Short Story: When the City Sleeps

(Mumbai, late 1980s)

By the time the last local groaned into Marine Lines, Ramesh’s ledger lines were still dancing in his head like impatient ants. Columns that refused to add up, numbers that snickered at him from the margins. He had stayed back again, Junior Clerk (Probation) at Mehta & Sons Exporters, Fort, because Mr. Mehta had started dropping words like “tightening belts” and “rationalisation,” which were dignified ways of saying “some of you are unnecessary.” Ramesh had never liked the feeling of being unnecessary. It followed him to the train like a stray dog.

He stepped onto the platform and swallowed the tang of sea salt and iron. The station, which earlier in the evening had pulsed with elbows and voices and bodies, now yawned like a huge mouth catching its breath. One stall was still open, its owner scraping burnt tea leaves from a vessel, the air fragranced with cardamom and something singed. A bored constable leaned against a pillar, tapping a stick gently on his calf, eyes distant. Somewhere above the glass roof, a gull scolded something invisible, and then the sound was gone.

Ramesh adjusted the cloth bag at his shoulder. It held the day’s leftovers: a steel tiffin dabba with the last smear of baingan bharta, a fountain pen with its cap cracked, and his worries, which seemed to take the most space.

Outside the station, a kaali-peeli idled under a sputtering streetlamp. The driver’s turban had slipped, the fabric a little tired at the edges. He dozed with his mouth half open, the ghost of a bidi clinging to his fingers. A few steps away, the tea stall that never slept, the one everyone called “Karim’s,” though the painted board claimed “Lucky Tea & Snacks”, was open, as it always was, regardless of storms, cricket matches, or election nights.

“Arre, Ramesh bhai,” called Karim without lifting his eyes from the kettle. He had memorized his regulars’ footsteps long ago. “Late again?”

“Hmm,” Ramesh said, the sound falling somewhere between a yes and a sigh.

Karim poured chai into a glass so thin it was almost cruel, tied a knot with his rag, and slid it across the counter. “Sugar less today. Your face is already sweet sad.”

Ramesh smiled despite himself. “Bas, Karim bhai. Aap bhi na.”

He cupped the glass and let the heat bite his palm just enough to remind him he was alive. Behind him, the sea growled and spat, throwing foam at the tetrapods as if annoyed by the very idea of concrete. A boy pedalled by, wobbling slightly, newspapers stacked so high they orbited him like a satellite. He would soon deliver headlines to doors still heavy with sleep, ringing small bells that said everything and nothing at once: Wake up, something’s happened again.

“Office?” Karim asked. He didn’t look up, just listened to the pitch of Ramesh’s breathing, to the city’s residual hum. The kettle hissed. A moth auditioned for suicide against the yellow tube light.

“Office,” Ramesh said. “Figures don’t behave.”

“Figures are like people,” Karim said, stirring. “They behave if you hold them gently and threaten them at the same time.” He grinned, revealing a gold tooth that caught the light like an extra star.

Ramesh laughed, the sound surprising himself. He finished the tea and placed the glass upside down, respectful. The habit came from his father, who had believed that the way you left things mattered: a glass, a conversation, a day.

He ambled toward Marine Drive. At this hour, it belonged to dogs and whisperers. Yellow pearls of light looped the curve of the Queen’s Necklace, the streetlamps leaning like sleepy sentries. On a bench, an old man stared so hard at the horizon it seemed he might pull dawn up by its ears. A couple walked shoulder to shoulder, not touching, measuring a distance only they understood.

Ramesh sat on the seawall and let the damp creep into his trousers. He watched the moon wipe its face on a passing cloud. He wondered, not for the first time, if he should give up and go back to Nagpur. There was safety back there: a mother who would still scold, a sister who saved the crispest bhakris for him, an old bicycle with a bell that sounded like a cough. But the thought also made him restless in a way that felt like suffocation.

He looked at his palm lines. Somewhere in them, a fortune-teller had once said, there was water. “You will live near water. Or drown in it,” the man had added, noncommittal, as if hedging his bets against karma.

The taxi under the streetlamp coughed awake. The driver rubbed his face and squinted at the road. He spotted Ramesh and raised his chin in inquiry.

“Girgaon,” Ramesh said, getting up. “Near Thakurdwar.”

“Chalo,” the driver said, patting the seat in a way that suggested the car was a temperamental animal that needed soothing.

As the taxi nudged into motion, the driver flicked the radio on. A woman’s voice floated, Lata, as soft and inevitable as the ocean. Advertisements for Nirma and Rasna elbowed their way in between. The city’s soundtrack, even at this hour, asked you to buy and believe.

“Late night?” the driver asked.

“Late year,” Ramesh said before he could simplify the truth. The driver chuckled.

They glided past an Irani café with its shutters half down. A solitary man sat on a chair outside, smoking into a notebook. Grant Road’s corners still held their secrets; a line of posters: Mithun’s dance pose, Amitabh’s fist, a sari-clad heroine with eyes like dark lakes, wrinkled in the damp.

At a red light, obedient to rules because it was too sleepy to think otherwise, the taxi slowed. A group of young men in shirtsleeves pushed a stalled truck, laughing at their own effort. From a nearby building, a night watchman’s whistle punctured the air at timed intervals. A rooftop flapped with laundry long forgotten.

“Nights suit you?” Ramesh asked the driver, surprising himself again with a question.

“Nights suit my face,” the driver replied, tapping the mirror. “Less scrutiny.”

Ramesh looked properly at him now. He had the kind of face that had once been beautiful and then decided to become interesting: cheekbones chipped by life, eyes like old coins. He wore a thin gold chain with a tiny Ganesha that lurched with the car’s movements.

“I am Shankar,” the driver said, as if meeting in darkness demanded some exchange of names. “And you?”

“Ramesh. Clerk. Mehta & Sons.”

“Ah,” said Shankar, as if this explained some philosophy. “I used to be a clerk in my first life. Textile mill. Parel side.”

“What happened?”

Shankar smiled without teeth. “Bombay happened,” he said. “Then taxi happened. To drive is to be in motion even when life stalls.”

The signal changed to green as if in agreement. The taxi slid forward like a yawn. As they approached Charni Road, a burst of light exploded from a paan shop shuttering itself; tin clapping like a cymbal. Ramesh thought of Mr. Mehta’s watch: thin, silver, cutting seconds into obedient slices. He sometimes felt he lived inside that watch.

A boy darted across the road suddenly, a stack of newspapers teetering in his arms. Shankar braked gently. The boy wobbled, steadied, but a single paper escaped, skittering to the median and plastering itself there like a tired fish.

“Tomorrow’s truths, scattering,” Shankar murmured. “Every night I think of the boys. They are the first to know and the first to be forgotten.”

They were two lanes from Girgaon when the taxi shuddered, complained, and died. Shankar petted the steering wheel. “Bas, bas, darling,” he muttered, then sighed. “She wants tea.”

He pulled over near a small island of a tea stall, the flame underneath a blackened kettle painting the faces around it with a mythic glow. The board read “Sagger Cold Drinks & Tea,” but nothing could be more ironic. It was pure heat.

“Two cutting,” Shankar said, lifting two fingers. Ramesh pulled out money reflexively.

“Arre, Ramesh-bhai,” called the tea boy. It was Karim’s cousin, as it seemed every tea seller in the city was. “Second shift? You’re becoming a bat.”

“Bas yaar,” Ramesh said, and leaned on the counter. Tea arrived: bitter, sweet, scalding. He felt it spread through him as a small courage.

Next to him, a man in a watchman’s cap blew into his hands. His whistle dangled from a braided rope like an amulet. He nodded at Shankar, then at Ramesh. “Night is long if you watch it alone,” he said. “Name’s Lobo.”

“Ramesh.”

“Shankar.”

Introductions done, the city ticked forward by another, different measure.

“What building?” Shankar asked.

“Art Deco one,” Lobo said, jerking his head toward a handsome facade with curves like a thoughtful woman. “We call it ‘Seaview,’ but the sea is shy behind other buildings now. Once upon a time you could see ships.”

“Ships are like promises,” Shankar said. “When you see them, you believe. When they go behind buildings…”

“You keep believing,” Lobo finished. He laughed, and the laugh made them like him.

“Any ghosts?” Ramesh asked lightly, unsure if the question was the kind of night question that would make morning regret it.

“Plenty,” Lobo said cheerfully. “Mostly of rent-controlled tenants. They never leave.”

Ramesh imagined these gentle, stubborn ghosts bristling at renovations, at VCR stores, at the first whispers of satellite television like contraband.

A small commotion erupted near the PCO booth on the corner, a glass cubicle with a phone that ate coins and gave back hope. A woman in a faded sari was banging the receiver cradle repeatedly. “Koi nahi uthata!” she hissed. No one is picking up.

“Problem?” Lobo asked, approaching with a professional authority he wore lightly.

“My husband,” she said. Her voice carried exhaustion and a dignity that refused to outsource itself to panic. “Taxi driver. He should have been home by now. Whole evening gone. I called the stand. They say he left. Where is he to go? Our boy…fever.”

“What’s the taxi number?” Shankar asked, stepping forward.

“MH-01 G something something,” she said, flustered, wiping her forehead with the edge of her sari. “I forget. It is always the same and then today…”

“We’ll help,” Shankar said, as if the city had deputised him. “Come, sit. Drink water.” He looked at Ramesh, then at Lobo. The unspoken math was simple: three people divide the night into manageable parts.

“Which stand?” Ramesh asked. “Where does he usually take last fare?”

“Near Crawford,” she said. “Sometimes Opera House. He does vegetable market mornings.”

Shankar glanced at his car. “She’ll start,” he said, patting the bonnet, making a promise he had no right to make. He slid into the seat, turned the key, whispered something that sounded like a prayer, and the engine answered like an old lion, grumpy but game.

“You come,” Shankar said to Ramesh. “Two eyes more. Lobo?”

“I will be here if the police van comes, to direct,” Lobo said, tapping his whistle. “I’ll speak to Sub-Inspector if needed. And I’ll keep the phone line for you.”

The woman hesitated, then nodded. “I am Savita,” she said. “Thank you.”

“Chalo,” said Shankar. “We’ll go Crawford first.”

They slid into the lane, the city obliging by making space because it always did, somehow, even when it insisted there was none. The roads wore monsoon’s leftover scars, potholes like bad memories. At an intersection, two dogs conducted a long conversation in barks that sounded like philosophy.

“What is his name?” Ramesh asked gently.

“Ravindra,” Savita said. “He complains of back. He says he will leave taxi and go back to village. But the village…” She didn’t finish the sentence, and she didn’t have to.

Crawford Market rose from the darkness like a red-brick ship anchored in a sea of crates. It smelled of coriander dreams and fish arguments and wet jute. A few men squatted on upturned baskets, playing cards by the light of a single dangling bulb. A tea seller sloshed hot liquid from glass to glass like a magician passing light through his fingers.

Shankar slowed at the taxi stand. A man in a vest approached, scratching his chest theatrically. “Kya hua?”

Shankar described Ravindra as best he could with Savita feeding details. The man nodded as information slotted into a mental register he kept more reliable than any notebook. “Haan, haan, he took a fare to Opera House, then said he will drop taxi here later. But a police nakabandi is near Lamington Road. Maybe he got stuck.”

“Lamington then,” Shankar said, and they were off, the engine developing a companionable clatter that suggested it had accepted its role in this small crusade.

Lamington Road was a sleeping dragon. Electronic shops with names like “Sancheti Radios” and “Vijay Time” had pulled their shutters like eyelids. A paan stain on a wall glistened, surprisingly elegant in the lamplight. A constable waved them down at a makeshift barricade.

“Routine checking,” he said, peering in. “Theft at Grant Road. You from where?”

“Looking for a driver,” Shankar said, his voice both humble and official. He explained rapidly, oiling the facts with familiarity. The constable muttered into a walkie-talkie that crackled back a universe of half-heard instructions.

“Two taxis detained for papers,” he said finally. “Take left, go towards Opera House. Maybe he is waiting near the Irani on the corner. Or at police chowky.”

Opera House held itself like a dowager, elegant even in the rain’s afterthought. The Irani café on the corner had its shutters up halfway, enough for a boy to sneak in and out with bun maska for the policemen inside the chowky. A small group had gathered: a driver gesticulating, an officer making notes lazily, and a boy with a black-and-white puppy cradled in his arms.

“Ravindra!” Savita cried, and the driver’s head whipped around. His eyes were bleary with hours and worry.

“Ai, Savita!” He grabbed her shoulders as if to confirm she wouldn’t evaporate. “I tried calling, but line busy. I stopped at chowky to report; there’s a boy I found near Kalbadevi, lost. He wouldn’t speak. Only the dog would wag its tail. So I brought him.”

“Boy speaks now,” said the Sub-Inspector mildly, chewing on a pencil. “Name is Selvam. He ran away. He says he lives, what is it, Grant Road chawl, near the tailoring shop with Amitabh poster. Father drinks. Mother cries. He got bored of it today and followed puppy.”

The boy stared at the floor, embarrassed at having ended up the subject of adult narratives. The puppy sneezed.

“We will take him home,” the Sub-Inspector said. “I sent constable. These are everyday things at night. The day has headlines. Night has footnotes.” He looked at Ramesh and Shankar and Savita. He nodded, a small gratitude.

Ravindra fished at his pocket, came up with a paper-wrapped parcel. “I brought medicines,” he told Savita. “For fever. The pharmacist near Majestic gave discount. He knows us.”

“You didn’t come home,” she said, the reprimand dilute with relief. “I was scolding you in my mind and worrying at the same time.” She swatted his arm with two fingers and then squeezed that same arm, both acts having equal force.

“Come, come,” said Shankar. “Let us leave the police to their footnotes.”

Outside, the city seemed to have shifted again. The sky had paled by a degree you could only measure with a night worker’s eye. The first BEST bus sighed awake somewhere far and near. A rooster, imported perhaps by mistake into Mumbai’s logic, crowed from a corrugated roof.

They sat in the taxi for a moment, all four of them, and listened to the engine, which seemed to have acquired a heart.

“Come home,” Savita said to Ravindra, the words plain but landing like a warm blanket. “Then you can go again.”

Ramesh watched them go, a pair that made sense even when the city did not. He looked at Shankar.

“You drive nights to be alone?” he asked.

“I drive nights to remember I am not,” Shankar said, and smiled with his eyes.

They returned to the tea stall, which had welcomed crises and reunions for years without committing to either as a policy. Lobo was there, of course, pouring tea into saucers for two constables who were pretending not to enjoy the decadence. He waved. “All sorted?”

“All sorted,” Shankar said. “Boy followed a dog. Man followed a conscience. Woman followed a fear. We followed them.”

“City followed itself,” Lobo said, satisfied. He pushed a cup toward Ramesh. “It’s on me. Actually it’s on the building’s watchman fund. Same thing.”

They drank, all of them, the cup a small anchor against the flood of time. Ramesh felt the tea move into him with authority. Around them, the city tested its limbs, flexing the parts that would soon need to run: the baker lighting ovens, the first dabbawalas tying their white Gandhi caps and aligning their tiffin codes like mantras, the milkman rattling aluminum cans like bells. The streets corresponded with the sky in a language that was not taught but inherited.

“Sometimes I think of leaving,” Ramesh said, surprising himself for the third time in one night. “Nagpur. My mother is there. She’ll be happy if I come back. The city will not notice if I leave. The city has too many faces to miss one.”

Lobo nodded, a slow, sympathetic metronome. “I’m from Vasai,” he said. “Came in seventy-nine, when the trains still believed in empty seats. I have left Mumbai many times, on days off, for weddings, for funerals. Each time I arrive back at Churchgate, my feet accelerate on their own. That is how I know I belong to the city. Not the other way around.”

Shankar scratched the back of his head. “We think city is a machine,” he said. “But it is a net. If you fall, someone catches. Not always with soft hands. But still catches.”

Ramesh thought of the night’s choreography: Karim’s cousin’s tea, Shankar’s engine prayers, Lobo’s whistle diplomacy, the PCO’s stubborn dial tone, the chowky’s footnotes, a lost boy and a found dog. He felt, for a precise second, the city’s pulse line up with his own. It was not romantic. It was mechanical and magnificent, like a lung.

“I am a clerk,” he said softly, perhaps only to himself. “I make columns add up. Maybe I can make something else add up.”

“Arre wah,” Lobo grinned. “Listen to poet-saab. You write?”

“Sometimes,” Ramesh said, thinking of a notebook under his mattress where he collected sentences like bus tickets.

“Write about us,” Shankar said, patting the dashboard. “Write about the city when it is pretending to be asleep.”

They parted like people on a platform; tidily and forever and for now. Lobo returned to his building, where a tenant would soon complain about the lift’s noble decision to rest between floors. Shankar slid back into the stream, his taxi’s meter clicking into moral ambiguity. Ramesh walked toward Girgaon, his bag lighter, though he had not removed anything.

At the mouth of his lane, a man in a lungi hosed down the front step in a ritual that declared: new day, old dust, we will do this again. A woman on a balcony shook a doormat as if punishing it for its hospitality. The faint drift of agarbatti threaded the air. An elderly neighbor, a Parsi auntie with her hair in a stubborn bun, wiped her glasses with the end of her sari and said, “Good morning?” like a question that suspected it knew the answer.

“Good morning,” Ramesh said, and meant it.

Inside his kholi, he put his tiffin on the shelf, peeled his shirt off, and washed his face with water so cold it argued with his sleepiness. In the mirror, his eyes looked like they belonged to an older man and a younger boy at the same time. He reached under the mattress and pulled out his notebook.

He wrote quickly, before the day’s logic marched in with its boots: When the city sleeps, it is not silence. It is a low hum, a hand on your shoulder telling you to keep breathing. A dog leads a boy home. A watchman’s whistle is a metronome for faith. A taxi requests tea and receives it. A clerk decides to do sums that cannot be written in ledgers.

He paused and drew the edge of his thumb along the paper, savouring the grain. He flipped to a new page.

Then, for reasons he would later explain as borrowed bravery, he wrote a plan. Not poetry, not anything fine. Just a list of neat, practical steps like the ones he imagined the dabbawalas must use in their heads each day:

  • Review the dispatch registers at Mehta & Sons; spot bottlenecks like a watchman spots shadows.
  • Suggest a dabba-code system for consignment tracking. Simple marks. No fancy machines.
  • Volunteer to coordinate between back office and drivers. Be the knot in the net.
  • Ask for a trial week. Promise measurable outcomes. Numbers that do behave.
  • If they laugh, smile. If they listen, work. If they refuse, leave with dignity and join someone who understands nets.

He closed the notebook and lay down, the city’s sounds pinwheeling into a lullaby: a vendor calling “doodh!”, the temple bell just down the lane offering its daily deal to god, the train in the distance rehearsing its promise of return. He slept with his mouth slightly open, like a man who has let something go.

When he reached the office later that morning, wrinkled shirt ironed by the pressure of resolve, Mr. Mehta was already in. He wore a tie that had prevented him from entirely swallowing his moustache. “Late again?” he said, checking his watch for drama rather than information.

“Sir,” Ramesh said, standing in the doorway with his cloth bag clutched politely. He felt the usual stage fright, the feeling of being a small character auditioning for a generous role. Then he remembered Shankar’s calm and Lobo’s grin and Savita’s blended scold-love, and the feeling dissolved like jaggery in hot tea.

“I have a suggestion,” he said. “For reducing dispatch delays. No cost, small system. One week trial. You can fire me if it fails.”

Mr. Mehta took his glasses off. It made him human for exactly three seconds at a time. “You?” he said, not unkindly, just surprised to see a clerk misbehave with initiative. “Explain.”

Ramesh explained. He drew the marks on a scrap of paper: circles and slashes, dots in quadrants. He spoke of routes and rhythm, of stitching two departments with string rather than rope. He did not use big words. He did not apologise for small ones.

Across the window, Fort peeped at them with its colonial eyebrows. The noon bell from a church somewhere cleared its throat respectfully.

“Hmm,” Mehta said at last, the syllable like a suitcase being unlatched. “We can try. One week. You will coordinate. I will not pay extra. If it fails, you will not cry.”

Ramesh shook his head. “No crying, sir,” he said, and thought of the sea’s refusal to apologize for its moods.

The week that followed felt like balancing on a bamboo stick held up by two acrobats. He listened to drivers who had developed skepticism the way others developed ulcers. He learned the names of loaders whose backs held the city like invisible scaffolding. He mapped the building’s stubbornly independent floors into a partnership. He stood at the godown door, at the dispatch gate, at the office window, and drew dots on paper that ended up being more persuasive than a memo.

At night, he still walked past Marine Lines, sometimes. Karim would look up and say nothing, which was his way of saying everything. Shankar flashed by occasionally, two fingers lifted in a salute that belonged to a shared country. Lobo’s whistle kept time with the city’s arterial beat. The boy Selvam, it turned out, had been enrolled in a night school run by a church and delivered newspapers in the morning with the same puppy (now named Raja) trotting like a secretary. Ravindra and Savita waved sometimes from a corner near Opera House, their marriage looking like a busy shop: crowded but open.

By Friday, Ramesh’s code had begun to bite. The numbers arranged themselves like mild-mannered guests. A consignment that had previously sulked for hours in the courtyard now made it from receiving to loading with the efficiency of a rumor. The drivers nodded at him with something like respect, which in Mumbai was more precious than any recommendation letter.

On Saturday, Mr. Mehta called him in. Ramesh stood again in the doorway, the hallway fans chopping the air into obedient squares.

“Not bad,” Mehta said, his moustache dislodging the syllables gently. “We saved thirty-seven minutes on an average per consignment. This is not a small thing. Who taught you this?”

“Night taught me,” Ramesh said, then realized how it sounded and corrected himself without correcting himself. “The city taught me, sir.”

Mehta stared at him. The gaze lasted exactly as long as it takes a ledger line to accept a correction. Then he nodded. “You will oversee dispatch for two weeks,” he said. “Then we will talk. Do not make me regret believing a clerk.”

“I won’t,” Ramesh said, and meant it so precisely that the sentence could have balanced on a fingernail.

That night, he walked again to the sea. The sky had decided to be generous with stars, an act it rarely performed in the city out of what Ramesh suspected was a commitment to realism. He sat on the seawall, trousers damp in the usual places, and listened.

The city was, again, in that half-sleep that belonged to it like a habit: one eye closed, the other on duty. Somewhere a radio sang of unfulfilled love in a voice that made unfulfillment sound like a virtue. A bus rattled by, half full of people who did not owe the morning any explanation. On a bench, a woman in a cotton sari unwrapped a foil packet and ate quietly, each bite measured, her eyes on nothing in particular. Two friends argued about cricket with the seriousness that had saved whole neighborhoods from despair.

Ramesh thought of Nagpur, of his mother, of letters written and not sent. He thought of boys with puppies. He thought of nets that did not look like nets, and of columns that held up buildings as well as pages. He thought of the way the city, even when it looked away, still watched you enough to keep you standing.

“When the city sleeps,” he whispered into his sleeve, “it is learning your name.”

The sea obliged him with a salty nod. The lights along Marine Drive blinked, each doing its little job of burning without complaint. The old man on the bench from nights ago was not there, but Ramesh could imagine him anyway, waiting for horizons to behave.

He got up. He had a day to meet halfway. Behind him, the city rolled onto its other side, adjusted its pillow, and kept its ear open, listening for the footfalls of all those who belonged to it, whether they admitted it or not.

In My Hands Today…

A Change of Habit: Leaving Behind My Husband, Career, and Everything I Owned to Become a Nun – Sister Monica Clare

In her twenties and thirties, Monica Clare was a talented but exhausted photo editor who spent her days getting yelled at by clients who were often strung out on cocaine and megalomania. For years, the voice calling her to a simpler, quieter life had been getting louder.

As a little kid, she’d seen Audrey Hepburn in The Nun’s Story and thought: That’s me. That’s how she found herself straightening her habit nervously as she walked into a convent, preparing to live alongside eleven other sisters who’d taken the same vow of poverty and celibacy . . . indefinitely. Could a chronically fidgety, pop culture–obsessed woman of the world ever fit in? she wondered. And why did the other nuns seem so cold and disapproving?

As the months went on, she realized the other nuns were shy, not unfriendly—much like herself. The culture at the convent discouraged giving compliments or even saying “please” or “thank you,” since acts of generosity were to be freely given and received. But when Monica rose to the role of Sister Superior, she got the policy against compliments changed. Relationships started to blossom, first awkwardly and then more easily. Who would have predicted that Sister Christina, the one she thought had deeply disliked her from the start, would turn out to be a huge hugger? Or that they’d spend entire afternoons trying to keep a wild turkey from running amok in their community garden?

Equal parts tell-all and rallying cry, A Change of Habit reveals how much we can say yes to when we stop laboring to prove our worth to ourselves and others. In her role as a spiritual counselor, Sister Monica guides people from all walks of life toward resisting the false promises of capitalism, finding healing in small acts of nurture and connection, and ultimately, restoring themselves to a place of wholeness, all while living in this gorgeously messy world of ours.
Genres
Memoir
Nonfiction
Religion
Biography Memoir
Audiobook
Spirituality
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Adulting 101: Support Systems, Mentors, and Sponsors

Most people don’t admit it, but being an adult can feel like you’re winging it. College or your first job drops you in situations where you’re supposed to be independent, but it’s all new. Everyone talks about independence, but few talk about building a safety net. Having the right people around you isn’t just a nice-to-have; it’s the difference between burning out and thriving.

Why support systems matter more than people admit
Support systems are made up of people and resources that help you handle life’s messes and celebrate wins. A lot of advice tells you to “find your tribe” or “lean on your family.” That’s safer than it sounds. Not everyone’s close to their family, and sometimes friends aren’t enough. You need to ask: Is your current circle actually helping you grow or holding you back? Good support is more than comfort; it means people who give real feedback, challenge you, and have your back when things go sideways.

There’s a myth that being strong means doing things alone. But adulthood is about relationships, not isolation. Needing people isn’t a weakness; it’s smart. Communities, friends, and even alumni groups can push you forward, not just listen to your problems. If you trust only family and overlook outside help, you might be missing out on key opportunities and fresh insight.

Building your support system from scratch
Many articles list the usual suspects: parents, friends, and roommates. But those are just the beginning. Here’s what actually works:

  • Start with who’s already there. Professors, counsellors, classmates, and neighbours: they’re more accessible than you think.
  • Look beyond comfort. Clubs, sports teams, study groups, part-time work, or volunteering put you in touch with people who understand your struggles.
  • Mix formal and informal. Sometimes joining a formal group or organisation (student associations, professional bodies) forces you to show up and meet new people.
  • Don’t over-rely on one person. Make sure your network has variety: someone for practical advice, someone for emotional support, and someone with professional experience.
  • Financial support can come from unexpected places. Don’t ignore scholarships, advisors, or the financial aid office; they can be part of your support system, too.

And don’t forget campus services: counsellors, career centres, and even mental health support. Some people hesitate, thinking only people with “real problems” need campus counsellors. Truth is, waiting until things break isn’t smart. See them before you need them. It’s better to get perspective early, not after you’re burnt out or stuck.

Let’s challenge a common belief: If friends and family are supposed to be enough, why do so many adults feel lonely? Because being close doesn’t equal having the right support. Sometimes, people closest to us are part of the problem. That’s when you look outside for help. There’s no shame in reaching for new circles. In fact, it’s sometimes necessary.

Networking isn’t sleazy; it’s survival
Some people avoid networking because it feels forced. But if you avoid reaching out, you’re just building more obstacles for yourself. Networking is just meeting people with a purpose. And, despite what most introverts think, it doesn’t have to mean “selling yourself.” Often it’s about showing up, listening, and following up.

So, where do you start? Campus organisations, events, seminars, and club activities. Go to workshops even if you don’t know anyone. Talk to classmates in labs or group projects. Slowly, you form connections. Don’t wait for others to approach you; most people are self-absorbed, especially at uni. So, make the first move, even if it’s uncomfortable.

Another myth: only extroverts succeed at networking. Sure, they enjoy talking, but research shows introverts are often better listeners, which builds stronger bonds. If you’re quiet, play that to your advantage. People will remember someone who pays attention and asks thoughtful questions.

The reality about mentors
Mentors aren’t mythical wise elders who appear at key moments. They’re regular people, sometimes younger, sometimes peers, who know things you don’t. The hardest part? Recognising who could become a mentor and asking for their time. Many never do.

Some think a mentor is supposed to fix your problems. Not true. A mentor shows you options, shares mistakes they made, and lets you decide. The best mentors challenge you, not coddle you. They’ll warn you if you’re making a dumb choice; they won’t pretend everything is fine to avoid hurting your feelings.

So, how do you actually find one? Ignore formal “mentor-matching” programs at first; they can help, but impersonal pairings usually fizzle out. Instead, look for people you respect (not necessarily the most successful or famous). Ask them for coffee, chat about their work, and tell them what you’re wrestling with. Be honest. Don’t worry about “bothering” them. Most people like sharing their story, especially when you’re direct.

Mentors don’t need to be from your field, either. Sometimes, someone from a different area has fresh ideas and can ask questions you’ve missed. And mentors change over time. When you move jobs or cities, find new ones. It’s normal.

The hard truth about sponsors
People confuse sponsors with mentors. Sponsors do what mentors don’t. They put their reputation on the line for you, open doors, recommend you for jobs, and push for your promotion. Sponsors can be rare, and you’re not owed one. You earn sponsorship by being good at what you do and by building trust over time.

Some ask, “Isn’t it unfair that you need sponsors to get ahead?” Maybe. But pretending the system doesn’t exist won’t change anything. If you avoid sponsors because it feels political, you risk being stuck doing grunt work while others zoom ahead.

To attract sponsors, do more than what’s asked of you, be reliable, and make your skills visible. If you’re quiet but good at work, let others know by volunteering ideas or running a project. Sponsors notice people who add value and take initiative.

A controversial take: Sometimes, sponsors pick favourites. Is that fair? Not always. But publicly complaining never landed anyone a promotion. Instead, prove you’re worth recommending. And, yes, sometimes sponsors look for similarities: same school, same background, but don’t let that stop you. Put yourself in places where influential people can see you, and don’t wait to be discovered.

How to keep your support system alive
Having a network or mentor isn’t a one-off thing. Relationships need upkeep. Here’s how to keep yours sharp:

  • Don’t only reach out when you need something. Connect regularly: a simple check-in or sharing an article can keep relationships alive.
  • Be honest about what you want. If you need advice, say so. If you need time to vent, be upfront. People respect clarity.
  • Give back. It might sound cheesy, but support is a two-way street. If you get help, offer help to others when you can. It proves you’re not just taking, you’re also invested.
  • Keep boundaries. Don’t let any one relationship get too intense. It’s healthy to spread your attention. And it avoids dependency, which can burn out both sides.
  • Remember, relationships change. Not all connections last forever. If someone drifts away, that’s ok. Focus on keeping your network fresh.

Common pitfalls and myths to challenge

People think asking for help is weak. Actually, knowing when to ask is mature. And some worry about oversharing. Oversharing is only a problem when it turns into dumping. Most people appreciate candour, as long as you also listen.

Others believe only high achievers deserve mentors or sponsors. Not true: everyone has something to gain. Some people avoid building a support network because they feel “different.” But differences can be your edge. Diverse networks help you see blind spots and develop new skills.

Watch out for toxic connections. Not everyone is rooting for you. If someone repeatedly undermines or criticises you, especially in public, cut ties fast. You don’t owe loyalty to anyone who treats you like a project or a punching bag.

There’s also the false hope that technology replaces real support. Apps and social media make finding groups easier, but texting isn’t the same as deep relationships. Don’t confuse likes for love.

Finally, some people say mentors and sponsors breed dependence. Sure, you need independence. But true adulthood means knowing when to lean on others, and when to stand alone.

How to start right now
Building your support system takes guts. The first step is accepting that you can’t do everything yourself. Second, put effort into showing up for real relationships. Third, ask tough questions, and avoid echo chambers where everyone just agrees with you.

If you’re nervous, start small. Have one real conversation this week with someone in your class or office. Go to one event you wouldn’t normally try. Text someone you’ve lost touch with, and ask how they’re doing.

And if you mess up, don’t panic. Relationships get awkward, and sometimes they end. That’s not failure; it’s growth. What matters is trying again.

So, adulting isn’t just paying bills or landing jobs. It’s choosing and keeping the right people around you. That’s your real safety net and the best way to move through life with confidence, perspective, and some backup when you need it.

2026 Week 15 Update

Today’s quote from British life coach, speaker, and author known for his work on self-awareness, leadership, and mindful living, Rasheed Ogunlaru, reads almost like a gentle checklist for living well. Each phrase carries a distinct idea, yet together they form a balanced way of being.

Feet on the ground speak to staying rooted in reality. It’s about practicality, responsibility, and being present in your day-to-day life. No matter how big your dreams are, you still need grounding: discipline, consistency, and awareness of what’s in front of you. Heading to the skies adds another dimension. It encourages imagination, ambition, and hope. Life isn’t just about getting through routines; it’s also about aspiring, dreaming, and allowing yourself to think beyond current limitations. Without this upward gaze, life can become narrow and mechanical.

An open heart is where connection comes in. It’s an invitation to live with empathy, vulnerability, and kindness. An open heart allows you to experience life more fully: to love, to trust, and to engage deeply with others, even when it feels risky. Finally, a quiet mind ties everything together. In a world full of noise and constant stimulation, a calm mind becomes essential. It allows clarity, better decisions, and a deeper sense of peace. Without it, even the best intentions can feel scattered or overwhelming.

The beauty of this quote lies in its balance: grounding and dreaming, feeling and stillness. It suggests that a meaningful life isn’t about choosing one over the other but learning to hold all of them at once. There are times when you need to give your thinking mind a rest and allow your intuition to lead. You don’t have to know every detail of how things will unfold. Fear-based thoughts can feel paralysing, pulling you away from your truth. Step back from the catastrophic stories your mind creates and tune into your deeper inner knowing, the quiet sense of calm that reassures you that everything is unfolding in your favour, even when it doesn’t look that way. Remind yourself that there is no need to panic. This sequence of events is guiding you closer to what you truly want.

The Bhagavad Gita verse that I want to highlight this week is verse 6.6. Conquering the mind sounds dramatic. It is not. It is not about eliminating thought. It is about not being ruled by every impulse. It is about pausing before reacting. It is about not believing every emotion deserves immediate action. A trained mind becomes supportive. It gives perspective. It resists exaggeration. It tolerates discomfort. An untrained mind amplifies everything. It creates urgency where none exists. It pushes comparison, fear, and resentment. The difference between friend and enemy is not external. It is discipline. Friendship with the mind is built through repetition.

In this week’s motivation, be prepared for the unexpected. Things will work out for you in ways you’ve never seen before. You’ve overcome excruciating situations with extraordinary calm and grace. The pain you thought had broken you was actually strengthening your spirit. Your season of miracles is finally here. Be ready to receive the beautiful gifts you truly deserve. Your eyes will sparkle with joy again. Your heart will be filled with warmth. What may seem impossible right now will come to fruition in magical ways. Simply trust as you move forward into this new season. That’s all you need to do right now. No worry, no doubt, just believe.

Life continues to move along in its own steady rhythm. BB and GG are caught up in their own worlds now with school, friends, and their growing independence, and I find myself busy in mine, our days intersecting in small, familiar ways but also quietly expanding in different directions. There’s something both comforting and a little bittersweet about this phase, watching everyone settle into their own pace.

And beyond our little circle, the world continues to unfold in all its complexity. Moments of progress and hope sit alongside uncertainty and conflict. News moves quickly, headlines shift, and yet beneath it all, life everywhere carries on in the same way; people show up, getting through their days, holding on to what matters. Perhaps that’s the thread that ties it all together, the quiet persistence of everyday life, no matter what is happening around us.

Here’s to a wonderful week ahead; may it bring you joy and happiness!

In My Hands Today…

Careless People: A Cautionary Tale of Power, Greed, and Lost Idealism – Sarah Wynn-Williams

From trips on private jets and encounters with world leaders to shocking accounts of misogyny and double standards behind the scenes, this searing memoir exposes both the personal and the political fallout when unfettered power and a rotten company culture take hold. In a gripping and often absurd narrative where a few people carelessly hold the world in their hands, this eye-opening memoir reveals what really goes on among the global elite.

Sarah Wynn-Williams tells the wrenching but fun story of Facebook, mapping its rise from stumbling encounters with juntas to Mark Zuckerberg’s reaction when he learned of Facebook’s role in Trump’s election. She experiences the challenges and humiliations of working motherhood within a pressure cooker of a workplace, all while Sheryl Sandberg urges her and others to “lean in.”

Careless People is a deeply personal account of why and how things have gone so horribly wrong in the past decade—told in a sharp, candid, and utterly disarming voice. A deep, unflinching look at the role that social media has assumed in our lives, Careless People reveals the truth about the leaders of Facebook: how the more power they grasp, the less responsible they become and the consequences this has for all of us.