Education provides knowledge, knowledge helps you to get employment, employment gives you money, money gives you power and power eventually gives you control. And once you have control, you have almost everything. 😌
Amazon is laying off 14,000 employees, including in India, as AI takes over their roles.
The cruel part is how fragile private sector “stability” is. You get a job, start earning, feel settled, plan a future, buy a house on EMI, and one fine morning the company decides to “downsize”. Suddenly, you’re jobless. If a new job doesn’t come quickly, those EMIs can destroy your peace and your life.
And the govt! While you earn, you must pay taxes. The moment you lose your job, you’re on your own. Farmers get compensation when crops fail, despite many paying zero income tax, but a taxpayer losing his job gets practically nothing.
Maybe it's time to introduce reforms like make EMI pauses for few months more liberal for those who lose their jobs, and providing a time-bound monthly allowance for few months from the govt, except for disciplinary cases of course. Ladla/Ladlis can get free money, free ration, free water and electricity, so why not support a worker who has been paying taxes and contributing?
Koi bhi cheez jab waqt pe haasil nahi hoti toh uski khwahish khatam hone lag jaati hai. Kyunki ab waqt itna zyada guzar chuka hai ki ab bas jee rahe hai waqt kaatne ke liye.
Sawaal aakhir mein yehi reh jaata hai - Hamari zindagi ka maqsad kya hai? 🍃
#ting
Summing up RCB’s historic and momentous victory in IPL 2025 feels almost impossible—words fall short. The emotions were bone-chilling and truly unforgettable. It felt no less than India lifting the World Cup. The celebrations across the country said it all.
#ForVirat 💪🏆
I don't know if I should say this but even life's most basic needs and requirements have become a dream & fantasy. Even though life's impermanence isn't going to last long and will fade away eventually ... still surviving everyday is a challenge. Timeline is completely messed up.
For a moment I thought how agonizing, mind boggling and heart wrenching my life has become that there isn't any purpose to live for. Suddenly, I snapped out of the delusion and did a reality check because deep down I myself know how privileged I am and how wondrous my life is.
Losing a person knowing the fact that they're still out there somewhere in this world is the most difficult factor to process and one cannot even fathom that level of unbearable pain. 💔
> Studied hard.
> Became software engineer.
> Buys his favourite bike.
> Goes on a ride with group.
> Gets beaten up by Gurgaon Dehatis.
> 11 lakh rupees bike destroyed.
> Admitted to ICU.
Moral? Leave India if you earn well at a young age.
Try to find your purpose of existence and maybe the world will feel a better place to live without feeling suffocated. Ultimately, finding contentment in whatever you do is a crucial key factor.
If you truly read and understand any religion, all of them teaches you to be kind, compassionate, considerate, and respectful. So stop the drama and discrimination against any race or ethnicity. Live and let everyone live peacefully. (2/2)
#humanityislostforever
Religion has become the biggest weapon to target the weak minds. Instead of using it for the goodness of humankind ... it's being used to fight against each other.
People have become so blind and judgemental that they have forgotten the basic moral values and etiquettes. (1/2)
Pareshaani kya hai? Yeh bhi toh ek waqt hai ... guzar jayega! Jaisa mushkilatein aati hai waise aasaniyan bhi aayengi. Acha waqt bhi zaroor aayega.
Sabr karo. Bharosa rakho. Himmat se raho.
Ummeed pe duniya khayam hai! 😌
Kiran Rao's Lapata Ladies, India's official entry to the Oscars and projected as an original work, actually seems heavily inspired by a 2019 short film titled Burqa City.
Set in Middle East, the 19 min film follows a newlywed man whose wife gets exchanged due to identical burqas. He then embarks on a journey to find her. The satirical comedy highlights the absurdity of a society where women are treated as interchangeable objects rather than unique individuals, critiquing extreme patriarchy, gender-based restrictions, and the loss of identity.
Kiran Rao made Lapata Ladies, with the same theme, replacing burqas with ghoonghats. The film carried the same message about patriarchy, societal norms, and women's identity. Even the Ravi Kishan police station scene seems heavily inspired.
How much money is enough money? Find the contentment, fulfillment and satisfaction with whatever we have got. It's easier said but at least we can try. Eventually, this will lead to peace and happiness.
#NoteToSelfFirst