Posts

Alone.

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Alone. The word sat heavy in his chest the morning he left. His mother stood at the door, wiping her hands on her apron. His father pretended to read the newspaper. "I'll be back," he said. He didn't specify when. Neither did they. --- The city welcomed him with open arms and closed wallets. He worked. He climbed. He collected. Money came first. It arrived in crumpled notes, then crisp bundles, then digital numbers that moved between accounts without being touched. He stared at the screen and felt something that looked like pride but tasted like hunger. Success followed. Promotions. Titles. Corner offices with views that made visitors gasp. He learned to enjoy the gasp. It meant he had arrived. Reputation crowned him. His name appeared in lists. People wanted his advice, his presence, his money. He gave them advice. He gave them presence (billed by the hour). He gave them money (with interest). Somewhere along the way, his mother stopped calling. She learn...

Love Story in Notifications

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Love Story in Notifications They say every love story is beautiful. But they forgot to mention that modern ones come with read receipts, screenshot notifications, and a mute button. Here is a love story. No poetry. No letters. Just pings. --- Day 1: Inbox (1) Tinder Match • Hi, nice to meet you. Swipe right. Match. The algorithm did its job. Two strangers, curated by code, decide to give it a shot. The opening line is generic, but the potential feels electric. The phone buzzes. The heart flutters. It begins. Month 1: WhatsApp • Good morning  The good morning texts arrive like clockwork. The heart emoji is red, passionate, intentional. Screenshots are taken. Friends are shown. "I think this one is different," you say. The notification sound is no longer annoying; it's the soundtrack of your happiness. Month 3: Instagram DM • Why are you online but not replying?  The honeymoon phase has a flat tire. You saw their story. You liked three posts. But you didn't ...

First Time Dreams, Last Time Realities

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First Time Dreams, Last Time Realities I still remember the day I first arrived. I stepped off the train with a bag that was too heavy and a heart that was too light, bouncing with delusion. The city loomed around me like a promise—skyscrapers punching the clouds, yellow lights blurring into golden streaks, and the intoxicating smell of possibility. I was going to conquer this place. I imagined the corner office with the glass walls. I imagined the love story set against city sunsets. I imagined the luxury: the watch, the car, the table at the restaurant that required a booking three months in advance. The city looked at my 22-year-old face and smiled. It had seen this movie before. Years Later I am leaving today. For the last time. I stand at the same station, but the platform feels smaller. The bag is lighter now—I learned to travel light, learned that things don't fill voids. The skyscrapers are still there, but they just look like places where people go to owe thing...

The Highway of Human Ambition

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The Highway of Human Ambition There is a road I started walking on years ago. I don't remember how I found it, or why I took the first step. I just remember looking ahead and seeing the asphalt stretch into infinity, shimmering with possibility. It looked like an adventure. I was wrong. It was a trap. The further I walked, the more companions I gathered. The road, it seemed, was a popular destination. First, I met a Businessman. His briefcase was overflowing with papers, and he walked with a frantic pace, eyes glued to a stock ticker on his phone. "I'm almost there," he panted, sweat beading on his forehead. "Just a few more millions and I'll have enough. Then I'll stop and enjoy life." I saw him again ten miles later. He was still running. The millions had doubled. The stopping hadn't happened. Next, I encountered an Influencer. She walked backward, filming herself, her smile permanently fixed. She wasn't looking at the road; she...

If Humans Could Time-Travel, History Would Need Therapy

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If Humans Could Time-Travel, History Would Need Therapy Last Tuesday, I discovered I could teleport. There was no radioactive spider, no sorcerer's ritual—I just woke up, thought about my office desk, and suddenly my coffee was hovering over a different zip code. The logical thing to do would be to alert the authorities, or prevent a war, or maybe rob a bank in a way that is historically undetectable. But I didn’t do any of that. I used my power to skip the Mumbai local during rush hour. I haven't saved the world yet, but my god, my commute is bliss. Once you start teleporting, however, you get curious. You wonder if humanity was always this chaotic, or if we peaked somewhere along the way. So, I jumped. First Stop: An Ancient Kingdom I landed in the middle of a vast empire. Armies clashed on the fields below—real swords, real blood, real stakes. Men screamed at each other over land and pride. I watched for a while, then jumped back to 2023 and scrolled through Twit...

Hope for the Future

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 Hope for the Future #FinalLetter #HopePrevails #TimelessThings If you are reading this at 100, I hope the world finally learned that the most valuable things—love, trust, and respect—were never meant to be temporary. #PermanentValues #ThingsThatLast I hope you're sitting somewhere comfortable. Maybe a chair with sunlight. Maybe a porch where the world moves slow enough to watch. I hope your hands are steady enough to hold this paper, your eyes good enough to read these words, your heart soft enough to still feel what they mean. I wrote this in a hurry, in a time when hurry was a virtue. We measured productivity in output, success in speed, importance in urgency. We ran everywhere and arrived nowhere. We optimized everything and enjoyed nothing. Tell me you learned to pause. #SlowDown #ArriveNowhere Tell me patience came back into fashion. Tell me people stopped apologizing for taking their time, for thinking before speaking, for waiting until they meant it. Tell me tha...

Personal Reflection — Letter to My Future Self

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 Personal Reflection — Letter to My Future Self #DearFutureMe #IntegrityCheck #WhatSurvived So here I am. Thirty-two years old, writing to a version of myself I might not recognize. The clock on my wall ticks like a countdown. My phone buzzes with notifications I'll ignore. Outside, the world spins faster every day, and I'm standing still for just a moment, asking questions I'm afraid to hear answered. Tell me, old man—did we keep our integrity? Or did we also become part of the disposable generation? #IntegrityQuestion #DisposableFear I need to know: Did the world slow down or just spin faster? Are you reading this on a Tuesday afternoon with actual paper and actual light, or did some AI summarize it for you in three seconds while you scrolled past? Do you still have afternoons? Or did we optimize those away too? #TimeQuestion #SlowOrFaster I want to believe you're better than me. Wiser. More patient. I want to believe you learned to sit with discomfort ins...