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Friday, June 12, 2026

If I Could Weave New Threads into India’s Cultural Tapestry

What’s a cultural tradition from another country that you wish existed in yours?

If I Could Weave New Threads into India’s Cultural Tapestry

Traditions are not merely echoes of the past; they are bridges that carry the wisdom of one generation into the dreams of the next.”

India is often described as a civilisation rather than merely a nation. It is a land where rivers are worshipped, festivals illuminate the darkest nights, families gather around shared meals, and ancient stories continue to shape modern aspirations.

From the snow-capped Himalayas to the sun-kissed shores of Kanyakumari, every region hums with its own melody of customs and beliefs.

Yet, even in a country as culturally rich as India, one occasionally wonders: What traditions could further enrich our collective life? What cultural practices, if adopted widely, might make our society more compassionate, harmonious, and joyful?

While I deeply cherish the traditions we possess, there are a few cultural customs I wish existed more prominently across our nation.

The Tradition of Celebrating Ordinary People

India celebrates film stars, sports icons, politicians, and industrialists with great enthusiasm. Their achievements deserve recognition. Yet countless unsung heroes quietly shape our communities every day.
Imagine a tradition where neighbourhoods gathered annually to honour schoolteachers, nurses, sanitation workers, farmers, security guards, and volunteers. No glittering stage. No television cameras. Just heartfelt gratitude.

After all, a society grows not only because of those who shine in the spotlight but also because of those who keep the lamps burning behind the curtains.

As the old saying goes, “The roots are never seen, yet they hold up the tree.”

The Tradition of Listening to Elders’ Stories

Modern life often races faster than our ability to absorb its meaning. Grandparents and elderly citizens carry libraries of experiences within them, yet many of those priceless stories disappear unheard.

I often wish there existed a cultural tradition where families dedicated one evening every month solely to storytelling by elders.

Children would listen to tales of hardship, resilience, humour, love, migration, and changing times.

Such evenings would become living museums where wisdom is passed not through textbooks but through human voices.

History preserved in books informs the mind; history preserved in conversations nourishes the soul.

The Tradition of Community Gratitude Days

We celebrate festivals of victory, prosperity, devotion, and harvest. But what if there were a national custom dedicated simply to gratitude?

– A day when neighbours thanked neighbours.

– Students thanked teachers.

– Children thanked parents.

– Employers thanked employees.

– Citizens thanked nature.

In an era where criticism often travels faster than appreciation, such a tradition could become a healing balm.
Gratitude is a currency whose value never depreciates.

The Tradition of Interfaith

Family Gatherings

India’s diversity is one of its greatest strengths. Temples, churches, mosques, gurudwaras, monasteries, and sacred groves coexist across the land.

Yet many people remain unfamiliar with traditions beyond their own.

How beautiful it would be if communities organised annual interfaith family gatherings where people shared food, music, customs, and stories without debate or conversion.

When people break bread together, walls often crumble faster than arguments can build them.

Differences need not divide; they can enrich.

A garden is beautiful precisely because it contains many flowers.

The Tradition of Reading Aloud Together

The digital age has gifted us convenience but stolen many moments of collective reflection.

I wish there were a widespread tradition of families reading aloud together for an hour each week. Literature, poetry, biographies, travelogues, humour, philosophy—anything that stimulates imagination and conversation.

Books have a remarkable ability to unite generations sitting beneath the same roof.

– A child may discover wonder.

– A parent may discover perspective.

– An elder may discover companionship.

And everyone discovers that learning has no expiry date.

The Tradition of Annual Reconciliation

Every family accumulates misunderstandings. Friendships encounter storms. Communities experience disagreements.

What if there existed a cultural custom encouraging people to seek reconciliation once every year?

A day dedicated to making phone calls, writing letters, offering apologies, and extending forgiveness.

Many relationships do not perish because of major conflicts. They fade away through silence.

A tradition of reconciliation could revive countless bonds before they become irreparable.

After all, bridges are easier to repair than to rebuild.

The Tradition of Celebrating Nature as a Relative

India reveres nature through many rituals, yet environmental concerns continue to grow.

I dream of a tradition where every family adopts a tree, a pond, a stretch of road, or a small garden and nurtures it throughout the year.

Children would grow up viewing nature not as a resource but as a relative.

When affection replaces obligation, conservation becomes effortless.

The earth has always cared for us. Perhaps it deserves to be treated as family.

A Culture That Continues to Evolve

Tradition is not a museum exhibit frozen in time. It is a living river that gathers fresh streams as it flows.

The greatness of India has never rested solely upon preserving the old; it has also rested upon embracing the meaningful new.

If we cultivate traditions of gratitude, storytelling, reconciliation, environmental stewardship, respect for ordinary heroes, and genuine social harmony, we would not diminish our heritage. We would enrich it.
The strongest cultures are those that remember their roots while extending their branches towards the future.


The India of my dreams is not merely prosperous.
It is thoughtful.
Not merely educated.
It is wise. Not merely connected by roads and technology.
It is connected by empathy.

Ultimately, a nation’s true wealth is not measured by the height of its buildings or the size of its economy, but by the depth of its humanity.


Let stories flow where silence stays,
Let kindness colour common days.
Let grateful hearts replace complaint,
And heal the wounds that time may paint.

Let every elder’s voice be heard,
Let every child cherish each word.
Let rivers, forests, skies and seas,
Be loved as family, not merely trees.

For cultures bloom when hearts expand,
Like monsoon rains across the land.
And India shines her brightest light,
When compassion walks with might.

Thursday, June 11, 2026

When Visitors Miss the Soul of a Nation: The Biggest Mistakes People Make While Visiting My Country

What are the biggest mistakes people make when visiting your country?

When Visitors Miss the Soul of a Nation: The Biggest Mistakes People Make While Visiting My Country

Travelling to another country is not merely about crossing geographical boundaries; it is about stepping into a different rhythm of life.

Every nation has its own heartbeat, its own fragrance, its own unwritten rules. Yet many travellers arrive carrying invisible luggage far heavier than their suitcases—prejudices, assumptions, stereotypes, and unrealistic expectations.

If I were asked about the biggest mistakes people make while visiting my country, I would not point first to incorrect maps, forgotten reservations, or poorly planned itineraries. The greatest mistakes are often matters of perception rather than preparation.

Arriving with a Ready-Made Opinion

One of the most common mistakes travellers make is arriving with conclusions already formed. They see a nation through documentaries, social media reels, political debates, or sensational headlines long before they see it with their own eyes.

A country is not a news bulletin.

It is a living tapestry woven from millions of stories, cultures, languages, dreams, and struggles. Those who arrive expecting only what they have heard often miss what is actually there.
The traveller who carries certainty sees little. The traveller who carries curiosity sees everything.

Trying to Compare Everything

Many visitors spend their entire journey comparing.
The roads are not like my country.”
“The food is different.”
“The people behave differently.”
“The system works differently.”

Of course it does.
A country is not meant to be a duplicate of another.

Comparison is the thief of discovery. When visitors constantly measure one culture against another, they reduce a unique experience into a scorecard.

The beauty of travel lies not in finding similarities but in appreciating differences.

Racing Instead of Experiencing

Modern tourism has become a strange competition.
Ten cities in seven days.
Twenty monuments in three days.

Hundreds of photographs and almost no memories.
Many travellers spend more time documenting a destination than experiencing it. They collect images while losing moments.

A nation’s true character is rarely found in famous landmarks alone. It is hidden in a conversation with a shopkeeper, a cup of tea shared with a stranger, a sunset watched without a camera, or the laughter of children playing in a village lane.

Countries are meant to be felt, not merely photographed.

Ignoring Local Customs

Every culture possesses its own code of respect.
Visitors who fail to understand local customs often unintentionally create discomfort. A gesture that appears harmless in one society may be considered rude in another.

Learning a few local greetings, understanding basic etiquette, dressing appropriately where required, and respecting traditions can transform a visitor from a tourist into a welcomed guest.

Respect opens doors that money never can.

Judging Poverty Without Understanding Resilience

Many travellers notice economic differences and immediately define a country by them.

They see what is missing but overlook what is present.
They notice modest houses but miss generous hearts.
They observe crowded streets but ignore vibrant communities.

They witness struggle but fail to recognise resilience.

A nation’s dignity cannot be measured solely by income statistics. Human warmth, family bonds, cultural richness, and community spirit are treasures that rarely appear in economic reports.

Expecting Perfection

Every country has its challenges.

Traffic jams exist.

Bureaucratic delays occur.

Public systems sometimes falter.

Visitors who expect perfection become frustrated. Those who expect authenticity become enriched.

Travel is not an exercise in finding faults. It is an opportunity to understand how different societies solve life’s challenges in their own way.

Treating History as Dead

Many tourists walk through ancient monuments as though they are museum exhibits frozen in time.

Yet history is not dead stone.
It breathes through architecture, language, festivals, folklore, and collective memory.

When visitors rush through historical sites without understanding their stories, they see walls instead of wisdom.

The past is often the key that unlocks the present.

Failing to Listen

Perhaps the greatest mistake of all is speaking too much and listening too little.

A nation reveals itself through its people.

Every taxi driver, teacher, farmer, musician, student, grandmother, and street vendor carries a fragment of the country’s story.

Those who listen carefully return home with something far more valuable than souvenirs.

They return with understanding.

The Real Purpose of Travel

The finest travellers are not those who visit the most places but those who allow places to change them.

Travel should enlarge the mind, soften prejudices, deepen empathy, and broaden perspectives.

A country is not merely a destination on a map. It is a chapter in humanity’s collective story.

When visitors arrive with humility instead of judgement, curiosity instead of certainty, and respect instead of entitlement, they discover something extraordinary.

They do not merely visit a country.

They meet its soul.


Walk gently upon a foreign shore, For every land has tales in store.
Not every treasure shines like gold, Some live in stories left untold.

The road rewards the humble heart, And wisdom blooms when worlds depart.
For those who travel not to see, But learn what different lives can be,Return with more than photographs bright— Return with understanding’s light.

Wednesday, June 10, 2026

A Hundred Miles to Happiness: The Song That Never Fails to Lift My Spirit

What’s a song that always puts you in a good mood?

A Hundred Miles to Happiness: The Song That Never Fails to Lift My Spirit

There are songs we listen to, and then there are songs that somehow become fellow travellers on the long road of life. They arrive quietly, settle comfortably in the heart, and remain there through changing seasons, changing places, and changing fortunes. For me, one such song is 100 Miles by Paul McCartney.

The very mention of the song is enough to brighten a dull afternoon. It has the remarkable ability to sweep away the dust of routine and replace it with a sense of movement, freedom, and possibility. Like a gentle breeze entering through an open window, it refreshes the mind without making any grand announcement.

Music possesses a mysterious power. A familiar melody can unlock memories long forgotten, revive old dreams, and rekindle emotions buried beneath the responsibilities of everyday life. Certain songs become emotional anchors, reminding us of who we were, who we are, and who we still hope to become. 100 Miles does precisely that for me.

The title itself evokes a sense of journey. A hundred miles is not merely a measure of distance; it is a metaphor for life’s adventures. It suggests roads stretching beyond the horizon, unexpected encounters, and the excitement of discovering what lies around the next bend. Every time I hear it, I imagine endless countryside roads, golden sunlight dancing upon the fields, and the promise of new experiences waiting patiently ahead.

What makes a song truly special is not only its composition but also the emotions it awakens. Some songs entertain; others accompany us. This one feels like a trusted companion sitting beside me during life’s quieter moments. It neither demands attention nor seeks applause. Instead, it offers reassurance that there is still beauty to be found in ordinary days.

The older one grows, the more one appreciates such companions. Life inevitably presents storms alongside sunshine. There are days when enthusiasm wanes, when ambitions seem distant, and when the world appears wrapped in shades of grey. Yet a beloved song can perform a small miracle. Within a few notes, the clouds begin to part. The heart remembers its resilience, and the spirit regains its rhythm.

Perhaps that is why music has survived every age and every civilization. It speaks a language beyond words. It bridges generations, cultures, and personal histories. A melody that stirs one person’s soul may leave another untouched, yet the magic remains equally real. We all possess that one song capable of turning an ordinary moment into something memorable.

Whenever 100 Miles begins to play, I find myself smiling almost instinctively. The worries of the day loosen their grip, and life appears lighter. It reminds me that happiness is not always found in grand achievements or dramatic events.

Sometimes it arrives wrapped in a simple tune, travelling quietly through the air, asking nothing more than a willing ear.

In a world that often moves too fast, such songs become treasured refuges. They invite us to pause, reflect, and celebrate the journey itself. And if a few minutes of music can make the heart feel a hundred miles closer to joy, then surely it is a gift worth cherishing.

For every weary road, a melody waits;
For every fading dream, a note resonates.
When shadows lengthen and hopes seem small,
A cherished song can brighten it all.

Let the miles unfold beneath the sky so wide,
With music as a friend forever by your side.
For happiness often travels unseen and free,
Arriving on the wings of a familiar melody.

Monday, June 8, 2026

Chains of Gold, Threads of Dreams: Why We Cling to What We Possess

Chains of Gold, Threads of Dreams: Why We Cling to What We Possess

Chains of Gold, Threads of Dreams: Why We Cling to What We Possess

Human beings are curious creatures. We arrive in this world with empty hands and leave it in much the same way, yet between those two silent moments, we spend a lifetime gathering, protecting, cherishing, and sometimes mourning things, people, positions, and dreams. The question is as old as humanity itself: Why do we become so attached to what we own, whom we love, or what we aspire to possess?

Attachment is perhaps the invisible thread that stitches together the fabric of human existence. It is neither entirely a virtue nor wholly a weakness. It is simply one of the colours of being human.

A child clings to a favourite toy, not because of its monetary value, but because it carries memories, comfort, and familiarity. As years pass, the toy may be replaced by books, houses, careers, relationships, or ambitions, yet the nature of attachment remains remarkably similar.

We seldom value things merely for what they are; we value them for what they mean to us.

A weathered photograph is only paper and ink to a stranger. To its owner, it is a doorway to vanished laughter, forgotten journeys, and beloved faces. In this way, attachment transforms ordinary objects into sacred relics of personal history.

The same principle applies to people. We become attached because relationships are the architecture of our emotional world. Friends, spouses, children, mentors, and companions become woven into our identity. Their joys become our celebrations; their sorrows become our burdens. To lose them feels, at times, like losing a piece of ourselves.

Yet attachment extends beyond possessions and people. Some of our strongest attachments are to dreams.

Dreams are curious investments. They often exist only in the imagination, yet they command extraordinary devotion. A student dreams of achievement, an artist dreams of recognition, an entrepreneur dreams of success, and an ageing soul dreams of leaving behind a meaningful legacy. These dreams become stars by which we navigate our lives.

The irony is that many dreams never fully materialise. Yet people continue to pursue them with remarkable determination. Why? Because dreams provide purpose. They transform existence from mere survival into a journey.

A dream is not merely a destination; it is often the reason one rises after every fall.

Psychologists suggest that attachment gives us a sense of security. Philosophers argue that it gives life meaning. Poets would say that attachment is the heart’s way of declaring that something matters. All three perspectives contain truth.
However, attachment has its shadows.

When affection becomes possession, it breeds jealousy. When ambition becomes an obsession, it invites disappointment. When ownership becomes identity, loss becomes unbearable. The tighter we hold, the more fragile we become.

Life repeatedly teaches that everything is transient.

Seasons change. Empires crumble. Wealth fluctuates. Relationships evolve. Even the strongest mountains yield to time. The river of existence never stops flowing, and nothing remains exactly as it was.

The wisdom, therefore, lies not in avoiding attachment altogether but in balancing it with understanding. We may love deeply without imprisoning. We may own without becoming owned. We may dream passionately without allowing failure to destroy our spirit.

Perhaps attachment is like holding a bird in one’s hand. Hold it too loosely, and it flies away. Hold it too tightly, and you harm it. Hold it gently, and both the bird and the holder experience freedom.

As the years pass, many discover a profound truth: the most precious things in life are not things at all. They are moments of kindness, conversations that linger in memory, shared laughter across a dining table, the comfort of companionship, and the quiet satisfaction of having lived with purpose.

In the end, attachment is not merely about possession. It is about connection. We cling because we care. We care because we feel. And it is our capacity to feel that makes us wonderfully, imperfectly human.

The challenge is not to stop loving the things, people, and dreams that enrich our lives. The challenge is to cherish them while remembering that every possession is temporary, every season changes, and every dream is but a traveller passing through the landscape of time.

For when attachment is tempered by wisdom, it ceases to be a chain and becomes a bridge—connecting the heart to the beauty of existence without binding it to sorrow.


We gather shells upon life’s shore, And guard them as a treasured store; Yet tides arrive with patient grace, And wash away each borrowed place.

We hold our dreams against the night, Like lanterns casting fragile light; Not all will bloom, not all will stay, Yet still they guide us on our way.

Love what you have, but hold it light, Like stars that shimmer in the night; For hearts grow rich not by what they own, But by the kindness they have shown.

Sunday, June 7, 2026

Followers, Friends, or Fellow Travellers?

Do Subscribers Stay for Life, or Only Until the Ideology Changes?

Followers, Friends, or Fellow Travellers?

In the digital age, a peculiar word has quietly entered our vocabulary—subscriber. It sounds innocent enough, almost affectionate, as though someone has signed up not merely for content but for companionship. Yet the question lingers like mist over a winter moor: Are subscribers friends for life, or are they merely passengers who travel with us until the road bends away from their beliefs?

The answer is neither simple nor cynical.

A true friend is like an old banyan tree. Seasons may scorch its leaves, storms may batter its branches, and years may carve wrinkles into its bark, yet its roots remain steadfast. Friendship survives disagreements, misunderstandings, and even long silences. It is built not on convenience but on commitment.

Subscribers, however, often belong to a different kingdom.

Many subscribe because they enjoy a particular style, idea, expertise, or worldview. They gather around a person much like birds gather around a fruitful tree. As long as the fruit remains sweet and plentiful, the branches are crowded with song. The moment the harvest changes, many birds simply fly elsewhere. Such is not betrayal; it is merely the nature of the relationship.

In truth, most subscriptions are contracts of interest rather than covenants of affection.

People are naturally drawn to echoes of their own beliefs. We enjoy hearing opinions that confirm our understanding of the world. It reassures us. It comforts us. It tells us that our compass is pointing in the right direction. Yet when a creator begins questioning old assumptions, exploring new horizons, or changing direction, subscribers often feel as though the familiar landscape beneath their feet has shifted.

Some leave quietly.

Others announce their departure as though they were abandoning a sinking ship.

A few stay behind and attempt to persuade the creator back into the ideological fold.

But among the multitude, there are rare individuals who remain.

They may disagree with every second sentence. They may challenge conclusions. They may even argue passionately. Yet they stay because they value the person more than the position. Such individuals are not merely subscribers; they are fellow travellers on the long road of intellectual and emotional discovery.

History offers countless examples.

Philosophers, writers, scientists, and reformers often lost admirers when they altered their views.

Society applauds originality only until originality begins to challenge its own assumptions. The crowd cheers the rebel until the rebel questions the crowd.

The irony is as old as civilisation itself.

Most people claim to admire independent thinking, but many prefer predictable thinking.

Thus, subscribers frequently reveal less about the creator and more about themselves. Their loyalty is often tethered to ideology, preference, entertainment, or expectation. Change any one of these, and the rope may snap.

Friendship, however, operates by a different mathematics.

– A friend may disagree and still remain.

– A friend may question and still care.

– A friend may walk beside us through seasons of success and stretches of failure.

A subscriber follows content.
A friend follows character.
One counts views; the other values virtues.

One arrives because of agreement; the other remains despite disagreement.

This distinction becomes increasingly important in an era where numbers are mistaken for relationships. Thousands of subscribers can create the illusion of companionship. Notifications may arrive every minute, comments may flow endlessly, and appreciation may pour in from every corner of the globe. Yet when the lights dim and the applause fades, one genuine friend is worth more than a stadium full of temporary admirers.

The digital world resembles a bustling railway station.
People board our train at different platforms. Some travel for a single stop. Some journey for a few stations. Others stay long enough to share stories, laughter, and insights before continuing elsewhere.

Only a handful remain until the final destination.

And perhaps that is perfectly acceptable.

Not everyone is meant to stay forever.

Subscribers come and go like changing seasons. They enrich the landscape while they are present. Their departure should not be viewed as failure, nor should their arrival be mistaken for permanent loyalty.

What truly matters is authenticity.

If a person spends life chasing subscribers, they may gain numbers and lose themselves. If they remain true to their convictions, they may lose numbers and gain clarity.

In the end, life is not a competition to collect followers. It is an opportunity to cultivate character.

Subscribers may gather around our ideas.

Friends gather around our humanity.

The former may applaud our words.

The latter understand our silence.

And when the final chapter of life is written, it is unlikely that we shall remember how many people subscribed to our thoughts. We shall remember those rare souls who subscribed to our journey.

The crowd may cheer the song today,
And seek another tune tomorrow;
Yet hearts that truly understand,
Will share both joy and sorrow.

Followers may count the miles we tread,
And praise the roads we roam;
But friends are those who walk beside,
And help the weary traveller home.

For loyalty is not agreement,
Nor friendship born of praise;
It is the lamp that stays alight,
Through changing nights and changing days.

Saturday, June 6, 2026

The Proverb That Failed—And Yet Saved Me

Share a proverb you think is completely wrong and make your case.

The Proverb That Failed—And Yet Saved Me

When a Wrong Saying Led Me to the Right Life

Proverbs are curious little travellers. They journey through generations, crossing borders and centuries, carried on the tongues of grandparents, teachers, neighbours, and strangers. Some are wise as ancient oaks; others are as stubborn as weeds. We repeat them so often that we seldom pause to ask whether they are true.

One such proverb that shaped my life was this:

Good things come to those who wait.”

At first glance, it sounds comforting. It promises that patience will eventually be rewarded, that time itself is a silent servant working on our behalf. It encourages stillness and trust. Many people cherish it.

Yet, as life unfolded before me, I discovered that the proverb was only half true—and half-truths can be more dangerous than outright lies.

For years, I waited.

I waited for opportunities to knock on my door. I waited for recognition to arrive. I waited for circumstances to improve. I waited for people to understand my worth. Like a passenger standing endlessly on a deserted platform, I expected a train that had no intention of stopping.

Then one day, life taught me a lesson that no proverb had mentioned:

Good things do not merely come to those who wait; they come to those who prepare while waiting.

The difference is enormous.
A farmer may wait for rain, but he first ploughs the field.

A sailor may wait for favourable winds, but he repairs his sails beforehand.

A musician may wait for an audience, but he practises long before the curtain rises.

Waiting alone changes nothing. Waiting with preparation changes everything.

That realisation altered the course of my life.

I stopped treating patience as a substitute for action. I began to understand that destiny is not a postman delivering parcels at the correct address. It is more like a sculptor handing us a block of stone and asking what masterpiece we intend to carve from it.

The world is filled with people waiting for the “perfect moment.” They wait to write, to travel, to forgive, to learn, to love, to begin. Yet perfection is a horizon; no matter how far we walk, it remains in the distance.

Meanwhile, those who dare to start with imperfect tools often accomplish extraordinary things.

The irony is delightful. The proverb that turned out to be incorrect became one of my greatest teachers. By questioning it, I learned to question many other assumptions.

I learned that:

– Silence is not always wisdom.

– Busyness is not always productivity.

– Popularity is not always success.

– Comfort is not always happiness.

– Waiting is not always patience.

– Life seldom rewards spectators. It applauds participants.

History itself confirms this truth. Great discoveries were not found by those who sat beside the road expecting miracles. They were made by people who walked into uncertainty, stumbled, learned, and continued moving. The river reaches the sea not because it waits, but because it flows.

As the years pass, I have grown fond of flawed proverbs. They remind me that wisdom is not something to inherit blindly; it is something to examine carefully. Every generation must polish old truths and discard old errors. Even a mistaken proverb can become a signpost if it encourages us to think rather than merely repeat.

Today, if someone asks me whether good things come to those who wait, I would smile and answer:

Sometimes. But the best things usually come to those who wait with purpose, work with courage, and move with faith.”

For life is not a waiting room.
It is a workshop.

And the clock on its wall was never meant to be watched—it was meant to inspire us to begin.


Do not sit counting distant stars, While dreams grow old in silent jars; The dawn belongs to hearts that rise, Not merely those who scan the skies.

The road rewards the willing feet, The fields reward the hands that meet; And fortune seldom knocks by chance— She favours those who join the dance.

So question words grown faint with age, And write your wisdom on life’s page; For even errors, strange though they seem, May guide a soul towards its dream.

Friday, June 5, 2026

Soulmates: A Meeting of Hearts or a Creation of the Soul?

Do you believe in soulmates? Why or why not?

Soulmates: A Meeting of Hearts or a Creation of the Soul?

There are few words in human language that carry as much romance, mystery, longing, and hope as the word soulmate. It evokes images of two people finding one another across oceans, across years, and perhaps even across lifetimes. It suggests a bond so profound that it defies explanation, a connection that seems written not in ink but in the stars.

But do I believe in soulmates?

The answer is both yes and no.

I do not believe that every person has only one predestined companion wandering somewhere on Earth, waiting to be discovered like a misplaced treasure. Such a notion can make life seem like a lottery where happiness depends upon finding a single magical individual.

Yet I do believe that certain people enter our lives and touch our souls in ways that others cannot. Their presence changes the colour of our days, reshapes our thoughts, and leaves footprints upon our hearts that time cannot erase. Whether we call them soulmates, kindred spirits, or fellow travellers, their influence becomes part of our story.

Human beings are not born complete. We are unfinished poems, rough sketches, and half-written melodies.

Throughout life, we encounter people who help us discover the missing verses. Some stay for decades; some stay only briefly. Yet their contribution to our journey remains priceless.

A soulmate, therefore, may not be someone destined for us before birth. Perhaps a soulmate is someone with whom we build an extraordinary understanding. The relationship may arise through friendship, marriage, mentorship, or even a fleeting encounter. It is not always romantic.

Sometimes the deepest connections arrive without fanfare and remain hidden beneath the ordinary routines of life.

History, literature, and philosophy are filled with examples of such bonds.

Great friendships have shaped empires. Loyal companions have stood together through storms. Writers have found muses. Teachers have transformed students. Parents have nurtured children who carried their values forward. These relationships reveal that souls often recognise one another through shared purpose, mutual respect, and genuine affection.

The modern world, however, often mistakes attraction for destiny. A few pleasant conversations, some common interests, and a handful of photographs on social media are quickly labelled as proof of eternal compatibility. Yet true companionship is tested not in sunshine but in rain.

A genuine soulmate is not merely someone who walks beside us when the road is smooth. They remain present when the wheels come off the cart. They see our flaws without magnifying them, our strengths without envying them, and our dreams without mocking them. They do not complete us; rather, they help us become more completely ourselves.

Life itself teaches a remarkable lesson.

Relationships flourish not because two perfect people meet, but because two imperfect people choose patience over pride, understanding over judgement, and commitment over convenience. Soulmates are often created through years of shared laughter, tears, sacrifices, and forgiveness.

Perhaps that is why some people spend a lifetime together and still discover new depths in one another. Their connection is not the result of magic. It is the result of daily acts of kindness, trust, and mutual growth.

They become soulmates not by destiny alone but by devotion.

In many ways, the search for a soulmate is actually a search for understanding.

Every heart longs to be heard without speaking, accepted without pretending, and loved without conditions.

When we encounter someone who offers such acceptance, we feel as though we have come home after a long journey.

The older one grows, the clearer it becomes that life is not measured by possessions, titles, or achievements. It is measured by the quality of the relationships we nurture. The richest people are often those whose hearts are filled with meaningful connections rather than material wealth.

So, do I believe in soulmates?

Yes, if by soulmate we mean a soul that walks alongside ours with sincerity and grace.

No, if by soulmate we mean a perfect person who arrives to solve every problem and fulfil every dream.

The most enduring soulmates are not found; they are built—brick by brick, day by day, heart beside heart.

Some souls arrive like morning lights,
Softly chasing away the night;
Not with thunder, not with fame,
Yet nothing afterwards feels the same.

Some hearts converse without a word,
In silent songs only they have heard;
Across the seasons, near or far,
They guide each other like a star.

If soulmates exist, perhaps they are these—
The ones who bring our restless spirit peace;
Not perfect angels from realms above,
But ordinary people teaching extraordinary love.

And when life’s final curtain falls one day,
And worldly triumphs fade away,
May we be remembered not for gold or art,
But for the souls we carried within our heart.

If I Could Weave New Threads into India’s Cultural Tapestry

What’s a cultural tradition from another country that you wish existed in yours? If I Could Weave New Threads into India’s Cultural Tapestry...