Arjun
18.9K posts


Tell me a beautiful medical fact.

Mexico City 🇲🇽



India’s head must be spinning 😵💫





Give compassion a chance! Feed them and befriend them. #AyurK9

I moved to Thailand. Same me. Same work. Same age. My body, my energy, my sleep, my social life, all different here. And it’s got nothing to do with discipline. Here’s what I’ve learned living here: 1. Food Street food is ₹100. Grilled. Fresh vegetables. 25g protein. Pad kra pao, som tam, grilled chicken, green curry. All day, every day. Healthy is the normal. 2. 2. Movement Nobody “goes for a walk.” They just walk. 8,000 steps a day without trying. Night markets, beach walks, motorbike to every corner. Movement is built into the city, not scheduled around your calendar. 3. Working spaces Cafes with natural light. Outdoor coworking. Beach towns full of people working from their laptops. 4. Meeting people New friendships at 35 are normal here. At night markets, at cafes, at coworking spaces. Strangers talk to each other. “Come over” still means today. 5. Cost of living ₹60,000 a month gets you a full apartment, a scooter, 3 meals out a day, and weekends at the beach. 6. Community Digital nomad communities here are real. Coworking spaces full of people building things, traveling alone, starting over at 30. I love India. I always will. But living here has shown me what’s possible when a country builds for its people. The food, the movement, the rest, the community, it all adds up to a body and a life that feels lighter. We have the talent. The culture. The potential. We just haven’t decided we deserve this kind of life yet. PS - all of this is true if you want it to be.


meat, fish, real estate is expensive in India


never marry a jeeta who works in corporate, imagine those nashik jeets who sent their wives to earn extra income in return got cucced & their wives destroyed their religion too, lmao.





Few days ago, CM Helpline workers in UP fought for ₹15,000. Today, Noida garment workers are fighting for ₹20,000. Just ₹20,000 and 8 working hours. What they are getting: ₹9,000 salary. 12-hour shifts. No overtime. No dignity. 4-5 days of peaceful protest. Zero media coverage. Zero government response. CM Yogi was busy telling Bengal how well he runs Uttar Pradesh. The same studios that sat in Noida for 5 days and saw nothing... will now have Dozens experts explaining why poor people are dangerous.











