@itssmdri@SudeepSonawane We don't live in India by choice. Ask any of those 1.4b if given a chance to leave India. They will not even bother saying goodbye to their kin and immediately take the offer.
Applause is temporary. Effort is permanent.
Don’t chase claps—chase consistency.
Because the people who quietly show up every day…
They’re the ones who eventually get a standing ovation.
Difficult customers aren’t difficult—they’re just unconvinced, unheard, or burned before.
If you stay calm while they stay chaotic, you win twice: the deal and the reputation.
@IAmAaronWill “‘Well, there’s your problem,’ said the Cat. ‘You keep asking for directions when you haven’t taken a single step yet.’” — loosely inspired by Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland
unpopular opinion: most people don't need a mentor.
they need to stop consuming and start executing.
they already know enough to take the next step.
they're just using "i need guidance" as a reason to delay the scary part.
action is the best mentor you'll ever have.
@Jayyanginspires Upgrade your room before you upgrade your résumé. When their “just another Tuesday” feels like your stretch goal, you’re in the right place.
@NsNitinsinha A car isn’t a status symbol, it’s a story machine. If your best memories don’t involve wrong turns, late-night coffee, and questionable parking choices… you’re just commuting, not living.
No matter what car you have. It should take you places. You must enjoy the freedom of travelling in your personal transport. Go anywhere. Stop anywhere. Drive throughout the night with a couple of Iced Americanos. Park and sleep in the car.
Sometimes the best memories are not made in luxury hotels. They are made inside a car munching miles…
Your car should take you places. Not just physically, but emotionally too. ❤️
@sharran Funny how people’ll spend 30 minutes choosing a ₹200 shirt but sign a 20-year EMI in 5 minutes. Priorities don’t lie—they just quietly compound.
True. Peaceful people don’t compete, they just coexist.
When someone is calm and content, they’re not scanning the room for comparisons—they’re present. No quiet jealousy, no subtle judgments, just space for others to be.
It’s a different kind of energy. You feel it immediately.
Now I understand why people say you should be friends with people who are genuinely happy with their lives.
Most importantly, yang calm & content. When someone is genuinely happy with their life, they don’t feel the need to envy or judge others.