Exactly 10 years ago.
My daughter was just three months old.
She didn’t know how to sit. Didn’t know how to talk.
She was just rolling around… smiling at the ceiling fan… living in her own small universe.
And I was still rolling in the sky of becoming a father.
My wife was in her native. I was driving between Chennai, Madurai and Pollachi like a shuttle service. Highway tea shops were my silent companions. Early morning drives. Late night returns. Phone calls in between.
Business was going good.
I had a solid team. Energy was high.
That was the time I was seriously working on my coffee shop initiative — ideas, branding thoughts, concepts, locations, numbers, dreams. Filter coffee was not just a drink. It was a possibility.
Friend time had reduced.
Not intentionally. Life was just expanding.
But still, I made sure I showed up.
Green Park in Chennai.
Union Club in Madurai.
Those were my meeting spots. Laughter. Business talks. Political debates. Life updates. Some evenings were heavy, some were light, but they kept me grounded.
Bangalore visits had reduced.
Before 2015, Bangalore used to be almost a weekly emotion.
After that, priorities shifted. Travel changed direction. Responsibilities quietly took the driver’s seat.
That was also the period when I purchased two houses in Madurai.
And the construction of my present house was happening brick by brick. I still remember walking through half-built walls, imagining furniture, imagining children running around.
Today when I think back…
I don’t remember the stress.
I don’t remember the tiredness.
I remember the movement.
I remember the building phase.
I remember the silent excitement.
A 3-month-old baby.
A growing business.
Under-construction dreams.
Reduced Bangalore trips.
More responsibilities.
Life was not slow.
Life was not easy.
But life was beautifully in motion.
Ten years passed quietly.
But that version of me — driving highways, carrying dreams, and learning fatherhood — still smiles somewhere inside.
And that 3-month-old baby?
She is ten now.
Time really doesn’t ask permission before it moves.
The Man Who Borrowed Like There Was No Tomorrow (And Still Won)
The Lucky Bhaskar of Real Life
I know a man.
An educationalist.
But he didn’t build schools slowly.
He opened them like tea shops.
If there was land, he built.
If there was opportunity, he borrowed.
Private lenders. High interest.
To pay interest, he borrowed again.
At one point, there were 100 lenders sitting in his office, waiting to collect interest.
A friend once told me:
“He will take even ₹50,000 if you lend him — he just needs to survive today.”
And this same man built a ₹300 crore medical college and hospital.
But he was choking.
The newly built college almost came for sale.
It looked like the end.
Then COVID Happened
Now here is where the story flips.
When the world was collapsing,
healthcare infrastructure suddenly became gold.
Regulations shifted.
Cash flows adjusted.
Demand dynamics changed.
Somehow — restructuring, revenue surge, timing, destiny —
he cleared his dues.
Today?
Debt-free.
Positive cash flow.
Calm face.
Was He Smart or Just Lucky?
Let’s be honest.
Borrowing to pay interest is usually a red flag in American business textbooks.
It’s how companies collapse.
But here’s the difference:
He wasn’t borrowing for lifestyle.
No yachts.
No flashy cars.
He was building real assets — schools and a medical college.
He gambled on scale.
He bet that:
“If I survive long enough, the asset will save me.”
And it did.
What I Learned From Him
There are two types of entrepreneurs:
1. The Safe Builder – grows slow, protects downside.
2. The Fire Walker – walks through debt, believing tomorrow will justify today.
He was the Fire Walker.
Most fail.
A few survive.
And when they survive, we call them visionaries.
Why This Story Matters Globally
In the U.S. startup world, we call this:
Leveraged entrepreneurship
Aggressive asset scaling
Risk appetite psychology
But beyond terms, this is about one thing:
Mental stamina.
Can you face 100 lenders daily and still build?
Most can’t.
He did.
Entrepreneurship is not clean.
It is messy.
It is risky.
It is timing.
Sometimes, it is just surviving long enough for luck to arrive.
Maybe he was Lucky Bhaskar.
Or maybe he just refused to quit.
Are We Walking Into WW3 — Or Just a Noisy World?
Every day I open the news.
Israel – Hamas.
Israel – Hezbollah.
Iran tension.
Russia – Ukraine still not ending.
India – Pakistan heat.
Pakistan – Afghanistan firing.
Even Thailand – Cambodia fighting.
Naturally one doubt comes.
Are we walking into World War 3?
I didn’t want to react emotionally. So I looked at old patterns.
In 1914, one incident triggered alliance dominoes. Nobody had nuclear weapons. Once it started, it swallowed everyone.
In 1939, the world was already weak after the Great Depression. Economies were broken. One expansion led to total war.
Today the situation is different.
Yes, number of conflicts are high. In fact, data says active conflicts are at one of the highest levels since World War 2.
But here is the difference.
After 1945, wars didn’t stop.
They just became regional.
Big powers support from behind.
They avoid fighting each other directly.
Why?
Because nuclear weapons changed calculation.
Because global trade is too connected.
Because full war is economic suicide now.
So what do I think?
Next 5 years will be tense. Very tense.
Oil may spike if Middle East expands.
Markets will swing.
There can be slowdown.
Defense and energy sectors will grow.
But full World War 3?
I feel chances are low. Maybe 15–20%.
Most likely scenario?
Many fires burning at the same time.
But nobody wanting the entire forest to burn.
This is not a peaceful world.
But it is also not a suicidal world.
History doesn’t repeat.
But it leaves clues.
And the clue I see is this:
We are entering a loud, unstable, multi-conflict world —
not necessarily a third world war.
Let’s see how it unfolds.
When Ego Speaks Louder Than Truth
Not every insult deserves analysis.
Some words are not conclusions.
They are explosions.
When elders lose control in an argument with their own children, something interesting happens psychologically. Authority feels threatened. The old hierarchy shakes. And when authority shakes, ego searches for balance.
But instead of repairing the argument, it attacks sideways.
It is rarely rational.
It is rarely calculated.
It is emotional spillover.
Many men from an older generation were raised with one equation:
Manhood = Salary dominance.
If a man earned more, he led.
If he led, he was respected.
If he was respected, he was a “real man.”
That formula worked in a different economic era — when income came only from monthly wages and pensions.
But the world changed.
Today wealth can come from:
- Investments
- Rental income
- Business cycles
- Asset-based models
- Digital ventures
Income is no longer linear.
It is strategic.
However, not everyone updates their mental software.
When someone says, “Are you living off your wife’s salary?” it may sound like a financial accusation. But psychologically, it is something else.
It is an ego defending its position.
It is discomfort with a new structure of power.
It is unfamiliarity disguised as insult.
Explaining rental yield percentages will not heal generational pride.
Presenting bank statements will not upgrade belief systems.
Because the statement was never about numbers.
It was about control.
The real strength in such moments is not counter-attack.
It is clarity.
Clarity that not all criticism is insight.
Clarity that some words are emotional debris.
Clarity that your financial model does not need validation from someone who doesn’t understand asset-based thinking.
When ego speaks louder than truth, wisdom chooses silence.
And silence, sometimes, is the most powerful response.
The Man at the Dining Table
It was a quiet suburb somewhere in New Jersey.
White fence. Two kids. A modest home bought with years of sacrifice.
For ten days, the house was fuller than usual. Her parents had come to visit. The air had been tight from the beginning — polite smiles, forced laughter, old opinions sitting heavy at the table.
One evening, the argument started.
It wasn’t about him.
It was between a daughter and her parents. Old wounds. Old control. Old authority trying to reassert itself in a house that no longer belonged to them.
He stayed silent.
It wasn’t his battle.
Then suddenly, like a chair kicked across the floor, the words came.
“If you’re a real man, why are you sitting here living off your wife’s salary?”
The room froze.
The children looked up.
Time slowed.
He felt heat rise from his chest to his ears. Not because of money. Not because of truth. But because of humiliation — delivered casually, like a glass dropped on tile.
He owned rental properties.
He built assets.
He carried responsibilities quietly.
But none of that mattered in that moment.
What mattered was dignity.
He could have shouted.
He could have listed numbers.
He could have broken the evening into pieces.
Instead, he breathed.
He chose silence — not because he was weak, but because strength sometimes refuses to perform.
The insult lingered in the air like smoke. But smoke clears.
That night, he lay awake — not angry at the words, but at the realization that some men only understand power through volume.
He understood something different.
A man is not defined by who earns more.
He is defined by how steady he stands when someone tries to shake him.
The children went to sleep in a house that did not explode.
And sometimes, that is victory.
A Dinner Without Rush – Rare Luxury in Madurai
Today we went out for dinner — my family and my friend’s family together.

Being a vegetarian in Madurai is not easy. Options are limited. And even in those few hotels, the model is mostly quick service. You order, food comes in 5 minutes, and before you finish your first dosa, you can feel eyes around you.
Three or four families standing nearby.
Waiting. Watching.
Silently asking, “Are you done?”
Irony is — we also do the same when we enter. We scan plates. We calculate who might leave first. We mentally reserve a table before it is even free.
There is no space to sit and talk. No time to laugh loudly. No feeling of outing. Just eating and leaving.
But today was different.
We went to Marudheeswara Restaurant at Iyer Bungalow.
Yes, we had to wait for 30 minutes.
But surprisingly, it didn’t feel like waiting.
They made us sit in a garden-style entrance area. Antique setup. Calm lights. Pleasant breeze. It felt like we had already started our dinner before entering the dining hall.
Once inside, the menu itself felt refreshing.
Not the usual routine items.
It had a unique fusion South Indian touch. Even the utensils were artistic and different. Small details, but they mattered.
Food?
Average to good.
But experience?
Very good.
That is what stood out.
We spent almost 90 minutes there. Talking. Laughing. Kids enjoying their food peacefully. Nobody standing behind us. Nobody pushing us with their eyes.
For 7 members, the bill came to around ₹2500 — less than ₹400 per person. Slightly premium for Madurai standards, but honestly, what we paid for was not just food. It was time.
After a long, long time, we had a dinner in Madurai where we ate without rush.
Sometimes luxury is not five-star food.
Sometimes luxury is simply not being hurried.
Too Soft for This World? Or Just Too Real?
I used to think being emotional was a weakness.
In business, I took decisions based on feelings.
In relationships, I trusted with my whole heart.
In friendships, I gave more than I received.
And many times… I lost.
I lost money because I didn’t want to hurt someone.
I lost peace because I couldn’t say “no.”
I lost control because I reacted instead of responding.
Breakups hit me like earthquakes.
Betrayals felt like public humiliation.
Emotional blackmail worked on me because I cared too much.
For a long time, I blamed my heart.
I thought strong people are cold.
I thought smart people are practical.
I thought successful people don’t feel too much.
But now, at this stage of life, I see something different.
Being emotional is not weakness.
Being emotionally unmanaged is weakness.
There is a difference.
Earlier, my emotions were driving me.
Now, I am learning to sit in the driver’s seat.
I still feel deeply.
I still get hurt.
I still care more than I should sometimes.
But today, I pause.
I observe.
I accept.
This phase is not emotional weakness.
It is emotional awareness.
Psychologists call it emotional regulation — the ability to feel without losing control.
Some call it maturity.
Some call it healing.
I call it growing up.
Is it good or bad?
It is powerful — if trained.
Dangerous — if unmanaged.
Emotions are like fire.
They can cook your food.
Or burn your house.
I am not trying to kill my emotions anymore.
I am trying to train them.
Maybe I was never weak.
Maybe I was just untrained.
And maybe… the real strength is not in becoming stone.
It is in becoming steady.
And I am learning steadiness — one feeling at a time.
The Year I Stopped Chasing and Started Compounding
The Year I Stopped Chasing and Started Compounding
For most of my life, I was chasing something.
Chasing revenue.
Chasing validation.
Chasing the next big idea.
Chasing people who didn’t even know they were being chased.
And I thought that was ambition.
If you are reading this from New York, Texas, California or even from a small Midwest town, you know this culture. Hustle. Scale. Optimize. 10X. Exit. Repeat.
We celebrate velocity.
But nobody talks about durability.
The American Dream vs The Compounding Dream
The American Dream is powerful. Build something from scratch. Work hard. Make it big.
But somewhere along the way, “make it big” quietly replaced “make it sustainable.”
I learned this the hard way.
There was a time in my life when everything collapsed at once. Business, relationships, reputation. It felt like falling from the sky without a parachute. And what shocked me was not the fall.
It was the realization that I had built speed, not strength.
Speed impresses.
Strength survives.
The Quiet Power of Compounding
Compounding is boring.
It does not trend on Twitter.
It does not go viral on Instagram.
It does not get you invited to podcasts.
But it changes everything.
Compounding is:
Writing one thoughtful post every week
Investing small amounts consistently
Showing up for your family even when you are tired
Learning one concept deeply instead of ten concepts superficially
In finance, compounding turns 100 dollars into millions over decades.
In character, compounding turns small discipline into unshakeable confidence.
In relationships, compounding turns simple trust into lifelong loyalty.
Why This Matters in 2026
We live in a time of:
AI shortcuts
Overnight creators
Instant monetization
Algorithm driven fame
But the world is also quietly rewarding consistency again.
Businesses that survive are not the loudest. They are the most resilient.
Creators who last are not the most viral. They are the most authentic.
Leaders who endure are not the flashiest. They are the most grounded.
Compounding does not care about geography.
It works the same in Silicon Valley and in a small town in India.
That is the beauty of it.
My Shift
The year I stopped chasing:
I stopped saying yes to everything
I stopped trying to prove my worth
I stopped running behind fast money
Instead:
I built systems
I reduced unnecessary risk
I invested in health
I rebuilt trust
I chose fewer, deeper relationships
Nothing dramatic happened overnight.
But something powerful happened slowly.
Stability.
The day you stop chasing and start compounding is the day your life begins to feel less fragile and more intentional.
ATM With Emotions – Please Press Cancel
There is one skill I seriously need to upgrade in life.

Not business.
Not investment.
Not AI automation.
The art of saying NO.
I don’t know why, but whenever someone calls me — especially those long-distance “Hi da… remember me?” connections — I already know what is coming.
Not “How are you?”
Not “Let’s meet for coffee.”
It is always:
“Bro… small help…”
Small help.
That word has destroyed many budgets.
The 20-Year EMI Without Return
There are people who borrowed money from me 20 years back.
Yes. Two decades.
If that money was invested in SIP, it would have retired by now.
But instead, it is peacefully sleeping in someone else’s memory — because clearly, they don’t remember it.
And I?
I remember everything. Even the amount. Even the day.
But I never ask again.
Why?
Because I feel awkward.
See the comedy? I give money comfortably. Asking it back feels like a crime.
The Legendary Deduction Incident
One day, I actually tried something brave.
A friend owed me money for years. One fine day, I borrowed a small amount from him. In my head, I was doing advanced accounting.
“Okay. I will adjust from what he owes me.”
Brilliant plan.
After one year, this gentleman calls me.
“Machan… when are you returning my money?”
I waited for him to laugh.
He didn’t.
He had forgotten the 10-year pending amount.
In that moment, I had two options:
- Fight.
- Pay and disappear.
I paid.
Then I disappeared.
That was my bold rebellion.
The Monthly Charity Subscription
Even after all this experience, every month someone calls.
And somehow, my mouth says:
“Okay… I’ll transfer.”
Why?
Maybe I don’t want to hurt people.
Maybe I don’t want to look selfish.
Maybe I want to be seen as the “good guy.”
But here is the hidden truth:
Every time I say yes, a small part inside me says, “Why did you do that again?”
It is funny on the outside.
Inside, it is tiring.
The Real Problem
It’s not about money.
It’s about boundaries.
If someone says no to me, I understand.
But when I have to say no, I feel guilty.
Why is that?
Somewhere, I built an image of myself as:
“Helpful Anand.”
But I forgot to add:
“Helpful with limits.”
The Hard Realization
If someone borrowed 20 years back and never returned,
and still has no intention…
That is not generosity.
That is poor boundary management.
If someone forgets what they owe me but remembers what I owe them…
That is not friendship.
That is selective memory with financial clarity.
I want to become an ATM machine does not feel bad when it says:
“Insufficient funds.”
It just displays the message.
Maybe I should learn from machines.
I don’t want to stop helping people.
I just want to stop helping in a way that hurts me.
Learning to say no might be the most profitable skill of my life.
1,447 Times I Pressed Publish
On 25 February 2000, I wrote my first blog.
There was no strategy.
No SEO.
No audience metrics.
Just a simple PHP script called Blogger
and a young man with more thoughts than direction.
I didn’t know that one day
those thoughts would become 1,447 posts.
In 2009 alone, I wrote 349 times.
Almost one post a day.
As if silence itself was a risk.
I wrote about startups before I understood business.
I wrote about money before I had any.
I wrote about ambition before I knew its cost.
I wrote about trust before I experienced its fracture.
Still, I pressed publish.
Some posts were sharp.
Some were emotional.
Some were naïve.
Some were unnecessarily intense.
But they were honest.
Between 2008 and 2011, I wrote like someone in motion.
Not escaping life —
chasing it.
The blog became my thinking space.
My therapy.
My argument room.
My confession booth.
My rehearsal stage for dreams that hadn’t yet taken shape.
Across 1,447 posts, there were 433 comments.
Not viral.
Not explosive.
Just steady and quiet.
Which means most people read without speaking.
Or maybe they simply passed through.
Either way, I kept writing.
Then something shifted.
Life matured faster than my sentences.
Responsibilities layered themselves.
Experience sharpened me.
Trust became selective.
Energy became intentional.
The frequency dropped.
The tone changed.
From exposure to reflection.
From reaction to analysis.
From “Here’s what I feel”
to
“Here’s what I’ve learned.”
The writer did not disappear.
He evolved.
Somewhere between risk and responsibility,
between optimism and realism,
between dreaming and accounting —
a different Anand emerged.
Less impulsive.
More deliberate.
Less open.
More layered.
But here’s what I’ve realised:
Every version of me still exists inside those posts.
The young optimist.
The restless entrepreneur.
The bruised learner.
The structured planner.
The reflective father.
When I lost the first five years of writing during a platform migration,
I thought I had lost memory.
Now I understand —
The memory isn’t in the missing files.
It’s in the transformation.
From 2000 to 2026,
I did not build a blog.
I documented a becoming.
1,447 times I pressed publish.
Not for applause.
Not for algorithms.
But to leave evidence that I was thinking, trying, evolving.
And I am still here.
— S.Anand Nataraj