Sacred Stones, Spaces, and Stories: Divya Desams Part 11

Thiruvazhundur Temple, Theranzhdur, Tamil Nadu
Thiruvazhundur, also known as Therazhundur, is a small village near Mayiladuthurai. At its centre stands the ancient Divya Desam dedicated to Amaruviyappan, a form of Vishnu known for protection, guidance, and the strength to restore order. His consort here is Senkamalavalli Thayar. The temple is one of the 108 Divya Desams sung by Thirumangai Alvar, whose verse gives the temple a permanent place on the spiritual map of Vaishnavism. The temple is quiet and steady, like many sacred spaces in the Kaveri region. But its story carries movement, tension and release. It tells of a chariot gone out of control, a god who steps in, and a lesson about power used with clarity and compassion.

The main legend of this temple revolves around Balarama, the elder brother of Krishna. The story says that Balarama once took a divine chariot belonging to Kubera, the god of wealth. For reasons that differ across versions, the chariot went out of control and dragged through this village. The name Therazhundur itself reflects this; ther means chariot, and azhundur suggests sinking or dragging. Seeing the trouble this caused, Vishnu appeared here as Amaruviyappan and stopped the chariot. His intervention brought calm, order, and protection for the people living in the village. This form of Vishnu shows the ability to step in where chaos grows, not with rage, but with grounded clarity. The temple’s identity rests on this idea that divine support can help freeze a situation before it spirals further.

Another story tied to the temple is about Uparicharavasan, an ancient king known for his devotion and strict moral code. He prayed here and received blessings for longevity and clarity of judgment. This adds another layer to the temple’s meaning: spiritual stability comes from both divine support and personal discipline. A third legend speaks of Vishnu appearing here to bless Agastya, the sage who brought balance to the world by moving to the south to counter the weight of rituals happening in the north. Agastya prayed here for strength and equilibrium, and Vishnu appeared before him. When taken together: Balarama’s chariot, the king’s devotion, and Agastya’s need for balance, the temple’s mythic identity becomes clear. Thiruvazhundur represents the moment when life slows down enough for the mind to find direction again.

The temple’s roots go deep into the Chola period. This region has always been part of the cultural heartland of Tamil Nadu, and many temples grew under Chola patronage. Inscriptions around the temple show land grants and donations made for maintaining lamps, feeding Brahmins, and supporting temple festivals. These inscriptions offer a glimpse into the quiet but continuous support the temple received from local rulers and families. Later, during the Nayak period, parts of the mandapam and outer walls were rebuilt or reinforced. The Nayaks often contributed decorative pillars and expanded worship spaces, and their influence can still be seen here. The Marathas of Thanjavur also left their mark in the form of renovations and festival support.

What makes Thiruvazhundur interesting is how securely it remained part of the Divya Desam network despite being located in a rural pocket. Thirumangai Alvar’s verse gave it prestige, and subsequent generations kept returning here, creating an unbroken line of devotion. Even when political power shifted away from the region, temples like this stayed active because of strong community roots. Today, it continues as an integral part of the Kaveri temple belt, visited by people who follow the Divya Desam trail, as well as those who come because the temple’s legends speak to them personally.

Thiruvazhundur Temple has a layout typical of South Indian Vishnu temples, but its scale is slightly larger than some of the smaller Divya Desams nearby. The Rajagopuram at the entrance is not massive, but it sets a clear frame for the temple. The temple tank, Darshana Pushkarini, sits close by and holds a place in several small rituals. Inside the complex, the first thing that stands out is the mandapam. The pillars show carvings that echo Chola and later Nayak styles: simple lines, yali motifs, lotus patterns, and scenes from everyday life. The stone is cool throughout most of the day, especially in the shaded areas.

The main deity, Amaruviyappan, stands in a graceful posture facing east. He holds the conch and discus, with a calm expression that reflects both strength and reassurance. Some versions of the legend describe him as stepping forward to stop the chariot, and the idol captures that sense of readiness. Senkkamalavalli Thayar sits in her own shrine. Her name refers to the red lotus, and her presence adds softness to the otherwise action-oriented mythology of the temple. Devotees often speak of how peaceful her shrine feels, especially during early morning puja.

Around the temple, you can find small shrines for Vishvaksena, Garuda, the Alvars, Rama and Krishna in smaller forms, and a shrine for the temple’s associated sages. The premises have several trees that provide shade, adding to the temple’s calm rhythm. The mix of granite, plaster, repainted sections, and weather-worn carvings tells the story of a temple that has been used, maintained, and lived in for centuries.

The temple follows the standard Vaishnavite pattern of daily pujas, each marking a shift in the day’s energy. Early morning begins with suprabhatam, followed by alankaram, neivedyam, and the first darshan. The priests move through the rituals slowly, without rush. Major festivals include Vaikunta Ekadasi, the most important day for Vishnu temples, Brahmotsavam, which involves processions through the village, Garuda Sevai, Panguni Uthiram, associated with divine union, and Purattasi Saturdays, popular for family visits. Because the temple is tied to legends of guidance and intervention, many devotees come here when facing confusion or crossroads. They offer prayers for clarity, direction, and support through uncertain phases of life.

The chariot festival held here has special meaning because of the temple’s mythology. Even though the modern chariot is symbolic, the act of pulling it through the streets connects the devotees to the original moment when Vishnu stopped the runaway chariot. This ritual reinforces the idea of regaining control over life. Thayar’s shrine attracts women who pray for stability in the home and a smooth path for their children.
The temple maintains a community-oriented identity. During festivals, local families volunteer, cook prasadam, and help decorate the temple. It feels more like a shared home than a formal institution.

Pilgrims usually reach Thiruvazhundur from Mayiladuthurai or Kumbakonam. The drive is easy, passing through paddy fields and quiet lanes. This region has many temples, but each stands in its own pocket of land, creating a rhythm of sacred spaces across the landscape. As you enter the village, the streets narrow, and houses get closer together. The temple doesn’t rise suddenly; it becomes visible slowly as you turn corners. Local people give directions without fuss. The village has a balanced pace—not too slow, not hurried. Inside the temple, the air feels still. The sound of bells and chanting filters through the corridors. The stone floor is cool even in the heat of the afternoon. Most pilgrims say that the temple gives a sense of grounding. Maybe it’s the story of Vishnu stopping the chariot. Maybe it’s the large mandapam or the open courtyard. Whatever the reason, people often linger longer than they planned. The tank near the temple adds to the setting. In the evenings, the reflection of the gopuram on the water creates a soft, tranquil mood. The temple visit is usually calm and unhurried, making it a good stop for those wanting a quieter Divya Desam experience.

Thiruvazhundur has a firm place in Vaishnavite tradition because of Thirumangai Alvar’s hymn. His words describe the beauty of the place and the protection offered by Amaruviyappan. The chariot legend influences local culture in subtle ways. Stories about regaining control, seeking guidance in turbulent moments, and trusting divine timing are passed down in households. Village plays and storytelling sessions during festivals often highlight Balarama’s role and Vishnu’s intervention. Local musicians sing verses from the Divya Prabandham here, keeping the oral tradition alive. Families in the region visit the temple during shifting phases of life: marriages, new jobs, family disagreements, or important decisions. The temple becomes a marker of transition. Even though it’s not one of the largest temples in Tamil Nadu, its stories show up in heritage writings, spiritual talks, and simple everyday advice that elders give to younger generations.

The temple today functions smoothly with daily pujas and regular festival schedules. Management is handled through temple authorities with support from local devotees. Renovation work happens slowly but steadily. Repainting, structural repairs, restoration of damaged carvings, and upkeep of the temple tank are ongoing. Thiruvazhundur has seen an increase in footfall due to Divya Desam tourism. Many visitors come in groups that cover several temples in one day. Yet the temple remains peaceful because the crowd comes in waves and rarely overwhelms the space. Younger people have started discovering the temple through social media posts, especially photos of the deity and the tank. This has brought new attention without changing the temple’s core identity. The temple maintains a balance between tradition and practical needs. Nothing feels forced or overly modernised. Worship remains simple, and visitors often comment on how natural the atmosphere feels.

Thiruvazhundur stands tall in the Divya Desam network not because of size or grandeur, but because of its story: the moment Vishnu brought a runaway chariot to a halt and restored calm. Amaruviyappan represents protection, steadiness, and clarity. His presence reassures people facing confusion or emotional turmoil. The temple’s history, architecture, rituals and community reflect this same message. Everything here moves at a measured pace. Nothing feels rushed. In the wider map of Indian spiritual heritage, Thiruvazhundur serves as a reminder that strength does not always roar. Sometimes it acts quietly, stepping in at the right moment to stop things from breaking apart. It remains one of the gentler stops on the Divya Desam trail and a temple that leaves visitors feeling steadier than when they entered.

Thiruchirupuliyur Temple, Thirusirupuliyur, Tamil Nadu
Thiruchirupuliyur, located near Nannilam, is one of the 108 Divya Desams and houses the deity Arulmaakadal Perumal, also known as Krupa Samudra Perumal, meaning “the ocean of compassion.” His consort here is Tirumagal Nachiyar. The temple is small, quiet and deeply woven into local life. Like many Divya Desams, it carries a legend that gives it emotional weight and a sense of purpose. In this case, the story centres on redemption, forgiveness and the chance to rise after a mistake. The temple stands in a compact village, surrounded by fields, narrow lanes and homes where devotion is part of daily rhythm. When you walk through the entrance, the space feels personal rather than overwhelming. The temple’s size reinforces its message: healing doesn’t need noise.

The mythology here revolves around a sage named Vyaghrapada. The name literally means “tiger-footed.” The story goes that Vyaghrapada prayed intensely at this place for inner clarity and freedom from past mistakes. He wanted physical strength and spiritual forgiveness. Moved by his devotion, Vishnu appeared here and blessed him. The Perumal took on the name Arulmaakadal, emphasising unlimited mercy. Because the sage had tiger-like feet, the village came to be known as Thirusirupuliyur, meaning the sacred place tied to a “small tiger” or a tiger-featured devotee. Another legend ties the temple to Markandeya, the devotee of Shiva who was destined to die at sixteen. While Markandeya’s main story belongs to the Shaivite tradition, some versions say he also received Vishnu’s blessing here. This strengthens the theme of grace crossing boundaries between different paths. A small but important myth explains why the temple is physically small. It says that when Vishnu appeared to Vyaghrapada, he did so in a compact form, out of gentleness. The deity wanted the sage to feel close and not overwhelmed. Because of this, the sanctum today is smaller than in most Divya Desams. Devotees sometimes kneel or bend low to see the main deity clearly. This act of lowering oneself becomes part of the experience, almost symbolic of humility and surrender.

Like many temples in the Kaveri region, Thiruchirupuliyur carries the imprint of the Cholas, who were known for building and supporting temples across Tamil Nadu. The structure we see today shows signs of early Chola influence, especially in the stone base and the compact layout of the sanctum. Later, during the Nayak period, some renovations were done, including smaller mandapams and support structures. The temple does not have grand inscriptions or heavy stone sculptures like some larger temples, but whatever inscriptions remain indicate land grants and donations for lamps, daily puja and festivals.

The temple’s claim to Divya Desam status comes through Thirumangai Alvar, who composed verses praising the deity here. His poetry describes the Perumal as a source of deep compassion, someone who responds quickly to sincere prayer. Because of this, the temple has stayed important despite its small size. Villagers continued to maintain the temple even during periods when larger shrines received more political attention. Its survival over the centuries reflects a theme common to many Divya Desams: a small place with a strong soul endures because people care. Families in this region have visited this temple across generations, and this continuity has kept the place active.

Thiruchirupuliyur is one of the smallest Divya Desams in Tamil Nadu. This is not a weakness; it is its character. The temple’s layout is simple, with a short gopuram at the entrance, a small courtyard, and a narrow path leading to the sanctum. Inside the main sanctum, Arulmaakadal Perumal stands in a calm posture facing east. The deity is small in scale, matching the legend of Vishnu appearing in a compact form to comfort Vyaghrapada. The shrine’s low entrance forces devotees to bow or bend before entering, adding a physical experience of humility to the act of worship. The goddess, Tirumagal Nachiyar, has her own shrine. Her presence adds balance to the temple’s energy. Her space feels gentle, and many women come here for guidance in family matters or emotional clarity. The temple tank, Punyakoti Theertham, sits nearby. It is small and used mostly during festivals and occasional rituals. The water reflects the gopuram and nearby trees, adding to the temple’s quiet mood. Carvings on the pillars and walls are modest, mostly floral patterns, lotus motifs, and a few yali figures. These are typical of smaller Chola-era shrines. Over time, patches of plaster and paint have been added, but the temple still carries the feel of an older structure. What stands out architecturally is not the detail but the proportions. Everything is smaller: sanctum, courtyard, mandapam, and corridors. This scale creates intimacy. It feels like walking into a temple that is close to the ground, close to people, close to emotion.

The worship schedule here is straightforward. Priests perform daily pujas with care but without extravagance. This temple does not rely on large-scale rituals. Its power comes from repetition, rhythm and sincerity. Morning puja begins early, followed by alankaram, neivedyam and darshan. Evening puja brings soft lamp light that fills the temple with a warm glow. Major festivals include Vaikunta Ekadasi, which draws the largest crowd, the temple Brahmotsavam, with processions in and around the temple, Purattasi Saturdays, when many families in Tamil Nadu visit Vishnu temples, and the Theerthavari, involving the temple tank. Even on festival days, the mood stays grounded. Devotees don’t rush. People chat quietly in the courtyard. Volunteers help distribute prasadam. Children run around without getting lost in massive crowds.

A notable local practice is performing prayers for relief from guilt, past mistakes and emotional heaviness. Because the temple is tied to Vyaghrapada’s redemption, people come here seeking a new start. The priests explain the story to visitors, sometimes adding simple advice or reassurance. The atmosphere is unpretentious. Worship here feels like a conversation rather than a performance.

Reaching Thiruchirupuliyur usually starts from Nannilam, Kumbakonam or Thiruvarur. The roads are quiet, passing through small villages and patches of farmland. By the time you reach the temple, your pace naturally slows down. The village itself is compact. Houses stand close together. Children play in the streets. The temple blends into the neighbourhood rather than standing apart from it. There are no large shops or tourist stalls. Instead, you find tea sellers, small groceries and a few homes where people sit outside chatting. Entering the temple, the space feels peaceful. You can see the sanctum almost immediately from the courtyard, a sign of the temple’s small scale. The air inside is cool and carries the smell of oil lamps and incense. Visitors often say that this temple feels like walking into someone’s ancestral home. The silence is soft, not heavy. You can hear the rustle of leaves, the sound of bells and nearby voices blending with prayer. This temple fits naturally into a Divya Desam trail. Many pilgrims cover nearby shrines like Thirukovilur, Thirukannankudi, or Thiruvazhundur on the same day. But Thiruchirupuliyur stands out because of its size and mood. People often come here when they want a break from crowded temples. It invites you to pause instead of pushing you along.

The temple may be small, but its presence in local culture is strong. Stories of Vyaghrapada are told by elders to children during festivals. The theme of redemption and inner strength shows up often in folk songs, small plays and temple narratives shared during gatherings. Thirumangai Alvar’s verse gives the temple its identity within the Divya Prabandham. The Alvar’s poetry describes Vishnu here as overflowing with kindness and ready to forgive. Locals see the deity as someone who listens quickly, not someone who makes devotees wait. This shapes their emotional connection to the temple. Artists occasionally depict Vyaghrapada with tiger-like limbs, praying before a small Vishnu. These images appear in calendar art, festival posters and devotional booklets sold in nearby towns. The temple also plays a quiet role in shaping values around humility. Because devotees must bend or kneel to see the deity, the physical act becomes part of local storytelling about surrender and gratitude. The temple is woven into community identity, less through grandeur and more through emotional meaning.

Today, the temple continues to function smoothly, supported by both the administration and the village community. Daily pujas run without interruption. Festival arrangements involve local volunteers. The temple is kept clean, and repairs are made as needed. Recent restoration efforts include repainting, structural strengthening of the sanctum, and improvements to pathways. These updates are done with restraint, preserving the original character of the temple. The temple has also started drawing attention from younger devotees through online posts. Photos of the small sanctum, the unique low entrance and the stories of Vyaghrapada circulate on social media and heritage pages. This has added a new layer of visitors while keeping the temple’s calm atmosphere intact. Tourism is modest but steady. Pilgrims visit throughout the year, especially those completing the Divya Desam circuit. Even with new attention, the temple has not become commercial. Worship remains simple, direct and sincere.

Thiruchirupuliyur stands as one of the most intimate Divya Desams. Its legend of Vyaghrapada and Vishnu’s mercy gives it emotional depth. Its small architecture reinforces its message, humility opens the heart. Arulmaakadal Perumal represents forgiveness without judgment. His presence comforts those who feel burdened by mistakes or uncertainty. In a landscape full of grand temples and large festivals, Thiruchirupuliyur offers something different: a gentle reset. The temple’s place in the Divya Desam network reminds us that spiritual strength doesn’t depend on size, scale or spectacle. It grows out of sincerity, simplicity and the quiet assurance that help is always available. This temple continues to welcome anyone seeking a new start. And in the long chain of South India’s sacred spaces, it remains a soft, steady voice.

In My Hands Today…

The Rising Sun: The Decline & Fall of the Japanese Empire, 1936-45 – John Toland

This Pulitzer Prize–winning history of World War II chronicles the dramatic rise and fall of the Japanese empire, from the invasion of Manchuria and China to the atomic bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Told from the Japanese perspective, The Rising Sun is, in the author’s words, “a factual saga of people caught up in the flood of the most overwhelming war of mankind, told as it happened—muddled, ennobling, disgraceful, frustrating, full of paradox.”

In weaving together the historical facts and human drama leading up to and culminating in the war in the Pacific, Toland crafts a riveting and unbiased narrative history. In his Foreword, Toland says that if we are to draw any conclusion from The Rising Sun, it is “that there are no simple lessons in history, that it is human nature that repeats itself, not history.”

Short Story: Incognito Heart

The scooter had been making that sound for weeks. Not a dramatic sound. Not even a complaint. More like a quiet, sulking wheeze. As if it had opinions about her choices and had decided to express them through the engine.

Nandini Rao patted the handlebars the way her mother used to pat her head when she couldn’t fix a problem but wanted it to behave anyway.

“Bas. Just get me there,” she murmured. “I’m not asking for much.”

The scooter responded by dying right outside the shuttered entrance of the old Bhandarkar Hall, where somebody had recently put up fresh hoardings with glossy visuals: REVIVAL. HERITAGE. A NEW CHAPTER.

Nandini stared at the hoarding and felt an unhelpful urge to laugh. Mumbai loved the idea of revival. It loved new chapters. It also loved forgetting the old ones.

She pushed the scooter to the side, wiped sweat from her forehead with the end of her dupatta, and checked her phone. One bar. Low battery. A bank balance that looked like a scolding.

Of course.

She stood there for a second, between the traffic and the hoarding and her own tiredness, and tried to decide which was worse: the scooter breaking down, or the fact that she’d started expecting breakdowns like they were part of the monthly budget.

A tap on her elbow made her flinch.

“Madam, scooter bandh?” a watchman asked, leaning on a metal railing like he’d been born there.

“It’s… taking a pause,” she said, as if she could negotiate with it using language.

The watchman grinned. “Pause toh theek hai, par yeh road pe pause mat karna.”

Behind him, a man stepped out from the construction site, wiping his hands on a rag. He wore a faded T-shirt and jeans that looked like they’d seen too many monsoons. There was dust in his hair. Not styled dust. Real dust. He had the kind of face that would disappear in a crowd until it didn’t.

“Need help?” he asked, and his voice was calm in a way that made her suspicious. Calm usually came with privilege. Calm usually meant people had options.

“It’s fine,” Nandini said automatically.

The man glanced at the scooter, then at her. Not in a dramatic up-and-down way. More like he was assessing the situation and doing the math quietly.

“You’re not from the It’s fine school,” he said.

“Excuse me?”

He smiled a little. “You said it’s fine, like you were trying to convince yourself. Not me.”

Nandini felt her cheeks heat. She hated being read. She made a living reading people, matching them to books. She did not enjoy the same attention coming back at her.

“I’m Nandini,” she said, mostly because she didn’t know how to end the conversation without being rude, and she was tired of being rude to strangers. It turned life into a long fight.

“Mihir,” he said. “I’m working there.” He tilted his head toward the building.

She followed the gesture. The place smelled of wet cement and old paint. Bhandarkar Hall had once hosted plays, debates, charity shows, and at least three weddings that had spilt onto the road. Now it was being reborn with a name that sounded like a bank.

“You can’t fix it?” she asked, half-hopeful, half-defensive.

“I can try.” He crouched near the scooter, peered under the side panel, and made a small sound of disapproval. “When was the last time you serviced it?”

Nandini made a face.

“That long, huh?”

“I’ve been… busy,” she said.

He looked up. “Everyone’s busy. The scooter doesn’t care.”

He opened the panel and nudged something with his thumb. “Battery connection is loose. Also, your plug cap looks like it wants to retire.”

Nandini blinked. “You… know what you’re doing.”

“Just enough to survive Mumbai,” he said.

The watchman chuckled. “Yeh Mumbai hai, madam. Sabko sab aata hai.”

Mihir tightened the connection, tapped the panel back into place, and gestured. “Try now.”

Nandini started the scooter. It coughed, complained, and then—like a child who didn’t want to be late to school but didn’t want to admit it—came alive.

Relief washed through her so hard she nearly closed her eyes.

“Thank you,” she said, and meant it in the way you mean things when your day was about to fall apart and then didn’t.

Mihir wiped his hands again, then glanced at her scooter basket. There was a cloth bag in it, bulging with what looked suspiciously like books.

“Where are you going?” he asked.

“Banyan & Paper,” she said, before she could stop herself.

He frowned. “That second-hand bookstore near the station?”

Nandini’s pride stirred, even though it was a small, exhausted pride. “Yes.”

“I’ve walked past it,” he said. “Always wanted to go in.”

“You haven’t?”

“I keep meaning to. I…” He paused, as if he was choosing words. “I haven’t had the habit in a while.”

Nandini didn’t ask what habit. She knew what he meant. Everyone knew what he meant. Reading had become something people claimed to love the way they claimed to love fitness. A virtue, not a practice.

“Well,” she said, surprising herself, “you should come in.”

“I will,” he said, and she got the sense that he actually meant it.

The watchman called out behind them, “Arre Mihir, kaam pe aa. Boss chillayega.”

Mihir lifted a hand in acknowledgement, then looked at Nandini again. “Don’t ignore the service, haan. Battery connection is a symptom. The scooter is basically you.”

“What’s that supposed to mean?”

He smiled. “Overworked. Still functioning. One bad day away from collapsing dramatically on a main road.”

Nandini stared at him, offended and amused at the same time. Before she could come up with a reply, he turned and walked back into the dusty half-reborn building.

She rode off with her scooter, behaving, and her mind mildly unsettled.


Banyan & Paper sat between a photocopy shop and a tiny snack stall that sold vada pav with alarming confidence. The bookstore didn’t have a glossy sign. Just painted letters that had faded unevenly, and a handwritten note taped near the entrance:

Yes, we buy old books. No, we can’t take your college textbooks from 2009. Please don’t argue.

Inside, the air was cooler than outside, not because of AC; she couldn’t afford to run it all day, but because books held a different kind of temperature. The place smelled like paper, dust, and the faint perfume of mothballs that Nandini kept in strategic corners like tiny guards.

Her mother had named the shop when Nandini was eight. Her father had wanted something sensible. Something like Rao Books & Stationery.

Her mother had insisted on a banyan tree.

“A banyan doesn’t look like it’s doing anything,” her mother had said. “But it holds everything together.”

Nandini unlocked the shutter, pulled it up with a grunt, and stepped inside.

Her phone buzzed. A text from her neighbour, Aarti:
Ma ate?

Nandini typed back quickly:
Yes. Dawa de diya. Sleeping.

Chronic but stable, her mother’s condition was a constant hum in the background of their lives: medication, BP checks, occasional dizzy spells, and a general fragility that made Nandini’s choices feel less like choices and more like a line drawn on a map.

She couldn’t move for work. She couldn’t “just try something else.” She couldn’t relocate, restart, reinvent herself in the way LinkedIn loved to suggest. Her life was tethered to this suburb, this shop, and the upstairs bedroom where her mother slept with a fan pointed directly at her face like it was a personal assistant.

Nandini flipped on the lights, dust motes rising like tiny spirits.

At ten thirty, the regulars drifted in.

A retired uncle who came to argue about politics and borrow old Marathi novels.

A teenage girl who pretended she was browsing but actually just wanted to sit in the corner and breathe for twenty minutes away from her tuition schedule.

A man who bought self-help books and looked disappointed every time a book failed to fix him.

The shop didn’t make money the way shops were supposed to. It made meaning. And meaning, unfortunately, didn’t pay rent.

At noon, the bell above the door rang.

Nandini looked up and saw Mihir standing there, freshly washed, wearing a clean shirt that looked surprisingly well-fitted. Not expensive exactly, but… deliberate.

He stepped in slowly, like someone entering a temple without knowing the rules.

“Hi,” he said.

“You came,” Nandini said, and immediately hated the warmth in her own voice.

He glanced around, taking in the shelves, the mismatched chairs, the handwritten category signs: Old Loves, Weird But Good, Marathi Classics, Women Who Don’t Apologise.

“It’s… exactly how I imagined it,” he said.

“What did you imagine?”

“A place where people come to feel less alone,” he said, like it was obvious.

Nandini’s throat tightened, annoyed at herself. She moved behind the counter and busied her hands with a stack of books.

“So,” she said, brisk, “what are you looking for?”

Mihir smiled at her tone. “Something that doesn’t make me feel like I’m doing homework.”

“Welcome to the club,” Nandini muttered.

He wandered into the aisles. He picked up a thin book of poetry, flipped through a few pages, put it back carefully.

“You read poetry?” Nandini asked before she could stop herself.

“I used to,” he said. “When I was younger.”

“And now?”

He shrugged. “Now I scroll.”

Nandini snorted. “You and the rest of the country.”

He looked at her then, properly. “Do you ever feel like everyone is tired but pretending they’re fine?”

Nandini paused. “Yes.”

“And do you ever feel like reading is the only thing that makes the tiredness… manageable?”

She swallowed. “Yes.”

He nodded, like something inside him settled. “Okay. Give me something.”

Nandini came out from behind the counter, walked to the shelves, and started pulling books without overthinking.

A slim novel in English that carried quiet grief like a second skin.

A book of essays by an Indian writer that made you laugh and then feel guilty for laughing.

A Marathi short story collection she’d grown up reading, translated on the facing page because she didn’t know what his Marathi was like and she didn’t want to ask.

She handed the stack to him. “Start here.”

He stared at the books as if she’d handed him a key.

“You’re good at this,” he said.

“I’ve been doing it forever,” she said, and then, because honesty slipped out sometimes when you weren’t watching, she added, “and because I can tell when someone is trying to remember themselves.”

Mihir’s mouth opened, then closed. For a second, he looked like he wanted to say something and didn’t trust it.

He paid in cash.

Nandini noticed because she always noticed. Cash was inconvenient. Cash was usually a habit, or a decision.

He took the bag and hesitated. “I’ll come back and tell you what I think.”

“You better,” she said. “Otherwise I’ll assume you didn’t like it and I’ll take it personally.”

He laughed. It was a full laugh. Not polite.

“Deal,” he said, and left.

Nandini watched the door for a second longer than she needed to, then turned back to the counter, annoyed with her own heart for being so easy to wake up.


Over the next two weeks, Mihir became a pattern in her day.

Not daily. That would have felt like too much too fast. But often enough that she started expecting him in the way you start expecting the train to arrive, even though it never arrives when you want.

He’d come in, buy one book, then talk about it like it mattered. Not like he was showing off. Like he was trying to understand why it hit him.

He brought her cutting chai once, and she nearly cried because nobody brought her chai unless they wanted something from her.

“Don’t make it weird,” she told him.

“You’re making it weird,” he said, grinning.

Sometimes he’d help her shift cartons. Sometimes he’d sit in the corner and read for twenty minutes without speaking. The shop accepted him the way old spaces accepted people who didn’t try to dominate them.

Even her mother, who noticed everything despite pretending she didn’t, asked one evening while Nandini was crushing tablets into curd:

“Who is this boy who keeps coming?”

“He’s not a boy,” Nandini said.

“Men are boys until they prove otherwise,” her mother replied, unbothered.

Nandini rolled her eyes. “He’s… a customer.”

Her mother made a soft sound. “Hmm.”

“Stop doing that.”

“Doing what?”

“That hmm. That I-know-more-than-you hmm.”

Her mother smiled. “I’m only saying, if he’s making you smile, don’t immediately find a reason to punish yourself for it.”

Nandini stared at the curd like it had answers.


One Thursday, after the shop had closed, Aarti stuck her head in with her usual lack of boundaries.

“You’re coming for the open mic, right?” she asked. “Don’t back out.”

Nandini groaned. “Aarti, I said maybe.”

Aarti widened her eyes theatrically. “Maybe is what cowards say when they want to sound brave.”

Behind Aarti, Mihir walked in, carrying a book under his arm.

“What open mic?” he asked.

Nandini shot Aarti a look that could have peeled paint. Aarti smiled innocently and disappeared.

Nandini exhaled. “There’s this small thing. At the community library. People read their writing.”

Mihir’s eyes lit up in a way that made her want to throw something at him. “You write?”

“Not like… professionally,” she said quickly. “Just. Sometimes.”

“I’d like to hear you,” he said.

The way he said it was not flirtatious. It was earnest. That made it worse. Earnestness didn’t give you room to be cynical.

“I don’t do public reading,” she said.

“Why?”

Because in public, people decided who you were and then told you. Because the moment you offered your words, they belonged to everyone.

Nandini shrugged instead. “I’m not that person.”

Mihir studied her for a second, then said quietly, “You already are. You just haven’t admitted it out loud.”

Nandini stared at him. “You’ve known me for two weeks.”

“And in two weeks,” he said, “I’ve seen you tell a teenager that her feelings aren’t a problem to solve. I’ve seen you put a book in an uncle’s hand and make him look less lonely. I’ve seen you run a shop that shouldn’t survive and keep it alive anyway. Don’t tell me you’re not that person.”

Nandini’s eyes stung, and she hated that too.

“You’re saying all this because you want me to read something,” she said, trying for sarcasm.

“I’m saying all this because you deserve to hear it,” he replied. “Reading is just… one way.”

Nandini looked away, pretending to straighten a pile of books.

Finally, she said, “Fine. I’ll go. But if I faint, I’m blaming you.”

Mihir’s grin returned. “Fair. I’ll bring water. And a chair.”


The community library in their suburb wasn’t fancy. It had plastic chairs, yellowing posters, and a librarian who treated overdue books like personal betrayal.

About thirty people showed up for the open mic. Mostly students. A few aunties. One man who read jokes like he was performing at a corporate event.

Nandini sat in the back, holding a sheet of paper so tightly it was beginning to crease.

Mihir sat one row ahead, turned halfway in his chair so he could see her, as if she might bolt.

When her name was called, her body moved before her brain agreed.

She walked up to the front, faced the microphone, and saw the room: not hostile, not kind, just waiting.

She took a breath.

“This is…” Her voice caught. She tried again. “This is called Banyan & Paper.

And then the words came.

She spoke about the shop. About her mother’s hands pricing books with a pencil. About the way people came in looking for one thing and left with another. About the slow grief of watching reading become unfashionable. About holding a space together when the world told you it didn’t matter.

She didn’t mention her mother’s illness. She didn’t mention her bank balance. She didn’t perform pain.

She just told the truth.

When she finished, there was a beat of silence. Then applause. Real applause, not polite.

Nandini stepped down, slightly dizzy, and returned to her seat.

Mihir looked at her like she’d done something impossible.

“I told you,” he whispered.

“Don’t,” she whispered back. “Don’t make me cry in public.”

He smiled, but his eyes were damp. “Okay.”

Outside, later, under the streetlight near the paan shop, he said, “You were brilliant.”

Nandini exhaled shakily. “I feel like I ran a marathon without training.”

“That’s what it looks like when you do something you’ve been avoiding,” he said.

And then he kissed her.

Not dramatically. Not to prove a point. Just like it was the next honest thing.

Nandini kissed him back, and for a moment, the suburb felt suspended: the local train rumble in the distance, the smell of rain on concrete, the fact of tomorrow waiting.


After that, their closeness grew faster.

It always did once you crossed that line.

Mihir started coming over. Not often, because her mother was home, and Nandini had a complicated relationship with private life being witnessed. But sometimes he’d stand at the door with fruits or masala biscuits and say, “Aunty ke liye.”

Her mother would eye him with suspicious fondness.

“Tumhara kaam kya hai?” her mother asked one evening, not bothering with softness.

Mihir paused. “Consulting,” he said.

Nandini’s mother raised an eyebrow. “That word means nothing.”

Mihir smiled politely. “I help companies… fix problems.”

Her mother gave him the look only Indian mothers could give: the look that said I’m letting you speak, but don’t think I’m believing you.

Nandini watched Mihir carefully. He didn’t seem offended. He didn’t seem defensive. He seemed… careful.

Careful was okay. Careful was better than arrogant.

Still, there were things that didn’t add up.

He knew how to talk to people. Not just in a friendly way. In a practised way.

He was too comfortable in expensive spaces. Not showy, but unbothered.

He paid in cash, always.

And sometimes, when his phone rang, his entire face would change for a second. Like someone had called him by a name he wasn’t using.

Nandini told herself she was being dramatic. She told herself she was looking for problems because peace felt unfamiliar.

Then, one evening, she walked back to the shop after locking up, because she’d forgotten her keys.

She took the side lane behind the building, where the photocopy shop dumped paper scraps, and the snack stall stored gas cylinders.

She heard voices.

Low. Urgent.

A woman’s voice, sharp and controlled. “You can’t keep doing this.”

Mihir’s voice. Different. Cleaner. “I told you, I’m not available.”

“You’re not a college boy playing house in the suburbs,” the woman snapped. “You have responsibilities.”

Nandini froze behind a stack of cardboard, heart climbing into her throat.

“You can handle it,” Mihir said.

“I can handle it for a week,” the woman said. “Not indefinitely. And not when you’re ignoring calls. This is getting noticed.”

A pause.

Then the woman said, “Mihir Mehta, this isn’t romantic. It’s reckless.”

Nandini’s blood went cold.

Mehta.

Not an unusual surname. But the way she said it. Like it carried weight. Like it was a name that opened doors.

Mihir’s voice softened, but there was steel under it. “Don’t use my full name like you’re scolding a child.”

“You’re behaving like one,” she shot back. “The board meeting is tomorrow. The Pune acquisition is hanging. Your father is asking questions.”

Nandini felt dizzy. Father. Board. Acquisition.

This wasn’t just consulting. This was a life she hadn’t been invited into. A life that didn’t include second-hand bookstores and open mic nights.

“You’re going to get attached,” the woman said, and now there was something almost weary in her voice. “And then what? You think she’ll just… fit?”

“She doesn’t need to fit,” Mihir said.

“You’re not listening.” The woman lowered her voice. “She’ll pay the price for this long before you do. That’s how it works.”

Nandini pressed her hand to her mouth because something between a laugh and a sob threatened to come out.

Mihir said, very quietly, “I’m not lying to hurt her.”

“You’re lying to be loved safely,” the woman replied. “That’s still lying.”

Silence.

Then footsteps. The woman’s heels clicked away.

Mihir exhaled like someone who’d been holding his breath for days.

Nandini stumbled backwards, stepped on a plastic bottle, and the sound made Mihir turn.

Their eyes met across the lane.

For half a second, both of them looked like strangers.

“Nandu,” he said, and the nickname landed wrong. Like a stolen intimacy.

Nandini’s voice came out thin. “Who are you?”

Mihir opened his mouth, closed it, then said, “Can we talk inside?”

Nandini shook her head. “No. You don’t get inside. Not right now.”

His face tightened. He took one step toward her.

Nandini held up her hand. “Stop.”

He stopped.

“Tell me,” she said, voice steady now in a way that surprised her. “Don’t perform. Don’t manage my emotions. Just tell me.”

Mihir swallowed. “My name is Mihir Mehta,” he said. “That part is true. I… didn’t lie about my name. I lied by omission.”

Nandini laughed once, sharply. “That’s a fancy way to say you lied.”

He flinched. “Yes.”

“What are you?” she asked. “Consultant? Business heir? What? Because the lane behind my shop is not where ‘board meetings’ happen.”

Mihir looked down for a second, then back up. “My family… has businesses,” he said. “I work in them. I run a part of it.”

“And you thought saying ‘consulting’ was… what? Charming?”

“It was cowardly,” he said, and at least he didn’t deny it.

Nandini felt something inside her go very quiet, the way a room goes quiet when someone says something true and ugly.

“Why?” she asked.

Mihir’s voice broke slightly. “Because when people know, they don’t see me. They see the name. They see what I can offer. They see access. And with you—” He stopped, as if the sentence scared him.

“With me?” Nandini prompted, even though she already knew she’d regret it.

“With you,” he said, “I felt like I could be… a person.”

Nandini stared at him. She wanted to be moved. She wanted to soften. But something harder rose in her chest.

“You didn’t trust me,” she said.

Mihir’s face tightened. “I did—”

“No,” she cut in. “You trusted your own fear. You trusted your own script. You didn’t trust me to choose.”

He went still.

Nandini continued, words coming now like they’d been waiting. “Do you understand what you did? You let me imagine a future. You let me… step into something. And you knew, somewhere in your head, you knew that if this went wrong, it would cost me more than it would ever cost you.”

Mihir’s eyes shone. “I wasn’t trying to…”

“I know you weren’t trying,” Nandini said, and the fact that she believed that made her angrier. “That’s the problem. You didn’t even see the imbalance. Or you saw it and didn’t want to look at it.”

He whispered, “I did see it.”

Nandini held his gaze. “And?”

“And I still wanted to be with you,” he said, voice raw. “I still do.”

For a moment, the lane felt too small for the truth sitting between them.

Nandini looked away because if she looked too long, she’d remember the other version of him: the one who held her hand in the library, the one who listened to her words like they mattered, the one who sat on the shop floor and read quietly like he belonged there.

Her voice came out tired. “I don’t know what to do with this.”

“I’ll tell you everything,” Mihir said quickly, like he’d been waiting for permission. “Not managed. Not filtered. Everything.”

Nandini stared at the broken plastic bottle on the ground. Then she said, softly, “You should have done that before.”

“I know,” he said, and it sounded like it hurt.

Nandini felt tears rise, annoying and hot. She wiped them away with the heel of her hand, angry at her own body for being loyal to feelings.

Mihir took a cautious step closer. “Nandini…”

She stepped back. “Not today.”

He stopped, visibly restraining himself. “Okay.”

Nandini swallowed. “Tell me one thing. And don’t answer like a man in a boardroom.”

He nodded.

She asked, “Was any of it real?”

His voice turned quiet, almost rough. “All of it.”

“The books?” she demanded.

“Yes.”

“The way you looked at me?”

“Yes.”

“The kiss?”

He didn’t hesitate. “Yes.”

Nandini’s chest tightened painfully. “Then why ruin it with a lie?”

Mihir’s laugh was small and bitter. “Because I didn’t know how to be loved without one.”

That sentence landed hard. Not romantic. Not redeeming. Just honest in a way that made the skin on her arms prickle.

Nandini reached into her bag, pulled out her keys, and stared at them as if they were instructions.

Mihir stood there in the lane, not reaching for her, not touching her, as if he’d finally understood that touching was not the same as staying.

He took out his wallet, hesitated, then pulled out a card and held it out to her.

Nandini didn’t take it.

“It’s my number,” he said. “My real number. Not the one I’ve been using.”

“Why are you giving it to me?” she asked.

“Because I’m done hiding,” he said. “And because I’m not going to chase you. I don’t have the right. But I also don’t want to disappear and let you think you did something wrong.”

Nandini’s throat tightened. She hated that he was saying the right thing now. She hated that she still wanted to believe him.

She reached out and took the card, not because she forgave him, but because she wanted the truth to remain available if she chose it later.

Mihir watched her fingers close around it as if it were a fragile thing.

“I’m sorry,” he said again. Not dramatic. Not pleading. Just plain.

Nandini nodded once. She didn’t trust her voice.

She unlocked the shop door, stepped inside, and turned on the light. The shelves stood there, patient and familiar, like they’d seen everything and survived anyway.

Mihir stayed outside. She could feel him, even without looking.

After a minute, she heard his footsteps retreat.

When she finally turned back toward the glass door, the lane was empty.


That night, Nandini sat on the balcony of their flat, listening to the local train rattle past in the distance.

Her mother slept inside, the fan still aimed at her face like a stubborn guardian.

Aarti had texted twice. Kya hua? and then Don’t be stupid, ya. Nandini didn’t reply.

She held Mihir’s card between two fingers, turning it over and over like a coin.

On the other hand, her phone glowed with an unsent message.

I don’t know what to do with you.

She didn’t send it.

Below, someone argued with a delivery boy. Somewhere, a dog barked. The city continued, indifferent and intimate at once.

Nandini thought about the shop. About her mother. About the years she’d spent making peace with staying.

She thought about Mihir’s face when she read at the open mic, like he’d seen her become someone she’d been hiding from.

She thought about the lane behind the shop, about that one sentence that had cut clean:

You’re lying to be loved safely.

Nandini didn’t know what tomorrow would hold. She didn’t know whether love could survive the kind of truth that arrived late and messy.

But she knew this: she was done being treated like an afterthought in someone else’s escape plan.

The phone screen dimmed. She tapped it awake again.

The message still sat there, unsent.

She stared at it a long time, then deleted the text entirely.

And then, because she was not a saint and because she was human, she didn’t delete the number.

In My Hands Today…

Generations: The Real Differences Between Gen Z, Millennials, Gen X, Boomers, and Silents―and What They Mean for America’s Future – Jean M. Twenge

A groundbreaking, revelatory portrait of the six generations that currently live in the United States and how they connect, conflict, and compete with one another—from the acclaimed author of Generation Me and iGen

The United States is currently home to six generations: the Silents, Baby Boomers, Generation X, Millennials, Generation Z, and Generation Alpha. They have had vastly different life experiences and thus, one assumes, they must have vastly diverging beliefs and behaviors–but what are those differences, what causes them, and how deep do they actually run?

Professor of psychology Jean Twenge does a deep dive into a treasure trove of long-running, government-funded surveys and databases to answer these questions. Are we truly defined by major historical events, such as the Great Depression for the Silents and September 11 for Millennials? Or, as Twenge argues, is it the rapid evolution of technology that differentiates the generations?

With her clear-eyed and insightful voice, Twenge explores what the Silents and Boomers want out of the rest of their lives; how Gen X-ers are facing middle age; the ideals of Millennials as parents and in the workplace; and how Gen Z has been changed by COVID-19, among other fascinating topics. Surprising, engaging, and informative, Generations will forever change the way you view your parents, peers, coworkers, and children, no matter what your generation.

Adulting 101: How to Develop a Growth Mindset and Embrace Challenges

Starting university or a new career is a tough phase. You face challenges, unexpected setbacks, and pressure to perform. The way you approach these moments shapes how well you handle adulting. One of the most powerful tools for managing this is developing a growth mindset, the belief that your skills and intelligence can improve with effort.

What is a growth mindset? A growth mindset, a term coined by psychologist Carol Dweck, means believing that you can grow smarter and better through effort and learning. It’s the opposite of a fixed mindset, where you believe your abilities are fixed traits. People with fixed mindsets tend to avoid effort, give up easily, and see failure as a permanent flaw. Growth mindset folks see effort as a path to mastery and failure as a learning step. But let’s not romanticise this too much. Just believing in growth isn’t enough. It requires conscious effort, daily practice, and a willingness to tolerate discomfort. Growth mindset is not a magic switch; it’s a muscle you have to work on.

Before you build a growth mindset, you have to catch yourself falling into fixed mindset thinking. That internal voice that says, “I’m just not good at this” or “I’m not that kind of person.” Notice when you avoid challenges or give up quickly. These thoughts limit your potential and trap you in a comfort zone. But here’s a catch: some fixed mindset thoughts can serve as protective signals. They tell you when something feels too risky or overwhelming. Instead of completely shutting these feelings down, challenge them. Ask yourself, “Is this really true, or am I just scared to try?”

Embrace challenges as opportunities. This is key. Seeing challenges as invitations to grow flips how you experience difficulties. Instead of shutting down or quitting, you use them to stretch your limits. “But I hate failing,” you might say. Everyone hates it. But failure is necessary if you want to improve. Think of it like exercise: your muscles get stronger when you push them, not when you avoid strain. Failure is the mental strain that builds resilience and skill. When you face obstacles, remind yourself, “I don’t know how to do this yet.” That single word, “yet,” is powerful. It opens space for learning.

A mistake many make is to focus on the outcome, whether they succeeded or failed, and base their self-worth on it. A growth mindset teaches you to praise your effort, strategies, and progress, not just natural talent or end results. You can’t control your starting point or natural gifts. You can control your actions. Recognise small wins along the way. Celebrate grinding through tough stuff, not just hitting the final goal.

Practice self-reflection and patience. Developing a growth mindset is a process. You will slip back into old thinking sometimes. That’s normal. Be patient with yourself. Reflect on your reactions to challenges and failure. Write down what you learn daily or weekly. Recognise what worked, what didn’t, and how you felt. This creates a feedback loop that helps your mindset grow.

Learn from others and seek feedback. One way to accelerate growth is by talking to people who embody a growth mindset. Ask them how they handle failure or tough times. Learn from their stories and advice. Also, get feedback from people you trust. View feedback not as criticism but as a tool to improve. It’s hard sometimes, but growth demands honesty.

Cultivate curiosity and keep learning. Curiosity breeds growth. Stay open to new experiences and knowledge. Whether it’s a new skill, hobby, or perspective, learning keeps your brain adaptable. If you see your intelligence or abilities as static, you’ll miss chances to expand. A curious mindset invites you to explore instead of shutting doors.

Build resilience and grit. Challenges aren’t just obstacles; they are tests of resilience. A growth mindset helps you develop grit; persistent effort despite setbacks. When you face a difficult project or life event, resilience is what keeps you pushing forward rather than giving up.

Embrace your mental health and well-being. Mindset affects your mental health. A growth mindset reduces fear of failure and shame. It fosters hope and motivation. When you believe you can grow, setbacks feel less like threats and more like temporary hurdles. But this doesn’t mean ignoring emotions or pretending everything is fine. Recognise your feelings about challenges and use them to fuel your motivation, not paralyse you.

Practical steps to start developing a growth mindset

  • Identify your mindset. Notice your self-talk when facing challenges.
  • Reframe “I can’t” as “I can’t yet.
  • Set small, realistic goals and celebrate effort and progress.
  • Write down learnings and reflections.
  • Seek feedback and learn from mentors or peers.
  • Surround yourself with people who encourage growth.
  • Take risks and get comfortable with discomfort.
  • Be patient; growth is a process, not instant.

Common misconceptions to challenge

  1. A growth mindset means you will always succeed. No. It means you will keep trying and learning despite failure.
  2. You’re either born with it or not. Wrong. The brain’s neuroplasticity proves you can develop your abilities.
  3. Praise talent only. This can promote a fixed mindset. Instead, praise effort and learning.
    Growth is easy if you want it. Growth often requires hard work and persistence.

Why does embracing challenges matter more than comfort? Comfort zones feel safe, but don’t foster growth. The biggest personal breakthroughs come from discomfort. In adulting, challenges prepare you for life’s unpredictability. Embracing challenges can help you build confidence, resilience, and adaptability. Avoiding challenges may feel easier, but it doesn’t prepare you for real-world problems.

Developing a growth mindset is essential for navigating the ups and downs of adulthood. It’s not a quick fix but a lifelong practice of viewing challenges as opportunities and failures as lessons. With patience, reflection, and effort, you can build resilience and thrive in your university years and early career. Remember: adulting is tough. A growth mindset is how you get tougher.