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.

We Grew Up Before “Seen” Receipts — And Honestly, We Survived Miraculously


I was born in the 80s.

Which means I belong to a very special generation.

The last batch of humans who lived a full life…
with absolutely no evidence.

No photos.
No videos.
No screenshots.
No “last seen at 2:17 AM.”

Just stories. And witnesses who may or may not support you.


Childhood in the 80s

We didn’t “hang out.”
We disappeared.

Morning 9 AM — leave home.
Return — when the street lights turn on.

That was the only rule.

No phone calls.
No GPS.
No “share live location.”

Parents just had blind faith… or strong blood pressure.

In India, it was cricket on the street.
In the US, it was bikes, backyards, and baseball.

Same story. Different accent.

We all had that one friend who said,
“Don’t worry, nothing will happen.”

That friend is the reason many things happened.


Teenage years — 90s

This was peak danger.

We had freedom… but no documentation.

We said things.
We did things.
We went places.

And today, all of it exists only as:

“Bro, remember that day?”

That’s it.

No proof. No replay. No viral moment.

Just mutual silence.


The biggest blessing

Today, one wrong move becomes:

  • A reel
  • A meme
  • A life-long digital record

Back then?

It became:

“A story we will never tell our parents.”

There is a big difference.


Imagine if we had smartphones

If smartphones existed back then:

Half of us:

  • Would not have jobs
  • Would not have reputations
  • Would not be allowed in family functions

Because everything we did would be: Recorded. Shared. Replayed. Judged.

Instead, we got lucky.

Our stupidity expired in memory… not in the cloud.


The unspoken agreement

Every 80s kid knows this rule:

“What happened… stays in that time.”

No one digs it up.
No one verifies it.
No one posts “throwback evidence.”

We all silently agreed:

Let the past remain… unsearchable.


Final thought

People say today’s generation is smarter.

Maybe.

But we were freer.

Not because we were better.

But because:

We lived in a time where mistakes had an expiry date.

“I Make $100 a Day Trading…” — But No One Will Tell Me How


I have a few friends who are into day trading.

Not long-term investing. Not business.

Just buy… sell… and make money — every single day.

According to them, life is simple.

“Bro, I make $50 to $100 daily.”

I smiled.

But inside… my brain started doing math.

👉 $100 × 20 days = $2,000/month
👉 No boss. No office. No pressure
👉 Just a laptop… and money flowing in

At that moment, I genuinely questioned my life choices.


Then came the obvious question

So I asked them:

“How does it work?”

And suddenly…

  • One said: “It’s experience, you won’t get it now.”
  • Another: “You need to understand market psychology.”
  • One more: “You have to feel the market.”

I was like…

👉 Are we talking about trading… or learning martial arts from a master?


The funny part

These same friends:

  • Share profit screenshots
  • Talk with full confidence
  • Say “I rarely lose”
  • Exit as soon as they hit their daily target

But when it comes to explaining the method…

Total silence.

Not even one clear step.

At one point, I honestly wondered:

👉 Do they think I’ll learn it in one day and become their competition?


That’s where my doubt started

If something is:

  • So consistent
  • So predictable
  • So “easy”

Then why:

👉 No one explains it clearly?
👉 No one teaches it properly?
👉 No one scales it to millions quietly?

That’s when a different thought hit me.


What if the story is incomplete?

What if:

  • The $100 profit days are real…
  • But the $300 loss days are never mentioned?

What if:

  • They exit early on good days…
  • But struggle silently on bad ones?

What if:

  • It’s not a fixed system…
  • But a mix of experience, luck, and timing?

The reality I’m starting to see

Day trading might look like:

👉 Small daily wins

But actually be:

👉 Uneven results over time

Some days up.
Some days down.
Some days confusing.

And the bad days?

They don’t make it to the conversation.

Now when someone says:

“I make money daily trading…”

I don’t jump in with excitement.

I pause.

I think.

And yes… I get a little skeptical.

Not because they’re lying.

But because:

👉 They might only be telling the good part of the story.

Everything Feels in Control… Until Health Slips


There was a time I thought life is all about control.

Earn money.
Build wealth.
Chase success.
Create happiness.

Everything looked like a system.

If you lose money — you can earn again.
If you fail — you can try again.
If you feel low — you can change your environment and bounce back.

It all looked controllable.

At least, that’s what I believed.


But slowly, life shows you something deeper.

There is one thing…
That quietly sits above everything.

Health.


If money is lost, you can work harder.
If business fails, you can rebuild.
If happiness fades, you can recreate it.

But when health starts slipping…

Everything changes.


Money starts flowing out instead of coming in.
Your energy to work disappears.
Your ability to fight, to persist, to dream… reduces.

Even success — if already achieved — starts feeling meaningless.

And happiness?

It can disappear in seconds.


That’s when you realize something uncomfortable.

Health is the real controller of everything.

Not money.
Not success.
Not even happiness.


The truth is — health is not fully in our control.

There are conditions, surprises, genetics, age… things we cannot predict or stop completely.

But…

There is another truth.


We still have partial control.

We can control:

  • What we eat
  • How we sleep
  • How we manage stress
  • How much we move our body
  • What habits we build daily

These small controls don’t guarantee perfect health.

But they reduce the chances of disaster.


After a certain age, priorities quietly shift.

Not by choice…
But by experience.

You don’t chase only growth.
You start protecting stability.

You don’t just build wealth.
You start protecting your body.


Because somewhere you understand:

If health stands strong, everything else is still possible.

If health falls…

Everything else becomes fragile.


This is not fear.

This is awareness.


So today, I’m not just thinking about money, success, or happiness.

I’m thinking about something more basic.

How do I protect the only thing that protects everything else?


Maybe that’s the real question we should all start asking.


When Life Feels Against You — I Stopped Fighting and Found Peace


There are phases in life where nothing seems to go your way.

Health acts up.
Money feels tight.
Plans don’t move.
People misunderstand you.
And somehow… everything happens at the same time.

I recently went through a phase like this.

For a while, I kept asking the same question in my head:
“Why is everything against me?”

The more I asked, the more restless I became.

Then I realized something important.


Inner peace is not when life becomes perfect

We all think peace means:

  • Problems solved
  • Money flowing
  • Health perfect
  • Everything under control

But that’s not peace. That’s ideal conditions.

Real peace is this:

Being okay… even when things are not okay.

That was my first shift.


I stopped fighting everything

Earlier, my mind was constantly resisting:

  • “This shouldn’t happen”
  • “Why now?”
  • “When will this end?”

That resistance was exhausting.

So I tried something different.

I told myself:

“Maybe this is just a phase. Let me handle it properly instead of fighting it.”

Just like in business — when the market is down, you don’t fight the market.
You slow down, conserve energy, and prepare.

That one thought reduced half my stress.


The real problem was not life… it was my thoughts

I noticed something strange.

Even when I slept, my mind didn’t stop.
Thoughts were running continuously.

That’s when I understood:

The problem is not just what is happening.
The problem is how much I am thinking about it.

So I started doing something very simple.

Every day, I sit quietly for 10 minutes.

I don’t try to control anything.
I just watch my thoughts like traffic on a road.

Slowly, the noise reduced.


I focused on calming my body

When the body is stressed, the mind becomes worse.

So instead of trying big solutions, I did small things:

  • Slow breathing (longer exhale)
  • Simple walking
  • No overdoing techniques

Nothing fancy.

But it helped.

Because when the body calms down, the mind follows.


I reduced my life to basics

At one point, I was thinking about everything:

  • Future plans
  • Problems
  • Responsibilities
  • Big decisions

It was too much.

So I made a rule:

For some time, I will only focus on:

  1. My health
  2. My family
  3. Daily stability

That’s it.

No big goals. No expansion thinking.

And surprisingly… that brought peace.


I changed how I see this phase

Instead of thinking:

“Everything is going wrong”

I started thinking:

“This is my slow phase. A phase where I am forced to pause and rebuild.”

Not exciting. Not glamorous.
But necessary.

Sometimes life slows you down… not to punish you, but to reset you.


What I keep telling myself now

Whenever things feel heavy, I repeat one line:

“This phase will pass.”

Not as motivation.
Just as truth.

Because every phase in life — good or bad — has always passed.


Final Thought

If you are also going through a phase where everything feels against you…

Don’t try to fix everything immediately.

  • Calm your mind
  • Stabilize your body
  • Reduce your focus
  • Take one day at a time

Peace doesn’t come when life becomes perfect.

It comes when you stop panicking about life being imperfect.

I Thought It Was Insomnia… But My Brain Wasn’t Sleeping


For the last few months, I’ve been struggling with sleep.

Not the typical “I can’t sleep” problem.
I do sleep. But when I wake up, I feel tired.

And the strange part?
I remember my thoughts while sleeping.

That made me question — is this insomnia?

I checked. It wasn’t.

Someone suggested it could be sleep apnea. I reduced weight. I started exercising. I even tried getting physically tired so I could sleep better.

Still, the problem didn’t go away.

That’s when I realized something important —
my body was sleeping, but my brain was still active.


🧠 What’s Actually Happening

After digging deeper and discussing with ChatGPT, the explanation made a lot of sense.

This is not just a sleep issue. It’s a recovery issue.

There are three layers to it:

  • Mild or hidden sleep apnea — even if weight reduces, breathing interruptions can still exist
  • Overactive brain — constant thinking, problem-solving, stress doesn’t switch off at night
  • Nervous system imbalance — body stuck in “alert mode” instead of “rest mode”

That hit me.

Because if I look at my life — business thoughts, responsibilities, ongoing issues — my brain is always “on”.

So even during sleep, it doesn’t fully shut down.

That’s why I wake up tired.


🛠️ What ChatGPT Recommended

Instead of treating it like insomnia, the solution was surprisingly practical.

1. Calm the brain before sleep

No business thinking, no problem-solving at night.
Write everything down before sleeping — like telling the brain “we’ll handle it tomorrow.”


2. Slow breathing (not aggressive breathing)

Simple pattern:

  • Inhale → 4 seconds
  • Exhale → 6–8 seconds

This shifts the body into a relaxed state.


3. Improve sleep posture

Sleep on the side, not flat on the back.
This helps even if there is mild apnea.


4. Reduce night stimulation

No heavy food, no late caffeine, no intense conversations.


5. Morning reset

Sunlight + a short walk within 30 minutes of waking up.

This resets the internal body clock.


🧭 My Realization

This is not about sleep.

This is about a mind that doesn’t know how to rest anymore.

And honestly, many of us who are constantly thinking, building, worrying — fall into this trap.


🚀 What I’m Going to Do

I’m not jumping into medication.

I’m going to follow this routine strictly for the next 30 days.

  • Night brain dump
  • Slow breathing
  • Side sleeping
  • Morning sunlight

Let’s see what happens.

I’ll come back and write an update blog after a month — whether this worked or not.

Because this is one problem I know many people silently struggle with.

The Silent Power of a Woman: How She Can Build, Break, or Balance a Man


Since 2004, I’ve been watching.

Friends getting married.
Young men full of energy, ambition, clarity.
And then… life happening.

It’s been more than 22 years now.

And I’ve seen everything.

I’ve seen a sharp, promising youth slowly fade into mediocrity.
No big failure. No big incident. Just… a gradual settling.

I’ve also seen a directionless, confused guy become stable, responsible, and grounded — purely because of the person he married.

I’ve seen a drunkard reform.
And I’ve seen a teetotaler become a 24/7 alcoholic.

Same life stage. Same age group. Same opportunities.

Different outcomes.


At some point, a thought hit me:

The person you choose can change the direction of your life.

Not loudly.
Not immediately.
But consistently.

Day after day.


There is something we don’t talk about openly.

We think success or failure is about:

  • Hard work
  • Intelligence
  • Luck
  • Timing

All true.

But we underestimate one silent force:

👉 The person we live with.


In psychology, there’s something called emotional contagion.

It means we slowly absorb:

  • Attitudes
  • Habits
  • Energy
  • Even thinking patterns

From the people closest to us.

Without realizing it.

And when that person is your life partner, the impact is not small.

It’s daily.


I’ve seen men lose their edge.

Not because they became incapable.

But because:

  • Their environment became comfort-heavy
  • Their decisions became approval-driven
  • Their life became routine instead of growth

No fights. No drama.

Just slow dilution.


And I’ve seen the opposite.

A man who had no clarity…
Suddenly becoming focused.

Not because he changed overnight.

But because:

  • Someone believed in him
  • Someone held him accountable
  • Someone gave stability instead of noise

That combination is powerful.


For a long time, I used to think:

“If you choose the right woman, you are 80% through in life.”

There is truth in that.

But over time, I refined that thought.


It’s not about “a woman making or breaking a man.”

It’s about this:

👉 The person you choose will either multiply you… or dilute you.


They won’t create you from zero.

But they will:

  • Amplify your strengths
  • Or slowly weaken them

They will:

  • Push you forward
  • Or make you comfortable staying where you are

And over 10–20 years…

That difference becomes your life.


The uncomfortable truth?

It’s easy to say:

“She changed him.”

But the deeper truth is:

👉 He allowed himself to change.


Because at the end of the day:

  • Discipline is still your responsibility
  • Direction is still your responsibility
  • Identity is still your responsibility

A partner influences.

But you decide.


After watching all these years, one thing has become very clear to me:

👉 Choosing the right partner doesn’t guarantee success.
👉 But it removes a lot of silent friction in life.

And that itself is a huge advantage.


If you get it right:

Life becomes smoother.
Growth becomes natural.
Energy stays intact.

If you get it wrong:

Nothing crashes immediately.
But slowly… things stop moving.


I’ve seen both.

Up close.

Over decades.

And if there is one decision in life that quietly shapes everything else…

It is this.

Who you choose to walk with.