Salary Pride vs Asset Reality: When Old Mindsets Meet New Money


In every family there is one invisible scoreboard.

It is rarely spoken about, but everyone knows it exists.

For many in the older generation, success is measured by one simple formula:

Salary = Respect.

If a man wakes up every morning, goes to a job, comes back with a monthly paycheck, he is considered responsible, hardworking, and respectable.

Anything outside that formula confuses them.

Business cycles?
Investments?
Rental income?
Asset creation?

Those things simply don’t exist in their mental framework.

Recently I had one such moment in my own life.

Out of the blue, my father-in-law exploded in anger and declared that I was “sitting and eating from my wife’s income.”

The irony is almost poetic.

My brother-in-law earns around ₹70,000 a month. His wife doesn’t work, and the family runs on that income.

Meanwhile, I earn three to four times more than him, and even more than my wife, but the structure of my income is different.

Instead of chasing salary slips, I focus on building assets.

Rental income.
Investments.
Long-term wealth generation.

My wife’s salary goes into family expenses like children’s education and one house EMI. My rental income goes into building the next asset, the next EMI, the next investment.

It is a cycle of wealth creation.

But to someone who believes the only respectable money is a monthly salary, anything else looks suspicious.

This is where psychology becomes interesting.

The older generation grew up in a world where:

A job meant stability.
A pension meant dignity.
Business meant risk.

So when they see a different financial model, they don’t analyze it — they attack it.

And sometimes there is another layer beneath it: comparison.

If their own son earns a salary, they must defend that model at all costs. The easiest way to do that is by questioning the son-in-law who operates differently.

It is not logic.

It is ego protection.

But the world has changed.

Today wealth is not just built by salaries. It is built by assets, systems, and patience.

Some people understand this shift.

Some people don’t.

And some people grow old before their thinking does.

So when someone tries to lecture me about manhood, income, and responsibility while ignoring reality, I simply remind myself of one thing:

Age may add years to a person, but it does not automatically upgrade their thinking.

Can Vijay Become the MGR of the 21st Century? A Political Thought


In Tamil Nadu politics, comparisons are inevitable. Every new entrant is measured against someone from the past. For actor Vijay, the most common comparison is with the legendary MGR.

But when we look closely, the journeys are quite different.

MGR entered politics very early in his life. By his 30s he was already deeply involved in political movements. He first contested elections through an established party, the DMK founded by Annadurai. By the time he launched his own party in 1972, he had already served as an MLA and even as an MLC. Politics was not a sudden move for him; it was a long preparation.

Vijay’s political journey begins much later. He formally launched his party in 2024, around the age of fifty, and his first electoral test will likely be the 2026 Assembly election. Unlike MGR, he has not contested elections earlier through another party or through by-elections.

But the real difference between the two may not be timing. It may be political clarity.

MGR had a very clear political structure.
He had one ideological mentor — Annadurai.
And he projected one clear political rival — Karunanidhi.

This clarity helped his followers. They knew whom to follow and whom to oppose. In politics, clarity often creates strong movements.

Vijay’s political messaging appears broader. He draws inspiration from multiple leaders — Kamarajar, Ambedkar, Periyar, and others. While this reflects inclusiveness, it may also make the ideological identity less defined.

Similarly, his political opposition is spread across several fronts — the ruling party, national parties, and other regional forces. When too many opponents are named, supporters sometimes struggle to identify a single central political narrative.

MGR’s rise also came with a powerful electoral moment. In a tough four-cornered contest, his party secured about 30% vote share and translated that into around 120 seats. That result cemented his position in Tamil Nadu politics.

For Vijay, the real test will be the 2026 election.

If his party manages to capture even half of that historic momentum — say a significant vote share or a few dozen seats — it would mark the arrival of a serious new political force.

Until then, comparisons with MGR remain interesting political discussions.

Dubai or Singapore? A Simple Thought Every Entrepreneur Should Have


Sometimes when we talk about global business hubs, two names keep appearing again and again — Dubai and Singapore.

Both are small countries.
Both have no natural advantage like huge population or massive natural resources.

Yet both became global business magnets.

I often wonder why.

After observing entrepreneurs, investors and companies over the years, I realized something very simple.

Dubai and Singapore represent two different philosophies of business.

Dubai is built for making money efficiently.
Singapore is built for building companies that scale globally.

Dubai created an ecosystem where business can move fast.
Taxes are low, company setup is quick, and the city sits right in the middle of Europe, Asia and Africa.

If someone wants to trade goods, run consulting, manage wealth, or operate international commerce, Dubai becomes a very natural base.

Singapore, on the other hand, built a different reputation.

It became a global trust machine.

Investors trust the legal system.
Venture capital funds operate comfortably.
Technology startups find funding, mentorship and access to Southeast Asian markets.

If someone wants to build a technology company, raise venture capital or create a global startup, Singapore becomes the natural choice.

A simple way I see it is:

> Dubai helps you make money faster. Singapore helps you build companies stronger.

Many smart entrepreneurs actually use both.

For example, a SaaS founder might keep their startup headquarters in Singapore to attract investors, while using Dubai for tax-efficient global operations.

Similarly, an international trader may base operations in Dubai, but create a Singapore entity for global credibility with banks and partners.

In the end, it is not about which city is better.

It is about which ecosystem fits your business model.

Because in business, location is not just geography — it is strategy.

The Grand Chessboard: How the U.S. Played Multiple Moves in One Global Game


If we observe global politics like a chessboard rather than isolated events, the last four years begin to look very different.

Wars, regime shifts, proxy battles, sanctions, and economic pressure often appear chaotic. But sometimes, when you zoom out, the pattern starts to look like a carefully played long game.

This is my geopolitical observation.

The war between Russia and Ukraine initially looked like a regional conflict. But strategically, it forced Russia into a prolonged war of attrition. Even if Russia manages territorial gains, the real cost is economic isolation, military exhaustion, and long-term sanctions that weaken its global influence.

At the same time, another quiet shift happened in the Middle East.

For decades, Syria had been a critical geopolitical anchor backed by Russia and Iran. When the regional balance shifted and the regime weakened, it disrupted an entire network of alliances across the region.

That shift had ripple effects.

Groups aligned with Iran such as Hezbollah, Hamas, and Houthis began facing intensified pressure.

At the center of this regional realignment stands Israel, which suddenly found itself with greater operational freedom against hostile forces around its borders.

Meanwhile, another interesting development occurred thousands of miles away.

China had invested heavily in Venezuela, viewing it as a strategic foothold in the Western Hemisphere. But instability in Venezuela, combined with geopolitical pressure, has complicated those ambitions.

When you connect these dots, the broader picture becomes clearer.

One prolonged war weakens Russia.
Middle Eastern shifts isolate Iran.
Regional militant networks shrink.
China faces pressure in strategic investments.
And Israel emerges in a more secure position.

In one sequence of global events, multiple strategic rivals are forced onto the defensive.

This is why geopolitics often resembles chess more than warfare.

Sometimes winning the war is not about conquering territory.
It is about exhausting your rivals, reshaping alliances, and controlling the economic systems that power the world.

If energy markets remain aligned with the petrodollar system, global financial dominance stays where it has been for decades — with the United States.

In that sense, even if Russia wins battles on the ground in Ukraine, the larger geopolitical game may already be moving in a different direction.

And on the global chessboard, the most powerful move is often the one played several years before anyone notices.

The Invisible Tug of War: Why Some Mothers Can’t Let Their Daughters Go


Over the years, while talking to friends and colleagues about their family lives, I started noticing an interesting pattern in some marriages.

At first glance, the conflicts looked ordinary. It would start with small things — a mixie purchase, a fridge decision, a comment about finances, or a casual remark about respect.

But when these stories were compared across different families, a deeper pattern slowly emerged.

In some households, the mother struggles to accept that her daughter has moved into a new life after marriage. Marriage naturally shifts priorities. The daughter now builds a new household, makes decisions with her husband, and slowly forms an independent family unit.

For most parents, this transition is normal and even joyful.

But in a few cases, the mother experiences it as a loss of control.

That is when strange narratives start appearing.

A financial setback becomes “because you argued with your mother.”
A health issue becomes “because you hurt her feelings.”
A disagreement becomes “the reason your life is not going well.”

Slowly, guilt and fear start entering the daughter’s mind.

The conflict then stops being about the actual issue. It becomes an invisible tug of war  between independence and emotional control.

What makes this dynamic powerful is not anger, but emotional conditioning. When children grow up hearing that hurting a parent brings bad karma or misfortune, even educated adults can feel uneasy when life problems appear.

But real life does not work like that.

Every family experiences ups and downs — money issues, health scares, misunderstandings. These are part of the normal rhythm of life, not the result of someone’s curse or anger.

The healthier families seem to understand one simple truth:

Marriage creates a new center of gravity.

Parents remain important, but they are no longer the command center of their children’s lives.

When this transition is accepted with grace, families grow stronger.

When it is resisted, invisible tug-of-wars begin.

And sometimes, the real victory in a family is not winning an argument, but quietly learning to let go.

The Invisible Good We Do


People rarely remember what you did for them.
But they clearly remember what you did not do.

You may help someone ten times.
But if you fail the eleventh time, suddenly the story becomes:

“You never help.”

It sounds unfair, but this happens everywhere — in families, friendships, workplaces, and even business.

Let’s understand why.

1. Human Memory Notices Absence More Than Presence

When something good happens repeatedly, the brain slowly treats it as normal.

For example:

A father drops his child at school every day for years.

One day he cannot go.


That one day becomes the memory.

Not the 1000 days he did it.

Because the brain records change, not routine.

2. Good Things Become “Expected”

When you consistently help someone, your help slowly moves from appreciation to expectation.

Example:

You lend money three times → appreciated.

Fourth time you refuse → suddenly you are “selfish”.

The earlier help disappears from the narrative.

It becomes baseline.

3. Negativity Has More Emotional Weight

Psychologists call this negativity bias.

One negative experience can emotionally outweigh many positive ones.

Think about restaurants:

10 good visits → normal.

1 bad experience → we remember it for years.


Human relationships behave the same way.

4. People Judge the Moment, Not the History

Most people evaluate based on the current moment, not the full history of actions.

So the thinking becomes:

“You didn’t help me when I needed you.”

Instead of:

“This person has helped me many times.”

The timeline shrinks to the latest event.

The Practical Lesson

The moment you stop expecting recognition, something interesting happens.

Your actions become free from emotional burden.

You help when you want.
You refuse when you must.

And you stop carrying the invisible disappointment of unnoticed goodness.

Because the truth is simple:

Goodness is often invisible.
But it still shapes who you are.

Madras Lives in My Heart, Even If the World Calls It Chennai


I love Madras more than Chennai.

For many people, it may just be a name change.
But for me, Madras was not just a city.
Madras was a feeling.

The Madras I knew was simple, small, and full of memories.

Watching Jackie Chan movies at Alankar Theatre felt like a festival. The excitement of sitting in the theatre, waiting for the action scenes, cheering with strangers — those moments were pure joy.

Then there was Anand Theatre and Little Anand Theatre.
Simple theatres, but they carried big memories.

In Mylapore, I remember going to Shanthi Sagar just for chaat. It was never about luxury. It was about taste, laughter, and friendship.

Near Alankar Theatre, there was a small lassi shop near Bharat Petroleum.
Nothing fancy. But that one glass of lassi after a movie felt like the perfect ending.

Even food had its own emotion.

At Buhari Hotel, the bun butter jam was always fresh.
Prepared right there and served warm.
That taste still lives somewhere in memory.

And then there were the beaches.

Just going to Marina Beach or Besant Nagar Beach was enough to reset life. No plans. No pressure. Just the sound of waves and the wind.

Sometimes we would end the evening with bhel puri at the old Nic Nac shop in T. Nagar, right next to Nalli Kuppusamy Chetty.

Those small things made the city feel like home.

Back then, Madras felt like a city you could understand.
I knew almost every area name.

Today, Chennai has grown so much that sometimes I hear area names I have never even heard before. Some names sound similar, some confuse me.

Sometimes when someone asks me about an area and I say I don’t know, they jokingly ask,

“Are you really from this city?”

I smile. But inside, it hurts a little.

Because I am from this city.

But I am from Madras.

And the Madras I knew —
the theatres, the bun butter jam, the beaches, the small streets —
is slowly disappearing.

The world may call it Chennai now.

But in my heart,
it will always be Madras.

The Olympic Champion of Double Standards


Every family has characters.
In my life, one character deserves a special award — my mother-in-law.

If hypocrisy had an Olympic event, she would win gold, silver, and bronze in the same competition.

Let me explain.

When my wife became pregnant with our second child, my mother-in-law questioned us as if we had committed a national crime.
“Why second child now?”
“Why this timing?”
“Are you people even thinking?”

That lecture triggered months of arguments between my wife and me.

Life was already heavy then. My business was going through a rough phase. Instead of support, we received a full-time investigation committee.

But here comes the interesting twist.

Her own son made his wife pregnant within a month of their first delivery.
They quietly went for an abortion.
Two years later they had their second child.

No lectures.
No committee meeting.
No moral science class.

Apparently, family planning rules apply only to sons-in-law.

Another favorite sport of my mother-in-law is property comparison.

Whenever I buy a property, she becomes restless.

During my house-warming ceremony, instead of blessing the house she said:

“Her son still hasn’t bought a house, but you people are buying.”

It sounded less like a blessing and more like a real-estate grievance meeting.

Then there is the myth she spread to my daughter.

According to her version of reality:

  • My wife works like a machine.
  • I do absolutely nothing.
  • I just lie on the bed and live a luxury life.

The truth?

I run a business.
Sometimes business work happens from a laptop.
Sometimes from a phone.
Sometimes while lying on the bed thinking.

Entrepreneurs don’t punch attendance.

But explaining entrepreneurship to someone who measures work only by office attendance and sweating in traffic is like explaining Wi-Fi to a 19th-century postman.

The irony?

Her own son was jobless for months and was financially supported by her.
Even his car was gifted by her.

Yet somehow, I became the unemployed villain in the family story.

For 13 years she mastered one particular skill —
whenever my wife and I were peaceful, she would plant a small spark.

A sentence here.
A complaint there.
A comparison somewhere.

Soon a small spark would become a domestic wildfire.

But something interesting happened in the last two years.

My wife finally started seeing the pattern.

When manipulation loses power, the next step is usually character assassination.

So now I have apparently become the official villain of extended family WhatsApp discussions.

And honestly, I’m fine with that.

Every good story needs a villain.

If she is the Olympic champion of double standards,
I’ll happily play the misunderstood character in the family drama.

After all, life without such characters would be a very boring story.

The Victim Script: How Some People Turn Their Weakness into Your Fault


Over the years I have noticed an interesting pattern in certain people. At first it looks like a personality issue, but when you observe carefully, it almost behaves like a predictable psychological script.

It usually begins with their own shortcomings — inefficiency, insecurity, or inability to take responsibility. Instead of acknowledging it, they quietly look around for someone else’s weakness.

Once they identify a small flaw in someone, that becomes their main weapon.

A small mistake suddenly becomes a major character flaw.
A simple disagreement becomes disrespect.
A minor misunderstanding becomes an attack on them.

What fascinated me most is how the narrative slowly changes.

Facts are slightly twisted, context disappears, and selective pieces of the story are repeated again and again. Over time, the original incident gets reshaped into something much bigger than what actually happened.

Sometimes they even go one step further — they start making the other person doubt their own memory of events. Statements like “That’s not what happened” or “You always do this” slowly distort the reality of the situation.

By the time the story reaches others, it barely resembles the original event.

The most interesting part is the final stage.

After exaggerating another person’s weakness and repeating the story enough times, they position themselves as the victim of the situation. Suddenly the focus shifts away from their inefficiency and towards the injustice they claim to have suffered.

Over time I realised this pattern usually contains four psychological behaviours working together:

Projection – placing their own flaws onto someone else.
Scapegoating – blaming another person for a bigger problem.
Victim playing – gaining sympathy by presenting themselves as wronged.
Gaslighting – twisting facts so others begin to question their own understanding of events.

When all four happen together, the result is a powerful narrative manipulation.

The lesson I learnt from observing such people is simple.

Not every loud complaint represents truth. Sometimes it is just a clever way of hiding one’s own shortcomings behind someone else’s mistake.

Once you recognize this pattern, it becomes much easier to stay calm and not get pulled into unnecessary drama.

Because sometimes, the person who speaks the loudest about being wronged is actually the one quietly avoiding responsibility.

When Life Was Moving Between Cities and a 3-Month-Old Smile


Exactly 10 years ago.

My daughter was just three months old.
She didn’t know how to sit. Didn’t know how to talk.
She was just rolling around… smiling at the ceiling fan… living in her own small universe.

And I was still rolling in the sky of becoming a father.

My wife was in her native. I was driving between Chennai, Madurai and Pollachi like a shuttle service. Highway tea shops were my silent companions. Early morning drives. Late night returns. Phone calls in between.

Business was going good.
I had a solid team. Energy was high.
That was the time I was seriously working on my coffee shop initiative — ideas, branding thoughts, concepts, locations, numbers, dreams. Filter coffee was not just a drink. It was a possibility.

Friend time had reduced.
Not intentionally. Life was just expanding.

But still, I made sure I showed up.

Green Park in Chennai.
Union Club in Madurai.

Those were my meeting spots. Laughter. Business talks. Political debates. Life updates. Some evenings were heavy, some were light, but they kept me grounded.

Bangalore visits had reduced.
Before 2015, Bangalore used to be almost a weekly emotion.
After that, priorities shifted. Travel changed direction. Responsibilities quietly took the driver’s seat.

That was also the period when I purchased two houses in Madurai.
And the construction of my present house was happening brick by brick. I still remember walking through half-built walls, imagining furniture, imagining children running around.

Today when I think back…

I don’t remember the stress.
I don’t remember the tiredness.

I remember the movement.
I remember the building phase.
I remember the silent excitement.

A 3-month-old baby.
A growing business.
Under-construction dreams.
Reduced Bangalore trips.
More responsibilities.

Life was not slow.
Life was not easy.
But life was beautifully in motion.

Ten years passed quietly.
But that version of me — driving highways, carrying dreams, and learning fatherhood — still smiles somewhere inside.

And that 3-month-old baby?
She is ten now.
Time really doesn’t ask permission before it moves.