The Summer That Stood Still


The Summer That Stood Still

Every year, summer vacations come and go. But once in a while, a summer arrives that feels different—a season you know you’ll remember long after it ends.

For me, this year’s summer vacation began on April 26th. What followed wasn’t just a holiday for the kids; it became nearly two months of uninterrupted family time, laughter, road trips, and moments that money simply cannot buy.

The adventure started with a four-day trip to Munnar, followed immediately by four days in Bengaluru. From there, we spent two weeks in Chennai, enjoying the simple pleasure of being together without deadlines, meetings, business calls, or schedules dictating our lives.

The journey didn’t stop there.

We moved between Madurai and Chennai, attending tuition programs, reconnecting with family, and most importantly, giving the children something increasingly rare in today’s world—time with their cousins. There were sleepovers, endless conversations, shared meals, games, inside jokes, and the kind of bonding that only happens when children spend weeks together instead of a few hurried hours during festivals.

One of the highlights was another trip to Munnar, this time with cousins joining the adventure. Watching the children create memories together was perhaps more enjoyable than the destination itself.

As the school reopening approached, reality slowly began knocking on the door. We attended the first day of school, squeezed in another quick Chennai visit, and then, for the final few days, stayed together once more before my sister’s family prepared to leave India.

Yesterday was the hardest part.

There were long hugs, emotional goodbyes, and that silent understanding that everyone was trying to be brave. The children held on a little longer than usual. We adults did too. By evening, we were on the road back to Madurai, reaching home close to midnight.

And just like that, the summer was over.

Looking back, I realize this wasn’t really about Munnar, Bengaluru, Chennai, or Madurai. It was about something much simpler—being present. Being available. Being together.

As parents, we know these summers are not permanent. Every year, our children grow a little older. Soon, academics, friendships, college plans, and their own lives will naturally take center stage.

Perhaps that’s what made this summer special.

It reminded me that childhood is not measured in years; it is measured in the number of summers we get to spend together before life gently pulls everyone in different directions.

For now, my heart is full of gratitude—for the journeys, the laughter, the cousins, the family, and the memories.

And if God is willing, may there be many more summers like this.

The destinations will fade from memory. The hugs, laughter, and time spent together never will.

Friends, Politics and Social Media: Can We Disagree and Still Coexist?


There was a time in India when people with completely different political opinions still remained close friends.

One person voted Congress.
Another supported BJP.
Someone else supported DMK.
One was deeply religious.
Another was secular.

Yet:

  • they attended weddings together,
  • worked together,
  • helped each other in business,
  • had tea shop debates,
  • argued loudly,
  • and still remained connected.

Politics was just one part of life, not the entire identity of a person.

But social media slowly changed this culture.

Today, a political opinion is no longer seen as “just an opinion.” It has become an emotional identity marker. The moment someone openly supports a political party or reacts to a religious issue, people start placing them into categories and labels.

This is where the real pain begins.

In my case, I have many close Muslim and Christian friends — friends from work, business, ex-employees and social circles. I never questioned their religious practices or political preferences. I never had a problem if they supported Congress or DMK.

But when I openly supported BJP or reacted when I felt Hindu beliefs were mocked or insulted, suddenly the reactions changed.

Some called me and expressed disappointment.
Some unfriended me silently.
Some stopped engaging completely.
Some branded me a “Sanghi.”

That word itself is often used today as if it is meant to socially isolate someone.

The irony is: supporting a political party in a democracy should be normal.

is not a banned organization or an underground movement. It is a democratically elected political party, just like or .

Then why has society become emotionally uncomfortable with political differences?

That is the bigger question.

I realized this issue is no longer just about BJP, Congress, religion or ideology. The deeper issue is that society is slowly losing the ability to coexist despite disagreement.

Earlier we had emotional maturity to separate:

  • friendship from politics,
  • people from opinions,
  • relationships from ideology.

Today social media mixes everything together.

Algorithms reward outrage.
Politics becomes identity.
Identity becomes emotion.
Emotion becomes division.

Even normal people slowly become emotionally reactive online.

A person who would happily sit and have coffee with you in real life may still get disturbed by your political post online.

That is the strange contradiction of the social media era.

The dangerous part is not disagreement. Disagreement is healthy in a democracy.

The dangerous part is emotional isolation.

When people stop expressing openly:

  • resentment builds silently,
  • echo chambers grow,
  • society becomes polarized,
  • and friendships become conditional.

Maybe a healthier society is not one where everyone agrees.

Maybe a healthier society is one where:

  • people openly express opinions,
  • disagree strongly,
  • debate emotionally,
  • cool down,
  • and still remain human with one another afterward.

India survived for centuries because of coexistence despite differences in:

  • religion,
  • language,
  • caste,
  • food,
  • region,
  • and politics.

“Unity in diversity” is not about similarity.
It is about emotional maturity despite differences.

Social media has tested that maturity.

Now society must evolve again.

Because if friendships cannot survive political disagreement, then politics has become bigger than humanity itself.

Manifestation vs Astrology: Can Positive Thinking Control Life?


For a long time, I had one big question in my mind.

If manifestation is real, why do people still suffer even when they think positively?

Today, manifestation has become a popular word everywhere:

  • law of attraction,
  • visualization,
  • positive vibration,
  • subconscious programming,
  • energy alignment.

Different names. Same core idea.

The belief is simple:

“Your inner state influences your outer reality.”

And honestly, I do believe thoughts matter.

Positive thinking can:

  • improve confidence,
  • sharpen focus,
  • increase persistence,
  • help people notice opportunities,
  • and emotionally keep them moving forward.

But life also teaches something equally important.

Positive thinking alone does not prevent every storm.

That is where astrology and manifestation become an interesting discussion.

If astrology is true, then life moves through timing cycles.

Some phases bring:

  • growth,
  • opportunities,
  • momentum,
  • support,
  • expansion.

Some phases bring:

  • delays,
  • pressure,
  • emotional heaviness,
  • setbacks,
  • karmic corrections.

Like seasons.

Manifestation may not completely control those seasons.

Instead, it may influence how we move through them.

The best analogy I found is this:

  • Astrology is the weather.
  • Manifestation is how we sail the boat.

A skilled sailor cannot stop the storm.

But the sailor may still survive the storm better than someone who gives up mentally.

That perspective changed my understanding completely.

Modern manifestation culture sometimes oversimplifies life by saying:

“If you think positively enough, nothing bad will happen.”

Real life clearly disproves that.

Because reality also includes:

  • other people’s actions,
  • health,
  • economics,
  • legal systems,
  • timing,
  • randomness,
  • emotional maturity,
  • and consequences.

No mindset fully controls all of that.

At the same time, mindset still matters enormously.

When I look at people who survive difficult phases and rebuild repeatedly, there is usually one common factor: they never fully lose belief in tomorrow.

That belief itself becomes fuel.

So today, my understanding is this:

Manifestation is probably not magical control over destiny.

It is more likely a force that shapes:

  • endurance,
  • direction,
  • choices,
  • emotional resilience,
  • and persistence.

Astrology, if true, may describe the season.

Manifestation may describe how consciously we move through that season.

And honestly, life itself feels like a constant balance between:

  • effort,
  • belief,
  • timing,
  • and reality.

Border Towns Don’t Follow Politics, They Follow People


Hosur has always fascinated me.

Politically, it is part of . But culturally, it feels like a beautiful mix of Tamil Nadu, , and all living together in one place.

Recently, I visited an branch in Hosur, and that is where I saw this reality in action.

The staff members were speaking Telugu among themselves very casually. A customer before me was spoken to in Kannada fluently. When my turn came, they immediately switched to Tamil and continued the conversation naturally.

No hesitation. No language politics. No “Which state are you from?” moment.

Just communication.

That small incident made me realize something important about border towns in India.

Maps may divide states, but people don’t live their lives based on political borders.

Historically, Hosur, Denkanikottai, Royakottai, and nearby regions were always culturally mixed zones. These places saw Tamil, Kannada, and Telugu influence for centuries through kingdoms, migration, trade, and later through British administration under the old Madras Presidency.

When states were reorganized in 1956 based on language, these regions became part of Tamil Nadu. But culture does not change overnight just because a line was drawn on a map.

Even today, Hosur carries:

  • Tamil political identity
  • Kannada cultural influence
  • Telugu community presence
  • Bengaluru’s economic energy

all at the same time.

In fact, Hosur today behaves like a Bengaluru extension economically, while emotionally and politically remaining Tamil Nadu.

That is what makes places like Hosur special.

In many cities, people struggle with language barriers. But in border towns, multilingualism becomes survival, habit, and eventually culture itself.

A bank employee switching between Telugu, Kannada, and Tamil within minutes may look normal there. But if you observe carefully, it actually tells the story of South India itself — connected, blended, adaptive, and practical.

Sometimes, history is not visible in monuments or textbooks.

Sometimes, history is visible in a simple conversation inside a bank.

My Maid Election Predictor: Better Than Opinion Polls?


Over the last three Tamil Nadu elections, I accidentally discovered my own election prediction system.

No exit polls.
No survey agency.
No political strategist.

Just… asking my maids whom they would vote for.

And strangely, every single time, their answer matched the eventual winner.

At this point, I’m seriously wondering whether I should stop watching political debates and simply do “Maid Josiyam” before every election.

In 2016, the overall perception around me was that DMK would come back to power. Social media discussions, public conversations, and political analysts all leaned toward a DMK comeback.

One day, I casually asked my maid:

“Whom will you vote for?”

Without even thinking for a second, she replied:

“Amma.”

That was it. No analysis. No manifesto. No policy discussion. Just emotional conviction toward .

AIADMK won.

Then came 2021.

This time the political atmosphere was different. Amma was gone. Again, I casually asked another maid whom she would vote for.

Her answer:

“Till Amma was there, my vote was for Amma. Now my vote is for DMK.”

Once again, simple answer. Straight from the heart. No overthinking.

That year, DMK won.

Now comes 2026.

Again, the broad perception in many circles was that DMK would comfortably return to power. But by now, I had started trusting my unofficial election forecasting model more than TV channels.

So I asked my maid:

“Who are you voting for?”

She smiled and said:

“My grandchildren asked me to vote for Vijay. So I’ll vote for Vijay.”

At that exact moment, I got goosebumps.

Three elections.
Three different maids.
Three different emotional reasons.
Three winning waves.

At this point, this no longer feels like political discussion. It feels like Tamil Nadu-style kili josiyam.

Like those roadside parrots that pick one card and silently predict your future.

Only difference here is: instead of parrots, my maids are predicting Chief Ministers.

What fascinates me is that these conversations happen completely outside political noise. No one is trying to sound intellectual. No one is quoting data. These are raw emotional voting signals from ordinary homes.

And Tamil Nadu politics has always been emotional:

  • MGR
  • Amma
  • Kalaignar
  • cinema charisma
  • welfare connection
  • family influence

Maybe elections are not decided in TV studios after all.

Maybe somewhere inside kitchens, while making coffee and discussing family matters, Tamil Nadu quietly decides its next government.

The Real Estate Illusion: What I Learnt After Buying, Holding, Struggling and Waiting


For a long time, I believed what most middle-class families in India believed:

“Real estate never fails.”

I grew up seeing my father buy properties at prices that looked expensive at that time, but within 5 years he could see visible appreciation. Land was limited, apartments were fewer, and buyers had patience. Owning property itself was considered success.

But today, after nearly two decades of observing, buying, managing, renting, struggling, and sometimes getting stuck with properties, I feel the real estate game has completely changed.

Over the last 3–4 years, I have been seeing massive real estate supply everywhere across and .

Every highway has:

  • plotted developments,
  • gated communities,
  • luxury villas,
  • premium apartments,
  • smart townships,
  • “future city” marketing boards.

What shocked me was not the supply alone. It was the pricing.

Many properties today are priced in a way where:

  • rental yield is weak,
  • breakeven takes 7–10 years,
  • resale becomes difficult,
  • and liquidation is no longer easy.

I myself made mistakes.

Like many others, I also entered some “bubble inventory” thinking appreciation would continue endlessly. On paper, the projects looked attractive:

  • premium brochure,
  • clubhouse,
  • launch offers,
  • future development promises,
  • metro stories,
  • IT corridor stories.

But reality after handover became very different.

Some projects had:

  • delayed completion,
  • legal complications,
  • builder-association conflicts,
  • maintenance disputes,
  • poor resale demand,
  • or simply too much nearby supply.

One painful lesson I learnt is this:

Buying property is easy. Liquidating property is the real challenge.

Today, buyers prefer fresh inventory directly from builders because builders come with marketing, offers, interiors, EMI schemes, and “new project excitement.” A 7-year-old resale apartment suddenly looks old even if it is structurally good.

Land investments also became complicated. Litigation risk has increased heavily. Documentation verification itself has become a full-time process. Many layouts grow slowly for years because supply keeps expanding further outside the city.

At one point, I realized many people are not truly “real estate investors.”

They are actually:

long-term holders waiting for liquidity.

That changed my thinking completely.

Slowly, I started understanding that in today’s world, real estate works better when it creates cashflow instead of depending only on appreciation.

That is where my thinking evolved towards:

  • rental-focused models,
  • studio rooms,
  • operational properties,
  • service-oriented spaces,
  • and ideas like turf + kiosk + utility-based businesses.

Today I strongly feel:

real estate alone is no longer wealth creation.

Real estate plus operations, cashflow, and utility creates wealth.

The old generation made money because they entered during scarcity.

This generation must survive in oversupply.

That changes everything.

The Night My Neighbour Disappeared — And My Heart Became Light


For years, I believed some relationships would survive everything.

Not because they were perfect, but because they were built during difficult times.

In 2019, my next-house neighbour slowly became one of my closest friends. What started as casual conversations became a deep family friendship. Our wives became close, our kids played together almost every day, and we shared countless small but beautiful moments that only neighbours understand.

During one of my toughest phases in life, he even helped me liquidate a property and break a local real estate syndicate issue that had become a major headache. Naturally, trust grew.

Then came the unexpected turn.

About a year later, he asked me for money from the property sale, promising that he would return it whenever I asked. Since trust was strong, I never overthought it.

Initially, he repaid in small parts. But one day, when I firmly asked him to settle the amount completely, he casually said he couldn’t.

That moment hit differently.

It was not just about the money. Life had already shown me betrayals before, and during 2021, I was emotionally exhausted and financially strained. I didn’t have the strength for another emotional war. So I stayed silent, absorbed the loss, and slowly maintained distance.

Still, life is never black and white.

His wife had supported my family immensely during my wife’s second pregnancy, especially when we had almost no parental support around us. Our children remained close too. Because of all this, the friendship never completely broke. It simply became quieter.

Years passed.

Then last week, something strange happened.

Around midnight, he vacated the house and disappeared without informing anyone nearby. The security later mentioned that he had given notice earlier and that bank recovery agents had been visiting frequently over the past few months.

When my wife told me the news, she was shocked and worried because she still maintained friendship with his wife.

But my reaction surprised even me.

I suddenly felt… light.

Not happy.

Not victorious.

Not sad either.

Just light.

For a few moments, it genuinely felt like some invisible weight had left my body and mind.

Later, I started thinking deeply about why I felt that way.

The answer slowly became clear.

From 2021 onwards, that friendship had stopped being a normal friendship inside my mind. It had silently transformed into an emotional burden made up of trust, betrayal, gratitude, anger, guilt, memories, and unanswered questions.

Every time we casually met, spoke, or crossed paths, my mind probably reopened that unresolved emotional file for a few seconds.

For five years, I was unknowingly carrying that emotional weight.

Then suddenly, overnight, the chapter ended on its own.

No confrontation.

No arguments.

No explanations.

No fake smiles.

No awkward future encounters.

My mind probably interpreted it as something simple:

“The burden is over.”

That is why I felt light.

The Silent Exit


There is a strange kind of pain in life.
Not the pain of losing money.
Not the pain of struggle.
Not even the pain of betrayal.

It is the pain of realizing that some people quietly walk away from your life without even the courtesy of a goodbye.

Almost nine years ago, a man entered my life as a tenant. Over time, he became a neighbour. Then somewhere along the way, he became a friend.

Life hit him brutally during COVID.

Three months before the pandemic, he had taken the bold step of quitting his job to become an entrepreneur. Like many dreamers, he believed hard work and courage would be enough. But COVID did not spare dreamers.

Within months, he lost almost everything.

Money disappeared.
Business collapsed.
Respect vanished.
Even peace inside his home broke apart.

I watched a man slowly get crushed by life.

During those days, he borrowed money from me. Not a small amount. Even after six years, only about twenty-five percent has come back. But honestly, the money was never the biggest issue for me.

When someone is drowning, you don’t stand near the shore calculating percentages.

You help.

And I did.

Not because I was rich.
Not because I expected returns.
But because humanity should not become a transaction.

I stood beside him during a phase where even his own confidence had abandoned him. I do not want to list the support I gave him, because kindness loses meaning the moment it becomes an invoice.

Then life slowly started improving for him.

Business recovered.
Confidence returned.
The wounds of survival slowly healed.

And that is when something else quietly started happening.

Distance.

Calls became shorter.
Conversations became formal.
Meetings became accidental.

Still, I never held it against him. Life changes people. Success changes priorities. I understood that.

But last week, he vacated the community and moved to Coimbatore.

No message.
No visit.
No handshake.
Not even a simple:
“Anna, I’m moving. Thank you for standing by me.”

I called him after hearing about it.
He did not answer.
He did not call back.

And strangely, that hurt more than the unpaid money.

Because after everything life has shown me — failures, losses, betrayals, pressure, humiliation — one thing I still struggle to understand is this:

Why do some people lose courtesy the moment they stop needing us?

A goodbye costs nothing.
Gratitude costs nothing.
Basic human acknowledgment costs nothing.

Yet for some people, these become the hardest debts to repay.

Maybe this blog is not about him alone.

Maybe many people reading this have silently experienced the same thing — standing beside someone during their storm, only to become invisible once the skies cleared.

And if someday he happens to read this, I do not want him to feel insulted.

I want him to feel something heavier.

Guilt.

Not for the money.

But for forgetting the hands that held him when life pushed him to the floor.

The 78 vs 26 Story: How TVK Hurt DMK More Than ADMK


The Real Story Behind the Numbers

If we strip away all the noise and look at the data calmly, one number stands out:

👉 78 vs 26

Out of the 108 seats won by TVK:

  • In 78 seats, DMK came second
  • In 26 seats, ADMK came second
  • Remaining 4 were split among others

This is not just a statistic — it tells us where the real competition was.


What This Actually Means

In simple terms:

  • In 78 constituencies, the fight was: 👉 TVK vs DMK
  • In 26 constituencies, the fight was: 👉 TVK vs ADMK

So, TVK wasn’t evenly cutting votes across the board.

👉 It was primarily disrupting DMK’s winning chances


If TVK Was Not in the Race

Let’s think practically.

  • In those 78 seats, DMK was already the runner-up
    👉 So DMK is the closest to victory
  • In the 26 seats, ADMK was second
    👉 So ADMK benefits there

Now the key insight:

DMK has 3 times more “near-win” seats than ADMK (78 vs 26)


The Strategic Conclusion

This clearly shows:

👉 TVK’s presence hurt DMK significantly more than ADMK

That part of the analysis is solid and fact-based.


Where the Analysis Overreaches

The next step in the viral claim says:

“If TVK votes split 50–45, DMK would reach 147 seats”

This is where it becomes assumption-heavy.

Because:

  • Not all TVK voters will shift uniformly
  • Every constituency behaves differently
  • Local factors matter more than averages

A Day That Started Rough… and Ended with Popcorn & Smiles


Yesterday was one of those days that starts with resistance but quietly transforms into something meaningful.

We had reached Bangalore the previous night around midnight. Tired, exhausted… and then came the first spark—Aradhya didn’t like the bed. Too hard. Uncomfortable. Her reaction was instant—she messaged her mom asking if we could return to Madurai immediately. That set the tone.

I pushed her a bit to adjust. Not the best start, but sometimes parenting begins with friction.

Morning came with a follow-up call from my wife. I reassured her—and more importantly, I reassured my daughter. I told her, “Let me finish the work today. If you still don’t like it, we’ll go back.” That seemed to calm things down.

Breakfast was ordered on Swiggy, but the morning was slow. I got stuck watching Tamil Nadu election results on YouTube. The unexpected leads (especially Vijay trending) pulled me deeper into the screen than I planned. Time slipped.

By 11 AM, we finally started. Bank work took longer than expected—reached by 11:30, finished only by 2 PM. By then, my son had crossed the “hungry to angry” phase. That classic moment every parent knows.

We drove to Royal Meenakshi Mall, grabbed lunch, and picked up a few things he wanted. Energy levels improved immediately—food does magic.

By 3:30 PM, we reached the apartment. Wrapped up association work, handled the old tenant settlement, completed the new tenant handover. Work done—but the kids wanted time there. So we stayed. No rush.

By evening, we went back to the mall again. That’s when something interesting happened.

The kids discovered what a “second show” movie is.

When I explained it’s a late-night show—way past their usual sleep time—their eyes lit up. It wasn’t about the movie. It was about experiencing something new. Something “grown-up.”

They made a deal: “We won’t sleep. Please take us.”

I agreed.

All they wanted? Popcorn.

That excitement… that curiosity… that first-time feeling—it was worth everything.

After the movie, I casually asked my daughter if she enjoyed the day.

Her answer surprised me.

She said she wanted to stay for another 2–3 days.

Same place. Same bed she complained about.

This time, she asked, “Can we make it more comfortable?”

That’s when I told her something simple:
“This is our house. We don’t run away from discomfort. We improve it.”

We spoke about cushions, small changes, setting up our own comfort.

That moment mattered.

The day that began with resistance ended with ownership.

Kids finally slept at 3 AM.

Work got done. Memories got created.

And somewhere in between, a small lesson settled quietly—
not every discomfort needs escape… some just need adjustment.