Sunday, 30 November 2025

When a Ghost Takes a Taxi Ride: A Hilarious Stormy Encounter With an Eco-Friendly Twist

        



 

The storm was so heavy that my taxi’s wipers were basically doing surya namaskar on fast-forward. Just when I thought the night couldn’t get any weirder, a transparent gentleman floated into the back seat without even opening the door.

“Meter on?” he asked.
I nodded. Ghost or not, rules are rules.

He gave me an address that Google Maps politely refused to recognise, so I followed his floating finger instead. Halfway through, I realised he wasn’t leaving fog on the windows—he was the fog.

Turns out his “unfinished business” was not revenge, hidden treasure, or haunting anyone. No, sir. He just wanted to scold the living for ruining the environment.

Apparently, he’d spent his whole life littering everywhere and now had to “clean up his karma.” Literally. His afterlife punishment was to persuade drivers like me to go green.

So there I was, driving through the storm with a ghost giving me a TED Talk on composting.

Before disappearing, he left me with one responsibility:
“Beta, plant one tree. Then even ghosts will bless your mileage.”

So I parked the taxi, planted a sapling, and to my shock, the mileage improved the next day.
Either the ghost kept his promise, or my taxi simply felt emotionally blackmailed by nature.

Either way, unfinished business: completed. Eco-friendly step: accomplished. Ghost: hopefully resting.


( THIS BLOGPOST IS A PART OF BLOGCHATTER'S BLOGHOP . DETAILS HERE : https://www.theblogchatter.com/blogchatter-blog-hop-a-new-way-to-write-collectively )

Saturday, 29 November 2025

A Gentle Day of Recovery: Small Surprises, Comforting Routines, and Healing at Home

     



Some days quietly remind us how healing isn’t always dramatic—sometimes it comes in soft steps, small surprises, and ordinary routines gently returning. Today was one such day for me, a day that felt like a slow exhale after a demanding week.

For the past several days, I had been hospitalised with fever and an infection—seven days of IV antibiotics, the constant tug of a cannula, and the restless discomfort that comes with being unwell. Coming back home gave me not just rest, but a kind of peace that only familiar walls can offer. Last night, I slept deeply for the first time in days, and this morning began with a sense of lightness I’d been missing.

Breakfast was simple and soothing—soft idlies. But what made it special was the unexpected gesture: my father bought them for me, a small surprise that set a warm tone for the day. Amma, in her usual thoughtful way, sent my favourite sweets, hoping they would tempt my recovering appetite. And they did. For the first time in days, I could eat with my own hands, a small milestone but one that felt surprisingly emotional. The swelling from the cannula had eased, my fingers moved without pain, and that alone made me feel more like myself again.

With a little more strength today, I caught up on the newspapers stacked from last week—pages filled with headlines I had missed in the haze of illness. I also managed to step out briefly and buy vegetables for the week, a task that felt almost celebratory simply because I could do it again. I straightened up the house bit by bit, though I left the laundry aside; Chennai’s rains are unpredictable, and I decided to wait till the skies calm down.

The quiet part of my evening was spent reading a few blogs, flipping through my diary, and updating the entries I had missed. It felt grounding—like gathering the loose threads of the past week and gently stitching them back together.

Today wasn’t extraordinary. But it was healing.
It was comforting.
And most of all, it reminded me how recovery is made up of simple routines returning, one tender moment at a time.


Friday, 28 November 2025

Year-End Travel Planning: How to Choose the Perfect Destination Based on Your Remaining Leave Days

    



 

As the year draws to a close, many of us realise we still have a good number of unused leave days—often around 12 days—quietly waiting to be utilised before they lapse. Year-end is the ideal time to hit pause, step away from routine, and create meaningful memories with your family. But the key lies in choosing the right destination that matches your available leave, budget, and comfort.

Whether you are planning a short getaway or dreaming of a long, refreshing vacation, aligning your destination with the number of leave days ensures that your travel is both relaxing and well-planned.

 

1. Start With Your Leave Balance

Before you start scrolling through destinations, look at:

How many leave days are left in your yearly quota.

Your weekends—adding a Saturday and Sunday can stretch your trip without using extra leave.

Public holidays that fall in December or early January.

For example:

3 to 4 days available → Ideal for short domestic trips.

7 to 10+ days → Best for long vacations, international travel, or multi-city holidays.

 

2. Choosing a Destination Based on Leave Days

A. Short Trips (2–4 Days)

Perfect for quick refreshers and nearby locations.

Best Types of Destinations

Hill stations close to your city – Ooty, Kodaikanal, Yercaud, Coorg.

Heritage towns – Mahabalipuram, Hampi, Trichy, Madurai.

Beach getaways – Puducherry, Mahabalipuram, Kovalam.

Wildlife & nature escapes – Bandipur, Mudumalai, Munnar.

Why it Works

Less travel time.

Cheaper stay and transport.

Easier to manage with children or elderly parents.

No heavy planning needed.

Tips

Choose a place accessible by road or a short flight.

Book accommodations early to avoid year-end price hikes.

Pick activities that fit into a relaxed itinerary.

 

B. Medium Trips (5–7 Days)

Best for a balanced holiday with variety and rest.

Recommended Destinations

North India – Shimla, Manali, Rajasthan, Varanasi.

Northeast – Meghalaya, Sikkim, Gangtok.

Southern circuits – Kerala backwaters + Munnar combo.

Nearby international trips – Sri Lanka, Dubai, Singapore, Malaysia.

Why it Works

Enough days for sightseeing without feeling rushed.

Family-friendly itineraries.

Budget can be better managed with planned travel.

Tips

Opt for round-trip flights well in advance.

Build one “slow” day into the schedule.

Explore family packages for better cost value.

 

C. Long Vacations (8–12 Days)

Ideal for deeper travel experiences.

Best Destinations

International holidays – Europe (one or two countries), Thailand, Bali, Vietnam.

Indian long routes – Kashmir, Ladakh, Arunachal Pradesh, Andaman.

Multi-city itineraries – Jaipur–Jaisalmer–Udaipur; Kochi–Munnar–Thekkady–Alleppey.

Why it Works

Longer leaves justify long flights and higher budgets.

Time to explore culture, food, nature and spend quality bonding time.

Great for creating lasting family memories.

Tips

Compare airfare across portals before locking in.

Check weather conditions at the destination in December.

Book activities and excursions early to avoid holiday rush.

 

3. Factor in Budget, Family Needs & Travel Comfort

Choosing a destination is not just about the number of days. Consider:

Budget

Short trips → lower budget, flexible.

Long vacations → plan 1–2 months ahead for best deals.

Family Comfort

Travelling with kids or parents? Choose places with:

Good medical facilities

Direct travel options

Safe, family-friendly stays

Accommodation

Homestays and serviced apartments are great for families.

Resorts offer comfort and activities within the property.

Tickets & Accessibility

Road trips for short leaves.

Domestic flights for mid-length trips.

International flights for longer leaves with good layover management.

 

4. Making Your 12 Days Work Both Ways

If your office grants 12 days a year, try splitting them wisely:

Option 1: Two Trips

Short trip (3 days) + Medium trip (5 or 6 days)
Leaves you refreshed more than once a year.

Option 2: One Long Trip

Use 8–10 days at year-end when weather, festivals and vacation mood peak.
Great for families, annual holidays, and international travel.

Option 3: Club Weekends

Take 3–4 days of leave, add weekends → total 5–6 days.

Repeat twice in the year to maximise travel.

 

Conclusion

Year-end leave is a wonderful opportunity to explore, unwind, and spend precious time with your loved ones. Whether it is a quick escape to a serene hill station or a long international vacation, choosing a destination that aligns with your available days, family needs, and budget ensures a fulfilling and stress-free travel experience.

With thoughtful planning, your remaining leave days can turn into beautiful memories—and a refreshing start to the coming year.


Thursday, 27 November 2025

Whispers of winter

  

 


 

When winter leans upon the earth,
A hush falls soft and deep,
As though the world has paused a breath,
And curled itself to sleep.

The mornings bloom in silver light,
Frost etching dreams on glass,
Winds carry tales of distant hills,
Where wandering snowflakes pass.

Trees stand wrapped in quiet grace,
Bare branches sketch the sky,
Their shadows long, their voices still,
Content to simply lie.

Nights glow with a cooler flame,
Stars shimmer crisp and near,
A calmness settles in the heart—
A peace found only here.

For winter brings a tender gift:
A time to slow our pace,
To warm our souls with simple joys,
And find our inner space.

In every chill, a gentle truth—
In every pause, a song—
Winter’s speciality is this:
It teaches where we belong.

The poem describes winter as a season of calm, reflection, and beauty. It highlights how winter transforms both the outer world and the inner world of human emotions.

Stanza-by-stanza meaning

1. Winter’s quiet arrival

When winter leans upon the earth… curled itself to sleep.

Winter is personified as gently “leaning” on the earth.

The world grows silent, almost as if it is resting or sleeping.

This sets the tone of stillness and peace.

2. Beauty in small details

The mornings bloom in silver light… wandering snowflakes pass.

Morning frost and cold light are described creatively as “blooming”.

Frost on windows is compared to dreams etched on glass.

Winds tell stories from snowy hills, giving the season imagination and movement.

3. Quiet strength of nature

Trees stand wrapped in quiet grace… content to simply lie.

Bare winter trees, though stripped of leaves, are shown with a dignified beauty.

Their stillness reflects acceptance and patience.

4. Calmness of night

Nights glow with a cooler flame… A peace found only here.

Winter nights are clear and bright with stars.

This clarity brings a unique inner peace.

The poem connects the external cold with internal calm.

5. The lesson of winter

For winter brings a tender gift… And find our inner space.

Winter is shown not just as a season, but as a teacher.

It encourages people to slow down and enjoy simple comforts.

Winter becomes symbolic of introspection and emotional warmth.

6. The concluding message

Winter’s speciality is this: It teaches where we belong.

The poem ends by stating that the true beauty of winter is the wisdom it gives.

Winter helps people reconnect with themselves, their home, and their sense of belonging.

 

Poetic Style Used

1. Lyric Poetry

The poem expresses personal feelings, emotions, and imagery.

It focuses on mood, atmosphere, and inner experience.

2. Personification

Winter is given human qualities:

“Winter leans upon the earth”

“Winds carry tales”

Frost “etching dreams”

This adds softness and life to natural elements.

3. Imagery

Rich visual images create vivid scenes:

“Silver light”

“Dreams on glass”

“Cooler flame”

“Shadows long”

The poem appeals to sight, touch, and emotion.

4. Soft, flowing rhythm

Lines are structured to feel calm and smooth, matching winter’s quietness.

No harsh sounds or abrupt breaks—only gentle movement.

5. Symbolism

Winter symbolizes:

Rest

Reflection

Peace

Inner strength

Slowing down

It becomes more than a season—it's a metaphor for introspection.

6. Simple but evocative vocabulary

Words like hush, silver, grace, calmness, tender create a peaceful mood.

7. Free-verse with subtle rhyme

The poem does not follow strict rhyme, but uses:

Occasional soft rhymes (earth/breath, sky/lie)

Natural rhythm

Musicality without rigid structure
This suits the meditative theme.

Wednesday, 26 November 2025

SACRED STRANDS : DARBHA, ECLIPSE, AND THE FOOD WE PROTECT

  


 

Introduction

Food is never just food. It is memory, ritual, and a way of holding family together through time. In South Indian households, practices around what is cooked, what is preserved, and how food is handled are braided with religious belief and lived knowledge. One such practice—the use of darbha or kusha grass to protect food during eclipses—captures in a single gesture the intertwined concerns of purity, preservation, and care.

This essay is written as a reflection prompted by the recent lunar eclipse of 7 September 2025, when my family once again prepared for the shadow by collecting and soaking darbha. It is an attempt to describe, remember, and think through why a simple blade of grass can come to symbolise so much.

 

The Household Rhythm of an Eclipse

Eclipse days were announced in our house long before the sky darkened. A family member would call out the date, and quietly, the home would prepare. Curtains and shutters were drawn tight. Water vessels were covered. The temple priest, if nearby, would provide darbha, or a neighbour would bring what they had; sometimes it came bundled in paper, its blades stiff and pale.

There is a choreography to the preparation that almost feels musical: someone lays out a basin of water to soak the strands; another person slices the grass into short pieces; a child runs between the kitchen and the living room, carrying a small wooden utensil or a bowl. Voices fall into low, careful tones—no sudden noises, no frivolous movement. Even the air seems to match the restraint.

The specific tasks were divided by custom and age: men often went to the temple to gather the grass and recite the required mantras; women handled placement, tying the pieces into jars and wedging them between spices. This ritual distribution of labour was itself a way of transmitting knowledge: children learned by watching, the sequence of actions becoming absorbed through repetition.

 

How Darbha Is Used in the Kitchen

Once soaked, darbha softens: its sharp edges become less likely to cut the fingers, and it bends like a brittle reed turned supple. Small bits are slipped into containers of salt, tamarind, chillies, gingelly oil, and ghee; thin slivers are laid under papads; longer pieces are tied across the mouths of clay or brass pots. Sometimes a strand is placed in curd—a food that embodies microbial life—before it is placed in the darkest corner of the house.

The elders explained that darbha forms a barrier. The grass, it was said, shields the food from the eclipse’s damaging influence, preventing it from losing its prana—the vital life force. The language used is precise and tender: the grass does not fight the eclipse; it protects what sustains life.

What struck me, even as a child, was how mundane and extraordinary this was at once. A jar of tamarind looked ordinary until a green blade rested inside it. The presence of darbha turned that jar into an object under care.

 

Botanical Notes and Traditional Knowledge

Darbha or kusha is Desmostachya bipinnata, a resilient grass commonly found on temple grounds and arid plains. It is hardy, with fibrous blades that resist quick decay. In Ayurveda and ethnobotanical accounts, darbha is associated with cooling effects and is used in remedies for bleeding and inflammation. It is also a plant rich in symbolism: used as a seat for meditation, fashioned into rings known as pavitram, and offered as part of sacred fire ceremonies.

Modern studies in ethnobotany and microbiology note that many sacred plants used in traditional practices possess antibacterial compounds. Tulsi and neem are two well-known examples; darbha too is reported to have properties that could contribute to hygiene and preservation, though the evidence is still patchy and not definitive. Even if darbha’s chemical effects on stored food are small, the practice of sealing and not touching food during an eclipse would certainly reduce contamination and pests—simple measures with real protective value.

 Eclipse, Food, and the Question of 'Radiation'

When elders spoke of eclipse radiation they were not using the modern term in a physics sense. The idea was that during a grahana something in the cosmic order is out of balance and can affect the world below. Within this cosmology, making an extra effort to protect food—by using darbha or by sealing jars, avoiding fresh cooking, or fasting—made practical sense. If nothing else, it ensured that the household did not rely on food that had been left exposed or unattended during a period when people might be distracted, fasting, or sleeping.

The ritual thus performed multiple functions: it prevented careless spoilage; it enforced a pause in household activity that led to collective hygiene; and it embedded the act of protection with symbolic meaning so people complied willingly.

 Childhood Anecdotes: Small Defiance and Deep Lessons

My own childhood memory includes a small act of defiance. Once, unable to contain my curiosity, I tiptoed to the window and pressed my face against the grille to glimpse the moon as it dimmed. My grandmother found me, took my hand gently, and led me to the kitchen where she showed me the darbha in the curd pot. She did not scold harshly; instead she told me the story of how the grass was always called upon during times of disturbance. That evening, while we waited for the family’s ritual bath, she hummed quietly as she removed each blade—an almost invisible choreography of untying and releasing.

That promise—so small, so domestic—became a lesson in endurance and communal restraint, a way of learning how ritual ties behaviour to meaning. The first meal after the eclipse tasted like a celebration precisely because the household had undergone the minor ordeal of waiting and purification together.

 Regional Variations and Practical Differences

South India has a wealth of micro-practices around the eclipse. In Tamil Nadu, darbha is often tucked into tamarind jars and tied on the oil container. In Kerala, houses might cover food with banana leaves and perform purification baths together. In Andhra Pradesh and Telangana, pickles are considered vulnerable and are thus carefully watched; in parts of Karnataka, wells and water pots receive darbha or other protective materials.

North India shows different patterns: tulsi leaves and prayers might take the place of darbha; in some communities cooked food is entirely discarded and fresh meals prepared only after the eclipse. Coastal fishing communities sometimes avoid setting out to sea during a grahana. The diversity reminds us that ritual practice adapts to local ecologies and what is readily available: different sacred plants fulfill similar protective roles depending on the region.

 Cross-cultural Echoes

Across the globe, civilisations have reacted to eclipses with precaution, and many of these precautions have food dimensions. Ancient Chinese records often describe festive or fearful responses to eclipses, including stopping normal food routines. Mesopotamian priests watched eclipses as omens for rulers and took precautions around royal provisions. In parts of Latin America, pregnant women avoided outdoor exposure to keep fetuses safe. European medieval accounts tie eclipses to crop fears and livestock anxieties.

These parallels suggest that eclipses, as dramatic celestial events, universally provoked caution about sustenance and the vulnerable body. When the sun or moon is altered in the sky, food—and those who produce and consume it—becomes a focus of communal care.

 Ritual Language and Mantric Practice

In many households, darbha was not placed silently; it was accompanied by words—short prayers, invocations, or simple mantras. These were not always elaborate Vedic recitations; often they were quick, practical invocations: asking the grass to protect the food, requesting the deity to guard the family, or calling upon ancestral blessings. In temple contexts, priests chanted more formal mantras when cutting and handing over darbha, thereby consecrating it. The spoken element reinforced the material: the grass was not only a barrier but a consecrated medium charged by voice.

The language around darbha is worth noting because it ties the object into an oral culture of instruction—how to place it, how long to leave it, and how to remove it. These instructions are the connective tissue that keeps the practice coherent across generations.

 The Market and the Temple: How Darbha Reaches the Home

Darbha is often available near temples, sold by vendors or provided by priests to devotees. In smaller towns, bundles are laid out on temple steps; in larger cities, pilgrims carry small tied strands home. This supply chain—from field to temple to home—also illustrates how sacred plants are woven into local economies. Collectors who gather darbha from grasslands perform a service that has both cultural and material value.

These exchanges, however, raise questions about sustainability. In some regions, sacred plants are harvested intensively during festival seasons, putting pressure on local flora. A contemporary conversation about darbha therefore needs to include questions about sustainable harvesting, community stewardship of sacred groves, and ethical supply: how do we preserve both the ritual practice and the environment that sustains it?

 

My Method: Memory, Talk, and Listening

This essay is not an academic survey; it is a collection of remembered practices, family instructions, and conversations with neighbours and temple priests. I spoke with elders, who described what they did and why; I watched, during the 2025 eclipse, as darbha was placed around our kitchen. These are not neutral observations: they are embedded in affection and partiality. Yet they are also necessary. Cultural memory is often kept alive precisely in kitchens, not archives, and to ignore these practices is to miss the ways ordinary people manage risk and meaning.

 Gender, Authority, and Access

An aspect that bears attention is the gendered distribution of ritual labour. In many households, men were the ones to fetch darbha from temple premises or to pronounce the mantras; women handled preparation and placement in the kitchen. In other settings, women led ritual safeguarding of food and water sources. These divisions were not universal but reveal how sacred materials intersect with everyday authority. Who is permitted to handle the sacred? Who acts as the mediator between temple and home? These questions expose the social relations embedded in the ritual and how tradition is policed through everyday practice.

 Darbha and Food Security: A Larger View

Seen from an ecological and social perspective, the use of darbha during eclipses says something about scarcity and security. Food staples—salt, tamarind, papad, ghee—were precious in households where preservation required labour and planning. Rituals that protected these items were practical strategies for reducing waste and ensuring continuity. Even if a blade of grass does not change the chemistry of a jar of pickles, the ritual ensured the family actively guarded their reserves, avoided careless contamination, and used food judiciously during the pause of the eclipse.

 Urban Fading and Memory

As urban life shifts rhythms—with fridges, packaged goods and different social patterns—many of these rituals fade. Younger people may view the practices as quaint or superstitious. Yet memory persists: the image of darbha tucked into a pickle jar continues to surface in conversations and family recollections. For diasporic communities, these images anchor a sense of origin and belonging, a tiny emblem of home in foreign kitchens.

The fading of practice does not erase its lessons. The discipline, the care, and the attention to preservation remain useful lenses from which to view modern crises of food waste and unsustainable consumption.

 Reflection on the 7 September 2025 Eclipse

On 7 September 2025, as the moon’s shadow moved across the sky, I felt the old rituals return—briefly, insistently—into our modern kitchen. My mother laid darbha into the tamarind jar with a small, practised motion. We did not perform any elaborate mantras, nor did we discard food en masse. But the action—placing the grass, moving jars to a dark cupboard, pausing to wait out the eclipse—felt like a conversation between past and present.

There is a tenderness in that small conversation. It recognises that even in a scientific age, ritual practices can co-exist with knowledge. The darbha did not aim to defy astronomy; it aimed to hold human life gently through an unsettling celestial event.

 Contemporary Resonances: Climate, Food Waste and Resilience

Today, the logic that undergirded darbha practices—careful preservation, attention to storage, community coordination—has a fresh relevance. Climate change disrupts harvest cycles; supply chains are vulnerable; food spoilage is a global concern. The ethic of the darbha ritual—valuing staples, preventing waste, performing simple acts of protection—offers a vernacular model of resilience. Whether or not one embraces the metaphysical claims, the social practice of pausing, securing, and renewing food deserves study as a low-tech strategy for sustainability.

 Stories and Myths Around Darbha

Across regions, darbha is embedded in myth. Stories tell of sages who sat on kusha while receiving revelation; of deities who chose grass for its purity; of kings protected by sacred mats in times of battle. These narratives lend texture to the practice: the grass does not merely act; it participates in a lineage of sanctity. When elders invoke these tales in the kitchen, darbha becomes part of a long narrative of care and protection.

 Final Thoughts

I return, finally, to the bowl of curd with a blade of grass tucked inside the pot, to the small, steady gestures made by those who have always known how to hold a household together. Perhaps the darbha does not alter cosmic rays, but it alters us: it asks us to slow down, to be careful, to mark our lives with acts that say “we remember.” In the age of instantaneous consumption, these acts of measured care are not quaint relics but invitations to rethink how we treat what we eat.

If we keep the strand, even in memory, we preserve a way of being that honours food and one another. That, perhaps, is the true protection darbha offers. It is a small practice with a large heart.

Tuesday, 25 November 2025

One Month to Year-End: Encouragement for Reading Enthusiasts to Conquer Their TBR Pile

    


As the calendar quietly turns to its final page and we step into the last month of the year, many reading enthusiasts feel a familiar tug of anxiety — the unfinished TBR list. What began in January as a hopeful, ambitious plan to read widely and consistently has now become a mixed bag of half-read novels, untouched non-fiction, bookmarked essays, and titles that have been waiting patiently since summer.

But this final stretch of the year doesn’t have to be overwhelming. In fact, it can be the most exciting, energising, and satisfying part of a reader’s journey. With the right mindset and a practical approach, you can complete your personal reading goals and close the year with a sense of accomplishment.

 

Why It’s Challenging for Readers at Year-End

The last month is often packed with celebrations, deadlines, travel, family time, and reflections. Amid all this:

Reading pace slows down

Energy levels dip after a long year

New distractions pop up

Reading guilt grows, making it even harder to start

But remember — reading should never feel like pressure. It’s a companion, not a competition.

 

Practical Ways to Support Yourself and Finish Your TBR

1. Reassess Your TBR — With Kindness

Not all books that you planned in January still excite you in December.
Put aside the titles that feel heavy for now. Choose books that match your current mood and energy.

Reading is easier when the book pulls you forward.

 

2. Choose Shorter or Lighter Reads

Novellas, short stories, essays, thin non-fiction, or poetry collections are perfect for this season.
They give you momentum, and momentum is everything.

 

3. Try the 20-Minute Rule

Set aside just 20 minutes a day — morning, bedtime, or tea-time reading.
Once the habit clicks again, you may even surprise yourself and continue beyond 20 minutes.

Consistency > speed.

 

4. Listen While You Move

Audiobooks are a wonderful way to read when you’re cooking, walking, commuting, or cleaning.
It counts as reading, and it helps you clear titles faster in a relaxed way.

 

5. Join a December Reading Sprint

Even a small group of online friends or a WhatsApp family circle can help build fun accountability.
Share updates, pages read, quotes, or thoughts — encouragement works wonders.

 

6. Celebrate Every Book Finished

Complete one? Give yourself a small reward.
A new bookmark. A cup of hot chocolate. A cosy evening.
This boosts motivation beautifully.

 

7. Remember the Purpose: Joy, Not Pressure

Your TBR is not a burden — it’s a collection of choices, interests, moods, and dreams.
Even finishing one meaningful book is a victory worth celebrating.

 

A Gentle Push for the Last Month

To every reader who feels behind, delayed, distracted, or guilty —
you’re not alone.

Reading is a journey, and journeys are never linear. Pick up a book you truly love, open the page, and take the first step. You still have time — not to rush, but to enjoy the quiet company of words.

Let this final month be about:

 Rediscovering your love for reading
 Completing what truly matters
 Entering the new year with a light, happy reading heart

You’ve got this. One page at a time. One book at a time.
The year can still end beautifully — with you turning the last page of a story that stayed with you.

 

 

When a Ghost Takes a Taxi Ride: A Hilarious Stormy Encounter With an Eco-Friendly Twist

           The storm was so heavy that my taxi’s wipers were basically doing surya namaskar on fast-forward. Just when I thought the night...