Sacred Stones, Spaces, and Stories: Divya Desams Part 6

Thirukavithalam Temple, Kabisthalam, Tamil Nadu
Thirukavithalam, better known today as Kabisthalam, is a small village temple on the banks of the Kaveri, near Papanasam in Thanjavur district. The is dedicated to Vishnu as Gajendra Varadha, “the one who granted grace to Gajendra,” with his consort Ramamanivalli Thayar. The place is also counted among the Pancha Krishna or Pancha Kannan temples, where Krishna is given special prominence in worship even though the presiding deity is another form of Vishnu. The name “Kabisthalam” comes from “kabi,” meaning monkey, because Hanuman is believed to have worshipped Vishnu here.

The temple is tightly tied to the Gajendra Moksham story. In that story, Gajendra is a devoted elephant king who lives by a lotus-filled lake. Every day, he picks lotuses from the pond and offers them to Vishnu with genuine love. One day, as he enters the water, a crocodile catches hold of his leg and drags him in. The struggle goes on for a long time. At some point, Gajendra realises his own strength is not enough. In pain and fear, he lifts his trunk, holds a lotus, and calls out to Vishnu for help.

At Kabisthalam, the story is given extra detail through curse narratives. King Indradhyumna is said to have been cursed by sage Agastya to be born as an elephant for his arrogance. A demon named Koohoo, who lived in the Kabila Theertham tank here and kept pulling the legs of bathers, was cursed by the same sage to become a crocodile. Agastya told Koohoo that his curse would end when he caught the legs of that cursed elephant. When Gajendra came to bathe here, the crocodile grabbed his foot. Gajendra cried out “Aadimoolame,” calling the primordial lord. Vishnu rushed to the spot, cut the crocodile with his discus, freed both beings from their curses, and granted moksha to Gajendra.

So this is not just a random rescue. It is the crossing point of two curses and one act of surrender. The core message is sharp: even kings and demons, when stripped down to an elephant and a crocodile stuck in a tank, have to admit they are not in control. Gajendra doesn’t get saved just because he is an elephant-king; he is saved because he finally calls out with complete dependence.

Another layer is Hanuman’s link to the site. It is said that Hanuman, the monkey warrior of the Ramayana, worshipped Vishnu here. Because of this, the place took on the name “Kabisthalam,” “monkey place.” In some local tellings, this is where Rama allowed Hanuman to see another, more subtle aspect of his divinity.

Stepping away from legend, the temple as a structure belongs to the medieval Chola period. It was likely built in the late 8th or early 9th century CE, with inscriptions and style pointing towards that era. Later, Vijayanagara rulers and the Madurai Nayaks added their own layers: gopurams, mandapams, and structural repairs. So what you see today is a Dravidian complex shaped over centuries, not a single frozen moment in time. The temple is praised in the Nalayira Divya Prabandham, the Tamil hymns of the Alvars, which anchors it in the devotional map of early medieval South India. Being on the fertile Kaveri belt, Kabisthalam was part of the network of agrarian temples that supported both religious life and the local economy. Land grants, irrigation rights, and temple festivals were all tied together; the temple was not floating above society but woven into it.

Because the Gajendra story is so central, this temple also became known by older names like “Yanai Katha Nallur,” the “good place where an elephant was protected.” Over time, Kabisthalam, Thirukavithalam, Gajendra Varadar Kshetram, and similar names all came to point at the same shrine. Floods, political changes, and periods of neglect have come and gone, but the core identity, Vishnu, who saved the elephant, has stayed steady.

Architecturally, the temple follows the classic Dravidian style. A granite wall encloses the campus, keeping together the shrines and temple tanks. The Rajagopuram is a five-tiered tower that marks the main east-facing entrance. Stepping under it, you enter the prakaram, with pillared halls and smaller shrines around the main sanctum. In the sanctum, Vishnu is worshipped as Gajendra Varadha, in a reclining posture called bhujanga sayanam, resting on Adisesha, the serpent. This is similar to other Ranganatha-style images, but here the association is with hearing Gajendra’s cry and responding, so the posture is read as one of relaxed readiness, not indifference. His consort, Ramamanivalli Thayar, has a separate shrine. There are also shrines for Yoga Narasimha, Sudarshana, the Alvars, and Garuda. The temple tank, called Gajendra Pushkarini or Kabila Theertham, lies close by, identified as the very tank where the elephant–crocodile struggle took place. The overall layout is not huge by South Indian standards, but it is well proportioned. Carvings on pillars show deities and mythic scenes, and the vimanam above the sanctum follows the usual Dravidian lines.

Daily worship in Kabisthalam follows the standard Vaishnava agamic pattern with six main pujas spread through the day. Each cycle involves decorating the deity, offering food, and waving lamps, with nagaswaram and tavil playing while priests chant Vedic mantras and paasurams from the Divya Prabandham. The Lord is treated like a living presence: woken, bathed, fed, and put to rest.

Festivals build on the temple’s main myth. Gajendra Moksha is celebrated with special alankarams and recitations of the relevant stories. Vaikunta Ekadasi, like in most Vishnu temples, is a major event, drawing more visitors than usual. Brahmotsavam is celebrated with processions of the utsava murti in different vahanams around the temple streets. People come with specific motivations: freedom from deep fears, release from stubborn problems, and relief from long-term “stuck” situations. Local families sponsor parts of the festivals, contribute to Annadanam, and help with crowd management. It is not a temple run purely for “outsiders”; village involvement is real. And yet, because it is a Divya Desam, it also attracts visitors from other parts of Tamil Nadu and from Sri Vaishnava communities elsewhere.

Kabisthalam lies in the thick of the Kumbakonam–Thanjavur temple belt. The temple is usually reached from Kumbakonam or Papanasam by road through flat, green paddy fields and near the Kaveri and its branches. It feels rural rather than urban. You arrive at a modest cluster of houses and shops rather than a big town. Near the entrance, you find the usual stalls selling flowers, coconuts, and simple snacks. Inside, the atmosphere is quiet on most days. Darshan is usually not rushed. You can actually stand and look at the reclining Gajendra Varadha, the serpent coils, and the expressions on the faces of the consorts. Many pilgrims also walk to the tank, not always to bathe, but at least to touch the water or sit for a while and think about that old image: an animal in deep trouble, calling out because there is nothing else left to do.

Because Hanuman is tied to the place, some people doing Ramayana-themed routes also stop here. And because Krishna is given special emphasis at Kabisthalam as one of the Pancha-Kannan temples, Krishna devotees see this as part of a larger Krishna circuit, even though the main image is a reclining Vishnu. In short, different kinds of pilgrims “read” the temple differently, and that gives it a layered feel.

The temple is praised in the Nalayira Divya Prabandham, which locks it into the mainstream of Sri Vaishnava sacred geography. The Gajendra Moksha story itself has had a huge impact on Indian religious imagination, beyond this specific temple. Paintings, Harikatha, dance performances, and folk retellings have all used this scene of the elephant and the crocodile. Kabisthalam serves as one of the physical anchors for that shared story. Locally, the temple has also shaped how people talk about karma, crisis, and surrender. In many households in the area, when things feel completely out of control, the reference is “Gajendra moment”; that point where your own strength has run out, but you still choose to lift your trunk and call. People link visits to Kabisthalam with turning points: recovery after illness, resolution of court cases, or long-pending family reconciliations. The name “Kabisthalam” itself keeps Hanuman in the picture, so this is also one of the places where the Ramayana and the Gajendra story intersect. That helps soften sharp sectarian boundaries: this is not only “Vishnu for elephants” but also “Vishnu for Hanuman,” and by extension for all who serve with some mix of courage and confusion.

Today, the temple is managed under the usual state religious administration framework. The structure has seen multiple renovations, especially of the rajagopuram and key mandapams, funded by a mix of government, private donors, and diaspora devotees. The basic Dravidian outline remains intact, but plastering, painting, and structural consolidation are ongoing tasks. Visitor numbers are decent but not overwhelming. Many pilgrims do Kabisthalam as part of a Divya Desam cluster with nearby temples like Thirukoodalur, Thiruvelliankudi, and others in the Kumbakonam region. Some buses now include it on packaged 108 Divya Desam or Gajendra Moksha routes. Online information has made it easier for people to understand the story before arriving, which can be both good and bad. Good, because they come prepared. Bad, if it turns the visit into a quick box-tick without space for actual reflection.

Within the Divya Desam circuit, Thirukavithalam / Kabisthalam represents a very specific moment: the cry of someone who has run out of options. The elephant, the crocodile, the curses, the tank: all these are story devices. What stays is the image of a being in distress lifting a lotus and calling “Aadimoolame,” asking the source for help. Historically, this is a Chola-period Kaveri temple strengthened by later dynasties. Architecturally, it is a modest Dravidian complex with a five-tier gopuram and a reclining Vishnu. Spiritually, it stands at the crossing of many paths: Varaha lore, Hanuman’s devotion, Krishna’s prominence, Alvar hymns, and village life. For the broader Indian spiritual heritage, Kabisthalam keeps one uncomfortable but honest idea in circulation: sometimes, the only real prayer is “I can’t do this; help.” The temple doesn’t promise that every crisis will vanish. But it holds up a story where even a cursed king in elephant form, pinned by a crocodile, is not forgotten. If you visit, go beyond the quick “Gajendra photo.” Sit by the tank, look at the reclining form in the sanctum, and ask what your own “Gajendra moment” might be. That is where this place still has teeth.

Thiruppullamboothangudi Temple, Pullabhoothangudi, Tamil Nadu
Thiruppullamboothangudi Temple sits in a small village near Kumbakonam in Thanjavur district. Vishnu appears here as Valvil Ramar, Rama with a beautiful bow, reclining with Bhudevi as his consort since Sita was absent. The temple marks the spot where Rama performed Jatayu’s last rites after the eagle tried to stop Ravana from abducting Sita. Rama is shown with four arms holding a conch and a discus, a rare form that blends his human avatar with divine symbols.

The main story of the temple ties it to the Ramayana. Ravana abducted Sita from the forest. Jatayu, the eagle king and friend of Rama’s father, Dasaratha, spotted the Pushpaka Vimana and fought Ravana. Ravana cut off Jatayu’s wings. The bird crashed near here. Rama and Lakshmana found him dying. Jatayu told them what happened and pointed south. Rama performed the last rites. Hindu custom requires the wife to be present for such rites. With Sita gone, Bhudevi rose from a golden lotus pond to stand by Rama. She is Portaamaraiyaal here. Rama rested after, giving the temple its reclining image.

King Indradyumna worshipped Vishnu here. Sage Durvasa cursed him for neglect. Vishnu appeared in reclining form. King Kirutharaja did penance. Vishnu gave darshan as Valvil Ramar. Thirumangai Alvar passed by without noticing the temple. A bright light with Rama holding the conch and discus appeared. He sang ten paasurams in praise. The place name means “village of the bird’s birth,” linking to Jatayu from the peacock family of birds.

The temple dates to the medieval Chola period, around the 7th to 9th centuries, with Pallava roots showing in early style. Cholas rebuilt and expanded, and later the Pandyas, the Vijayanagara kings, and the Nayaks added gopurams and halls. Inscriptions record donations for lamps and festivals. No major raids are noted, but the Kaveri floods threatened it regularly. Alvars like Kulasekhara and Thirumangai praised it in Nalayira Divya Prabandham. Thirumangai’s light vision secured it a Divya Desam status. A unique feature of the temple is that it is the only Divya Desam with Rama in four arms, conch and discus visible. A village called Pullabhoothangudi, after Jatayu, “the birthplace of the bird.” It relieves pitru dosham, or ancestor curses.

Dravidian granite and brick build a compact complex. Five-tier Rajagopuram faces east with the inner prakaram circling the sanctum. Valvil Ramar reclines on Adisesha with Bhudevi, bow nearby. Four arms hold a conch, discus, bow, and arrow, a rare iconography. There are separate shrines for Yoga Narasimha, the Alvars, and Garuda. The Portaamarai tank north holds the golden lotus legend. Pillars carve scenes from the Ramayana, lotuses. The vimanam is modest over the sanctum. The temple is not big on innovation, but the Chola-Nayak layers show evolution. Because the temple is flood-prone, it has sturdy walls.

Six daily pujas follow the Pancharatra Agama, Vadakalai tradition from Ahobila Mutt. Alangaram dresses deities, while Neivedyam offers food. The deepa aradanai waves lamps with nagaswaram, tavil, chants and priests from Brahmin families handle rites. The Brahmotsavam in Panguni features processions, while Vaikunta Ekadashi in Margazhi opens the gates of paradise. The Jatayu Utsavam honours the eagle. Locals cook prasadam, sponsor lamps, and manage crowds. Pitru dosha pujas draw families seeking ancestor relief.

From Kumbakonam, an 8 km drive through fields reaches the village. Swamimalai is just 3 km away. The temple is set amidst rural roads, with the Kaveri nearby. Shops sell flowers near the temple gate, and on weekdays, the lord’s darshan is very quick. Tank dips recall Bhudevi, and locals share Jatayu tales. Quiet suits reflect on loss and duty. The HR&CE Board manages the temple. Renovations fix floods, repaint gopurams while festivals draw locals, and pilgrims from the Divya Desam circuit. 80% of visitors are devotees, while the rest are tourists via Kumbakonam packages.

Thiruppullamboothangudi fits the Divya Desams as a Ramayana pause. Myths show Rama’s duty to Jatayu and Bhudevi’s aid. The Chola base and Nayak tops endure floods while the four-armed Rama questions the pure human avatar. Claims of extreme age stretch, while inscriptions ground the temple. In circuit, it links exile grief to grace. Heritage reminds us that epics live in villages.

Thiruaadhanur Temple, Adanur, Tamil Nadu
The Thiruaadhanur Temple, also known as Andalakkum Aiyan Perumal Temple, is located in Adanur, near Kumbakonam. This temple holds significant spiritual and cultural importance as one of the 108 sacred shrines glorified by the Alvar saints. Vishnu is worshipped here as Andalakkum Aiyan, depicted in a reclining posture, resting his head on a measuring vessel or marakkal. This unique image symbolises divine justice and impartiality, themes deeply embedded in the temple’s legends and worship practices.

The temple’s mythology reveals profound spiritual messages. One popular legend tells of a wealthy devotee whose workers betrayed him, stealing his wealth and leaving him destitute. Pleased with the devotee’s unwavering faith, Vishnu appeared in his dream and promised assistance. He disguised himself as an old man and met the workers by the Kollidam riverbank. Using a measuring vessel, Vishnu distributed sand that magically turned to gold for the honest workers, while remaining mere sand for the dishonest. When the deceitful workers attempted to confront the old man, Vishnu revealed his divine form, causing them to repent. In another legend, Sage Bhrigu cursed Indra for disrespecting a divine garland by placing it on his elephant Airavata’s head, leading Indra to lose his powers and perform penance at this temple. Similarly, Agni, the fire god burdened with Brahmahathi dosha for burning Brahma’s head given by Shiva, was freed of his curse through worship here. Other tales involve Kamadhenu, the divine cow, and her daughter Nandini, who sought the temple’s divine grace.

Historically, Thiruaadhanur Temple traces its origins to the medieval Chola dynasty, with inscriptions and architectural styles dating back to the 9th century CE. It saw successive patronage from the Vijayanagara rulers and Madurai Nayaks, contributing to its expansions and temple arts. The temple stands strategically between the Cauvery and Kollidam rivers, with seven prakarams resembling the larger Srirangam temple but on a smaller scale. The distinctive pranava vimana rises over the sanctum, symbolising the cosmic sound Om, with the deity’s image visible up to the knees, signifying a boundary between the mundane and divine. The presence of sculptures like Kamadhenu and Nandini, along with Rama’s footprints, links the temple’s mythology to wider Hindu traditions. Despite facing floods and natural wear, the temple remains a vibrant spiritual centre, restored by various rulers over centuries.

Architecturally, the temple exemplifies classic Dravidian style with robust granite construction and elegant brick superstructures. The five-tiered Rajagopuram serves as a majestic entrance, opening into prakarams enclosed within protective walls. The central deity, Andalakkum Aiyan, reclines peacefully on Adisesha, with his head resting on the measuring vessel, reflecting the essence of divine equity. Surrounding shrines honour consorts and legendary figures such as Kamadhenu, Nandini, and Hanuman (revered here as Virasudarshana Anjaneya). The temple tank, integral to rituals, continues to serve as a site of spiritual cleansing and reflection.

Rituals at the temple adhere to the Pancharatra Agama and Vadakalai tradition. Six daily pujas mark the devotional rhythm from early morning until night, encompassing decoration, food offerings, and lamp ceremonies enhanced by classical music and chanting of sacred hymns from the Nalayira Divya Prabandham. Festivals such as the Brahmotsavam in Vaikasi (May–June) and Vaikunta Ekadashi attract devotees in large numbers. Special rites focusing on relief from curses and ancestral afflictions (doshas) are also prevalent. The local community intensely participates in these festivals, facilitating annadhanams, temple maintenance, and cultural performances, ensuring the temple’s living traditions continue unbroken.

Pilgrims visiting Thiruaadhanur typically journey from Kumbakonam, traveling through fertile plains between two rivers. The village surrounding the temple exudes a tranquil atmosphere, with simple shops offering flowers and offerings along the path to the shrine. The experience is marked by calm and contemplative worship, allowing visitors to appreciate the temple’s symbolic elements slowly. Pilgrims often take part in ritual baths in the temple tank, reflecting on the legends of divine justice and karmic balance embodied by the deity. For many, the temple provides solace, spiritual clarity, and a physical connection to the sacred geography of the Kaveri basin.

Culturally, the temple exerts influence primarily through its association with divine justice and karmic principles. Its mention in the Alvar’s hymns anchors it firmly within Tamil devotional literature, and its stories of fairness and divine measurement have permeated local folklore and religious discourse. Though it may not rival the prominence of Srirangam or other mega-complexes, its significance lies in its intimate connection to the community’s spiritual life, supporting rituals around soul liberation, healing from curses, and social harmony.

Today, the temple functions under the Tamil Nadu Hindu Religious and Charitable Endowments Department, which maintains its facilities and organises regular worship and festivals. The management balances preservation with accessibility, addressing challenges from flooding and wear while facilitating pilgrim infrastructure. Visitor demographics largely include local devotees and regional pilgrims traversing the network of Divya Desams in the area, with growing interest from heritage tourists. Technological advances such as online darshan bookings and streaming of major events are being integrated without compromising the temple’s traditional atmosphere.

Thiruaadhanur Temple occupies a distinctive place in the Divya Desam circuit as a beacon of divine justice and karmic measure. Its legends vividly illustrate the balance of fairness, accountability, and grace that underpins Hindu spirituality. Architecturally and historically rooted in the medieval Chola tradition, it continues to inspire devotion through its intimate rituals and narratives. For visitors and devotees alike, the temple offers a profound meditation on righteousness, inviting all to reflect on their actions and seek spiritual restoration under the watchful gaze of Andalakkum Aiyan.

In My Hands Today…

Trump Passion in the Quest for Work You Love – Cal Newport

In this eye-opening account, Cal Newport debunks the long-held belief that “follow your passion” is good advice.

Not only is the cliché flawed—preexisting passions are rare and have little to do with how most people end up loving their work—but it can also be dangerous, leading to anxiety and chronic job hopping.

After making his case against passion, Newport sets out on a quest to discover the reality of how people end up loving what they do. Spending time with organic farmers, venture capitalists, screenwriters, freelance computer programmers, and others who admitted to deriving great satisfaction from their work, Newport uncovers the strategies they used and the pitfalls they avoided in developing their compelling careers.

Matching your job to a preexisting passion does not matter, he reveals. Passion comes after you put in the hard work to become excellent at something valuable, not before. In other words, what you do for a living is much less important than how you do it.

With a title taken from the comedian Steve Martin, who once said his advice for aspiring entertainers was to “be so good they can’t ignore you,” Cal Newport’s clearly written manifesto is mandatory reading for anyone fretting about what to do with their life, or frustrated by their current job situation and eager to find a fresh new way to take control of their livelihood. He provides an evidence-based blueprint for creating work you love.

So Good They Can’t Ignore You will change the way we think about our careers, happiness, and the crafting of a remarkable life.

The Art of Intentional Endings: Using Planned Obsolescence as a Life Tool

Planned obsolescence usually makes us roll our eyes. It’s the reason our phones die mysteriously right after the warranty period ends. It’s why laptops are slow to the pace of a sleepy turtle for no good reason. It’s why appliances that once lasted a decade now last three years if we’re lucky. Companies love the idea. Consumers don’t. And honestly, fair enough. But somewhere along the way, I started wondering if this annoying business tactic had something useful to teach us. Not about products, but about ourselves.

Because if we’re being brutally honest, we cling to outdated versions of our lives far longer than any company ever could. We hold on to relationships that expired quietly years ago. We stay in roles that no longer fit simply because they used to. We keep beliefs and habits like old software: patched, buggy, slow, but still running because we haven’t bothered to upgrade.

So here’s the twist: What if planned obsolescence is actually a brilliant life strategy, just misbranded? What if the same principle companies use to keep products moving forward can help us keep ourselves moving forward? Today’s life requires versions of us that yesterday’s logic can’t always support. Just like tech, we evolve. And yet, unlike tech, we resist updates. It’s time to rethink that.

Let’s pull the idea apart. In business, planned obsolescence is designed to trigger action. Not because the product suddenly collapses, but because a better version exists, or will soon exist. You replace, upgrade, and refresh. But in life, we tend to upgrade only when we break. Burnout. A painful ending. A major life shake. A decision that comes too late. And that’s what makes the concept worth rescuing. What if we didn’t wait for collapse?

What if we practised intentional, thoughtful obsolescence: letting go of what has completed its purpose, even when it’s still working, just not working well? Businesses use planned obsolescence to keep profits flowing. We can use it to keep growth flowing. It’s not manipulation. It’s maturity.

Every phase of our lives comes with a toolkit. The version of you in your twenties needed certain beliefs, behaviours and patterns to survive and make sense of the world. You needed energy, flexibility, endurance, and the ability to say yes to almost everything.

But decades later, when priorities shift and emotional bandwidth tightens, those same habits don’t serve you. Yet you keep them out of loyalty, familiarity, or plain inertia. It’s like insisting on using Windows XP in 2025. Sure, it opens, but that’s not the point.

The point is: Your life upgrades faster than your habits do. When the mismatches pile up, you start feeling the symptoms: resentment, exhaustion, confusion, restlessness, stagnation, the sense that something is “off” but you can’t put your finger on it. That’s your internal software whispering: “This system is outdated. Please update.”

Planned obsolescence gives you a neat way to frame this. Not as a failure. Not as loss, but as natural succession. There are parts of you that carried you through tough chapters. They were necessary. Even heroic. But they’re retired staff. Not meant to be dragged along indefinitely. Let’s name a few:

The People-Pleaser: She helped you survive group projects, complicated families, messy workplaces, and fragile friendships. She protected you through silence and over-compromise. But now she’s draining your energy faster than a five-year-old smartphone battery. She needs to go.

The Over-Responsible One: This version handled everything. Emotional labour, logistics, crises, expectations. She took pride in doing the work of three people. Now? She’s exhausted, brittle and quietly resentful. She has served enough lifetimes for ten humans.

The Perfectionist: This one thinks life is a checklist where every box must be ticked neatly with the correct pen. She stops you from experimenting. She edits your work before it even exists. Her contract has expired. She doesn’t know it yet.

The “Safe” Dreamer: The one who thinks small, stays within predictable boundaries, and believes stability comes from avoiding risk. She means well, but she’s holding back the version of you who’s ready to live more boldly.

These versions aren’t wrong. But they’re outdated. They belong to older chapters, the ones that shaped you but shouldn’t confine you.

Planned obsolescence says: Thank them. Retire them. Upgrade yourself.

You’d think we’d be quicker to let things go. But no, humans cling like cling wrap. Why?

  • Familiarity feels safe: Even if the pattern is draining, at least you know it well. We rarely fear discomfort as much as we fear the unknown.
  • Identity gets tangled into everything: If you’ve spent 20 years being “the reliable one,” letting that version expire feels like losing a limb.
  • We worship longevity: Friendships should last forever. Jobs should last decades. Beliefs should stay unchanged. That’s the message we grow up with. But longevity is not proof of relevance.
  • Hope keeps us stuck: We tell ourselves things will improve. Just wait. Just tolerate. Just be patient. Hope is lovely, but sometimes it’s a velvet trap.
  • Endings feel like failure: If something ends, we assume it means we messed up. But endings are often the most responsible choice we can make.

Planned obsolescence reframes endings not as failure, but as lifecycle completion. Just because something doesn’t last forever doesn’t mean it wasn’t meaningful.

  • How to spot when something has quietly become obsolete? The signs are subtle at first, and then suddenly not subtle at all. Here’s what to look for:
  • You have to overwrite your instincts to stay.
  • You feel small in a space that used to excite you.
  • Your conversations feel repetitive.
  • You’re learning nothing new.
  • You’re staying out of loyalty, not alignment.
  • You fantasise about detaching, but feel guilty.
  • You’ve outgrown what the situation can offer.
  • The most telling sign? You feel yourself shrinking instead of expanding.

Obsolescence, in life, isn’t about usefulness. It’s about fit. And fit changes as we do.

How do we practice planned obsolescence in life? This is where the idea becomes practical. Not philosophical, not abstract, actionable. Here’s how to use planned obsolescence as a life tool.

Introduce Review Dates for Your Life: Jobs come with appraisals. So do products. But we rarely review our lives with the same discipline. Choose a date each year to ask: Is this still working for who I am now, not who I was? Careers, relationships, habits, commitments, all fair game. It’s not harsh. It’s honest.

Retire Beliefs That No Longer Fit: We don’t question our beliefs enough because we assume age equals correctness. But beliefs also expire. Examples include, “I have to do everything myself.” “I can’t disappoint people.” “Everyone will be upset if I change.” “I’m too old to try something new.”, and “Success must look a certain way.” These are old operating systems running on modern hardware. They cause more glitches than growth. Replace them with beliefs that match your current bandwidth, values and aspirations.

Let Relationships Evolve Instead of Forcing Them to Stay Frozen: Not all friendships need to maintain their original frequency. Some shift into seasonal contact. Some gently fade. Some stay but change shape. This isn’t betrayal. Its lifecycle. Planned obsolescence doesn’t mean ruthlessly cutting people off. It means recognising when a dynamic needs to upgrade or downshift. You can love someone and still acknowledge that the form of the relationship has expired.

Upgrade Your Coping Mechanisms: Overthinking, overworking, avoiding, shutting down: these coping tools belong to past versions of you. Instead of patching them, replace them. Old coping mechanisms may be to avoid conflict; the upgrade is to communicate early, clearly, and calmly. The old coping mechanism is to overprepare; the upgrade is to prepare enough. The old coping mechanism is to say yes automatically, while the upgrade means to pause, assess, and decide. Every upgrade frees emotional bandwidth.

Stop Treating Your Goals Like Museum Artefacts: Just because you once wanted something doesn’t mean you must carry that desire for the next 40 years. It’s fine to outgrow dreams, it’s fine to replace ambitions, it’s fine to retire goals that belonged to earlier versions of you. Life isn’t a museum where everything must be preserved untouched. It’s a living space. And living spaces need refreshing.

Version Your Life Like Software Updates: This is the simplest and most liberating idea of all. Think of yourself as a series of versions. Version 1.0 is learning the rules, version 2.0 is testing boundaries, version 3.0 is building stability, version 4.0 is rewriting definitions, and the current version is stronger, clearer, braver, and more intentional. Every version ends, not because it failed, but because you grew. A new version doesn’t erase the old one. It builds on it. That’s the beauty of planned obsolescence: retirement, not rejection.

What happens when you start living this way? Things shift, quietly at first, then dramatically. You stop dragging emotional clutter around. You notice what genuinely matters. You become more present. Your decisions sharpen. Your relationships clarify. Work feels more aligned. Life feels less chaotic because you’re not trying to maintain expired systems. You create space. And space invites possibility. Most people are so busy holding on that they forget life isn’t a storage unit. It’s a flow. Things come in, things go out. Nothing needs to remain forever to be meaningful. Planned obsolescence teaches you to honour the exit as much as the entry.

Next, let’s talk about the fear of letting go too soon. This fear is natural. Endings carry weight. But letting go intentionally isn’t rash. It’s incredibly mindful. It requires clarity and honesty, two things we rarely extend to ourselves. Letting something expire early isn’t failure. It’s stewardship. And here’s the truth: Most of the things we fear losing are already half-gone. We’re just pretending not to notice. When you release them, you’re not being irresponsible. You’re being real.

Planned obsolescence isn’t about discarding everything. It’s about recognising lifecycle, respecting timing, creating room for growth, not forcing permanence, and allowing evolution to happen smoothly instead of chaotically. It’s about gently closing chapters instead of dragging them until they fall apart. When you start doing this, something surprising happens: Your life becomes lighter. Not empty. Just uncluttered. Clarity comes. Momentum comes. Energy returns. Curiosity replaces dread. You become someone who adapts instead of someone who endures.

Life isn’t a forever project. We’re taught to value longevity as if the length of something is the best indicator of its worth. But some of our most important moments are brief. Some of our most transformative relationships last only a season. Some of our boldest decisions appear “too soon” to outsiders. Longevity is not the goal. Alignment is. Everything in life has a natural expiry: habits, jobs, routines, connections, identities. Instead of fearing that truth, planned obsolescence invites us to work with it. It encourages us to evolve gracefully instead of reacting desperately. Life doesn’t move in straight lines. It moves in cycles.
And each cycle deserves a clean beginning, not a leftover ending.

The best part, you get to choose what expires next. That’s the quiet power in this idea. Businesses dictate the expiry date of their products. But you get to dictate the expiry date of the parts of your life that no longer serve you. You choose what stays. You choose what retires. You choose what gets upgraded. It’s intentional, freeing and strangely calming. And once you start treating some things as temporary: beliefs, roles, patterns, you also start treating other things as possibilities. New habits, new relationships, new dreams, and new versions of yourself. Planned obsolescence, when translated into real life, simply means this: Stop waiting for things to fall apart. Choose your endings. Shape your transitions. Own your upgrades. It’s not a corporate trick, it’s a life skill. And it might just be the one thing that helps you move more lightly, more honestly and more courageously through the chapters waiting ahead.

In My Hands Today…

Billion Dollar Whale: The Man Who Fooled Wall Street, Hollywood, and the World – Tom Wright, Bradley Hope

An epic true-tale of hubris and greed from two Pulitzer-finalist Wall Street Journal reporters, Billion Dollar Whale reveals how a young social climber pulled off one of the biggest financial heists in history–right under the nose of the global financial industry–exposing the shocking secret nexus of elite wealth, banking, Hollywood, and politics.

The dust had yet to settle on the global financial crisis in 2009 when an unlikely Wharton grad was setting in motion a fraud of unprecedented gall and magnitude–one that would come to symbolize the next great threat to the global financial system.

Billion Dollar Whale will become a classic, harrowing parable about the financial world in the twenty-first century.