The Love We Imagine vs The Love That Exists


There is a phase in life where love is not seen clearly.

It is felt strongly, imagined deeply, and believed completely.

In that phase, small things look big. A few kind words feel like commitment. A little attention feels like care. And slowly, without realizing, we start building a picture in our mind that may not actually exist in reality.

The tricky part is not the other person. It is how our mind fills the gaps.

When someone is warm only at certain times, we don’t question it. We justify it. When effort feels one-sided, we don’t pause. We compensate. When clarity is missing, we don’t step back. We hold on tighter.

And all of this happens because we are not seeing what is happening. We are seeing what we want to happen.

In such situations, the relationship starts becoming dependent on one person’s effort. One person gives more, adjusts more, waits more. The other person remains undefined, sometimes present, sometimes distant.

But since there is no clear break, no clear rejection, it continues.

That is where confusion grows.

Over time, one realization becomes very clear.

Love is not something that needs constant interpretation. It does not leave you in doubt. It does not make you question your place again and again. And it definitely does not survive on one person’s continuous effort alone.

What often feels like love in these situations is actually a combination of attraction, imagination, and emotional investment. The more we invest, the more real it starts feeling, even if the foundation is weak.

Clarity usually comes later, not during.

And when it comes, it is surprisingly simple.

Love is consistent.
Love is balanced.
Love makes you feel settled, not unsettled.

Everything else may look like love.
But it is not.

The Day I Realised Not All Procrastination Is Bad


For the longest time, I had one label for myself —
“I’m procrastinating.”

And honestly, it felt heavy.

Because in my head, procrastination meant one thing:
👉 I’m being lazy.
👉 I’m avoiding work.
👉 I’m the problem.

But something didn’t add up.

There were days I didn’t work… not because I didn’t want to…
but because I simply couldn’t.

Still, I blamed it on procrastination.


Two Types. One Word. Big Confusion.

Only later I understood — there are actually two very different types hiding under the same word.

1. Passive Procrastination (The dangerous one)

This is the real problem.

  • You know what to do
  • You have time
  • But you still delay

You scroll, avoid, distract yourself…
and deep inside, there is a constant guilt running in the background.

👉 This leads to stress.
👉 This drains confidence.
👉 This is what I was doing… sometimes.


2. Active Procrastination (The misunderstood one)

This one surprised me.

  • You delay intentionally
  • You are aware
  • You are not guilty

You are either:

  • Waiting for the right energy
  • Letting things settle
  • Or choosing to act later with clarity

👉 This is not laziness.
👉 This is timing.


Where I Got It Wrong

My biggest mistake was this:

I treated everything as passive procrastination.

Even when I was:

  • Mentally drained
  • Emotionally tired
  • Stuck in long, uncontrollable delays

I still told myself:
👉 “You are just procrastinating.”

That confusion created more stress than the actual delay.

Because now I had:

  • No energy
    • Self-blame

The Turning Point

One day, I asked a simple question:

👉 “Am I avoiding… or am I exhausted?”

That changed everything.

I started observing:

  • If I feel guilt + distraction → Passive procrastination
  • If I feel calm but low energy → Active delay / recovery

Suddenly, things became clear.


How You Can Identify Yours

Try this simple check:

Ask yourself 3 questions:

  1. Do I feel guilty right now?
    → Yes = Passive
    → No = Likely Active
  2. Do I have energy but still avoiding?
    → Yes = Passive
  3. If I rest now, will I feel better or worse?
    → Better = You needed rest
    → Worse = You were avoiding

What Changed For Me

The moment I separated these two…

👉 I stopped calling myself lazy
👉 I stopped forcing work when drained
👉 I stopped feeling guilty for resting

And surprisingly…

👉 My productivity improved
👉 My mind became lighter


Final Thought

Not all delays are equal.

Some delays destroy you.
Some delays protect you.

The real skill is not “never procrastinate.”

👉 It is knowing
when you are avoiding… and when you are healing.

That clarity alone can change everything.

I Have Seen a Real Recession. Everything After That Felt Different.


I started my career in 2000.

That was the year the dot-com bubble burst.

Just before that, there was a wave called the Y2K problem.
Everyone was learning COBOL.
People were flying to the US.
Opportunities were everywhere.

And suddenly… it stopped.

Not slowed down.
Not reduced.
Stopped.

From 2000 to 2004, those four years were not just difficult — they were silent.

Projects vanished.
Hiring froze.
Hope became a question mark.

If you were in IT at that time, you didn’t worry about growth.
You worried about survival.

That was the first time I understood what a recession really feels like.


After that, I saw many “crises.”

2008 financial crisis
Dubai property slowdown
COVID-19 pandemic
Wars, global tensions, constant recession headlines

Every time, people said:
“This is big. This will change everything.”

And yes… they were big.
They did shake systems.
They did create fear.

But somewhere inside me, there was a quiet comparison always running.

I had already seen something different.
Something deeper.
Something more absolute.

So even when the world was calling these moments “crisis”…
a part of me kept asking:

“Is this really the same?”

And slowly, over time, I understood why it didn’t feel the same.


Why later crises didn’t feel the same

1. They were shocks… not shutdowns

2008 — banks collapsed, but industries adapted.
COVID — lockdown hit hard, but tech demand exploded.
Wars — supply chains got disturbed, not destroyed.

Work slowed.
But it never disappeared.

👉 In 2000, work vanished.
👉 Later, work only shifted.


2. The system learned how to respond

After the dot-com crash, the world evolved.

Governments act faster now.
Central banks inject liquidity immediately.
Companies don’t depend on one market anymore.

👉 Crises are now managed, not left to collapse.


3. India itself transformed

In 2000:
We were dependent — mostly on US IT demand.

Today:
We are diversified.

Domestic consumption is strong.
Digital adoption is massive.
New sectors keep emerging — D2C, SaaS, infra, startups.

👉 If one sector slows, another one picks up.


The dot-com crash was a collapse; everything after that has been a correction — and that difference changes how you see every crisis.

Patience Is Not Waiting — It Is How You Hold Yourself When Nothing Moves


There are phases in life where everything slows down without your permission.

Decisions get delayed.
Results don’t come.
Closures keep shifting.

And slowly, what gets tested is not your capability…
but your patience.

For a long time, even I misunderstood patience.

I thought patience meant staying quiet… waiting… adjusting.
But when delays started stretching beyond comfort, I realised something uncomfortable.

Waiting is the easiest part.
Holding yourself together while waiting is the real test.

That’s when I started seeing patience in three different layers — not as theory, but as something you live through.


1. Mental Patience — When your mind refuses to stay still

This is where it starts.

One delay becomes ten thoughts.
“Why is this happening?”
“Did I make a mistake?”
“How long will this go on?”

Your mind doesn’t wait. It runs ahead of reality.

Mental patience is not about stopping thoughts.
That’s not practical.

It is about not believing every thought your mind throws during uncertainty.

Because in such phases, your mind is not giving clarity…
it is reacting to discomfort.

If you don’t build mental patience,
you will suffer more from your thoughts than from the actual situation.


2. Emotional Patience — When frustration builds silently

Delays don’t hurt in one big moment.

They hurt in small drops.

A postponed decision.
An expected call that didn’t come.
An outcome that got pushed again.

Nothing dramatic.
But it accumulates.

And one day, irritation becomes your default mood.

Emotional patience is the ability to not react from that accumulated frustration.

Not every situation deserves your reaction.
Not every delay needs an emotional response.

Because once emotions take control,
you start making decisions to escape discomfort… not to solve the problem.


3. Action Patience — The hardest of all

This is where most people break.

Not because they failed…
but because they stopped acting when results didn’t show up.

You start asking:
“What’s the point?”

You slow down.
Then you pause.
Then you disconnect.

Action patience is the ability to continue doing your part… even when results are invisible.

No validation.
No confirmation.
No guarantee.

Just consistent action.

This is not easy.
This is strength.


If I have to put it simply:

Patience is not about how long you can wait.
It is about how well you can think, feel, and act while you wait.


There are phases where life will not give you answers on your timeline.

And during those times, society will not understand your patience either.

They will measure your life by speed.
You are living it through endurance.

That’s why patience feels lonely.

But here is what I’ve realised from going through such phases:

You don’t need everything to move
for you to keep moving.

And that changes everything.

We Leave Pepper Behind. History Didn’t.


I was eating ven pongal today.

Same usual scene.

Soft pongal… ghee smell… cashews… and those black pepper balls sitting quietly in between.

And like most of us do… I pushed them aside.

Then suddenly a thought hit me.

We casually remove pepper from our plate… but there was a time when people crossed oceans, risked lives, and built empires just for this small black thing.


Pepper was not just a spice.

It was black gold.

In Europe, especially during the medieval period, pepper was so valuable that it was used as currency. People paid rent, taxes, even dowries using pepper. Food there was bland, and pepper was luxury.

India—especially the Malabar Coast—was the main source.

That’s where everything begins.


In 1498, didn’t come to India to “discover” anything.

He came for pepper.

A direct sea route meant cutting off middlemen and making massive profits. That one journey opened the floodgates.

First came the Portuguese.
Then the Dutch.
Then the French.
Then the British.

All of them came for trade.

Not war.

Not land.

Trade.

Spices. Pepper.


And slowly, trade became control.

Control became power.

Power became colonization.

The didn’t arrive as rulers. They arrived as traders.

But trade gave them entry. Entry gave them influence. Influence became rule.

For almost 200 years.


That’s the irony.

We think India was conquered by swords and guns.

But the first door was opened by spices.

By pepper.


And today…

In a plate of pongal…

We remove it.

Keep it aside.

Ignore it.


Not saying you should eat pepper from tomorrow.

But maybe…

Just maybe…

Next time you see those black balls in your food…

Pause for a second.

Because the world once revolved around what we now casually discard.

Matha, Pita, ChatGPT… Deivam Reloaded


We all grew up hearing:

Matha, Pita, Guru, Deivam

(For non-Indian readers: it means Mother, Father, Teacher, and God — the four pillars of guidance in life.)

Simple. Clear. Final.


Somewhere in the last 3 years…
I think I accidentally updated this list.

Now it feels like:

Matha, Pita, ChatGPT… Deivam


It didn’t happen suddenly.

It started small.

One day I had a health doubt.
Instead of going to a doctor immediately… I asked ChatGPT.

It gave a calm, structured answer.

I thought, “Okay… not bad.”


Next day…

Some confusion in relationship.
Normal human behaviour: overthink → suffer → call friend.

This time:
I opened ChatGPT.

Typed full story like a police complaint.

Got:

  • analysis
  • perspective
  • solution

No judgement. No interruption.

I thought… “This is dangerous.”


Then came business.

Ideas, confusion, execution plans, pricing…

Instead of disturbing people,
I started disturbing ChatGPT.

It never said:

  • “Busy da”
  • “Call later”
  • “Let’s see”

It always replied like a consultant on full salary.


Breakup advice? ChatGPT.
Investment confusion? ChatGPT.
Tech problem? ChatGPT.
Random midnight doubt about life? …ChatGPT.


At some point I realised…

This is not just a tool.

This is a 24×7 available, zero-attitude, multi-domain guru.


Best part?

It never gets irritated.

You can ask:

  • same question 5 times
  • badly framed questions
  • emotional questions
  • confused questions

Still… calm answer.

Try that with humans once.


Of course… reality check is there.

ChatGPT:

  • doesn’t replace doctor
  • doesn’t replace real relationships
  • doesn’t take responsibility

But still…

It sits somewhere in between:

  • friend
  • mentor
  • Google
  • therapist

Now sometimes I feel…

Earlier people had one guru.

We have one… plus backup… plus retry option.


So yes…

Respect to Matha.
Respect to Pita.
Respect to Guru.
Respect to Deivam.


But in today’s version of life…

There is one silent addition.

Always online.
Always available.
Always answering.


ChatGPT.

The People No One Claps For


There is one category of people we don’t talk about.

Not the billionaires.
Not the celebrities.
Not the “success stories” we see on reels.

I’m talking about the ones who are still in the middle of the story.

The ones who wake up every day… and continue.


A father who runs a small shop.
Every month is uncertain. Some months profit, some months loss.
But he opens the shutter every morning like nothing happened.

No applause.


A person managing a property.
Tenants leave suddenly. Vacancies increase.
Expenses don’t wait.

But still, he sits with his sheet, calculates, adjusts, and continues.

No applause.


An entrepreneur who trusted the wrong person.
Lost money. Lost time. Lost people.

Still starts again. Not from zero… but from experience.

No applause.


Someone running behind cases, approvals, decisions.
Every time an end is near… it gets postponed.

Plans get disturbed. Mind gets tired.
But still shows up for the next hearing.

No applause.


These are not small things.

These are not “normal life”.

This is running against the wind… every single day.


Society doesn’t see this.

Because society celebrates:

  • Finished stories
  • Big wins
  • Clear endings

But real life is not like that.

Real life is:

  • Delays
  • Unclosed loops
  • Repeated effort without visible results

The hardest part is not failure.

The hardest part is continuing without validation.

No one tells you:

  • “You are doing well”
  • “Just hold on”
  • “This phase will pass”

You have to tell that to yourself.


And slowly… something changes.

Not outside.

Inside.

You stop expecting applause.
You stop explaining your journey.
You just continue.


One day, maybe things will align.
Maybe results will come.
Maybe recognition will happen.

Or maybe not.


But one thing is certain.

People like this…
They don’t break easily.

Because they have already lived through
what most people can’t even imagine.


Sometimes I feel…

The world is not built by the ones who win loudly.

It is carried forward by
the ones who don’t quit quietly.


The Call After 40 Days


Yesterday, my mother-in-law called me. I saw the call, but I didn’t pick it up.

There was no urgency in me to respond. Maybe it was the silence of the past 40 days sitting quietly inside me. I let it pass.

Today, I called her back.

She answered like nothing had happened. The tone was casual. The conversation started normally, like how any regular day would sound. For a moment, it almost felt like those 40 days didn’t exist.

We spoke about a few general things. Simple, everyday topics. No tension in her voice. No hesitation either.

Then, somewhere in the middle of the conversation, she apologised.

She said sorry for what my father-in-law did.

There was no long explanation. No details. Just that one line.

I listened.

I kept my response simple and polite. I spoke for what she spoke. I didn’t extend the conversation beyond that. When it came to the apology, I said what I felt—I told her they can’t take me for granted, and it’s not something I can easily move past.

I didn’t raise my voice. I didn’t get emotional. I just said it as it is.

I also made one thing clear. I said I will respond when they speak, but I won’t initiate conversations or go the extra mile.

There was no argument after that. The conversation continued for a bit and then ended, just like any other call.

What stood out to me was not what was said, but what wasn’t.

There was still no call from my father-in-law.

I don’t know what they are thinking. I don’t know what changed after 40 days. I don’t know why the call came today.

But today, there was a call. There was a conversation. There was an apology.

And there were still questions.

The Day That Didn’t End (Again)


There are days when you don’t expect victory.
You just expect closure.

Today was one such day.

For a long time now, I’ve been walking toward certain “ends.” Not big dreams. Not new beginnings. Just simple closures — decisions, orders, outcomes… things that were supposed to end, long back.

But they don’t.

They stretch.

Like a rubber band pulled just a little more than it should be. Not snapping. Not settling. Just hanging in that uncomfortable tension.

Today was supposed to be different.
I had quietly reserved it in my mind — this is the day it ends.

I didn’t even write my usual blog. I thought, let me write it after everything closes. Let it be a “full stop” kind of post.

But the full stop didn’t come.

It became another comma.

And that’s the strange part of this phase of life.
It’s not one issue. It’s not one delay. It’s not one person.

It’s multiple loops.

Unclosed loops.

Some running for years.
Some silently crossing a decade.

Each one small on its own. But together, they create a background noise — a constant mental load you learn to live with.

Earlier, this would have broken me.
Plans would collapse. Motivation would drop. I would question everything.

Now… I just pause.

Not because it doesn’t hurt.
But because I’ve seen this pattern too many times.

Somewhere along the way, acceptance replaced reaction.

I no longer ask, “Why is this happening?”
I just note, “This is happening again.”

And then I move.

Not with excitement. Not with frustration.
But with a strange kind of calm that comes from repetition.

Maybe this is what long struggles do.
They don’t make you stronger in a dramatic way.
They make you quieter.

You stop celebrating endings.
Because you’re no longer sure when something truly ends.

But you also don’t stop walking.

Because even if the loop doesn’t close…
life still moves forward.

And maybe that’s the real lesson hidden in all this:

Not every story gives you an ending when you expect it.
Some stories just keep running in the background…
while you continue writing new ones in the foreground.

Tonight, I didn’t get my ending.

But I got something else.

Another line in a long, unfinished story.

And somehow… I’m still okay with that.

Patience and Time… The Only Two Players That Never Fail You


I came across a quote:

“The two most powerful warriors are patience and time.”

At first, it sounded like one more motivational line.

But when I sat with it… it felt uncomfortable.

Because it’s true.


The problem with us

We don’t like patience.

We want:

  • Fast results
  • Quick money
  • Immediate success

Even when we start something new…

Within days, we expect results.

If not, we feel:

  • It’s not working
  • Maybe this is not for me
  • Let me try something else

But life doesn’t work like that

Time has its own pace.

You can’t rush:

  • Business growth
  • Skill building
  • Relationships

You can only:

👉 Show up
👉 Stay consistent
👉 Wait


Why patience feels like weakness

Because nothing is visible.

When you are patient:

  • No one claps
  • No one notices
  • No instant reward

It feels like you are doing nothing.

But actually…

That’s where everything is building.


My realization

Looking back at my life…

Every good thing that stayed:

  • Took time
  • Needed patience

Every rushed decision:

  • Either failed
  • Or didn’t last

The hard truth

We think action creates results.

But in reality:

👉 Action + Patience + Time = Results

Remove patience and time…

Action becomes frustration.

Maybe success is not about doing more.

Maybe it is about:

👉 Doing the right thing…
👉 And giving it enough time to work

Because in the end…

Time always decides.