If you could live anywhere in the world, where would it be?
Home Is Where the Soul Finds Its Horizon: If I Could Live Anywhere in the World

“The world is a book, and those who do not travel read only one page.” These immortal words of Saint Augustine have inspired countless travellers. Yet, after turning many pages of life’s remarkable book, I have discovered a profound truth: the finest place to live is not always where the landscape is the grandest, but where the heart finds its rhythm.
If someone were to ask me, “If you could live anywhere in the world, where would it be?” my answer might surprise them. I would not immediately mention the snow-capped Alps of Switzerland, the maple forests of Canada, the lavender fields of France, the fjords of Norway, or the sun-kissed beaches of Australia. These are undoubtedly magnificent places, each a masterpiece painted by the Divine Artist. However, I have learnt that paradise is not merely a geographical location; it is a state of mind.
Having been born and nurtured amidst the majestic Himalayas, educated by the disciplined Jesuit Fathers, married into a warm Punjabi family, and having spent nearly four decades serving schools across India, I have come to realise that my true home is stitched together from countless memories rather than a single address.
Life has taken me on roads less travelled. It has offered me moments of triumph and seasons of despair. I have climbed mountains of responsibility, crossed rivers of uncertainty, and weathered storms that threatened to shake my very foundations. Yet every experience became another brick in the invisible house I now call home.
As the Principal of schools, I met children from diverse cultures, languages and faiths. Every smiling face reminded me that humanity speaks one universal language—the language of kindness. Education taught me something no atlas ever could: every place has beautiful people and broken people; every nation has saints and sinners; every city has both sunshine and shadows.
Were I compelled to choose one place today, I would choose a quiet town nestled amidst green hills, where dawn arrives with birdsong instead of traffic, where evenings are painted with golden sunsets, where libraries outnumber shopping malls, where children still laugh outdoors, and where neighbours know each other’s names. A place where one can cycle through winding roads, play the harmonium without disturbing anyone, write books beneath ancient trees, enjoy simple meals with family, and watch grandchildren transform ordinary afternoons into extraordinary memories.
Perhaps that place exists. Perhaps it does not. Yet dreams often become the compass by which life is navigated.
Indian philosophy beautifully captures this longing. The ancient Sanskrit verse says:
“वसुधैव कुटुम्बकम्” (Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam)
“The whole world is one family.”
If the entire earth is one family, then every country is but another room in our universal home.
Similarly, the Bible reminds us:
“For here we do not have an enduring city, but we are looking for the city that is to come.” (Hebrews 13:14)
This verse gently reminds us that our earthly addresses are temporary. We are all travellers carrying invisible passports stamped not by immigration officers but by love, compassion and faith.
History offers remarkable examples of people who carried their homes within them. Mahatma Gandhi transformed prison cells into places of reflection. Nelson Mandela turned confinement into a university of forgiveness. Rabindranath Tagore found poetry wherever nature whispered. Their surroundings changed, but their inner landscapes remained fertile.
Modern society often believes that happiness lies one relocation away. We imagine that moving abroad will erase our worries. Yet, as the old saying goes, “Wherever you go, you take yourself with you.” Changing the scenery without changing the soul is like repainting a cracked wall while ignoring the weakened foundation beneath.
Today, as I spend precious moments with my family, especially watching my beloved grandson discover the world one curious question at a time, I realise that happiness is not hidden behind distant mountains. It is sitting beside me at the dining table, laughing in the living room, cycling on quiet roads, writing another chapter, playing an old melody on the keyboard, or whispering a prayer before dawn.
There was a time when career ambitions determined my destination. Now wisdom chooses it. Earlier, I searched for opportunities; today, I searched for peace. Once I measured success by promotions and achievements; now I measure it by meaningful conversations, good health, faithful friendships and nights of restful sleep.
The Greek philosopher Diogenes famously declared himself a “citizen of the world.” In many ways, advancing age grants us that same citizenship. National boundaries become less important than human values. Languages differ, yet smiles remain identical.
If I could truly design my ideal place to live, it would have the serenity of the Himalayas, the hospitality of Punjab, the simplicity of rural Odisha, the discipline of my boarding school days, the innovation of Bengaluru, and above all, the warmth of a loving family gathered under one roof. Such a place may not appear on any map, but it flourishes in the heart.
Life, after all, is not about finding the perfect location but about becoming the kind of person who can create joy wherever Providence plants him. A tree does not complain about the soil; it quietly stretches its roots deeper and reaches higher towards the heavens.
As the evening of life gently approaches, I have discovered that home is not defined by bricks, borders or bank balances. Home is where prayers rise naturally, books gather lovingly, music heals silently, grandchildren laugh freely, and gratitude fills every corner.
If I could live anywhere in the world, I would choose a place where my soul grows kinder, my mind remains curious, my faith becomes stronger, and my family continues to flourish.
Perhaps, in the end, the greatest destination is not a country at all—it is a life well lived.
For wherever love resides, wherever hope is renewed, and wherever peace embraces the heart, there lies the most beautiful place on Earth.





