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Showing posts from December, 2023

The Freedom Manifesto – Karan Bajaj – Review

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Going through Karan’s career journey, it’s clear that he is someone with an exceptional energy level and always needed a place to expand, a sense of comfort seems to give him restlessness. Given Karan’s insane risk-taking appetite, his story should ideally not trigger a content individual on a pre-defined corporate ladder. With that caveat setup upfront, let me provide an overview of Karan’s freedom manifesto. The book is divided into two parts, the first one deals with a framework on how to position oneself for the entrepreneurship journey. He provides formula for the amount of corpus fund required to sustain a desirable lifestyle, investing rules that provides a broad structure to breakup income towards needs and experience based expense bucket while the rest gets into savings bucket, 1:1:1 daily process of dedicating 3 hours of life to self-improvement focusing on exercise, meditation and reflection and a broad understanding into which business idea provides maximum impact. It’s...

Longitude – Dava Sobel – Review

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For millennium before the mid 19th century, every great captain lost himself in the middle of sea despite the best of charts and compass, eventually leading to heavy loss of life, commodities and in many cases shipwrecks.  There has been hundreds of shipwrecks causing thousands of men ranging from sailors, civilians and warriors who had lost their life in mid sea not having a clue about their whereabouts. It’s one of the prime reasons why many voyagers landed in completely different geographic landmass, the problem of an unclear longitude. Deep sea or oceans brings with it extreme variances of temperature which caused the lubricating oil within the clocks to thicken or thin down the volume along with expansion or contraction of various components within the clock. It meant that the time shown in clocks became unreliable with differences ranging for a few hours ahead or behind the actual time, mostly not even knowing whether the error in time difference is positive or negative. No...

When breath becomes air – Paul Kalanithi – Review

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A curious title indeed and it pays to understand the meaning before getting to know the depth of it. When breath becomes the central focus of one’s existence and the subject is in the act of dying, it’s termed as breath becomes air. When every human takes breath as an undeniably granted component of their life, the same act had become central point of attention for over 22 months ever since Paul was diagnosed of lung cancer, an aspiring neurosurgeon just in his mid-thirties but a career that he has dedicated himself for over decade. Any surgery related to brain tumour is bound to be complex not just due the significance of the organ but more so due the life and death related outcomes. When prognosis becomes a function of probabilities added with uncertain elements in the mix, the exercise is a share of not just medical expertise but moral dilemma as well. Would you rather live with the pain of tumour than accept the radical change in personality post-surgery? Is death a preferrable o...

Same as Ever – Morgan Housel – Review

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As I was reading through Morgan’s 'Same as Ever' book, it reminded me of the great tamil philosopher Thiruvalluvar’s 1330 verses that remains true till date having withstood over two millenniums of human civilization and progress. Though Morgan’s score of tiny stories doesn’t cover the depth of human emotions as it does with Thirukural, the fundamental idea remains the same.    There are infinite number of ways that your life could potentially play out while any individual seems to be living just a single version of it. The leading question is what would be true in every imaginable version of your life, the universal truth that transcends beyond luck or chance. Having said that, let’s look at chance event that occurred on 28 th of August 1776, the battle of long island which marks itself as a significant day in the history of America. George Washington’s 10,000 troop army was battered by British through it’s fleet of 400 war ships. All that British army had to do was to s...

I hear you – Nidhi Upadhay – Review

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A simple lovable girl, an adorable father who has a scientific inclination, a geneticist husband who carries a disturbing past and most importantly a genetically modified advanced foetus with supernatural powers. With the combination of given characters, Nidhi crafts a beautiful storyline centred around Mahika and Shivam. The story starts with Mahika falling for a charming and aspirational geneticist Shivam, whose presence and touch cast an endearing experience within her. She longed for Shivam’s presence and voice during the initial days when he was a bright research assistant to her father, prof. Mishra.   The mutual attraction gets them married in the course of time and the couple shift to New Jersey to advance Shivam’s career prospects despite Mahika’s eagerness to stay close to her father. She undergoes a mixed emotion of the joy of experiencing a new place and the sadness of staying away from her father. As years pass by, Mahika begins to witness the rough side of Shivam ...