Showing posts with label Reading. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Reading. Show all posts

Monday, 26 January 2026

The Battle Being Fought, Unknown to the Self

Hindu Gods: Krishna, Arjuna, Gita

The battle being fought, unknown to the self. The constant trying to improve oneself must go on, not to quit, but reflect.

Analyzing the situation with the 3 ancient forces according to the Shrimad Bhagavad Gita:

1. One pulls you towards the grave, a heavy magnetic inertia that thrives on my passivity.

2. Fever, a restless hunger that drives you to conquer but leaves you unable to sit in a room alone.

3. Clarity that feels like peace yet often becomes its own kind of cage.

I found out that bad habits are hard to quit due to these forces. Hence, we should analyze and find out what can stop these forces and reduce their impact. It can be mindfulness, building a system, celebrating small victories, broadening our perspective, journaling, or praying.

It can be making our needs clear, having a clear priority and a plan to follow, which must be realistic and actionable, and removing the fear of failure, for which we must take action and keep reflecting on the plan. The satisfaction in one achieved consistency shouldn’t damage other aspects of life by neglecting them.

We must reflect on the consequences of an action but never take tension of the outcomes. Learn to channelize your energy, direct your focus, and time into something that is meaningful for yourself. Do not waste your time on something that isn’t worth the time and is non-rewarding.

Example: What will eating junk food do to my health? We get a picture of obesity or unhealthy side effects. This makes us avoid temporary satisfaction and get the long-term advantage of being healthy.

We are constantly fighting such battles unknown to ourselves, which we may win or lose, but should never quit and never vanish the constant feeling of improvement.

Tuesday, 9 December 2025

I Found a Solution to New Year Goals: Check Before December Ends

 Every year’s last month, I try to find something that will help me track my habits, but after searching so many times, I would always stumble upon a premium purchase-based or ad-integrated habit tracker app. I wanted something free,simple, and useful. After trying many apps and websites, I finally found the best solution.

I want to tell you that I am taking a challenge.

I’m not waiting until January 1st. I’m starting today, and I want you to witness this commitment.

Here’s what I’m challenging myself to achieve:

  • To be healthy, fit, and maintain a good physique
  • To be studious and consistently learn
  • To be disciplined and show up daily
  • To be honest with myself, no matter what

I take this challenge by taking small steps at a time,firstly by installing the habit of brushing twice.
To wake up early in the morning, not missing a single day for the next 30 days, followed by exercise and movement. With that, I will finish a book this month.
Also, to be accountable, I will track myself throughout these 30 days, and for that, I found a very realistic, to-the-point, and useful app which I will continue to use for next year to keep track and be consistent, making and transforming myself, building habits. These words will be used as proof of my commitment after these 30 days.


THE APP THAT I FOUND: Loop Habit Tracker

The name of the app is Loop Habit Tracker, it’s not like any other, too much gamified, ad-filled, and forcing you to buy their premium rather than being an open source mobile app that has a very basic, minimalistic UI, and you can track yourself very easily without any need to buy a subscription or watch ads in between. The best thing is it’s FREE!

Before you download this app, I want you to know that as I continue to use this app for next 30 days I will keep on updating it and will show you the results,also this app being free and open source I am not doing its affiliate marketing or promotion,just sharing because I found it most useful and best among all other apps available,you can even export your data that has its own advantages.

Here is the link to the app: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=org.isoron.uhabits&pcampaignid=web_share

F-droid:https://loophabits.org/

“Motivation is what gets you started. Habit is what keeps you going.” — Jim Ryun

Also I want you to join me and use this app and if you like it I will suggest you to continue it to next year to,I think that we must build a momentum to build the habit a month before new year and continue it with full enthusiasm.

5 Marathi Songs You Absolutely Need to Hear

 5 Marathi Songs You Absolutely Need to Hear

Every note in Marathi music carries centuries of devotion, poetry, and cultural memory. Whether one has grown up singing or has just discovered these songs, these five tracks represent the heart and soul of Maharashtra’s musical tradition. Each one reflects a story that is greater than words and connects listeners to something beyond words.

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1.Runujhunu Re Bramara

Artist: Lata Mangeshkar
Music: Pt. Hridaynath Mangeshkar

Lyricist: Sant Dnyaneshwar

Imagine a honeybee humming from flower to flower, drawn by irresistible fragrance. That is the metaphor Sant Dnyaneshwar applies here in the case of spiritual longing. The repetitive “runujhunu” is like the sound of tinkling bells or buzzing that creates this almost hypnotic quality that draws you in.

This devotional number gets a soft and meditative touch in Lata Mangeshkar’s voice. Not loud, not dramatic, but an invite to shed your cares and float for some time around in the divine presence. What if, instead, devotion was as instinctive as a bee seeking nectar? Or what if returning home to divinity were that easy?

This is cornerstone Marathi bhakti music-the kind to which kirtans have been sung for generations on pilgrimages, in temples, and in front yards where families gather for evening prayers.

2.Taal Bole Chipalila

Artists: Pt. Bhimsen Joshi and Dr. Vasantrao Deshpande

Lyricist: Jagdish Khebudkar

Raag: Yaman

Here’s where things get interesting. “Taal Bole Chipalila” literally means “the rhythm speaks to the sparrow”-imagine nature itself joining in devotional celebration. This abhang celebrates music and dance as paths to the divine, but with a radical message: everyone’s equal when they’re singing God’s praises. Rich, poor, educated, uneducated-none of that matters.

The lyrics preach something so beautiful: let go of your material attachments, serve humanity, and express your devotion through all of your being — singing, dancing, being fully present. The mridanga, a classical drum, really moves the rhythm along with infectious energy.

With stalwarts like Bhimsen Joshi and Vasantrao Deshpande rendering it, one can be assured of something special. Their voices bring in both technical brilliance and genuine devotional fervor.

3.Mazhe Maher Pandhari

Lyricist: Sant Eknath Maharaj

Singers: Pt. Bhimsen Joshi and Kishori Amonkar

Raag: Bhup, Nat

“Maher” means your mother’s ancestral home-that place you go back to for comfort and a sense of belonging. Sant Eknath describes the sacred city of Pandharpur, the residence of Lord Vitthal, as precisely that-the soul’s true home.

This 16th-century composition still resonates powerfully today. Every year, millions of pilgrims walk hundreds of kilometers during the Wari, or pilgrimage season, to reach Pandharpur, and many sing this very song along the way. It invokes the Bhima River, Pundlik, or Vitthal’s devoted follower, and the sacred geography of Maharashtra-grounding spiritual yearning in real physical places.

The longing in this song is palpable. It’s not abstract theological concepts; it’s homesickness for the divine. That’s what makes it so universally moving, even if you’ve never been to Pandharpur.

4.Roop Pahata

Traditional Folk Composition

Performers : Vishnubuwa Vavanjekar and others

Sometimes the most powerful prayers are the simplest ones. “Toha Vitthal Barva, Toha Madhav Barva” — You are Vitthal, You are Madhav. That, in essence, is the entire song, to be repeated with devotional intensity.

Simplicity does not necessarily mean a lack of depth. This abhang proclaims the unity of God amidst names and forms that may vary. It is an appeal to godhead person to person, without metaphorical phrases. Just pure surrender and recognition.

This is the kind of song that catches fire in group kirtans. Hundreds of voices join together in this simple affirmation, and something shifts in the room. Participatory spirituality doesn’t get much better than this: no musical training or theological knowledge required, just sincerity.

5.Zhale Yuvati Mana

Composer: Govindarao Tembe

Lyricist: Krishnaji Prabhakar Khadikar

Singer: Pt. Anand Bhate

From: Sangeet Manapman (1911)

Now we’re switching gears completely. This is natyasangeet — classical Marathi musical theater — and it shows an entirely different side of Marathi musical tradition. Composed for the 1911 musical drama “Sangeet Manapman,” this song explores romantic love and martial valor rather than devotion.

“Zhale Yuvatimana Darun Ran Ruchir Premshe”-the heart of the young maiden becomes passionate through the beauty of love and warfare. It is like classically Indian rasa theory, aesthetic emotion, meets Marathi storytelling. The composition is sophisticated, restrained, emotionally nuanced, everything you would have expected from a golden age of Marathi musical theatre.

The rendition by Pt. Anand Bhate is masterful, showcasing how traditional Marathi composers integrated classical frameworks with vernacular language and local sensibilities. This is art music-better appreciated for the technical brilliance and emotional subtlety with which it is rendered.

Why These Songs Matter Today
These five songs are not relics; they are living traditions that continue to move people, for they tap into something universal. The devotional pieces speak to anyone who’s ever felt that longing for something beyond themselves — whether you call it God, truth, home, or simply meaning. And “Zhale Yuvati Mana” sends us a reminder that Marathi music isn’t all about temples and pilgrimages. It’s also about artistic excellence, classical aesthetics, and the full range of human emotion.

From Sant Dnyaneshwar’s folk-devotional metaphors to the classical sophistication of early 20th-century theater, these songs showcase the incredible breadth of Marathi musical heritage. Each one offers something different: meditation, celebration, longing, surrender, and artistry.

So listen to them. Allow the melodies to work on you. You might not understand every word if you don’t speak Marathi, but the emotions transcend language. And who knows? You might find yourself humming “Runujhunu Re” weeks later, still thinking about that honeybee searching for divine nectar.

Monday, 1 December 2025

Gen-Z is LaZy,really?

 The thing is, throughout COVID I basically lived on YouTube and Instagram. That’s actually where I initially came across terms like ROFL, LOL, SUS. Honestly? At the beginning I found them strange. But then everyone started using them memes were, over the place and well gradually I began using them as well.

Nowadays there is slang, for everything. Abbreviations of abbreviations. Folks refer to it as “The Language of Gen-Z “. Indeed much of it originates from American culture. Indian teenagers adopted it either because it seemed trendy or because everyone else was using it — FOMO. Notice? I just used it more.

Elderly individuals don’t understand. They believe that we are irrational or muddled.. I see why it might appear that way from an external viewpoint as if we merely imitate the West and strive excessively to be something we aren’t.

However this is what they overlook.

The Lazy Generation? Really?

The story says that Gen-Z is indolent. We shun work sleep throughout the day avoid conversations and lack interactions. We appear isolated, unsociable and impolite.

Could we take a moment to discuss context?

This generation endured 2–3 years confined indoors due, to a pandemic. Throughout our years typically meant for socializing, exploring and developing interpersonal skills we were instead confined within our homes. Consequently we gravitated towards media — not out of laziness but because it was genuinely the sole means available to stay connected.

Social media turned into our place for connection. Our substitute, for all that we have lost.

Common Misconceptions About Us


This is what I genuinely observe when I examine my generation:

We prioritize our health. The majority of us avoid alcohol and smoking — we’ve informed ourselves about the dangers. We value fitness, mental well-being and emotional health. We discuss topics that earlier generations concealed.

We chase what holds significance for us not what we’re instructed ought to be important. Indeed this involves established norms. It means prioritizing enthusiasm, over routes that seem forced or obsolete. Our aim is to reshape, refresh and approach things in a way.

That’s not laziness. That’s intentionality.

The India That Remains Unseen

Nowadays as I observe I don’t notice any Gen-Z youngsters. Instead I witness a craving for experiences for learning, for diversity.

Indian Gen-Z aspires to launch enterprises. We are engaging with disciplines exchanging thoughts and voicing our opinions. Brimming with optimism and drive. Everyone is so occupied with judging us that no one genuinely pays attention.

I observe emerging artists, designers, business starters, intellectuals and authors; individuals achieving success early, in life that ought to inspire the rest of us.. Frankly? It propels me onward to continue striving and chase my aspirations as well.

What I Wish for Us to Keep in Mind

To my Gen-Z peers resist buying into their story. Don’t allow them to label you as the “ generation” despite all the repeated talk, about it.

Maintain the flame of inquisitiveness. Pursue what you wish to pursue.

Yeah, some of us are copying Western trends without thinking. Some do it out of FOMO. But a lot of us are genuine-we have real talents, real ambitions, real things to offer. We aren’t the problem. We’re just different. And maybe that’s exactly what the world needs right now.

Sunday, 26 October 2025

The Paradox of Progress: Compounding vs Changing Fast in the AI Era


With technology advancing at a rate never seen before, do we double down on creating long-term mastery — or endlessly reinvent ourselves to keep pace?

The Speed Paradox of the 21st Century

The 21st century is unfolding like a paradox in motion.

On the one hand, we're instructed that success is all about compounding — clocking in the time, developing knowledge, and allowing diligent effort to snowball into remarkable results. This concept is behind everything from investing to mastery of skills. The longer you keep at it, the steeper your growth curve will be.

Conversely, we are in an era characterized by change. Artificial intelligence, automation, remote work, and decentralized innovation are revolutionizing industries in real time. Careers that existed five years ago no longer exist, and new careers pop up every quarter. The market benefits those who can adapt quickly, change course quickly, and learn on a constant basis.

So which way to success in the Age of AI — compounding or fast change?

The reality is, it's not an either-or decision. The future is for those who can compound fast change — individuals who excel at changing while creating on the foundation of what they already have.

To see what that looks like, let's explore the two mindsets creating the future of work.

The Case for Compounding: The Power of Staying Long Enough

Compounding is the silent engine powering all great success stories. It's the law of exponential returns in action — small, consistent efforts that build disproportionately over time.

Compound is what makes long-term investors beat short-term traders. In careers, it's what differentiates world-class performers from great amateurs. As Warren Buffett once said: "The best returns come to those who stay invested."

The same applies to skills. A software developer who writes code every day for ten years doesn't gain merely 10 years of experience; he gains rich tacit knowledge — instinct that can't be learned in school. A designer who goes through iteration on hundreds of projects gains a sixth sense for beauty. A manager who navigates several product cycles gains judgment that no leadership book can match.

The longer you're on a path, the faster your returns compound. Each new insight builds on top of earlier ones. Each setback builds up more for the next. This is the alchemy of staying power — what James Clear describes as "compound interest of self-improvement."

But the catch is: the world around us no longer remains stable enough for slow compounding to work relentlessly.


When the World Compounds Faster Than You

Professions kept pace with human speed in the early 2000s. Knowledge developed over 10 years is still worth another 10. Now, it's no longer true.

A marketing professional in 2015 who became an expert on Facebook ads could find their skills close to being obsolete in 2025's AI-driven marketing landscape. A back-end developer who was once heavily involved in database optimization would today derive more significance in knowing LLM APIs and prompt engineering. A content writer who became a pro in search engine optimization ten years ago is disrupted by the generative models that create, edit, and optimize copy in seconds.

When the external rate of change outpaces your learning rate internally, obsolescence is unavoidable. What previously used to appreciate now deteriorates. That is, the half-life of the value of skills has significantly shortened.

This is why the prevailing career guidance of the industrial era — "find your niche and stick with it" — is losing its sway. The compounding curve continues to be there, but the slope is being reset by technology shocks more than it used to.

The Case for Changing Fast: Career Agility as a Survival Skill

Where compounding is depth, going fast is the ability to adapt. It's learning, unlearning, and learning again at the pace of the environment.

The AI-driven economy rewards the meta-skill of reinvention. Every few years — and sometimes months — professionals across disciplines are forced to realign to new realities. A journalist learns data visualization. A teacher adopts AI-driven learning tools. A CFO starts leveraging predictive analytics models.

This reinvention culture is not a trend. It's a response to the structure of exponential technology change. Ray Kurzweil has referred to this as the law of accelerating returns — the concept that the rate of innovation itself increases over time, leading to accelerating cycles of disruption.

For individuals and organizations, this implies that one fixed skill set is never enough. What is most important is how quickly you can recognize change, try new technologies, and redirect your career.

But there is a deeper reason why "changing fast" goes beyond mere survival: it's a matter of riding the leading edge of possibility. Early movers on AI tools, for instance, are already redefining value creation industry by industry — from generative design to algorithmic law. The people who go fast don't just follow; they set the new standard.

The Trade-Off Between Depth and Agility

So where does that leave us? If compounding creates long-term advantage and pivoting quickly allows for short-term timeliness, then the future appears to require ongoing balancing between stability and reinvention.

The catch is that each necessitates a different mindset.

  • Compounding flourishes on consistency, patience, and concentration — doing one thing better every day.
  • Rapid change requires curiosity, adaptability, and boldness — being open to starting over again and again.

Most individuals and institutions are hardwired for one but not the other. The career changer has difficulty letting go of prior experience. The professional switcher has trouble creating substance before switching again.

But the strongest professionals may come today don't pick sides — they stack them. They build learning systems that allow them to compound knowledge across several pivots.

This fusion strategy is the way polymaths have succeeded over the ages — from Leonardo da Vinci to today's cross-disciplinary artists. The only difference now is size. In the AI economy, each person needs to be an ongoing polymath, accumulating knowledge that is sufficiently flexible to port.

Compounding Through Reinvention

Let's redefine the challenge. Perhaps career change does not equate to giving up compounding — perhaps it's merely a shift of what compounds.

When you zoom out, it's not just skills that build up. So do mental modelslearning capacityjudgment, and pattern recognition. As you change domains — e.g., from marketing to product strategy — you don't start back at zero. You bring forward frameworks that speed learning in the new domain.

This is compound learning — where with each switch you get quicker at the next switch. Rather than compounding a single narrow ability, you are compounding the ability to adapt.

Here's how that plays out in real life:

  • Compounding skills: Remain deep in one field (e.g., full-stack development). This provides long-term credibility and intuition.
  • Adapting quickly: Periodically add on contiguous skills (e.g., AI integration, cybersecurity, or user experience). This makes your profile current.
  • Amplifying flexibility: Over time, your capacity to adapt to change compounds, making subsequent pivots smoother and quicker.

It's not about leaving mastery behind but reframing it — from a master of a space to a master of evolution.

AI: The Great Reset Button on Expertise

Artificial intelligence is the driver and democratizer of rapid change. AI compresses time cycles — speeding up what took years to a matter of days.

In creative labor, AI co-pilots make amateur creatives quasi-professionals overnight. In analytics, AI platforms mechanize deep statistical analysis that took decades of experience. In software, low-code and no-code platforms eliminate technical gatekeeping.

This democratization has an odd consequence: the price on intelligence decreases, while the price on judgment, creativity, and adaptability increases.

When AI can handle the repetitive and the routine, humans have to specialize in meta-intelligence — understanding what to askhow to integrate, and when to pivot.

The 2020s and 2030s will witness the emergence of what may be termed the "compound-changer" — professionals who construct stackable careers in various fields, joining the dots in a manner that AI cannot. A marketer turns into an AI trainer. An engineer turns into a product storyteller. A teacher turns into a data curator.

These are not arbitrary switches — they're strategic recombinations. Each pivot leverages the previous one, establishing nonlinear compounding across categories.

The Half-Life of Skills

In order to think strategically about your career in this new world, it's helpful to know about the half-life of skills — how long it takes for half of what you know to be rendered obsolete.

Based on several studies, technical skills now possess a half-life of less than five years and, in AI-based industries, that window is compressing to two or three. Soft skills — communication, judgment, systems thinking — last longer, but even they now depend on some level of technological literacy to remain useful.

This implies that our professional operating system should have periodic version updates. Just as companies launch v2.0 products, people will have to iterate their skill stack — most likely every 12–18 months.

The learning future, thus, will be modular, ongoing, and AI-driven. Microcredentials, learning-in-the-flow-of-work, and customized AI learning systems will become the default upskilling mechanisms instead of conventional degrees.

Adaptation itself will be the compound interest of the digital age.

The New Career Formula: Depth × Agility = Durability

If we set up the future career durability mathematically, it might be as follows:

Career Durability = (Depth of Expertise) × (Speed of Adaptation)

  • Depth gives identity, credibility, and compounding returns.
  • Agility provides renewal and relevance.
  • Multiplying them (not adding) highlights that both are equally critical — poor performance in one severely lowers overall durability.

A person who is profoundly technical but inflexible will wither quickly. A person who can pivot swiftly but doesn't have grounding will disperse their attention. The most powerful professionals — and businesses — are those who combine compounding with agility into one, amplifying loop.

Organizational Implications: Businesses Need to Compound Change Too

This reasoning doesn't end at personal careers. Businesses, too, have the challenge of compounding while changing quickly.

Traditional corporations were built around stability — predictable hierarchies, quarterly planning cycles, five-year strategy roadmaps. Startups, by contrast, thrive on agility — rapid iteration, fail-fast cultures, and pivoting power.

But neither model alone suits an AI-speed world. The incumbents risk inertia. The startups risk burnout.

Forward-thinking companies are blending both playbooks:

  • Create a compounding core: Invest in long-term strengths — culture, customer trust, data infrastructure, brand.
  • Support continuous reinvention: Construct modular teams, encourage career rotation inside, and co-pilot human work with AI agents.
  • Reinvent leadership: Future leaders are sensemakers — leaders who can predict, adapt, and compound organizational learning.

Just as individuals must master “compound change,” so must institutions. This is how companies become anti-fragile — not just surviving disruption but strengthening because of it.


The Emotional Cost of Constant Reinvention

Let’s not romanticize agility. Endless switching comes with emotional fatigue. Reinvention may sound exciting, but it often feels like identity erosion — letting go of what you’ve mastered to become a beginner again.

That's why inner compounding — stability of purpose and values — is a psychological anchor in the midst of constant change.

Your tools and roles can shift, but your why cannot. Whether you're addressing problems, spinning tales, or creating systems, the underlying motivation that gets you going offers continuity.

In short, compound meaning as you shift direction.

How to Compound While Changing Fast: A Practical Framework

Here's a four-part strategy for weaving together compounding and rapid change:

  1. Anchor in a core mission — Know the type or theme of problem that provides your profession with purpose. Keep that stable as you retool.
  2. Adopt a lattice mindset — Consider your skills as nodes within a lattice, rather than rungs on a ladder. Each new node connects with and magnifies others.
  3. Invest in meta-skills — Master learning, synthesizing, and adapting. These are multiplying skills that fuel every pivot.
  4. Leverage AI as a multiplier — Utilize AI to shorten learning curves and amplify output. The speed at which the world is changing, the more leverage AI has for human reinvention.

The greatest professionals of the 2030s will not only be employees or entrepreneurs. They will be adaptive systems — human platforms constantly updating themselves with data, curiosity, and creativity.

The Future Compounders' Mindset

To succeed in the age of AI, we need to reframe what mastery is. It's not mastering one skill over the course of a lifetime anymore. It's creating lasting patterns of growth that fit into an infinite number of contexts.

The compounding mentality continues to count — but what compounds isn't a static skill; it's your capacity to intelligently evolve.

That's the paradox of progress: the quicker we transform, the more critical forward thinking is. The world requires fewer specialists caught up in our own know-how and more compounders of change — individuals with the capacity for remaining curious, continuing to learn, and remaining human.

The Takeaway

The work life of 2030 and beyond won't be won by the smartest or the fastest — it will be won by those who can compound intelligence through reinvention.

Changing fast is no longer a trade-off, it's a synthesis. Just like compound interest turns small deeds into exponential results, compound adaptation turns small reinventions into longevity.

Master the speed of change without sacrificing your core. Create new piles on top of old foundations. Let your growth accumulate, even as your trajectory shifts.

In the AI-driven future of work, the winning strategy is easy to state, but not so easy to execute: Be around long enough to learn profoundly. Be fast enough to remain in business.

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