Randomness and Order!

1–2 minutes

Order sharpens. Randomness breathes.

You can’t build anything without structure. For eg, work, routine, focus and more. Discipline pulls scattered energy into one stream. It’s what keeps the mind from dissolving into noise. When you start organising your work, your thoughts follow. Slowly, you become a system. The mind becomes an architect, efficient, precise, and predictable.

But that’s where the disorder begins. Too much order burns out the right brain or creative side. The one that dreams, experiments, and questions patterns. You start mistaking predictability for peace. The creative pulse dulls. The soul hungers for chaos, for the unknown.

That’s why randomness is not the enemy of order. It’s the antidote. The moments when you wander, explore, and break your own systems are what keep the mind alive. The art is not choosing between them. It’s knowing when to let one breathe through the other.

Cheers!

PS: Apologies for the absence!

Previous post: Flow State: F1

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Flow State: F1

1–2 minutes

Yesterday I watched F1. I don’t drive cars, never have. But the way Sunny says that he is chasing that one experience. He’s not chasing a trophy. He’s chasing that moment or the flow state. The constant roar of the engine fall silent, his thoughts disappear entirely, and the world shrinks down to the one bubble of focus. In that zone, he isn’t just driving, he is flying.

This is what psychologists call flow, a term proposed by Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi. It’s that state where the activity itself becomes rewarding, where effort feels effortless, and time and self seem to disappear.

Flow differs for everyone, depending on the balance of skill and challenge. It’s not impossible to reach, but it requires repetitions, practice, laps gradually training the mind and body until skill meets challenge naturally.

Flow isn’t magic. It’s skill meeting challenge, over and over, lap after lap. You don’t wait for it. You train for it. When it clicks, you just do. That’s flying. That’s flow.

Cheers!

Previous post: Why second things do matter!

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Why second things do matter!

1–2 minutes

In First Things First, we saw how survival comes before thriving. Secure the basics, and only then can the mind shift to growth.

But what comes after survival? That’s where Quadrant 2 enters the space of things that are important but not urgent.

Stephen Covey, in The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People (current read), maps life into four quadrants. Quadrant 2 is where the real magic happens. These activities don’t scream for your attention, but they quietly shape your future. Like eating well, moving your body, sleeping enough and caring for your mental health

They make up barely 20% of your daily life’s time, but they create 80% of your results. Ignore them long enough, and the system collapses.

In a tamil debate show where a youngster bragged about spending lakhs on an iphone while skipping meals. The phone might impress for a moment, but when health deteriorates, nothing else works.

This is the paradox! Urgent tasks grab us, but it’s the non-urgent, important ones that truly sustain us. Survival keeps the goose alive. Quadrant 2 keeps the goose healthy enough to lay golden eggs.

Second things do matter. Protect them, and everything else changes and sustains.

Cheers!

Previous post: How screens and spaces shape you?

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Why first things first!

1–2 minutes

We all want to thrive. To grow, to master, to live with purpose. But thriving is hard when the basics are shaky.

This is what I call the Survival–Thriving Law: the mind only shifts to thriving once survival is secured.

Think about it.

  • In yoga, you can’t master a pose until your foundation is steady. First balance, then grace.
  • In business, you can’t scale without cash flow in place. First stability, then growth. Not talking about startups here!
  • In life, you can’t chase purpose if you’re still worrying about daily survival. First safety, then meaning.

It feels like a paradox. We want to optimize for the end, yet the end collapses if we skip the mundae work throughout. We want the flower, but it only blooms if the roots are grounded.

So the order is non-negotiable. First survive, then thrive. Secure the basics, then let the mind expand.

Cheers

Previous post: #DecodeAgri06: Why traceability matters beyond exports?

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#DecodeAgri20: Why traceability matters beyond exports?

3–5 minutes

When you buy a packet of rice or a basket of mangoes in India, what do you really know about it? At best, you get a label with an FSSAI number and nutritional values. But where was it grown, how was it handled, what chemicals were used, and under what conditions did it travel before reaching you? Those answers are usually missing. This gap is what needs to addressed.

What Traceability Really Means?

Traceability is the ability to track the journey of food from farm to plate. Globally, it is the backbone of food safety systems. If contamination is found, a traceable chain allows quick recalls. If quality is questioned, it helps identify the source. It also builds consumer trust, because buyers know exactly where their food comes from.

Why Traceability is Hard in India?

India’s agriculture is too complex to make traceability simple. With over 85% of farmers being smallholders, land is fragmented and practices are diverse. Crops pass through multiple middlemen before reaching markets. Digital records are rare, logistics are inconsistent, and enforcement is patchy. While exports especially developed countries like EU, US demands rigorous monitoring, the domestic market is left to labels that say little about origin or safety.

Export Success, Domestic Neglect

To be fair, India has built successful traceability systems developed by APEDA. GrapeNet for pesticide monitoring in grapes, Peanut.Net for groundnuts, MangoNet for mango and Tracenet for organic consignments. These platforms came into picture as the foreign buyers demanded strict compliance. For Indians, the same grapes or groundnut lose their trace once they stay within the country.

Challenges faced

The absence of traceability is not only a farmer issue, it is systemic. For traceability to work, you need ground-level data: what inputs were used, how often, where, and when. That kind of data barely exists in Indian farming. Records are verbal, fragmented, or entirely missing. Certification and auditing come with costs and most smallholders cannot absorb. Supply chains, stretched across middlemen, don’t transmit information only the product itself.

Few days back, I watched a Tamil YouTube video on aflatoxin contamination in groundnuts based on the study conducted in districts of Tamil Nadu, showing how even staple crops can carry hidden health risks. At the same time, awareness about protein & fibre intake, diet, and health is rising sharply. Consumers are actively looking for healthier, higher-quality products.

Why It Matters Beyond Exports

The illusion holds until it doesn’t. Not standardized organic labels, unchecked pesticide residues, adulteration all remain common here. After COVID-19, Indian consumers have started seeking for food quality and safety. Traceability that exists for compliance abroad could be protecting health at home, but isn’t. There is now scope to deploy traceability domestically, making products genuinely safer and healthier.

Current Initiatives and Technology Opportunity

India has already shown that traceability systems can work GrapeNet for grapes, Peanut.Net for groundnuts,MangoNet for mangoes and Tracenet are proof. These platforms track quality, residues, and handling from farm to export, ensuring compliance with global standards. But they remain almost entirely export and commodity focused

The tools to extend traceability domestically are available and increasingly accessible. AI and blockchain can create records, while IoT sensors can monitor soil, water, and pesticide usage directly at the farm level. QR codes or farm management mobile apps can connect consumers to this data instantly. The challenge is not in technology itself, but in designing systems that work for India’s fragmented agriculture. Millions of smallholders, scattered plots, and multi-layered supply chains. With thoughtful implementation, these digital solutions could make traceability practical, affordable, and meaningful for every Indian consumer not just those buying exports.

Closing the Gap

Traceability in India has been treated as an export obligation, not a domestic right. That approach misses the point. The health of nearly 1.5 billion people is not secondary to the demands of foreign buyers. With rising awareness and demand for healthier, quality products, the lens will inevitably shift toward traceability. If India can build traceability for Brussels or Boston, it can build it for Bengaluru and Bhopal. What’s needed is a shift in intent from compliance for others, to accountability for ourselves.

Cheers!

Check out the similar posts: #Decodeagri05: Hidden costs of the rice revolution! & other Agri posts

Previous post: Taking responsibility without losing agency

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Taking responsibility without losing agency

1–2 minutes

Take responsibility is a phrase that gets thrown around so much it almost sounds like a cliché and terrfying. But it sets the foundation of personal agency. The ability to act, decide, and influence the direction of your own life.

The modern productivity and self-help world uses fancy words like playbook, high agency, proactive, center of influence, asymmetric bets, moat and more. They sound technical, even intimidating, but they all circle back to a simple thing. You always have a choice in how you respond, how you correct, and how you move forward.

Responsibility doesn’t mean controlling outcomes. You can’t force every situation to bend in your favor. It means owning the activity, the action itself, and knowing that the option to respond differently is yours. That’s the edge. Outcomes may vary.

It’s all about owning the input and the part where you have a real choice. That’s where agency lives.

Cheers!

Check out the previous posts: #Decodeagri05: Hidden costs of the rice revolution!

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Why hardest way is the smartest way!

1–2 minutes

The hardest part of problem-solving isn’t the problem itself. It’s resisting the urge to react on autopilot of blaming, fixing in a hurry, or slipping into victim mode.

We cannot solve our problems with the same level of consciousness that created them. – Einstein

Raising your consciousness isn’t an overnight upgrade. It starts with a pause. In that pause, ask: How would someone I deeply admire handle this? It could be a mentor, a parent, or even a figure you’ve never met.

The first time, your brain will resist. The second time, it will hesitate. But keep repeating it, and soon your mind learns a new default. Shifting perspective before reacting.

Cheers

Check out the previous post: Voice Over: Reality Check!

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Voice Over: Reality Check!

1–2 minutes

Recently I tried giving voice over for a note. I thought my voice was good enough even got compliments before so I assumed one take will be fine. I recorded and sent it, only to realize it sounded flat.

I didn’t understand the jargon people threw at me. I searched courses and YouTube, but they were all one-way. Nobody could point out what my mistake was. Finally, I came back to LLMs, kept recording different versions with different emotions, and even checked spectrograms. Slowly, I saw some changes, maybe 10% improvement.

I’m still learning, and I plan to add recordings to this as well.

The lesson?

Keep a reality check. Whatever lane you go in, stop and reassess. Compliments can be nice, but real growth happens when you see where you’re lacking and work on it.

Cheers!

PS: Might sound flat! IDK lol!

Check out the previous post: Bad Girl (2025) Movie Review

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Obscurity vs Cringe Posting!

Fifteen years ago, what happened inside your walls stayed there. Neighbours had to work hard to even guess your new purchases, habits or lifestyle.

Today, obscurity is a luxury. Social media makes everyone visible, and strangers judge based on fragments. You’re either invisible or overexposed.

That leaves us with two real strategies:

1. Obscurity

Grow in Silence. When no one’s watching, you’re free. You can test, fail, rebuild, and nobody cares. It’s how every legendary thing starts, hidden in dorms, or quiet notebooks. Obscurity is freedom disguised as irrelevance.

2. Cringe Posting

Build in Public. The other path is the opposite. Post messy and raw, unpolished, even cringe. Let people mock. That noise makes you bulletproof. Over time, the critics fade, but your authenticity compounds. What starts as “cringe” becomes confidence.

The Only Mistake?

Trying to look polished too soon.

Stay obscure long enough to sharpen your edge. Or stay cringe until nothing can shake you. Each path fits a different lane. Choose the one that serves your goal.

Cheers!

Check out the previous post: Dogs, Humans, AI: What coexistence teaches us!

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Dogs, Humans, AI: What coexistence teaches us!

3–4 minutes

We think we control dogs. We think we will control AI. History shows coexistence is never one-sided. Yesterday, I watched a debate show on a popular Tamil channel. The topic was the rise of stray dogs, rabies cases, and public safety. At first, it looked like a heated argument, but very quickly I realized the show missed the real point.

Instead of inviting vet doctors to talk about rabies, or municipal officials to explain waste management and sterilization efforts, the stage was filled with two groups: victims of dog attacks and people who love and feed dogs. The media made it look like the problem was a fight between these two sides. In reality, the real issue is limited urban planning, healthcare, municipal responsibility, policies and bigger picture.

We all already know there are too many stray dogs. The real questions should be

  • Why is sterilization not scaled up?
  • Why is waste not controlled, attracting dogs in large numbers?
  • Why is rabies vaccination limited?

Without addressing these, the debate was just noise. Pure noise and diversion.

Why Dogs Are With Us in the First Place?

Thousands of years ago, humans were hunters and gatherers. Wolves began hanging around human camps because of leftover food and waste. Over time, the wolves that were less aggressive and more cooperative stayed closer, got food, and survived better.

Their guts adapted to human food even before their skulls and faces changed. Over time, they evolved into dogs not just serving humans as hunters and guards, but also shaping our emotions and daily lives. In many ways, dogs didn’t just get domesticated by us. They also domesticated us. They trained us to accept companionship (within home), loyalty, and emotional bonding with another species. It was also an extension of existing human social complexity.

Emotion vs Logic

In the debate, I saw major two emotions:

  • Fear and anger from victims.
  • Love and attachment from dog feeders.

Both are valid. But emotions cannot solve rabies. Only logic and policy can. Solutions are clear. Mass sterilization and vaccination programs. Better garbage control. Public awareness on rabies prevention. A humane system like the Dutch model, where strays are sterilized, sheltered, and adopted.

The AI Connection

Later that day, I listened to a podcast about birth rate decline and the rise of AI. A strange thought caught me as that tab was left open in my head. What if humans and AI end up like humans and dogs?

For thousands of years, dogs shifted from hunters and guards to pampered dependents fed, sheltered, and entertained by humans without needing to work. Today, AI is doing to humans what humans once did to dogs, taking over our roles, this time in cognitive work. Even dogs at risk!

The shift is happening at terrifying speed. Dogs had 30,000 years to adapt to dependence, humans may get just 30 years or less. Within a few decades, we could find ourselves in the dog’s position (Assumption or Sci fi or reality) living in comfort of AI-supported lifestyle first. Just as dogs today don’t understand the economic systems that feed them, maybe future humans might live comfortably while remaining fundamentally powerless in an AI-dominated economy.

But here is the difference. Gogs give something AI cannot yet replicate innocence, presence, and living in the moment. AI can fill intellectual gaps and even emotional ones, but it cannot replace the raw life energy of a living being.

The Bigger Lesson

Both stray dogs and AI show us the same truth: coexistence doesn’t happen by accident. It has to be managed. With dogs, poor management created today’s crisis. With AI, poor management could create tomorrow’s. In every case, the weaker side suffers most. Today it is dogs. Tomorrow, it could be us!

Cheers

Check out the previous post: The Bear and the tabs we keep open!

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The Bear and the tabs we keep open!

1–2 minutes

I just finished The Bear show. Yup, of course the last episode is heavy. Maybe whole show itself. But the real weigh isn’t in the plot. It is in the mirror of paradigm that it holds up.

Carm keeps adding hurdles for himself (dynamic menu). Not because he has to. Because it feels safer to juggle between the chaos rather than to sit with clarity. This show isn’t a fiction but the pattern of many. The character arc of the characters were phenomenal.

The trap is subtle. If we are always wrestling with new obstacles, we never have to face the scarier work of stillness. Of saying, This is enough, Let’s make it great.

The best people I have met aren’t the ones who seek more noise. They are the one who notice the noise they have been creating and turn it down.

Reduce the friction as much as possible. That’s the lesson.

Cheers!

Check out the previous post: Keeping the goose alive! & Movie Reviews

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Keeping the goose alive!

2–3 minutes

I have always believed that books come to you at the right moment. Some resonate instantly, while others feel irrelevant until a later season of life. A couple of months ago, while staying at a resort, I picked up The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People from their bookshelf. I set aside the book I had carried with me and started reading it instead. I didn’t finish and left it behind, telling myself that I would buy a copy later. Then life happened, and I forgot all about it totally.

Last Sunday, I happened to notice the same book on a friend’s shelf. It felt almost like the book was following me around, waiting for me to finally pay attention. This time, I decided not to ignore the sign. I opened it again, and started reading. I found myself pausing at a concept of the balancing between P and PC. I did understand it but lacked practical knowledge on applying it in day to day activities. Ran to LLMs to understand.

The author explains it through the old story of the goose that lays golden eggs. Same old story. The golden eggs represent production (the outcomes/results) we chase, whether it’s money, recognition, or any form of visible success. The goose represents production capacity (the machine/engine/body) that produces those results in the first place. Our health, our skills, our relationships, and our systems.

If we chase only the eggs, we risk burning out the goose. If we only keep feeding the goose without expecting results, we might never see progress. The challenge is to balance both, because real growth lies in protecting the goose while still collecting the eggs. The body has to stay fit to order to work.

As I was fidgeting with this idea, I realized it tied back to many of the reflections I have thought about. The vicious cycle of health, strength that lasts, why we should rest and work like lions, and how we juggle priorities. Each of those themes circles around the same truth. The goose matters as much as the eggs.

The more I think about it, the more I see that not all outputs/results are created equal. Some are just one-time golden eggs like small wins that feel good for the moment but don’t leave much behind. Others are scalable. They build the goose itself, ensuring bigger and better eggs in the future. Daily yoga/lifting weights for better and healthier body.

On the other hand, scrolling endlessly on the phone or saying yes to draining conversations may give a quick golden egg of distraction or temporary comfort, but they don’t feed the goose.

We keep chasing golden eggs without realizing the goose is starving. Burnout, imbalance, even unhappiness all of it comes from forgetting the goose.

Before your next task, ask yourself. Am I feeding the goose or starving it? Since we often forget the basics.

Cheers!

Check out the previous post: Subjective Nature of Every Solution! & Movie Reviews

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Subjective Nature of Every Solution!

1–2 minutes

Every book we read, every conversation we have, every podcast we listen to, each carries a story, a lesson, and a key. At first glance, these keys/solutions look universal. They promise to unlock the struggles that all of us, in one form or another face.

But here’s the catch! A key that works for one person doesn’t always fit another’s lock. Why? Because that key was shaped by their story, their circumstances, emotions, and perceptions.

On the surface, solutions often look similar. Wake up early, journal daily, eat healthy, invest consistently. These are the methodologies. But underneath, the variables shift. Our sleep cycle, our inner battles, our health conditions, our financial reality. And those variables mean the outcome is never identical.

This is why I fell in love with the word subjective in recent days. No single prescription fits all. There isn’t one shoe that everyone can wear without blisters. What works is taking the principle, plugging in your own variables, tweaking the method, and then testing it against your life.

In the end, wisdom isn’t about copying solutions, it’s about customizing them.

Cheers!

Check out the previous post: Your Pen, Your Story!

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Your Pen, Your Story!

1–2 minutes

When the Industrial Revolution came, people blamed machines. When calculators came, they said we would forget math. When computers came, they said we would stop working with our hands. In reality, the ones who learned to use computers replaced the ones who didn’t.

We used all these to enhance our lives. Now with AI, the same cycle repeats. Yes, people will blame AI and using AI for killing creativity. Lose our voice. That’s not real.

As long as a writer can think clearly and articulate an idea based on their own lived experience, nothing will replace them. LLMs don’t have sensory organs to feel the rain, smell the dust after it, or taste that first cup of black coffee in the morning. They can’t know heartbreak or the weight of silence in a room. They can only remix descriptions of it. LLMs also don’t think like humans. We sometimes get confused, create the complexities.

And hopefully, consciousness can’t be programmed into them. We need stories and human experience to keep our sanity and feel alive.

AI can enhance our work, take us to places we’ve never gone. But if we let AI to write on a topic and publish it without the core us in it, there’s no authenticity. Sometimes, I publish it raw to let the thoughts out. For eg. Routine and drunk ink and sober edits. Work on what best for you and helps you bring out of best you.

We voice can move through an LLMs. But it can’t be born from one.

The pen’s still yours, the blank screen’s still judging, and AI is just makes the stuff glow.

Cheers!

PS: LLM suggested: Authentically Yours: The Pen Is Still Yours

Check out the previous post: Voice notes vs Writer’s Block

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Zen Garden, Kyoto

1–2 minutes

Yesterday, I was watching The Bear. Richie was talking about a photo of a Zen garden (Ryōan-ji in Kyoto). One of his favorite director’s favorite places. Riche made me more on gut and vibrations too.

I went looking for the why. William Friedkin’s version came first. In one of his interview, he said that the stones are like people. We arrive alone, and we die alone. We are alone no matter surrounded by people.

Then the different interpretation started surfacing.

#Islands in a sea of raked gravel. The white lines are waves, the stones are land rising above them.

#Mountains in clouds. A bird’s-eye view of a distant world.

#A tiger carrying her cub across a stream. An old Japanese tale mapped in stone.

#Natural harmony. The placement shows balance without symmetry, the beauty of imperfection.

#Meditation itself. The emptiness is a deliberate removal of distraction. A place to just sit and be.

And then the one that wouldn’t let me go: incomplete truth.

No matter where you stand, you can never see all fifteen stones at once. One is always hidden. Not by accident but by design.

It’s a lesson that’s almost annoying in its simplicity. We will never see the whole picture. We will assume. We will fill in gaps. And those gaps will stay, no matter how far we shift your position. We tend to see things as we are, not as they are. Subjective always!

We’re all standing in our own corner of the world, convinced the view is complete and prefect while the missing stone waits, quietly, out of sight.

Cheers

PS: Bucket List

Check out the previous post: The art of asking questions

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