Not only is it safe but it’s necessary for you to realize this as you get older and step into who you’re meant to become. And you can only do that by giving yourself grace and acknowledging that not everyone is meant to stay in your life in the roles that they currently occupy
"humse mayus hoga zamana, par zamane ki kisko padi hai" might be the most beautifully written line in any Hindi song. It captures rebellion, self-acceptance and indifference to society's validation perfectly.
This paragraph by Haruki Murakami hits very hard:
“Once the storm is over, you won’t remember how you made it through, how you managed to survive. You won’t even be sure, whether the storm is really over. But one thing is certain. When you come out of the storm, you won’t be the same person who walked in. That’s what this storm’s all about.”
"I have no personal attachment to CJP. I will support any party that raises my issues. I haven't come for CJP. I have come for Dharmendra Pradhan's resignation. My issues are not Hindu-Muslim. My issues are education, healthcare, etc."
Hello Odisha, hire me if you want some lessons in ChatGPT prompts lest you embarrass your state emblem nationally.
Odisha state Higher Education department using AI to generate posts and making the bhoot of state emblem.
#amitkilhor#kilhor#odisha#stateemblem
A Brahmin student being called a 'Pakistani' by Modi Bhakts shocked and rightfully hurt many people across ideological lines, including several from the Right Wing itself. Because suddenly, people realised how dehumanising that label is.
But for years now, countless Indian Muslims especially those who speak up or question the government or criticise the PM are casually branded 'Pakistanis' or 'Bangladeshis' or a 'Rohingya'.
Our loyalty is questioned, our identity is regularly mocked, our citizenship treated as conditional.
And the society has normalised it so much that most people don’t even react anymore.
An insult that rightfully outraged people when used against a Brahmin student is thrown at Muslims every single day without guilt or an outrage, or without any consequences. No Indian should have to constantly prove they belong to their own country.
All thanks to the Media and the Politicians for Normalising this Hate against Indian Muslims.
"We must, then, avoid the 'Babel syndrome,' namely the idolatry of profit that sacrifices the weak, a uniformity that neutralizes differences, and the pretense that a single language — even a digital one — can translate everything, including the mystery of the person, into data and performance."
Lee Chang-dong said Burning is "a Faulkner story set in a Murakami world" and that Jong-su sees the world like Faulkner, but young audiences in korea can’t relate to him because they’re living in Ben’s world. I find that really interesting