The Forest Theory of People: Why Different Personalities Keep the World Running


When we look at people, we often try to label them.

Good.
Bad.
Cunning.
Smart.
Spiritual.
Selfish.

But what if we are looking at it the wrong way?

What if people are not “good or bad”…
but part of a living ecosystem, just like a forest?


Think of Society Like a Forest

In a forest, you will find:

  • A deer that peacefully eats plants
  • A fox that survives with cleverness
  • A lion or tiger that hunts
  • An elephant that carries strength and stability

No one questions them.

No one says:

  • “Why is the tiger killing?”
  • “Why is the fox so cunning?”

Because every one of them has a role.


Now Look at People the Same Way

In our world:

  • Some people are like deer → calm, simple, and peaceful
  • Some are like foxes → smart, strategic, and opportunistic
  • Some are like elephants → responsible, stable, system builders
  • Some are like lions → powerful and authoritative
  • Some are like tigers → independent and bold
  • Some are like owls → wise and spiritual
  • Some are like monkeys → expressive and communicative

And yes…
Some are like snakes → silent, unpredictable, and sometimes dangerous


The Truth We Often Miss

We try to build a world where everyone is “good.”

But imagine this:

  • If everyone is soft → nothing moves
  • If everyone is aggressive → everything breaks
  • If everyone is spiritual → nothing gets built
  • If everyone is practical → no compassion exists

👉 Balance comes from difference, not sameness.


Conflict is Not Always Wrong

In a forest:

  • The deer fears the tiger
  • The fox tricks others
  • The lion dominates

Yet the forest survives.

Why?

Because each one creates movement, pressure, and balance

The same applies to people.

The people who challenge you, irritate you, or even hurt you…
are also part of the system that shapes growth.


A Personal Realization

At different stages of life, we become different animals:

  • When young → bold like a tiger
  • When building → strong like an elephant
  • When reflecting → wise like an owl

Life is not about being one thing.
It is about adapting within the ecosystem.


Last But Not The Least

The world doesn’t run because people are good.
It runs because people are different.

The real wisdom is not judging people…
but understanding:

  • Who they are
  • What role they play
  • How to deal with them

Because once you see life as a forest,
you stop expecting deer from a tiger…
and you start navigating the world better.


From Fighting Parents to Protecting Family: The Two Lives of an Entrepreneur


There was a time when I had nothing to lose.

Late teens. Raw energy. Zero experience.
Just one dangerous thing — belief.

When I first spoke about entrepreneurship at home, it was brushed off as random talk.
But when I didn’t stop… when I kept pushing, questioning, exploring — it became uncomfortable.

Concern turned into pressure.
Pressure turned into resistance.

But something interesting happened.

I didn’t stop.

Because at that age, I had one powerful advantage —
I could invest time without fear.

I spent years, not money.
4–5 years of learning, failing, meeting people, asking questions, understanding how the real world works.

Failures didn’t feel expensive.
They felt like progress.

Time was my capital.
Curiosity was my currency.


Fast forward.

Same person.
Different life.

Now there is a wife. Kids. Responsibilities.
No one is stopping me anymore.

But strangely… I feel more restricted.

Not by people.
But by responsibility.

Earlier, I could risk everything because I owned nothing.
Now, I hesitate — because I own responsibilities.

The risk appetite changes silently.

I no longer experiment freely.
I calculate.

I don’t invest time recklessly.
I protect it.

I don’t risk money for passion.
I park it in safe assets.

And yes — those assets give stability.
They give residual income.
They give safety.

But they don’t give that feeling.

That raw excitement.
That thrill of trying something uncertain.
That joy of failing and still moving forward.


This is the untold shift in an entrepreneur’s life.

In your early years,
you fight your parents to follow your dream.

In your later years,
you become the parent — protecting stability over uncertainty.

And somewhere in between,
a question keeps echoing quietly:

“When did I stop taking risks… and start managing life?”


Maybe the answer is not to go back.
Not to become reckless again.

But to find a middle ground.

Where responsibility and risk can coexist.
Where safety funds survival…
and courage fuels meaning.

Because deep down, every entrepreneur knows:

We don’t just want to be safe.
We want to feel alive.

The Slow Theft of Youth — And the Silent Rise of Who We Become


There was a time when attraction was simple.

A smile on screen.
A face that stayed in mind.
Crushes that felt real, even if they were distant.

For me, it was names like Raveena Tandon, Bhanu Priya, Simran… they weren’t just actresses, they were emotions of a phase. That phase where life was light, uncomplicated, and filled with small excitements.

Today, something has changed.

Not suddenly. Not dramatically.
But quietly… almost invisibly.

Those things don’t pull me anymore.

And that’s when it hits me —
age doesn’t just add years, it slowly takes away what once mattered.


Friendships too have changed.

Not broken.
Not ended.
Just… distanced.

We still care. We still remember.
But access is gone.

Between children, responsibilities, work, and survival, the space to just “be there” for each other has shrunk.

Earlier, a call meant hours.
Now, even a message waits.

It’s not lack of love.
It’s lack of life bandwidth.


And then comes experience.

The good ones make us smile.
But it’s the not-so-good ones that leave a mark.

Failures. Betrayals. Loss.
Moments where reality hits harder than expectation.

Those are the moments that shape us.

Not gently.
But forcefully.

They start changing how we think…
How we react…
How we trust…

Slowly, piece by piece,
they rebuild us into someone new.


Sometimes I wonder…

Am I becoming better?
Or just becoming different?

Because the person I am today
is not the same kid,
not the same teenager,
not even the same man I thought I would be.

And that realization is both powerful… and uncomfortable.


Age doesn’t just grow us.

It filters us.

It removes illusions.
It reduces noise.
It reshapes identity.

And sometimes…
it quietly takes over who we once were.


But maybe that’s the point.

Maybe life is not about holding on to who we were.

Maybe it’s about accepting
who we are becoming.

The Day I Walked Away From Everything I Thought Was Mine


2008 didn’t just take away my company.

It took away people.

A partner I once called my best friend.
A love I believed was real.

Both gone.
Both unreal, as I painfully discovered.

That phase didn’t feel like loss.
It felt like being cut open… slowly… while still alive.

I still remember one day very clearly.

I got ready like any normal day — neatly dressed, wearing my Woodland shoes.
I told myself I’ll go watch a movie at Mayajaal. Maybe that would help.

I reached there.

But I couldn’t walk in.

Something inside me refused.

Instead, I just started walking.

No plan. No destination.

From Mayajaal… all the way to Mahabalipuram.

Tears didn’t stop.
Thoughts didn’t stop.

My mind kept replaying everything —
Was it all fake?
Was I living a dream that never existed?
How did everything collapse so fast?

At times, I don’t even remember parts of that walk.
There were moments of blankness… like my mind was shutting down to protect itself.

I don’t know how I walked that distance.
I don’t know how I came back.

I just did.

Years have passed.

Today, I have accepted what happened.
Life moved forward.
People moved on.
Even karma, in its own way, has done its job.

But acceptance is not the same as understanding.

Some questions never got answers.

Why did it happen?
Why did people change?
Was I blind… or just trusting?

I don’t carry anger anymore.

But I carry those questions.

Silently.

Because sometimes in life…
you don’t get closure.

You just learn to live without it.

Three Times My Blood Pressure Warned Me — My Story of Falling and Rising Again


I first discovered I had high blood pressure in July 2024.

It wasn’t during a crisis.
It was a simple checkup at an Ayurvedic hospital.

The reading was 163/99.
I weighed 98 kg.

Doctors didn’t panic.
They calmly pointed out the root causes:

  • Overweight
  • Fatty liver

That day, I decided to act.

I followed a strict routine:

  • 16:8 intermittent fasting
  • Regular exercise
  • Ayurvedic medicines

Within a few months, I lost 10 kg.
By December, my BP was back to normal.


Then came May 2025.

My kids had summer vacation.
We travelled — Munnar, Yercaud, Palani.

Food became enjoyment.
Routine slowly disappeared.

After that, I moved to Chennai.
My mother was in the US.
Most days, I survived on outside food.

No structure.
No discipline.

By July, my BP shot up again — 173/120.
My weight was around 90 kg.

I knew the path by then.

I returned to:

  • Intermittent fasting
  • Gym
  • Ayurvedic support

And again, my BP came down.


But I didn’t fully learn.

A week ago, it happened again.

This time, the reading was 178/118.

What surprised me was this: All my medical reports were normal.

No major issue.
No clear disease.


So I changed approach.

Instead of medicines, I focused on basics:

  • Reduced salt intake
  • Practiced breathing exercises
  • Brought back routine

Within a week, my BP normalized.


But there was one more struggle.

At night, when I lay down,
mucus drained into my throat.

It caused continuous coughing.
It disturbed my sleep.

And that’s when everything connected.


Across all three phases, one thing was common:

  • Bad food habits
  • Disturbed sleep

Not stress.
Not genetics.
Not some unknown disease.

Just broken discipline.


Today, I understand something very clearly.

My body is not weak.
It responds fast — both ways.

When I am disciplined, it heals quickly.
When I slip, it reacts immediately.


This is not just my BP story.

It is a pattern.

A reminder that health is not built once.
It is maintained daily.


The Myth of Strength: Why Survival Needs Direction, Not Positivity


He once believed strong people were calm, composed, and unshaken.

Then life showed him something different.

He had seen stories like Andy Dufresne (The Shawshank Redemption)  often glorified as a man who stayed mentally free inside prison.

But when he looked closer, he saw a different truth.

Andy wasn’t free.

He was beaten.
He was humiliated.
He lost people who mattered.
He was thrown into isolation.

There were days he must have felt broken.

Yet, something about him didn’t collapse.


That’s when it struck him:

Strength is not about feeling good.
It is about not losing direction when nothing feels right.


He started observing people around him.

Men dealing with:

  • endless legal battles
  • health issues that punish even small mistakes
  • businesses that stop just when they begin
  • families that don’t understand

From outside, they looked inconsistent.

Starting. Stopping. Struggling.

But a few of them had something different.

They didn’t chase motivation.
They didn’t pretend to be positive.

They did something quieter.


They anchored.

Not to success.
Not to outcomes.

But to direction.


One man, for example, stopped trying to fix everything.

He reduced his life to three things:

  • Eat in a way his body doesn’t punish him
  • Do one small piece of work daily
  • Avoid reacting to every external disturbance

That was it.

No big plans.
No grand comeback strategy.

Just daily anchoring.


At first, it looked like nothing was happening.

But slowly:

  • his health stopped fluctuating
  • his mind stopped spiraling
  • his work stopped breaking

Not growing fast.
But not collapsing either.


That’s when the real understanding came.

Life doesn’t always need acceleration.
Sometimes, it needs stability long enough for the storm to pass.


Most people fail here.

Not because life is hard.

But because they keep expecting life to behave normally during abnormal phases.


Mental anchoring is not:

  • staying positive
  • suppressing frustration
  • acting strong

It is simply this:

Choosing a direction… and refusing to abandon it… even on bad days.


He no longer admired people who looked strong.

He started respecting people who stayed consistent in chaos.

Because that is harder.

And rarer.


Not everyone escapes fast.

But those who anchor…

Eventually, they do.


Why He Couldn’t Start — And Why That Was the Right Decision


There was a man who always wanted to start a business.

Not just any business — something of his own. Something meaningful. Something that could change his life.

He had ideas.
He had experience.
He had seen success before.

But every time he sat down to begin… something stopped him.

He would open his laptop.
Think for a while.
And then close it.

Days became weeks.
Weeks became months.

He started asking himself:

“Why am I like this?”
“Am I becoming lazy?”
“Have I lost my courage?”

The more he questioned himself, the heavier he felt.

One day, he paused.

Not to work.
Not to plan.
Just to observe his own life.

And then he saw it clearly.

His mind was not refusing business.

It was refusing pressure.

Because his life was already full of unfinished chapters.

There were legal matters dragging in the background.
There were health concerns at home.
There was his own body still recovering.
There were family tensions that drained his peace.
And on top of all this, there was uncertainty about income.

Each of these was not small.

Each of these was an open loop.

And his mind was trying to hold all of them together.

Starting a business is not just about ideas.

It needs:

– clarity
– energy
– the courage to take risks

But his system was not in that state.

It was in survival mode.

A silent mode that says:

“Don’t take more risk now.”
“First stabilize what is already shaking.”

That day, something changed.

He stopped calling himself lazy.

He stopped feeling guilty.

Instead, he understood something powerful:

Sometimes, not starting is also intelligence.

He didn’t quit his dream.

He simply postponed the timing.

He decided:

– close a few open loops
– regain stability
– rebuild energy

And then return stronger.

Because a business started in clarity grows.

A business started in chaos struggles.

If you are in a similar place, remember this:

You are not weak.

You are not incapable.

Your mind is protecting you.

And sometimes,
the strongest decision is to wait… until you are ready to move forward with full strength.

When Salary Pride Attacks Asset Builders


Something interesting happened to me recently.

A family argument suddenly opened my eyes to a strange mindset gap that exists in many Indian families.

The argument was about money. But not really about money.

It was about how different generations understand income.

For many people of the older generation, success is simple to measure. A man wakes up every morning, goes to a job, gets a salary at the end of the month and runs his family. That model is clear, visible and respectable.

Salary equals pride.

Anything outside that formula confuses them.

Business income looks uncertain.
Investment income looks suspicious.
Rental income looks like “easy money”.

Recently I heard a statement thrown at me — that I am sitting and living from my wife’s income.

Ironically, the reality is very different.

My father-in-law’s pension, his rental income and my brother-in-law’s salary together are still only about 60% of what my assets generate every month.

Yet the arrogance with which the accusation was made was astonishing.

That moment made me realize something very interesting.

People respect visible effort, not necessarily actual income.

A man who goes to office every day, complains about workload and shows his salary slip is immediately seen as responsible.

But someone who spends years building assets, reinvesting income and creating rental streams looks like he is “doing nothing”.

The effort is invisible.

Asset builders usually spend years quietly reinvesting money. Loans are taken. EMIs are paid. Profits are pushed back into the next asset. The income grows slowly and silently.

From the outside, it looks like nothing is happening.

This is where the misunderstanding begins.

Older generations were trained to believe that job equals security. In their time, that was true. But the world has changed.

Today, long-term financial stability often comes from assets, not salaries.

A salary stops the day a job stops.

Assets continue working even when you sleep.

But mindsets built decades ago don’t update easily.

And sometimes when people don’t understand something, they attack it.

The funny part is this — I rarely react to my in-laws’ opinions. I have never interfered in their matters or spoken badly about them. I usually ignore things and move on.

But when someone questions your integrity or dignity, especially without understanding the reality, the silence naturally breaks.

Still, this entire episode taught me something valuable.

Sometimes the loudest opinions about success come from people who are measuring the world with a very outdated ruler.

And if someone still believes salary slips define a man while ignoring the assets he has built, then the real limitation is not financial — it is simply a stubborn old ego refusing to upgrade its software.

If Work Doesn’t Look Tiring, Is It Even Work?


There is a strange rule many of us grew up watching.

If work looks tiring, people respect it.

If work looks calm, people doubt it.

This is what I call the Effort Bias.

Older generations grew up in a world where hard work was always visible. A man would leave home early, go to office, sit at a desk all day, return tired in the evening and collect a salary at the end of the month.

That routine itself became proof of effort.

Government jobs, office work, shopkeeping, running a small business — all of these had one thing in common. They looked busy. They looked exhausting.

And because they looked exhausting, people respected them.

But the world of work has quietly changed.

Today a lot of wealth is created through thinking, planning and building systems.

Some people spend their time:

planning investments
structuring finances
negotiating deals
building rental assets
managing long-term investments

None of this looks dramatic from the outside.

There are no uniforms.
No punching attendance.
No visible rush every morning.

Sometimes it simply looks like someone is sitting quietly and thinking.

To someone who believes effort must look physically tiring, this can feel very confusing.

The conclusion they quickly jump to is simple:

“He is just sitting and doing nothing.”

But the irony is that some of the most powerful work happens exactly like this — quietly.

Instead of working every day for money, some people spend years building systems that make money work every day for them.

Assets are created.
Investments grow.
Income streams multiply.

And once those systems are built, they keep generating income even when the person is not physically working every day.

It may not look impressive to someone watching from the outside.

But sometimes the calmest looking work is the one doing the heaviest lifting behind the scenes.

The problem is not that the work is small.

The problem is that the effort is invisible.

The System Trap: Why Some Hardworking People Stay Poor


One common sentence we hear everywhere is this:

“If people work hard, they can become successful.”

It sounds good. It motivates people. But the reality is not always that simple.

I have seen many people in my life who work incredibly hard. Street vendors waking up at 4 AM. Small shop owners sitting in their stores for 14 hours a day. Daily wage workers sweating under the sun.

Yet many of them remain poor for decades.

So the question is — if effort alone creates wealth, why are these people still struggling?

Slowly I started realizing something uncomfortable.

Sometimes poverty is not created by people. It is created by systems.

Look at how many hurdles a small person faces.

A tiny shop owner has to deal with taxes, licenses, inspections, compliance, and endless paperwork. Rules change, interpretations change, and sometimes even officials interpret the same rule differently on different days.

If the rule book is confusing, power shifts to the person interpreting it.

And that is where harassment, delays and corruption quietly enter the system.

Large companies can hire lawyers, accountants and consultants. A small entrepreneur cannot.

Another interesting thing is how systems sometimes reward those who know how to manipulate them. Some people learn the shortcuts, exploit loopholes, or use connections.

Meanwhile, the honest person trying to follow every rule gets stuck in the slowest lane.

Even access to money is unequal. A rich person can get loans at lower interest rates, while the poor often borrow at much higher rates.

Education, legal systems, property rights, infrastructure — everything slowly stacks up either as a ladder or a barrier.

At some point I realized a powerful truth:

“People are poor not because they lack effort, but because systems limit opportunity.”

Hard work matters. But the environment around that hard work matters even more.

A good system can turn ordinary people into successful entrepreneurs.

A bad system can trap hardworking people in poverty for generations.

Sometimes the difference between prosperity and poverty is not talent, intelligence or effort.

It is simply the design of the system.