Blogchatter

A detailed review of Teachings from the Ramayana for Every Entrepreneur by Shantanu Gupta, exploring 25 leadership lessons, corporate case studies, and timeless entrepreneurial mindset insights drawn from the Ramayana for modern professionals and students.

A deep and honest review of Netflix’s Can This Love Be Translated? Exploring Mu-hee’s childhood trauma, Do Ra-mi alter ego explained, Ho-jin’s emotional translation, the reality show metaphor, and what the K-drama really says about modern love.

A reflective essay on content extraction guilt — the tension between experiencing books privately and turning them into online content. On reading slowly, posting strategically, and trying to remain a reader first in the age of visibility.

A reflective essay on physical closeness, distance, and how the body remembers touch even when the mind adapts. Exploring intimacy, absence, emotional regulation, and the quiet imprint of love.

A reflective essay on silence that comes from guilt rather than peace. Exploring withdrawal, self-erasure, responsibility, and the quiet cost of believing you must earn the right to be visible.

My notes on Half of Forever by Ravinder Singh, a deeply emotional story about Ravin and Heer, exploring love, marriage, emotional boundaries, and the complexity of loyalty. A raw and honest review.

A reflective essay on the hidden cost of visibility for authors. Exploring social media pressure, performance, burnout, and how modern publishing reshapes what it means to be a writer.

A reflective essay on how social media has shifted from being an add-on to becoming the centre of publishing. On visibility, marketing, slow books, algorithms, reader trust, and the evolving relationship between writing and promotion.

A reflective essay on how algorithms have become an invisible participant in reading and book promotion. On sincerity, strategy, content guilt, slow books, and navigating reading, sharing, and marketing in the age of social media.

A reflective essay on modern love, emotional stamina, and why leaving has become easier than repairing. Exploring discomfort, conflict, repair, and the quiet work of staying with intention.