The Strange Truth: The One Who Tries Gets Judged. The One Who Does Nothing Gets Left Alone.


I sometimes feel doing nothing is better.

Not because I believe it.
But because I’ve seen what happens to people who try.

The one who experiments, takes a risk, works hard, and still fails — he doesn’t just fail.

He gets judged.

He gets advice he didn’t ask for.
He gets compared.
Sometimes, he even gets insulted.

But the one who does nothing?

He escapes all of it.

No one questions him.
No one analyses him.
No one talks about him.

And slowly, a thought starts forming inside.

Maybe staying idle is safer.

Again — I’m not saying I believe this.

But I’ve felt this.

Because in the real world, effort is visible. Failure is visible.
And visibility attracts opinions.

There is an interesting observation in behavioural studies called the “spotlight effect” — people who step out and act feel like the world is watching them more than it actually is. But even if that effect is exaggerated, one part is true.

When you try, you become visible.
And when you become visible, you become vulnerable.

That’s the price of action.

If you look at entrepreneurship, this becomes even sharper.

A person who starts something and fails is discussed more than someone who never started.

We don’t analyse the silent majority.
We analyse the ones who moved.

Take any failed startup founder. The story doesn’t end with just “it didn’t work.”

It becomes —
“What went wrong?”
“Why didn’t he think properly?”
“I would have done it differently.”

But no one asks that about someone who never tried.

That silence is not appreciation.
It’s just absence of attention.

Even in history, this pattern is clear.

People remember bold failures more than silent non-attempts.

Thomas Edison failed thousands of times before the light bulb worked. But imagine if he had stopped after a few attempts.

He wouldn’t have been criticised.
He would have been forgotten.

That’s the difference.

Trying exposes you.
Not trying hides you.

And hiding feels peaceful.

But only on the surface.

Because there is another side to this.

The people who try and fail may face noise outside.
But they are at least moving inside.

The ones who do nothing may avoid noise outside.
But inside, over time, there is a different kind of discomfort.

A question that doesn’t go away:

“What if I had tried?”

That question is silent.
But heavy.

So when I say I sometimes feel like doing nothing is better, it is not a conclusion.

It is a moment.

A reflection of what I’ve seen.

But I also know this.

The world may judge the ones who try.
But life quietly moves with them.

And the ones who stay idle may escape judgment.
But they also escape growth.

So maybe the answer is not to stop trying.

Maybe the answer is to accept one truth clearly:

If you choose to try,
you are also choosing to be misunderstood at times.

And that’s not failure.

That’s the cost of being visible.

“Alexa, Buy Me a Toy” — The Day My 6-Year-Old Became an Online Shopper


Two days back, my wife and I stepped out for a while.

Nothing unusual. Just a normal day.

Next day, a package arrives.

Cash on Delivery.

We both looked at each other.

“Did you order something?”
“No… did you?”

And then the truth came out.

👉 My 6-year-old son had ordered a toy.
Using Alexa.
Alone.
Successfully.

No OTP.
No approval.
No drama.

Just:

“Alexa, buy me a toy.”

And Alexa said: “Sure.”


Funny… but also not funny

For a moment, we laughed.

I mean… how smart is this generation?

At 6, I didn’t even know how to dial a landline properly.
My son? He has already started e-commerce operations from the living room.

But then it hit me.

👉 This is not a smart kid story.
👉 This is a system risk story.


What actually scared me

It wasn’t the toy. It was cheap.

It was this:

  • No authentication
  • COD allowed
  • No notification until delivery
  • Anyone at home can receive & pay

👉 Which means:

Today: toy
Tomorrow: ₹5,000 headphone
Next week: “Alexa, buy chocolates every day”

And slowly… money leaks.


The real problem

Kids don’t understand:

  • Money
  • Consequences
  • Limits

They only understand:

“I asked. I got it.”

And if we don’t correct this early, it becomes:

👉 Instant gratification habit
👉 No respect for money
👉 Dependency on “asking” instead of “earning”


What I did with my son

I didn’t scold him.

Because honestly…
He didn’t do anything wrong.

He just used what was available.

So I told him:

“Alexa is like a shop. But only Appa and Amma can buy things.”

And added a simple rule:

👉 “You can ask for toys. But you cannot order.”

Kids understand rules better than lectures.


What every parent should do immediately

This is important. Don’t delay this.

1. Set a Voice Purchase PIN

In Alexa settings:

  • Go to Voice Purchasing
  • Enable 4-digit code

👉 Now Alexa will ask:

“What’s your PIN?”


2. Disable Voice Shopping (if not needed)

If you don’t use it:

👉 Turn OFF voice purchasing completely


3. Remove COD option

In ** account:

  • Avoid COD
  • Use prepaid only

👉 No one can casually receive & pay


4. Turn ON notifications

  • Instant alerts for every order
  • No surprises at the door

5. Consider parental controls

Use Amazon Kids / restricted profiles

👉 Control what Alexa can do


The bigger lesson for parents

Technology is becoming:

  • Faster
  • Easier
  • Invisible

But controls are:

  • Optional
  • Hidden
  • Manual

Which means:

If you don’t configure it, you are trusting default settings with your money.


Final takeaway

This incident taught me one thing:

👉 Parenting today is not just about raising kids
👉 It’s also about managing devices around kids

Convenience is great.

But:

Convenience without control becomes silent risk.

Fix the settings.
Set the rules.
And maybe… keep Alexa slightly scared of your PIN 😄


I Used to Live in Another World. Somewhere, I Lost the Entry Ticket.


There was a time when I was living two lives at the same time.

One — the real one.
The other — far more interesting.

In that world, I was unstoppable.

Some days I was a cricketer breaking records.
Some days I was building a massive business empire.
Sometimes… I was just impressing my crush like a movie hero 😄

All this used to happen:

  • while driving
  • while waiting
  • even in the restroom

No planning. No effort.
It just played automatically.


And then… it stopped.

Not suddenly.
Slowly… silently.

I didn’t even notice when my brain stopped creating those worlds.

Now if I sit idle:

  • I think about bills
  • I think about health
  • I think about what to do next

Earlier: “What if I become this?”
Now: “What should I do tomorrow?”

That shift… is adulthood.


So what were those fantasies actually?

Not madness. Not timepass.

They were actually your brain’s private cinema + strategy lab.

Sounds funny… but it’s true.

  • A cricketer imagines hitting a six before he actually does
  • An entrepreneur imagines success before taking risk
  • Even actors live scenes in their head before performing

So what we casually call fantasy is actually:

👉 practice without consequences


The truth — fantasies are both powerful and dangerous

👍 The good side

  • They give you confidence without proof
  • They help you dream bigger than your current life
  • They act as stress relief
  • They shape your identity silently

Honestly… many of my ambitions started there.


The risky side

  • You can get addicted to it
  • You may delay real action
  • You may expect life to behave like your imagination

👉 Living only in fantasy = escape
👉 Using fantasy = power


Then why did it disappear?

Simple.

Life got heavier.

Responsibilities came in:

  • family
  • money
  • health
  • expectations

Your brain switched mode.

From:
👉 creative mode

To:
👉 survival mode

And survival mode has no time for cinema.


But here is what hit me

I didn’t lose imagination.

👉 I just stopped giving myself permission to be useless.

Because fantasy needs:

  • empty time
  • relaxed mind
  • no guilt

Today even when I sit idle,
there is a small voice inside:

“Why are you wasting time?”

And that one sentence kills imagination.


So should we stop fantasies completely?

Big mistake if we do that.

Because without imagination:

  • creativity dies
  • thinking becomes rigid
  • life becomes routine

You may become “practical”…
but you lose vision


What to do instead?

Don’t stop it.

👉 Upgrade it.

Earlier it was random:

  • hero
  • cricket
  • movies

Now make it intentional:

  • What if my business scales 10x?
  • What if my idea becomes a category leader?
  • What would my life look like at the next level?

Same imagination…
but now with direction.


Why this matters

Because your brain is powerful in a strange way.

It doesn’t fully differentiate between:

  • what you imagine
  • what you experience

So when you imagine correctly:

  • fear reduces
  • clarity improves
  • execution becomes easier

👉 Your fantasy world becomes a rehearsal ground


My realisation

That parallel world is not gone.

It is just… waiting.

Waiting for:

  • a relaxed moment
  • a guilt-free pause
  • a little space

And maybe now, it can return in a better form.

Not just to escape life…

👉 but to design it.


If you still have that world somewhere inside…

Don’t shut it down.

Just…
open the door once in a while.


fantasy, imagination, daydreaming, parallel world, adult life,

Summer Vacation: When Parenting Becomes a Full-Time Survival Job


Summer vacation has started.

For kids — it’s freedom.
For parents — it’s operation survival.

First 2 days, we are all motivated.

We sit with them.
Explain routines.
Set expectations.
“Sleep early.”
“Wake up early.”
“Limited screen time.”

Kids nod like they are attending a corporate meeting.

Day 3…

Everything collapses.


Suddenly:

  • Screen time becomes unlimited plan
  • Night becomes day
  • Day becomes night
  • Breakfast happens at lunch time
  • Lunch happens at… who knows

And parents?

We are just trying to figure out what time zone this house is operating in.


Routine?

Gone.

Kitchen?

Always active.

Utensils?

Never-ending.

Clothes?

Always in some stage —
washing / drying / folding / ignoring.


Earlier:

You had a system.

  • Breakfast at fixed time
  • Work slots
  • Cleaning schedule
  • Some peace

Now?

Everything is on-demand service.

“Amma… hungry.”
“Appa… bored.”
“WiFi not working.”
“Remote where?”


And slowly…

House becomes:

  • Messy
  • Noisy
  • Alive
  • And honestly… a little happy

Because somewhere in this chaos,
there is laughter.

There are random conversations.
Late night stories.
Unexpected bonding.


But still…

When you realise there are 65 more days left…

You don’t react.

You just stare into space…

And take a deep breath.


Summer vacation is not for kids alone.

It is a test for parents:

  • Patience
  • Flexibility
  • And ability to survive without routine

And maybe…

That’s the real lesson.

Not controlling everything.

But learning to live inside the chaos.


Salary Won’t Make You Rich? The Truth Is More Interesting Than That


I came across a post recently.

It said:
75% entrepreneurs, 15% investors, 7% athletes, 3% artists, 0% employees.
And the moral?
👉 “Nobody got rich with a salary.”

At first glance, it hits hard.
Especially for people like us… who have seen both sides of life.

But something didn’t feel right.


Is it actually true?

Short answer: No. It’s oversimplified.

Let’s break it down.

If you look at global wealth data (like Forbes Billionaires list):

  • Yes, a majority of billionaires are entrepreneurs
  • Many are investors (Warren Buffett type)
  • Some are athletes and entertainers

But saying 0% employees? That’s simply not true.

👉 People like:

  • Sundar Pichai (CEO, Google)
  • Satya Nadella (CEO, Microsoft)

They started as employees.
Even today, they are technically salaried professionals—yet extremely wealthy.


So what is the real truth?

The difference is not salary vs business.

The real difference is this:

👉 Ownership vs Effort


🔹 Employees trade time for money

You work → you get paid → cycle repeats

🔹 Entrepreneurs build systems

They create something → it works even when they sleep

🔹 Investors grow money

Money starts working instead of them


A small realization from my life

I didn’t go behind a salary.

In fact, I resisted it.

There were phases when my mother and even my wife insisted that I should take up a job—for stability, for predictability.

But I kept saying to myself:
👉 “Once an entrepreneur… always an entrepreneur.”

At the same time, life slowly pushed me towards income stability.

That’s how I ended up building studio apartments and service apartments.

Not just as a business idea…
but as a way to ensure steady income every month.

So while I didn’t choose a salary,
I did choose stability in income.


The real lesson (not the viral one)

The truth is not:

❌ “Employees will never get rich”

The truth is:

✅ “Salary alone rarely creates wealth”


A quote that stayed with me

“If you don’t find a way to make money while you sleep, you will work until you die.”
— Warren Buffett


Final thought

You don’t have to quit your job.

You don’t have to become a startup founder overnight.

But you must ask yourself:

👉 Am I building something beyond my income?

Because wealth is not about how you earn
It is about what you build while you earn.

The Day KYC Made Me Feel Like a Stranger to My Own Money


Two days back, I went to do something very simple.

KYC.

Along with that, I had to reactivate a dormant bank account.

Sounds routine, right?

But it didn’t feel routine.


My First Bank Account

This Bank of Baroda account…
It wasn’t just an account.

It was my first account.

I must have been 8 or 9 years old.
I still remember starting a small RD (recurring deposit).

Back then, going to the bank felt like something big.
The passbook entries, the stamps, the feeling of saving money…

It was not about money.
It was about growing up.


The Bangalore Account

Then there was another account.

Opened in the early 2000s.
For a simple reason — address proof for my Bangalore house.

That account also had a story.
A phase of life.
A city.
A struggle.
A dream.


Fast Forward to Today

Today, I’m standing in a bank again.

Not to open something.
Not to build something.

But to prove something.

That I am… me.


The KYC Loop

In January, I already did KYC.

For my mom.
For myself.

Now again, for mutual funds.
Now again, for bank accounts.

Different institutions.
Different forms.
Same person.

Same documents.
Same frustration.


The Question That Stayed

They call it KYC — Know Your Customer.

But honestly…

Who is supposed to know whom?

Isn’t it the responsibility of the bank, the institution, the system…
to understand and track their customers?

Why is the customer made to run again and again?

Same Aadhaar.
Same PAN.
Same face.

But every time…
you stand there like a stranger.


More Than Just Paperwork

KYC is not just a process.

It slowly disconnects you from something that once felt personal.

That childhood account.
That first savings.
That emotional connection.

Everything becomes…

Forms.
Tokens.
Counters.
“Come tomorrow.”


A Simple Thought

Maybe systems need KYC.

But people need continuity.

Trust should not expire.
Identity should not feel temporary.


Ending Thought

Today, I walked into the bank to update KYC.

But I walked out thinking…

When did I become a stranger to my own bank account?

The Day I Realised Business Is Not About Profit… It’s About Survival


When I started my entrepreneurial journey, I thought I understood business.

Sell something.
Make profit.
Grow.

Simple.

But reality didn’t work like that.

Money was coming in… but stress was also coming in.
Customers were increasing… but so were expenses.
On paper, everything looked fine.
Inside, something felt off.

That’s when I slowly started understanding—business is not run on profit alone. It runs on a set of silent numbers.


It started with one question…

“How much am I spending to get one customer?”

That’s when I discovered CAC (Customer Acquisition Cost).

Suddenly everything changed.
If I spend ₹500 to acquire a customer who gives me ₹300… I’m not building a business. I’m burning money.


Then came a bigger realisation…

Even if one customer gives profit,
will it still work when I scale?

That’s Unit Economics.

Many businesses look profitable in small scale… but collapse when they grow. I’ve seen it happen.


Then reality hit hard…

“Cash in bank is more important than profit on paper.”

That’s Cash Flow.

You can be profitable… and still go bankrupt.
That line hit me hard.


And then fear entered…

“How long can I survive like this?”

That’s Runway.

And every month I spend money, that’s my Burn Rate eating into my runway.

This is where business becomes real.
Not in Excel sheets… but in sleepless nights.


Then I understood something deeper…

It’s not just about survival.
It’s about structure.

  • Working Capital tells if you can handle daily operations
  • Churn tells if customers are leaving silently
  • PMF (Product Market Fit) tells if people really want what you built

Before PMF, everything is trial.
After PMF, everything is growth.


And then comes the game changer…

Operating Leverage

Can I grow without increasing costs at the same speed?

That’s the difference between
a struggling business… and a scalable one.


Finally, the numbers investors look at…

  • EBITDA – Are you actually making money?
  • Gross Margin – Is your business strong or fragile?
  • ARR – Is your revenue predictable or uncertain?

My biggest learning?

Business is not one big decision.
It’s 12 small numbers… quietly deciding your fate.

You may ignore them.
But they won’t ignore you.


Today, I see business differently…

Not as “profit vs loss”
But as a system.

A system where:

  • Growth without unit economics is dangerous
  • Profit without cash flow is useless
  • Customers without retention is meaningless

If you’re an entrepreneur reading this…

Don’t wait for a crisis to learn these.

I did.

And trust me…
learning it early is much cheaper.

Why Our Parents Kept Friends for Life… and We Didn’t


I was thinking about something recently.

In my dad’s generation, I rarely heard of “friend breakups.”

He had a strong circle.
He stayed in touch with almost all of them.

Only one friend disappeared from his life.
Not because of ego.
Not because of misunderstanding.

But because that friend lost his son in his mid-50s…
He went into depression…
And slowly cut himself off from everyone.

My dad tried to find him.
But he became unreachable.

That was the only “lost friendship” story I heard.

Even after my dad passed away 12 years back,
his friends still call us…
check on us…
stay connected.

That bond didn’t end with him.


My mother’s story is even more surprising.

She grew up in a time when:

  • Landline phones were rare
  • Calls were expensive
  • No WhatsApp
  • No social media
  • Women had very limited freedom after marriage

Still…

After 20+ years, she reconnected with her school friends.
And now they are all in regular touch.

She says only a handful are missing.
Most are still connected.

No breakups.
No “we stopped talking.”


Now I look at my generation.

And I see something very different.

We have:

  • Mobile phones
  • Unlimited calls
  • WhatsApp, Instagram, LinkedIn
  • Video calls
  • Everything is instant

But still…

We lose people.

I have lost many close friends in my lifetime.
Not one. Not two. Many.

And I see the same pattern everywhere.

People drifting.
People disconnecting.
People breaking friendships.


So what changed?

1. Earlier: Fewer People, Deeper Bonds

Our parents had limited circles.
So they invested deeply in those few relationships.

We have hundreds of contacts.
But very few deep connections.

When options increase… value per relationship reduces.


2. Earlier: Ego Was Controlled by Need

They needed relationships.

Today, we can replace people easily.

One misunderstanding…
Instead of fixing it, we move on.


3. Earlier: Effort Was High → Value Was High

To stay in touch:

  • Write letters
  • Wait weeks
  • Make expensive calls

So they valued relationships.

Today:

  • One message is enough
  • But we don’t even send that

Ease has reduced emotional investment.


4. Today: We Expect Too Much

We expect:

  • Instant replies
  • Perfect understanding
  • Alignment in thinking

If someone doesn’t match…
We silently step away.


5. Life Complexity Has Increased

Career, money, stress, responsibilities…

Everyone is running.

Friendships are no longer a priority.
They become optional.


6. We Don’t Repair. We Replace.

This is the biggest shift.

Earlier:

They repaired relationships.

Today:

We replace people.


My Realisation

We think technology will keep us connected.

But connection is not about tools.

It is about:

  • effort
  • patience
  • tolerance
  • forgiveness

Our parents had less access…
But more commitment.

We have full access…
But less commitment.


Final Thought

Maybe the problem is not time.
Not technology.

Maybe the problem is this:

We gave up on people faster than the previous generation ever did.


Macrohard: When Dreams Were Bigger Than Skills


When I look back at my early days, I don’t see a polished entrepreneur.
I see a kid with zero skills, zero experience… but one big thing — a dream.

My first company was called Macrohard.

Yes… Macrohard.
An oxymoron to Microsoft.

At that time, just naming a company felt like building one. My friend and I sat, thought hard, and came up with that name. It sounded powerful to us. We didn’t know if it made sense to the world—but it made perfect sense to us.

We even booked a domain.

Those days, booking a domain itself felt like entering the big league. Platforms like Network Solutions would let you reserve a domain and give you 90 days to pay. No instant payments, no UPI, no frictionless checkout like today.

If you didn’t pay… the domain was gone.
Simple as that.

But for us, just holding that domain for those few days felt like we owned a piece of the internet.

We introduced ourselves as “Founders of Macrohard.”
Not as students. Not as beginners. Founders.

Confidence was never the problem. Reality was.

At the same time, we were part of the Linux User Group Chennai (LUGC) that used to meet in IIT Madras.

Those sessions were something else.

It wasn’t just about technology.
It was about belief.

Open source was not just software—it was an ideology.
We were young, energetic, and completely anti-proprietary. We felt like warriors fighting for a cause, even though we barely understood the depth of what we were defending.

Looking back now, we were crazy.
But it was a good kind of crazy.

We had:

  • No clear direction
  • No structured learning
  • No business model
  • Not even real passion yet

But we had curiosity.
And that was enough to start.

Those days didn’t build a company.
They built something more important — the seed of entrepreneurship.

Today, when I think of Macrohard, I don’t laugh at the name.
I respect it.

Because that name was the first time I told myself:
“I am going to build something.”

And sometimes, that’s all it takes.

Some Mistakes Don’t Come With a Second Chance


I was thinking about history.

Hitler. Mussolini. Japan. Soviet Union.

All of them were powerful at one point.
All of them were moving forward, building, expanding, winning.

But then… one decision.

Hitler invading Russia.
Mussolini attacking Greece.
Japan bombing Pearl Harbor.
Russia entering Afghanistan.

And that was it.

It looks like one mistake changed everything.


What if life gives a second chance?

We often say:
“Everyone deserves a second chance.”
“Humans learn from mistakes.”
“Mistakes make us better.”

It all sounds right.

But then a question hits me…

Do all mistakes come with a second chance?


In history, there was no undo.

Once that decision was made…
there was no going back.

No reset button.
No “let me try again.”


In life also, we like to believe:
“I’ll fix it later.”
“I’ll learn and correct.”

But what if…

Some decisions don’t come with a later?


What if:

  • one word breaks a relationship forever
  • one decision damages trust beyond repair
  • one risk wipes out years of effort
  • one moment changes the direction of life

Then what?

Do we still say “mistakes are good”?


Maybe mistakes are necessary.

They shape us.
They humble us.
They teach what success never can.

Without mistakes, there is no evolution.


But at the same time…

Not all mistakes are equal.

Some are lessons.
Some are turning points.
And some… are irreversible.


That’s where life becomes tricky.

We are expected to learn by making mistakes…
But we are also expected to avoid the ones that cannot be undone.


So how do we live?

In fear of making mistakes?
Or in courage, accepting the risk?


Maybe the answer lies somewhere in between.

Make mistakes.
But don’t be careless.

Take risks.
But know the cost.

Move forward.
But stay aware.


Because life may forgive many things…

But not everything comes with a second chance.


And the real wisdom is not just learning from mistakes…
but knowing which mistakes you cannot afford to make.