Five Seconds Is Not a Biography

They say, “First impression is the best impression.”Honestly? I would like to return that sentence to the sender.If first impressions were always correct, half of us would be permanently misunderstood and the other half would need apology letters printed in bulk.Apparently, I have what people call “the arrogant face.” You know the one — calm... Continue Reading →

Burn the Pain, Not Yourself

“Pain is not a wall,” someone once said. “It is a doorway disguised as one.”For the longest time, I thought pain was a red signal. Stop. Cry. Complain. Order extra chocolate. Repeat.But life, in its usual dramatic fashion, recently handed me a plot twist.I am a mother of three energetic humans who believe the house... Continue Reading →

I Loved Who I Was… But We Needed Space

What if the reason you feel stuck isn’t because you need more motivation… but because you’re carrying too much of who you used to be?What if the life you want is waiting patiently — not for you to add something new — but for you to finally put something down?Here’s something no one tells you... Continue Reading →

When Criticism Knocks, Offer It Tea

Criticism is that unexpected guest who rings the doorbell just when your house—and ego—are slightly messy. It rarely arrives with flowers. It usually comes holding a magnifying glass. The first instinct? Hide. Defend. Pretend we are “not at home.” But what if, instead, we opened the door and said, “Come in. Sit down. Teach me... Continue Reading →

How Quiet Moments Learned to Speak

Loneliness has terrible PR. It’s often mistaken for being unloved, unwanted, or tragically abandoned with a cup of cold tea and no notifications. But loneliness, in truth, is far more clever—and far more human—than that. It doesn’t always arrive dramatically. Sometimes it just sits beside you while your phone is fully charged, your calendar is... Continue Reading →

The Invisible Culprit: Why Is the Mother Always on Trial?

Somewhere between a child’s first cry and their first mistake, an invisible rule is quietly written into society’s handbook: If something goes wrong, ask the mother.Not the situation. Not the phase. Not the many influences shaping a child.Just the mother.A child forgets homework—“What is the mother doing?”A child talks back—“Didn’t she teach manners?”A child struggles—“I... Continue Reading →

How I Accidentally Raised My Own Emotional Coaches

Children don’t learn emotional health from lectures. They learn it while watching us look for our phone in the fridge, sigh dramatically at traffic, or whisper “I’m fine” with Olympic-level denial. Emotional health, it turns out, is a silent syllabus—taught not in words, but in moments.Parents often ask, “How do I teach my child to... Continue Reading →

The Chair Beside Me Is Still Warm

There is a strange kind of silence that only exists after you leave an office—not the peaceful kind, but the kind that hums with memories. The chair beside me is still warm in my mind. The desk still smells like shared coffee. The laughter still echoes somewhere between lunch breaks and deadlines.Office colleagues are not... Continue Reading →

Lonely Isn’t Empty, It’s Just Thinking

Have you ever been surrounded by people—family, friends, notifications buzzing like obedient bees—and still felt unbearably alone? Not the dramatic, rain-soaked movie loneliness. The quieter kind. The kind that sits beside you while you scroll, nod, smile, and say, “I’m fine.” Loneliness isn’t the absence of people. It’s the absence of being felt. Psychology tells... Continue Reading →

Learning to Breathe Before We Speak

Have you ever noticed how one tiny moment can hijack your entire day? A sharp tone from a colleague. A spilled glass of milk. A child beginning a sentence with “Amma…” and before the sentence even reaches the full stop—boom—we explode. That, dear reader, is not personality. That is reaction.I once came across something called... Continue Reading →

A Quiet Tug-of-War Between Habit and Hope

They say nothing is more constant than change. Ironically, the moment change knocks, we pretend we’re not home. We hide behind routines, clutch our comfort zones like old blankets, and whisper, “Everything was fine yesterday.”Change is funny that way. We admire it in motivational quotes, applaud it in success stories, and recommend it generously to... Continue Reading →

The Psychology of Motivation: Why Resolutions Start with Fireworks and End with “Maybe Tomorrow”

Every New Year, people around the world sit with shiny planners, colourful pens, and an energy level that could power an entire city. Resolutions are declared with dramatic flair—“This year, I will be calmer, sleep better, and finally master work–life balance!” But by mid-January, motivation slowly turns into negotiation. Suddenly, we’re saying things like, “Let... Continue Reading →

Create a website or blog at WordPress.com

Up ↑