Mumbai Memories: Amma and the Quiet Art of Making

One of my earliest memories from when I began school is of my mother waiting for me at the corner of the road just outside our building, a cloth bag looped over her arm, filled with stitching implements I did not yet understand but instinctively respected. Our building was a simple three-floor Mumbai walk-up, the kind where everyone knew who lived on which floor, and as soon as I got off the school bus, there she was.

We never lingered.

I would spot her, she would take the bag more firmly into her grasp, and we would quickly walk back and climb the three flights of stairs to our home. It was a small, repeated moment, but it carried a quiet certainty. She would be there.

Let me backtrack a little.

My sister is about a year and a half younger than I am, and after she was born, my father hired a mother’s helper. It was a practical decision. An infant and a toddler can turn any day into a small storm. But what it also did, quietly and without announcement, was create a small pocket of time for my mother. A rare thing, especially in those years.

My father, in his own way, wanted her to continue her education. There was a path he could see clearly: college, a degree, something formal and recognised. But my mother did not want that life. Not out of inability, but out of instinct. She chose differently.

The compromise they arrived at now feels telling. Not resistance, not submission, but something more thoughtful. She decided to learn stitching.

I still remember the name of the class she went to. Zarapkars. The word itself carried a certain solidity, as though it belonged to a world of skill, repetition, and quiet mastery. The classes were about a ten to twelve-minute walk from our home. Close enough to fit into a day. Far enough to feel like a destination.

Her routine settled into a rhythm. I would be sent off to school in the morning. My sister would be fed and put down for a nap. And in that window, my mother would step out, her time briefly belonging to her.

I do not remember the inside of those classes. I never saw Zarapkars. But I remember their afterlife.

In the evenings, our home would shift. Patterns would be spread out, measurements taken, fabric folded and refolded. Much of this happened in the enclosed balcony of my parents’ bedroom, a space that had quietly been repurposed into her sewing corner. It was small, but it was hers.

And then there was the machine.

She began with a hand-cranking machine, the kind that required both coordination and patience, before eventually moving to a foot-pedal one. The machine sat steady, almost dignified, as though aware of its role in the household. During the hotter months or the monsoon, she would sometimes bring it inside, adjusting the space to the weather, but never the work.

The sound it made was constant and reassuring. Not loud, not intrusive. Just there. A rhythm that stitched itself into the background of our growing up.

After she finished her course, this did not remain a hobby. It became part of the structure of our lives.

For many years, in fact, all the way until we finished school, my mother sewed our uniforms on that trusted sewing machine. There is something quietly extraordinary about that, though I did not think so at the time. Our uniforms were simple: the kind you would not look at twice, but to us, they were the best.

From kindergarten to class ten, everyone wore the same uniform. The only difference lay in the collar. The younger children had rounded collars, soft and almost decorative, while the older students graduated to proper shirt collars. It was a small shift, but it carried meaning. You could tell where someone stood just by that detail.

Our uniforms were not bought off racks or altered by tailors we barely knew. They were measured, cut, and assembled at home. Every pleat, every hem, every slightly uneven stitch carried the imprint of her hands.

Source

Beyond uniforms, her stitching entered our school life in other ways, too.

My school placed a surprising emphasis on extracurricular activities, and stitching was one of them. It never felt unusual to us then, though I suspect it might now. There were projects to be completed, small assignments that required patience more than talent, and this was where my mother stepped in again.

She would sit with us, guiding without taking over. Showing us how to hold the fabric, how to keep the line straight, how not to rush through something that required care. There was no formal teaching in the way she did it. Just a quiet correction, repetition, and the expectation that we would learn by doing.

Because of that, both my sister and I picked up the basics almost without realising it.

Even now, that knowledge stays.

I can do simple mending. Fix a loose hem. Stitch something back into place before it becomes unusable. Small things, easily overlooked, but quietly useful. The kind of skills that do not announce themselves but make life just a little more manageable.

And somewhere along the way, I began to feel that this is something everyone should know. Not as a hobby, not as nostalgia, but as a basic life skill. The ability to repair, to make, and to extend the life of something with your own hands. It is a small form of independence and a quiet act of care.

Beyond this, she experimented. Skirts, tops, dresses, and nightwear. Sometimes following patterns, sometimes improvising. Occasionally, something would not turn out quite right, but that never seemed to matter. The act of making itself had its own dignity.

Looking back now, I realise that what she created was not just clothing. She created a kind of quiet abundance. Not the abundance of excess, but of self-sufficiency. Of knowing that what you needed could, with patience and effort, be made.

Of course, like most things, this too changed.

There came a point when we wanted more “stylish” clothes. Trends began to matter. What others were wearing began to matter. And slowly, without any formal decision, the home-stitched wardrobe receded. Shops replaced patterns. Ready-made replaced hand-cut.

But the skill did not disappear.

My mother continued to sew her saree blouses, each one fitted not just to her body but to her comfort. She continued with small stitching projects. Repairs, adjustments, quiet fixes that extended the life of things. The sewing machine did not fall silent. It simply spoke less often.

What stays with me, more than the clothes themselves, is the shape of that period. A woman who did not choose the obvious path but still chose to learn. A skill that entered the home and stayed. A rhythm of making that sat alongside the rhythms of everyday life. And a childhood that, without realising it, was surrounded by acts of creation.

It is easy, in hindsight, to romanticise such things. To turn them into symbols of simplicity or “old ways.” But that would miss something important. This was not nostalgia. This was work. Repetition. Discipline. A willingness to sit with something long enough to become good at it.

And yet, there was also something else. A quiet kind of pride. Not announced, not displayed, but present. In a well-fitted uniform. In a neatly finished hem. In the simple fact that something had been made, and made well.

Even now, when I see a sewing machine, I do not just see a tool. I hear that steady rhythm. I see that small balcony corner. I see my mother, bent slightly forward, focused, patient, building something one line at a time. And I realise that long before I began writing, before I understood the satisfaction of shaping words into something whole, I had already witnessed what it means to make.

In My Hands Today…

Power, Sex, Suicide: Mitochondria and the Meaning of Life – Nick Lane

If it weren’t for mitochondria, scientists argue, we’d all still be single-celled bacteria. Indeed, these tiny structures inside our cells are important beyond imagining. Without mitochondria, we would have no cell suicide, no sculpting of embryonic shape, no sexes, no menopause, no aging.

In this fascinating and thought-provoking book, Nick Lane brings together the latest research in this exciting field to show how our growing insight into mitochondria has shed light on how complex life evolved, why sex arose (why don’t we just bud?), and why we age and die. These findings are of fundamental importance, both in understanding life on Earth, but also in controlling our own illnesses, and delaying our degeneration and death. Readers learn that two billion years ago, mitochondria were probably bacteria living independent lives and that their capture within larger cells was a turning point in the evolution of life, enabling the development of complex organisms.

Lane describes how mitochondria have their own DNA and that its genes mutate much faster than those in the nucleus. This high mutation rate lies behind our aging and certain congenital diseases. The latest research suggests that mitochondria play a key role in degenerative diseases such as cancer. We also discover that mitochondrial DNA is passed down almost exclusively via the female line. That’s why it has been used by some researchers to trace human ancestry daughter-to-mother, to “Mitochondrial Eve,” giving us vital information about our evolutionary history.

Instagram Interludes

Now let’s start Rome. I will try and summarise my trip in the following photos. You must understand how hard it was to choose the photos that are posted here…

A corridor in the Vatican Museum
View from the Vatican Museum
Rooftop views from our dinner place
Colosseum
Colosseum
Palantine Hill
From Palantine Hill
The Orange Grove on Palantine Hill
A street near Piazza Popolo
Near the Spanish Steps
Trevi Fountain

2026 Week 27 Update

I can’t believe we are looking at the second half of 2026! The older I grow, the faster the days and years seem to fly by. The first half of 2026 has felt less like a series of dramatic milestones and more like the steady construction of a life that is gradually becoming more intentional. It has been a season of building foundations rather than chasing quick wins. Professionally, there have been new responsibilities, meaningful collaborations, creative projects, and the quiet satisfaction that comes from seeing ideas slowly take shape. Much of the work has happened behind the scenes, planting seeds whose results may only become visible much later. Creatively, this has been one of my busiest periods in years. Writing has remained a constant thread, whether through reflections, photography, long-form articles, or exploring new ideas. Along the way, I’ve discovered that creativity isn’t always about waiting for inspiration. More often, it’s about showing up consistently and allowing small acts of creation to accumulate into something meaningful.

Personally, this year has been one of balance. Balancing ambition with patience, work with rest, and looking ahead while staying present. It has also been a reminder that life keeps evolving. Family roles continue to change, routines shift, and time seems to move faster with each passing month. There have been moments of excitement, moments of uncertainty, and moments of quiet reflection, each contributing something valuable. Perhaps the greatest lesson these six months have taught me is that progress rarely arrives with fanfare. It is found in the conversations that strengthen relationships, the habits that become second nature, the courage to try something new, and the willingness to keep going even when the destination isn’t yet visible.

As I look toward the second half of the year, I do so with a sense of quiet optimism. There is still much to learn, much to create, and many chapters yet to be written. If the first half of 2026 has been about laying strong foundations, perhaps the months ahead will be about building upon them, one thoughtful step at a time.

Today’s quote by the 26th President of the United States, Theodore Roosevelt, highlights the powerful role that belief plays in achieving any goal. Before we take the first step, before we learn a new skill or overcome a challenge, we first need to believe that success is possible. Without that belief, we often give up before we’ve even begun. Roosevelt isn’t suggesting that confidence alone guarantees success. Belief is not a substitute for hard work, preparation, or perseverance. Instead, he is pointing out that self-belief removes one of the greatest obstacles we face: the doubt that tells us we are not capable. When we believe in ourselves, we are far more likely to take action, persist through setbacks, and remain committed when progress is slow.

The quote also reminds us that many limitations begin in the mind. Fear of failure, fear of criticism, or fear of not being good enough can prevent us from trying at all. Self-belief doesn’t eliminate those fears, but it gives us the courage to move forward despite them. Every achievement begins with the willingness to say, “I think I can do this.” There is also an important lesson about momentum. Once we believe something is within reach, our actions begin to align with that belief. We seek opportunities, develop skills, and notice possibilities we might otherwise have ignored. In that sense, belief truly does put us “halfway there” because it transforms intention into action.

Today’s quote from the Bhagavad Gita comes from chapter 2.14 and is about enduring what comes and goes. One of the most comforting truths in the Bhagavad Gita is also one of the simplest: everything passes. When life is going well, we often wish the moment would last forever. When life becomes difficult, we fear that our pain will never end. Yet Krishna reminds Arjuna that both joy and sorrow are temporary visitors. They arrive, stay for a while, and eventually leave.

This does not mean we should ignore our feelings or pretend that suffering does not hurt. It simply means that we should not build our identity around temporary experiences. A difficult season is not our entire life. A moment of success is not our permanent reality. Much of our anxiety comes from treating passing circumstances as if they will last forever. The Gita invites us to take a longer view. The challenge is not to eliminate discomfort but to learn how to endure it with patience and dignity.

Like the changing seasons, life moves through cycles. By remembering this, we become less overwhelmed by hardship and less attached to fleeting pleasures. We learn to trust that what comes will go, and that we have the strength to remain standing through it all.

And this week, the most important thing I learnt was to give yourself time. Clarity will set in, and it will all make sense why things had to happen the way they did. You will begin to see that there is a lot of good in your life despite the challenges and disappointments, and you’ll remember how much you still have to be grateful for. When you stop fixating on what didn’t go as planned, you move more quickly toward the outcomes that are truly meant for you. You will find a way to thrive through this painful chapter, and you will attract such abundant gifts that you’ll realize that you can always trust the process completely.

And on that note, here’s to a fantastic second half of 2026, may the rest of the year bring what each of us want in our hearts!

In My Hands Today…

The Beginning of Infinity: Explanations That Transform the World – David Deutsch

In our search for truth, how far have we advanced?

This uniquely human quest for good explanations has driven amazing improvements in everything from scientific understanding and technology to politics, moral values and human welfare.

But will progress end, either in catastrophe or completion – or will it continue infinitely?

In this profound and seminal book, David Deutsch explores the furthest reaches of our current understanding, taking in the Infinity Hotel, supernovae and the nature of optimism, to instill in all of us a wonder at what we have achieved – and the fact that this is only the beginning of humanity’s infinite possibility.