The 78 vs 26 Story: How TVK Hurt DMK More Than ADMK


The Real Story Behind the Numbers

If we strip away all the noise and look at the data calmly, one number stands out:

👉 78 vs 26

Out of the 108 seats won by TVK:

  • In 78 seats, DMK came second
  • In 26 seats, ADMK came second
  • Remaining 4 were split among others

This is not just a statistic — it tells us where the real competition was.


What This Actually Means

In simple terms:

  • In 78 constituencies, the fight was: 👉 TVK vs DMK
  • In 26 constituencies, the fight was: 👉 TVK vs ADMK

So, TVK wasn’t evenly cutting votes across the board.

👉 It was primarily disrupting DMK’s winning chances


If TVK Was Not in the Race

Let’s think practically.

  • In those 78 seats, DMK was already the runner-up
    👉 So DMK is the closest to victory
  • In the 26 seats, ADMK was second
    👉 So ADMK benefits there

Now the key insight:

DMK has 3 times more “near-win” seats than ADMK (78 vs 26)


The Strategic Conclusion

This clearly shows:

👉 TVK’s presence hurt DMK significantly more than ADMK

That part of the analysis is solid and fact-based.


Where the Analysis Overreaches

The next step in the viral claim says:

“If TVK votes split 50–45, DMK would reach 147 seats”

This is where it becomes assumption-heavy.

Because:

  • Not all TVK voters will shift uniformly
  • Every constituency behaves differently
  • Local factors matter more than averages

A Day That Started Rough… and Ended with Popcorn & Smiles


Yesterday was one of those days that starts with resistance but quietly transforms into something meaningful.

We had reached Bangalore the previous night around midnight. Tired, exhausted… and then came the first spark—Aradhya didn’t like the bed. Too hard. Uncomfortable. Her reaction was instant—she messaged her mom asking if we could return to Madurai immediately. That set the tone.

I pushed her a bit to adjust. Not the best start, but sometimes parenting begins with friction.

Morning came with a follow-up call from my wife. I reassured her—and more importantly, I reassured my daughter. I told her, “Let me finish the work today. If you still don’t like it, we’ll go back.” That seemed to calm things down.

Breakfast was ordered on Swiggy, but the morning was slow. I got stuck watching Tamil Nadu election results on YouTube. The unexpected leads (especially Vijay trending) pulled me deeper into the screen than I planned. Time slipped.

By 11 AM, we finally started. Bank work took longer than expected—reached by 11:30, finished only by 2 PM. By then, my son had crossed the “hungry to angry” phase. That classic moment every parent knows.

We drove to Royal Meenakshi Mall, grabbed lunch, and picked up a few things he wanted. Energy levels improved immediately—food does magic.

By 3:30 PM, we reached the apartment. Wrapped up association work, handled the old tenant settlement, completed the new tenant handover. Work done—but the kids wanted time there. So we stayed. No rush.

By evening, we went back to the mall again. That’s when something interesting happened.

The kids discovered what a “second show” movie is.

When I explained it’s a late-night show—way past their usual sleep time—their eyes lit up. It wasn’t about the movie. It was about experiencing something new. Something “grown-up.”

They made a deal: “We won’t sleep. Please take us.”

I agreed.

All they wanted? Popcorn.

That excitement… that curiosity… that first-time feeling—it was worth everything.

After the movie, I casually asked my daughter if she enjoyed the day.

Her answer surprised me.

She said she wanted to stay for another 2–3 days.

Same place. Same bed she complained about.

This time, she asked, “Can we make it more comfortable?”

That’s when I told her something simple:
“This is our house. We don’t run away from discomfort. We improve it.”

We spoke about cushions, small changes, setting up our own comfort.

That moment mattered.

The day that began with resistance ended with ownership.

Kids finally slept at 3 AM.

Work got done. Memories got created.

And somewhere in between, a small lesson settled quietly—
not every discomfort needs escape… some just need adjustment.

Between Dislike and Hope: A Voter’s Honest Reflection


This election result felt like one of the most thrilling days in my life — not because everything went the way I wanted, but because something unexpected happened.

To be honest, my dislike for DMK is stronger than my support for BJP. My concerns have always been around nepotism, what I perceive as minority appeasement, and a certain arrogance in governance. So, seeing DMK lose — and Stalin losing — felt like a moment of relief, almost like a long-awaited shift.

What made it even more surprising was how things turned out. Exit polls predicted a DMK win. Like many, I hoped for a miracle — but I didn’t truly expect one.

And then came Vijay and TVK.

I’ve never been a fan of Vijay in movies, nor have I actively supported his politics. But I have to admit — I was not disappointed. In fact, I felt a sense of satisfaction seeing a new force disrupt the long-standing Dravidian political dominance. Whether one agrees with him or not, breaking a pattern takes courage and impact.

Even though BJP + AIADMK didn’t perform as expected, I didn’t feel the disappointment I had five years ago. Maybe because this time, the outcome itself brought a sense of balance.

One thing I’ve struggled with is how people label opinions.
If I criticize DMK, I’m seen as anti-minority.
If I don’t, I’m assumed to support them.

But reality is not binary.

I don’t hate minorities. I dislike certain political approaches. There’s a difference — but it often gets lost in public conversations.

Now, with Vijay potentially becoming the first minority Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu, I find it interesting. Not because of identity — but because of what it represents: change.

I may not fully support him.
I may not agree with everything.
But I acknowledge what has been achieved.

And for now, that’s enough.

Let me congratulate Vijay and his party for their performance. Even small positive changes can make a difference — and sometimes, that’s all people are asking for.

As for DMK — this might be a moment for introspection. Whether they rise again or decline further depends on how they respond.

For voters like me, this election wasn’t about choosing perfection.
It was about choosing change.

When Life Pushes You to the Edge, Don’t Move


There will be a phase in life where you are pushed to the extreme corner.

Not slowly. Not gently.
But all at once.

Everything you relied on starts disappearing.
Money becomes tight.
People become distant.
Clarity becomes zero.

You are left alone with one question:

“What next?”

And strangely… there is no answer.


The Reality of That Corner

This is not a motivational concept.
It is a real phase many people go through.

was once removed from the very company he built.
At that point, it wasn’t a comeback story—it was confusion, failure, and uncertainty.

was rejected by multiple publishers while struggling financially, unsure if her work would ever see light.

faced moments where both and were close to collapse, with personal finances at risk.

These are not stories of instant success.
These are moments where they stood at the same corner—
where nothing seemed to work.


What Works in That Moment

Not intelligence.
Not strategy.
Not even experience.

Only one thing works:

Patience.

Not passive waiting.
But holding your ground when everything inside you wants to give up.

Because in that phase, the biggest fight is not outside.
It is inside your mind.

Thoughts like:

  • “Will I survive this?”
  • “Is this the end?”
  • “Will anything ever change?”

This is the breaking point.


The Turning Point

Something interesting happens here.

Not immediately.
Not dramatically.

But slowly, things begin to shift.

A small opportunity appears.
A person shows up.
A path becomes visible.

Not because you forced it.

But because you stayed long enough to see it.

This is not fairy-tale magic.

This is the kind of magic that comes only after patience is tested to its limit.


The Truth About Magic

People often think magic means something extraordinary.

But in real life, magic looks like:

  • surviving one more day
  • not quitting when it made sense to quit
  • holding on when nothing guaranteed success

That silent endurance creates change.


Closing

Life will push you to a place where you feel there is nothing left.

When that happens, don’t rush to escape.

Don’t panic.
Don’t collapse.

Just stay.

Because sometimes, the only reason things change…
is because you didn’t leave before they could.

They Told Stories About Me. Here’s My Answer


Last weekend, I heard something interesting.

Not directly.
Not to my face.
But through the usual route—conversations, assumptions, and confidence built on half-truths.

Apparently, I have a story now.

A story where:

  • I built something and walked away with money
  • Someone from my past—let’s call her Æ—was the real force behind everything
  • My personal life is up for discussion
  • My family is a topic of curiosity
  • And my choices are signs of weakness

It’s fascinating how people who were not in the room
speak like they wrote the script.


Let me respond. Not to defend. But to define.

Yes, I built a company.
Yes, people came and went.
Yes, things didn’t end like a fairy tale.

That’s called entrepreneurship. Not storytelling.

Anyone who has built something from zero knows: There is no clean version of the journey.
There are struggles, decisions, exits, and consequences.

Some win quietly.
Some profit loudly.
Some move on.

I chose to move on.


About Æ and “growth stories”

Every story needs a hero.
Sometimes, people create one.

But growth is never a single person’s effort.
And neither is downfall.

If someone believes success came from “methods” instead of “work,”
that tells more about their thinking than my journey.


About my personal life

When conversations reach a point where:

  • Children are discussed
  • Marriage is judged
  • Respect is replaced with mockery

It stops being curiosity.
It becomes character exposure—not mine, but theirs.

A man who stands by his family is not weak.
A man who chooses peace over chaos is not controlled.

He is clear.


About fear and silence

Some think silence is fear.

Let me clarify:

Silence is not fear.
Silence is selection.

Not every noise deserves a response.
Not every narrative deserves energy.

But sometimes, silence must speak.


So here is my position

If you have a question—ask me.
If you have a doubt—clarify with me.
If you have a story—keep it with you.

Because I don’t live in narratives.
I live in reality.


What I’m focused on now

While stories are being discussed,
I’m doing something simpler:

  • Taking care of my family
  • Building again, step by step
  • Learning from every fall
  • Moving forward without noise

Because real life doesn’t need an audience.

26 Years. 4 Truths. Each One Earned the Hard Way


This May, I complete 26 years of professional life.

April 2000 — graduation.
May 2000 — reality.

No shortcuts. No clean wins.
Just lessons… slowly becoming truths.


Relationship

Be it friendship, love, or family — it must go both ways.

If effort comes only from one side,
it stops being a relationship.

It becomes a responsibility.

You won’t notice the shift immediately.
But one day, you’ll feel tired without doing anything extra.

“A one-sided relationship doesn’t break loudly — it drains silently.”


Magic

Life will push you to a corner.

A place where nothing is left —
no money, no clarity, no support.

At that stage, nothing works except patience.

Just hold on.

When your mind starts asking,
“Will I survive?”
“Will this ever change?”

That’s when something shifts.

Not like a movie.
But in a way only you will understand.

“Magic is not instant — it is patience finally paying back.”


The Mind

We cannot be good to everyone.

If we try, one day we will become the person needing help —
and realise no one is there.

Helping is good.
But without boundaries, it becomes self-damage.

Learn to say no.

Not out of ego —
but out of awareness.

“If you don’t set boundaries, life will set limits for you.”


The Body

In your 20s, your body forgives everything.

Skip sleep. Skip food. Skip movement.
It adjusts.

But it remembers.

By 40, it doesn’t warn —
it responds.

Every shortcut becomes a symptom.

“Your body doesn’t forget — it settles the account later.”


Closing

26 years didn’t teach me how to win.

It taught me how life actually works.

Balance in relationships.
Patience in struggle.
Boundaries in mind.
Respect for the body.

Everything else is noise.

“Life doesn’t reward speed — it rewards balance.”

The Tamil Nadu Numbers Game: Why the Polls Still Don’t Settle the Verdict


Tamil Nadu’s election narrative is slowly turning into a classic numbers puzzle — the more data we see, the less certain the outcome feels.

Looking at the current poll of polls median, the DMK+ alliance sits around 110 seats, which is interestingly short of the 118 majority mark. On the other side, the opposition space is fragmented, with the NDA hovering in the mid-70s range and TVK emerging as a wildcard with around 20+ seats in the aggregated view.

But here is where things get a little uncomfortable from an analytical perspective.

Pollsters like Axis My India and Kamakhya Analytics are projecting extraordinary numbers for TVK. These are not marginal improvements — these projections significantly elevate TVK’s presence and, in turn, distort the overall poll-of-polls median. When one or two outlier datasets push a third player aggressively upward, it naturally pulls down the dominant alliance’s numbers in the average.

If we mentally normalize this — by questioning whether TVK’s surge is overestimated — the picture starts to shift.

My personal reading is more grounded:

  • DMK: ~105 seats
  • AIADMK: ~95 seats

This suggests a tight bipolar contest, rather than a three-cornered fragmentation as some polls imply.

The key question is simple:
👉 Is TVK really a 20+ seat player, or is it being over-amplified in select surveys?

If TVK underperforms these projections, the seats it “takes” in polls will naturally flow back into the DMK vs AIADMK equation, tightening the gap further.

That’s why, despite all the data available today, the reality is this:

  • DMK is ahead but not secure
  • AIADMK is behind but very much in the race
  • TVK remains the bigest uncertainty factor

In elections like Tamil Nadu, where voter behavior can swing quietly and decisively, outliers matter — but they can also mislead.

So for now, the numbers tell a story… but not the conclusion.

Let’s wait for the D-Day.

When Even ChatGPT Said “No”


Last weekend, I opened ChatGPT with a very specific goal.

Not for tech.
Not for business.

I wanted help drafting a message for my school WhatsApp group—
something sharp enough to correct a narrative,
subtle enough to avoid drama,
and smart enough that only the right people would understand.

Simple brief.

Or so I thought.

What I Wanted

In my head, it was clear:

“Say enough so insiders connect.
Push back without sounding defensive.
Create doubt where needed.
And close the topic.”

Basically…
a clean, well-worded counter.

What I Got

ChatGPT replied like a well-trained diplomat.

“Stay neutral”

“Avoid targeting individuals”

“Focus on general principles”


It gave me messages that sounded like: 👉 I had just returned from a leadership workshop

Balanced. Calm. Responsible.

Also… completely missing my mood.

Round After Round

So I pushed.

“Make it more direct.”
“Add clarity.”
“Give context.”
“Make people understand what actually happened.”

Each time, it improved structure…
but refused to cross a certain line.

It kept things:

measured

indirect

and annoyingly composed


Like someone who knows exactly where the boundary is—and refuses to step over it.

My Inner Commentary

At one point, I caught myself thinking:

“If this was a person, I would have handled it differently.”

With a human, you can:

push

persuade

emotionally influence

or at least make them bend a little


But here?

No ego.
No irritation.
No slipping.

Just the same calm pushback: 👉 “This is as far as I’ll go.”

The Turning Point

That’s when it got interesting.

I wasn’t just trying to draft a message anymore.

I was trying to make ChatGPT say what I felt.

And it simply wouldn’t.

Not because it didn’t understand…
but because it chose not to mirror my frustration

The Mirror I Didn’t Expect

Slowly, the focus shifted.

From: 👉 “Why isn’t this giving me what I want?”

To: 👉 “Why do I want it said this way so badly?”

Was I trying to:

clarify truth?

or control perception?


Was it about:

closure?

or impact?


Not very comfortable questions.

The Funny Realization

I even laughed at one point.

If this were a human:

I could argue

escalate

or just out-talk them

But ChatGPT?

You can’t “win” against it.

It doesn’t get tired.
It doesn’t get emotional.
It doesn’t try to win.

It just stays… steady.

Then It Was Easy. Today It Feels Hard. Here’s What I Realised About Business After 25 Years


I started doing business in 1999.

When I look back, it honestly feels like business was much easier those days.

The internet was new. Opportunities were everywhere. Every idea felt like a first-mover advantage. There were no ready-made frameworks, no plug-and-play tools. We had to build everything from scratch—but that itself was an advantage.

If you knew something slightly better than others, you could build a business around it.

Even systems around us were flexible. Governments were still catching up with technology. Payments were easier in many ways. I remember collecting USD payments from Indian customers through PayPal using their cards. Credit cards themselves were a form of bootstrapping. There were tax benefits and fewer compliance headaches.

Today, everything feels different.

There are frameworks for everything. Microservices, APIs, platforms—you don’t need to build from scratch anymore. But strangely, that has not made business easier. It has made it more crowded.

Customers are more informed. Competition is everywhere. Governments are fully aware and tightly regulating. There are caps, rules, taxes, tracking—nothing goes unnoticed.

Earlier, building was the challenge.
Now, standing out is the challenge.

When I sat and analysed this, I realised something important.

Business is not harder today.
It is just different.

In the early days, the advantage was in knowledge and access. Today, knowledge is everywhere. What matters now is execution, speed, and consistency.

Earlier, we built products and customers came.
Today, you need distribution first, then product.

Earlier, a new idea was enough.
Today, trust and systems matter more.

I also realised something else. I was unconsciously comparing two different phases of my life—my early, aggressive, high-energy phase with fewer responsibilities, and my current phase with financial pressure, family responsibility, and constraints.

That comparison is not fair.

The truth is, the game has changed. And I need to adapt to the new rules, not fight them.

That’s when I started looking at simpler, system-driven businesses. Businesses that generate regular income, that don’t depend on complex structures, and that can run with clear processes.

Maybe success today is not about building something revolutionary.

Maybe it is about building something that runs smoothly, every single day.

And honestly, that feels like a game I can still win.

Why My Mind Stayed Young for 20+ Years… and Suddenly Changed After 42


I always believed life moves in stages.

As a kid, we behave like a kid.
Then we become a boy.
Then a teenager.
Then a youth.

And I assumed this transformation happens automatically every 10 years.

But when I look at my own life, I see something different.

From 19 to 42, I didn’t feel much change inside.

My likes were the same.
My interests were the same.
My way of thinking was mostly the same.

I enjoyed friends, outings, long drives, eating outside… all the usual things.
And I never felt like I had “moved to the next stage.”

Now when I look back, I had a doubt:

Did I stretch my youth too long?


But today, I see it differently.

Life doesn’t change based on age.
It changes based on interest.

As long as something gives us meaning, we continue to stay there.

There is no force inside us that says: “Hey, you are 30 now, change your mindset.”

It doesn’t work like that.

We change only when something inside us says:

“This is enough.”


That “enough” came to me only after 42.

Suddenly, I started losing interest in things I once enjoyed.

Friends’ get-togethers didn’t excite me the same way.
Long drives didn’t feel special.
Eating out became just another activity.

Instead, I started liking silence.

I prefer sitting quietly rather than being in loud places.
I think more about my kids than myself.
I feel a natural pull towards spirituality instead of questioning everything.

Nothing forced this change.

It just happened.


That’s when I understood something important.

Maturity is not a timeline.
It is a shift in interest.

Some people change slowly every few years.
Some people stay the same for a long time…
and then change deeply in one phase.

I think I belong to the second type.


So no, I didn’t delay my maturity.

I simply stayed in one phase as long as it made sense to me.

And when it didn’t… I moved on.


Today, I don’t see this as losing my youth.

I see this as finding a different kind of life.

A life where peace feels better than noise.
Where silence feels richer than conversation.
Where thinking about my children feels more meaningful than thinking about myself.


If you are also feeling this shift, don’t question it.

You are not becoming boring.

You are just growing…
in a way that cannot be measured by age.