
Subramanya
768 posts
























My cousin moved to Bangalore for a ₹1.5L/month tech job. Six months later, he realised something no one tells freshers. Computer Science graduate First software developer job Moved to Bengaluru for better opportunities Salary: ₹1.5L per month Back home, everyone thought he had made it. Big tech job. Big city. Big salary. But a few months later, reality looked different. Rent for a small apartment near the office: ₹36K Food & groceries: ₹13K-15K Cabs & autos (traffic is insane): ₹6K-8K Swiggy, coffee, weekends out: ₹10K-12K Then come the things nobody talks about. Subscriptions. Medical expenses. Unexpected bills. Sending money back home. By the end of the month… Savings were barely ₹15K-20K. That’s when he realised something most people outside big cities don’t see. ₹1L+ salary sounds huge in your hometown. But in a city like Bangalore, it often just means you’re getting started. Big salary. Small savings. Welcome to Banglore life.


I am travelling from Vizag to Hyderabad in Vande Bharat train. One guy got in fight with the catering services for not serving Non Vegetarian Food. He said that non veg is his default, only for the catering service guy asking him to confirm it on his ticket. His ticket said Veg Apparently if you book the Vande Bharat train at the last moment Tatkal, they can only serve you vegetarian food. @IRCTCofficial can we not fix this ? Most Indians are non vegetarians, if they book tickets at the last moment, they should get food of their preference










There is a popular belief in India that living in your own house on your own land is the ultimate lifestyle. I have lived in both houses and flats. In practice, flats are far more convenient. A few reasons why.












