smratz

2.2K posts

smratz

smratz

@sehr_chic

wordomaniac who loves the fact that she gets paid to read. only wish it paid a tad bit more.

Pune India Katılım Nisan 2010
949 Takip Edilen49 Takipçiler
smratz
smratz@sehr_chic·
@NonsensicalNemo That’s because most of them were around for 26/11. The older millennials remember the 90s very well
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imran GULZAR
imran GULZAR@igulzar78·
@ImtiazMadmood If your only way to feel powerful is through a 3-hour CGI fantasy, then by all means, buy your popcorn. Some people build nations; others just build movie sets to feel better about themselves. Enjoy the fiction,it’s clearly the only place where your narrative actually works.
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Imtiaz Mahmood
Imtiaz Mahmood@ImtiazMadmood·
UAE likely to allow the Release of Dhurandhar 1 and Dhurandhar 2 in all Multiplexes!! Just to put Pakistanis in their place!
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Iran Embassy in Zimbabwe
Iran Embassy in Zimbabwe@IRANinZIMBABWE·
8 P.M. is not that good. Could you change it to between 1 and 2 P.M., or if possible, 1 and 2 A.M.? Thank you for your attention to this important matter. I.E.Z.
Iran Embassy in Zimbabwe tweet media
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StoxMentor | The Stock Market Guide
This means we were succcessful in stage 2 on India's three stage nuclear program: Stage 1: Generate energy using Uranium-238 and produce Plutonium-239 as a byproduct. Stage 2: Generate energy using a mix of Uranium-238 and Plutonium-239. Less Uranium required and the proces generates more Plutonium-239 than it consumes. That means more Plutonium. It also generates Uranium-233 which is required for stage 3. Stage 3: Generate energy using a mix of Uranium-233 and Thorium-233 (which is available in abundance in India). It is stil theoretical and might take 25-30 years to develop after success of stage 2. If stage 3 succeeds, it will make India's energy supply virtually inexhaustible for centuries. We would be able to generate all the electricity we need to power everything including vehicles. No more dependence of oil. Solar+Nuclear energy is the future.
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smratz@sehr_chic·
@Schadengirl @saaiyer I think this whole concept is flawed. Can we find adequate protein sources for ppl who do low to moderate exercise in vegetarian food? Absolutely. For that we need to change the proportions in which we eat—less carbs focus and increase fibre, beans,dals + sprouted legumes
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RewriteYourStory
RewriteYourStory@saaiyer·
Rujuta Diwekar’s recent post has sparked a controversy and honestly, both sides are missing the full picture. Yes, it is overwhelming for mothers and older women to suddenly change how they eat, especially when they’re already carrying the bulk of cooking and household responsibilities. Women are conditioned to put themselves last, often at the cost of their own nutrition. But does that justify shutting down kids, specifically sons, when they’re asking for better, more protein-rich, more thoughtful food? No. The real issue runs deeper. We come from a culture where questioning elders is discouraged, and boys are rarely taught basic life skills like cooking or sharing household work. So when food conversations come up, they’re not just about nutrition, they’re about invisible labour, entitlement, and years of imbalance. You cannot demand better food without acknowledging who is doing the work. And you cannot shut down the demand without addressing why the system is broken. Cooking and food planning have to become shared responsibilities. Not “helping,” not “occasionally stepping in” but actively owning. Because here’s what I see in practice: When a male client seeks nutrition help, women in his family almost always step in, joining calls, following plans, supporting the process. When a female client seeks help? Silence. No involvement. No shared accountability. This isn’t about protein vs traditional food. It’s about who carries the burden of making it happen. Until gender roles inside the home evolve, no diet no matter how “correct”, will truly work. Health is not an individual responsibility in a household. It’s a system. @RujutaDiwekar
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Jigar Punadiya
Jigar Punadiya@Jigspunadiya·
it's always a low quality video ❤️
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Neo
Neo@neo_one_one·
@MichaelScottDM0 For anyone to take him serious, he needed a good movie, we always knew he had range, it was rly hard to tke him serious, bcs we saw him most of the time out of the movies doing really weird stuff, it took all the attention away from his mediocre movies. Dhurandhar changed that
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Michael Scott
Michael Scott@MichaelScottDM0·
I was never a Ranveer Singh fan. Loved his work but the loud personality, the over the top outfits outside movies was too much for me. Dhurandhar changed that. And it got me thinking about how badly India treats his craft. This man has played a street rapper, a historical emperor, a cricket legend, a Maratha warrior and disappeared completely into every single one. No two performances look like the same person. When he locked himself in for Khilji and needed therapy, people laughed. Called it attention seeking. Even fellow actors took digs at him. Heath Ledger does it, he is a legend. Ranveer does it, its drama and attention seeking. We just aren't used to an Indian actor taking his craft this seriously. So we mock it instead. Took me long enough but I get it now. 🤷 #RanveerSingh #Bollywood
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smratz@sehr_chic·
@StriderEl Him imitating her is peak brother-sister relationship
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smratz
smratz@sehr_chic·
@cleobug101 Unfortunately, once they reach the top, they trade in that woman for a trophy
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Cleobug101
Cleobug101@cleobug101·
the whole “trophy” wife thing is really just Hollywood and sports talk. it's a poor man's idea of being rich. when i worked as a nanny overseas, i spent time around a lot of ultra rich families. CEOs and CTOs of major international companies. let me tell you something, these men LOVE a plain woman. average to tall height, super slim build, mousy brown natural hair, no lip filler, no acrylics, nothing. but they were all very dedicated to making the man's house a HOME. they had chefs and nannies but they were still baking him treats, ironing his clothes for him, gardening, and extremely affectionate. men with responsibility and who also grew up around men with responsibilities learn very early on that a peaceful woman is everything.
Raq@raqisright

Aspiring tradwives are women too ugly to be aspiring trophy wives

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Smita Prakash
Smita Prakash@smitaprakash·
If you are a senior journalist, an editor, you should know the difference between a nation & a country. The 2 words are not interchangeable. Pakistan was a geographical entity carved out of a nation by a colonial power. It became a country in 1947. Gyan for today. You r welcome
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smratz@sehr_chic·
@AniseNot Revisiting this in a few months
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anise
anise@AniseNot·
I don’t think I am but I guess we will see
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anise
anise@AniseNot·
Sister showed up at my house today & was like “Oh wow you’re pregnant??” I said no She said “I’m not calling you fat, I can just sense these things. You’re pregnant, you’ll see”
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Blackpilled Hindu🇮🇳🕉️ௐ🚩
@nekzaad @um_dubey @_Saffron_Girl_ Parsis are unfortunately bigoted and anti-Hindu as we saw in Venu Srinivasan being removed yesterday from one of the Tata trusts for not being Parsi, and in the anti-Hindu judgements and diatribes of Supreme Court judge Nariman who is also a Parsi priest. Ungrateful lot!
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smratz
smratz@sehr_chic·
@nekzaad @ksinamdar @_Saffron_Girl_ Accepting! Tolerance means we don’t consider you as Indians nor do we eat or enjoy your culture and cuisine. You are one of us as Indians not Parsi-Indian or anything else
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Nick
Nick@nekzaad·
@_Saffron_Girl_ Parsi here, an actual minority in India (less than 60,000 of us here in a nation of 1 billion), and I can confirm this as 100% true! No just co-exist, we’re allowed to thrive, practice our faith. There’s no religion more tolerant than Hinduism 🙏🏼🚩🇮🇳
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smratz@sehr_chic·
@DivaJain2 Except Sabya is known for his red saris
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Diva Jain
Diva Jain@DivaJain2·
Thanks to deracinated and semi educated designers like Shweta Kapur and Sabyasachi, Indian women look like widows instead of brides on their wedding.
Diva Jain tweet media
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