We didn’t go theatre yet with the kid, he is two now. There is absolutely no point in disturbing the money, peace and experience of other people. We either leave our kid with family or we go one by one if the movie is good. This is a more of civic sense issue, you either understand this or you don’t.
@chiragbarjatya In Pune, there is a doctor called Asmita Dongare and she runs a clinic from Wakad called Cloverleaf. I repeat, do not go to her as her goal is to only make sure that her patient goes for Caesarean. She will create a scene of panic and leave family and patient with no choice.
Please, please read this news thoroughly, for your own sake. I experienced chest discomfort only when I started to run at higher speeds, and it subsided when I just walked or was at rest. That's called 'stable angina' (or stress angina). Unhealthy cholesterol levels, high(er) blood pressure, diabetes are some of the causes for this - in my case, it was unhealthy cholesterol levels, long undetected, while my blood pressure, conversely, continues to be on the lower side because of my running... which my doctor confirmed as healthy since I wasn't experiencing associated fatigue. And I'm prediabetic too, as I discovered during the blood tests for my procedure.
Rana seems to have carried his 'chest discomfort' for 3 days, after which it was too late for any intervention. This is a thin line for most people because it is very easy to mistake a 'discomfort' for stomach acidity, physical symptoms like muscle strain, or even 'heartburn' (which is quite literal!). In a way, I obsess over my daily run more so for this - to include a reasonably stress-inducing activity every day (since there is none) to see if I feel completely alright with it. This helped me identify that I did experience something unusual and it needed medical intervention. And since I felt normal if I stopped the source of stress (running at a faster speed), I ignored it for about a week. But since it persisted exactly only when I stressed, I realized that I was going through something predictably unusual and that needed a check. This 'discomfort' was not a pain at all, ironically. It felt, at best, as a steady tingling sensation on my shoulders and neck - nothing close to my heart! All the more reason to ignore it. But it occurred every single time I stressed myself by increasing the speed of my run, and subsided if I just walked at a slower pace.
Related reading - Two blocks and a second chance https://t.co/cgHCxGoqlB
Many parents complain nowadays that their children don’t visit them for months or even call them for days.
But there was a time when children would hear their parents coming and feel fear instead of comfort.
They would go silent, their bodies tense, expecting anger or punishment.
Back then, this fear was often seen as “discipline.” Even something to be proud of.
But time has a quiet way of revealing truth.
Today, many parents wonder why their children don’t visit, don’t call, don’t stay connected.
This isn’t about blame. It’s about reflection.
The environment we create in childhood often shapes the distance or closeness we experience later.
Fear may control behavior for a while but only love builds lasting connection.
. @99acresIndia I am sure you don’t do KYC before anyone can list their FAKE property as owners. As an affluent indian, it’s for me to catch the fraud person but thinking about those who cannot! You guys can do better. I didn’t transferred him the token but wanted to see the low
India’s emergency number is now 112, but many people still dial 100 out of habit.
In an emergency, that confusion can waste precious minutes.
Countries like the United States have made 911 second nature. One number, quick response, clear systems.
112 needs recall, reliability and a lot of marketing.
Make 112 visible everywhere, as familiar as UPI
Ensure faster, more consistent response across cities
Integrate it into maps, phones and apps for easy access
harsh truth about solo travel:
once you've eaten dinner alone at 9pm in a random place in rajasthan because you felt like it, once you've changed your entire itinerary at 6am because you wanted to, once you've spent 4 hours at top of hill without anyone rushing you...
you can't go back.
group travel feels like babysitting adults who can't decide where to eat.
Work from home concept has no izzat in India. It's been 5 years since I started working from home, but even to this day I help my mom with household chores, give full attention to guests, do all the market k kaam even during office hours, give her time, and despite all this, she says, "tum toh pura din laptop pe busy rehti ho". The irony is that if I commuted 2 hours, sat in an office, and came home exhausted, I'd be taken seriously. WFH didn't blur work-life balance. The office was the only proof society accepted that your time had value.
I sympathize with anyone who finds Zakir Khan funny, the guy isn’t even mid at comedy. His entire career is built around crying about how he had to leave home, something every adult is supposed to do.
He’s been milking the same ‘small-town boy in the big city’ sob story for years now. We are tired Zakir.