1. Never ever disrespect ladies (even your ex)
2. Speak at event even for 5 mins
3. Buy a watch in your early 20s
4. Never buy distressed and ripped jeans
5. Read about Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj at any cost
6. Do not comment on other's religious practices
7. Buy a gold for your mum
8. Love and care street animals
9. Post about whatever you know in a public
10. Never share exact income number
11. Lift weights, eat eggs, sunlights, and cold water baths
12. Visit beaches and mountains most
13. Educate people around you about recent tech
14. Find a lady with character, looks can be manipulate but not a behaviour
15. Start grooming beard and body hairs
16. Invest 50% in Index or large cap, 30% in new age companies, 20% into small cap risky sectors
17. Pick one freelance client and learn negotiation
18. Control sexual urges by going to a run
19. Keep a smile in every situation
20. Do not share personal things to anyone, no one cares
21. Do not please girls, recruiters, and clients. If you are worth of getting something then universe will take care of you
22. Feed your family first before taking life risks
23. Listen more in life
24. Play with children
25. Show infinite love to your nation
26. Read history, philosophy, SF stories, and finance
27. No drugs, alcohol, and casual sex
28. Start connecting on personal level with your social media friends
29. Spend time alone every week
30. Ask your gf/wife what are their fantasies and explore them
Chandigarh is truly blessed within just a 40-minute drive, you reach places like this near Parwanoo. A beautiful 4-room villa surrounded by complete silence and peace.
Not mentioning the name here otherwise people will start abusing Me 😅 DM for details.
But honestly, if you’re in Chandigarh, spending a night here is totally worth it! 😍
Apparently, 2BHKs in redeveloped Worli high-rises are being listed for up to Rs 4.8 crore in resale.
This is the purest Mumbai story.
You can spend your whole life earning Rs 30,000-40,000 a month in a chawl, then one fine day a builder needs your consent and suddenly you are holding an asset worth more than your family could earn in 100 years of mazdoori.
The hat tilted low, the single white glove, the way Michael Jackson freezes mid-move: he got all of it from a guy who started going bald at 17 and wore the hat to cover it, and the gloves because he hated his own hands.
That guy was Bob Fosse. The hat and gloves were only two of his fixes. He was pigeon-toed too, so his feet pointed inward instead of turning out the way a trained dancer's are supposed to, and instead of fighting it he turned his knees in and made that a move. Three things he was self-conscious about, all turned into a style.
The clip going around is from a 1974 movie, The Little Prince. Fosse plays the Snake. He came up with the dance himself, bought his own hat and gloves, even picked the camera angles. In the clip he's all in black under the desert sun, sliding across the sand, wrists flicking, before he stops dead. And he was no nobody: he had already beaten The Godfather to the Best Director Oscar for Cabaret. Pull up "Billie Jean" right after, and you're looking at the same man: the hat low over the eyes, the gloved hand, the trick where he holds completely still and then hits a pose that lands ten times harder because of the pause right before it.
Jackson knew exactly where it came from. In 1983 he took Fosse out to lunch, told him straight up how much his dancing had shaped his own, and tried to get him to work on the Thriller video. Fosse said no. He died four years later, in 1987.
Fosse didn't invent any of this from scratch either. He took it from the rundown stages and burlesque clubs where he started dancing as a kid, and from his own idol, Fred Astaire, the same way Jackson would later take it from him. The look that defined the King of Pop began with one man trying to cover up the parts of himself he couldn't stand.