked at the night sky and wondered what lay beyond the stars.



"I am leaving," Yagyavalkya announced, his voice echoing in the quiet hut. "I am entering the next stage of my life, abandoning the worldly life to meditate in the deep forest. I want to divide all my wealth, my gold, and my cattle between the two of you so you may live comfortably."

Katyayani nodded, accepting her share. But Maitreyi looked at the massive pile of wealth, then looked into her husband’s eyes. She felt a profound sense of mystery. If this wealth was so valuable, why was the wisest man in the world throwing it away?

Maitreyi leaned forward, her voice cutting through the twilight.

Maitreyi: "My Lord, if this whole earth, full of wealth, belonged to me, would it make me immortal(in a sense of achieving eternal peace)?"

Yagyavalkya: (Sighing gently) "No, Maitreyi. Your life would be just like the life of any wealthy person. You would have comfort, security, and luxury. But there is no hope of immortality through wealth or eternal peace."

Maitreyi paused, staring at the glittering gold. It suddenly looked like dust to her.

Maitreyi: "What should I do with that which cannot make me immortal(give me eternal peace)? Tell me instead, my Lord, the secret that you know."

A smile touched Yagyavalkya’s lips. This was the moment of true initiation. He didn't just offer her a religious doctrine; he offered her a radical psychological shift.

Yagyavalkya sat cross-legged and delivered a teaching that would form the bedrock of Eastern philosophy. He explained that our love for external things is actually a misunderstanding of a much deeper truth.

The Illusion of External Love: "A husband is not loved for the husband’s sake," Yagyavalkya explained, "but for the sake of the Self (Atman) within him. A wife is not loved for the wife's sake, but for the sake of the Self."

The Connected Cosmic Fabric: He wasn't telling Maitreyi to be selfish. He was saying that when we love a person, a pet, or even wealth, we are actually catching a glimpse of the universal soul that connects us all. We are loving the divine spark inside them.

The Metaphor of the Drum: How do you understand something you cannot see? Yagyavalkya used a brilliant analogy: “When a drum is beaten, you cannot catch the sound waves floating in the air. But if you grab the drum or the drummer, you understand the sound.” Similarly, you cannot grasp the mysteries of the universe by chasing fleeting external things; you must find the Source.

Why does a conversation from thousands of years ago still matter to an audience scroll-feeding on social media and dealing with modern anxiety?

1. Materials Provide Comfort, Not Completeness

Maitreyi’s question is the ultimate antidote to modern FOMO (Fear Of Missing Out). Wealth, fame, and the latest gadgets can upgrade your lifestyle, but they cannot upgrade your soul. True fulfillment—what the ancients called "immortality"—comes from knowing who you are at your core.

2. True Love is Spiritual Connection

When you realize that everyone and everything shares the same universal energy, your relationship with the world changes. You stop seeing people as tools to satisfy your needs and start seeing them as mirrors of your own inner self.

Yagyavalkya didn't leave Maitreyi with gold; he left her with an awakened mind. He walked into the forest, leaving behind a legacy not of coins, but of consciousness.


Saturday, May 16, 2026

20 Years After Graduation: Facing My Emotional Balance Sheet

 ​Today, reality hit me with the quiet weight of a telephone ring.

​A friend called to catch up, and during our conversation, a sudden realization washed over me: It has been exactly 20 years since I graduated.

​Looking back at myself in the year 2006 feels like looking at a stranger, yet it simultaneously feels like it happened just yesterday. Two decades have evaporated. If you had told the younger version of me back in 2006 what the year 2026 would look like, I would have envisioned a perfectly curated, beautiful life.

​Instead, I found myself sitting at my desk, opening an old Excel sheet, and staring at a blank canvas of uncertainty. If you are also hitting a major life milestone and feeling entirely clueless about where you stand, let’s talk about the heavy, unspoken reality of the 20-year timeline.

When Life Feels Like a Constant Struggle

​They say life is a struggle, and for the last two decades, that adage has proven itself true in every possible corner of my existence.

​Sometimes, I find myself battling intense anger toward my younger self. Why didn't I make wiser decisions? Why did I choose the paths I chose?



​But when I stop to practice a moment of self-compassion, I remember the truth: the younger me didn't have the harsh experiences I possess today. We cannot make seasoned, mature decisions using an unbruised heart.

​If I were to treat my life like a business and draw up a literal life balance sheet, it feels like the column of things I have lost would far outweigh my gains. As an deeply emotional person, those losses cut deep:

​Lost friendships that I thought would last a lifetime.

​Fractured family dynamics.

​The fading of emotional safety nets I felt I needed the most.

​Yet, despite the deficit on that balance sheet, one undeniable asset remains: I am still surviving.

​The Isolation of the 20-Year Milestone

​Here is the hardest realization to admit out loud: It is entirely possible to feel completely lonely even when you are surrounded by many.

Why do we do this to ourselves? Am I being too harsh? Has my mind simply found a twisted kind of comfort in the familiar ache of pain?

When I look back, it feels like I willingly walked into sacrifices I could have easily done without. It feels like a cage created entirely out of my own thoughts. If you are trapped in that same mental loop, know this: we did not choose the ugly feelings, but we did choose to survive them. Life served us a highly decorated plate of challenges, and our stubborn, adamant nature is the only reason we are still standing here to talk about it

Looking Ahead to 2046: Is It Selfish to Just Want to Feel Good?

[The 20-Year Reality Check]

2006: High expectations, naive optimism, unwritten future.

2026: Heavy sacrifices, complex realities, profound questioning. 

The past is a heavy anchor, but looking forward 20 years into the future can feel even more terrifying.

When people ask, "Where do you see yourself 20 years from now?" a collective shudder goes through many of us. Honestly, the thought of a long life isn't inherently comforting. We cannot stop time, and if I am still here in the year 2046, what will that version of me feel like?

I have stripped away the grand, exhausting ambitions of my youth. For the next chapter of my life, I have just one objective left: Can I make myself feel good?

If seeking peace, choosing joy, and protecting my emotional energy makes me selfish, then perhaps it is time to embrace selfishness. After two decades of survival, prioritizing your own well-being isn't a luxury—it is the ultimate goal.

How Do You Handle Your Life Milestones?

Reflecting on a 20-year timeline forces us to confront our ghosts, our regrets, and our unmet expectations. But it also proves our resilience.

Have you hit a major graduation or life anniversary recently? Do you look at your own emotional balance sheet and wonder how you got here? Leave a comment below and share your story. Let’s dismantle the loneliness together.

Wednesday, May 13, 2026

What Two Birds Taught Me About Mental Freedom!!

 On my recent visit to my parents' home, I was confronted by a sight that has always sat heavily on my heart: a birdcage. Years ago, my brother brought home a few birds, and as nature took its course, the family grew. My mother and I have never been fond of seeing wings behind bars; to us, a bird’s true essence is defined by the sky, not a enclosure. Eventually, my mother gave most of them away, leaving behind only two, the smallest, quietest pair of the lot.

​One evening, moved by their silent presence, I named them Chikki and Mikki. In a small gesture of friendship, I offered them tiny crumbs of a chocolate chip biscuit. But as I watched them, I noticed one seemed frail. When I asked about it, I was told they had simply grown old.

​Nature is swift. A couple of days later, one of the pair passed away.

​The silence that followed was short-lived, replaced by a sound far more painful: the remaining bird began to chirp incessantly. It wasn't the cheerful song of a bird in the wild; it was the frantic, searching call of a soul missing its companion.

​The loneliness of that cage became a physical weight in the room. I remembered asking my family a year ago why we couldn't just open the door and let them fly. The answer was a grim reality of domestication: “They were born in this cage. They don’t know how to find food, build a nest, or protect themselves. They wouldn't survive a single day in the open world.”

​This is the hidden cost of our "selfish interest." We provide food and shelter for our entertainment, but in doing so, we strip these creatures of the very skills, the survival instincts, that make them who they are. We give them safety, but we take away their sovereignty.


​The most poignant moment happened while I was lost in these thoughts. In the kitchen, the milk boiler began to emit a thin, subtle whistle. It was a high-pitched sound, remarkably similar to a bird’s chirp.

​In the other room, the lone bird erupted into a flurry of noise. It called out with a desperate intensity, as if it truly believed, for one fleeting second, that its friend had returned home. As two tears escaped my eyes, I realized the depth of its longing. It was responding to a ghost, a mechanical sound that mimicked the only thing it cared about.

​It is difficult not to compare our human lives to this cage. When we lose someone or when we lose our sense of direction we often find ourselves trapped in a cage of our own making. Our thoughts become the bars.

​We find ourselves "chirping" into the void, looking for validation or a sign that we are on the right path, only to be met with the "mechanical whistles" of a world that doesn't always answer back.

​Taming the human mind is perhaps the greatest challenge we face. When you feel there is no one standing behind you, no mentor to guide you, and no "sales" or "results" to validate your hard work, the mind begins to squeeze. We become like those birds: safe in our routines, yet lacking the skills or the courage to navigate the vast, "open world" of our potential.

​Are we born into cages of expectation? Have we forgotten how to build our own nests because we’ve waited too long for someone else to provide the straw?

​The story of Chikki and Mikki is a reminder that being "taken care of" is not the same as being free. Purposeful work and a disciplined mind are the only tools we have to unlock the door. We must teach ourselves the skills to survive independently not just physically, but emotionally so that we don't spend our lives waiting for a whistle to tell us we aren't alone.

Thursday, May 7, 2026

How to Stop Seeking External Validation: A Path Out of Anxiety and Depression!!

 In my last post, we explored the idea that life is beautifully random. But if life is a roll of the dice, why does it hurt so much when the dice don't land in our favor?

I was discussing this with my brother recently. We agreed that anxiety and depression often root themselves in our desperate search for external validation. But he challenged me with a brilliant question:

"If you work at a job, give your best, and enjoy it, but you don't get a promotion for years... how can you stay happy? Isn't a promotion external validation? How do you stop seeking it without losing your drive?"

It’s the ultimate "Catch-22." If we stop caring about external results, do we stop moving forward? Not exactly. The secret lies in changing why we move.



1. The Feedback vs. Validation Filter

The first step to overcoming the anxiety of "not being enough" is realizing that a result (like a promotion) is Data, not Destiny.

External Validation says: "I didn't get the promotion, so I am a failure. I am not seen. I am not worthy." This leads to depression.

Internal Validation says: "I am excellent at my craft. The fact that this company isn't promoting me is data—it tells me this environment's reward system doesn't align with my value."

When you validate yourself internally, you don't stop wanting the promotion; you just stop letting the lack of one break your spirit. You realize you’ve outgrown the container, and you move on with a calm heart rather than a crushed one.

2. Building an "Evidence Folder"

Anxiety thrives on the "invisible." We feel like we haven't achieved anything because we are waiting for a trophy to prove it. To overcome this, you must become your own historian.

Every week, document your Effort Wins. Did you handle a difficult client with grace? Did you learn a new design tool? Write it down. When you have a folder full of evidence of your own growth, a manager’s opinion becomes just one person's perspective—not the absolute truth.

3. Diversify Your Identity

If your entire "Self-Worth Portfolio" is invested in your job, you are headed for a market crash. Depression often hits hardest when our one source of validation dries up.

To find balance, invest in "Small Wins" across different areas of life:

The Creative Win: Finishing a drawing.

The Physical Win: A 20-minute walk.

The Intellectual Win: Reading a chapter of a book.

When the "Work" side of your life is stagnant, your "Artist" or "Parent" or "Hobbyist" side keeps your head above water.

4. The "Audience of One" Test

The path out of anxiety is to start performing for an audience of one: You.

Ask yourself: "If I did this task perfectly, but my boss never saw it and I never got a 'thank you,' would I still be proud of the work?" If the answer is yes, you have achieved the highest form of human freedom. You are no longer a slave to the "Like" button or the year-end review. You are a craftsman enjoying the journey.


Overcoming anxiety and depression isn't about "fixing" the world so that it finally rewards you. It’s about building an internal sun so that you aren't dependent on the world's light.

As I mentioned in my previous post, the universe is random. People's opinions are random. The only thing that is constant is the effort you put in and the peace you find in your own progress.

To my brother, and to all of you: You don't have to be happy with a lack of results. But you can be happy with yourself while you work to change those results.

Does your happiness currently have a "price tag" attached to an external goal? Let’s talk about how to reclaim your worth in the comments below.

Feature Post

​The Billion-Dollar Illusion: Why Are India’s Richest Icons Selling Slow Poison on World No Tobacco Day?

 Tonight, an estimated 450 million people across India are glued to their television and smartphone screens. The country is holding its coll...