Recipes: Guava Chutney

I had some green guavas in the fridge, but no one was eating them. I usually love guavas, but these had a lot of seeds, so I was not keen on eating them. So I was wondering if I could make them into a quick chutney? So I tried, and it was fantastic!

Guava chutney offers several health benefits thanks to its rich nutritional profile and the synergistic effect of herbs and spices that go into its preparation. Guavas are exceptionally high in vitamin C, which helps strengthen immune function and protect against infections. The dietary fibre in guava supports a healthy gut, aids in digestion, and promotes regular bowel movements, helping prevent constipation. The fibre also slows the absorption of sugar in the bloodstream, aiding blood sugar regulation, which is particularly valuable for people managing diabetes. Guava contains potassium that helps regulate blood pressure and dietary fibre, and antioxidants, all of which are beneficial for cardiovascular health. The chutney includes antioxidants like carotenoids, flavonoids, and vitamin C, which help neutralise free radicals, combat oxidative stress, and reduce inflammation in the body. The fibre content increases satiety, curbing appetite and aiding in weight management. Guavas provide vitamins A and E, which support vision, skin health, and cognitive function. Herbs like coriander and mint, and spices like ginger, cumin, and chilli add further phytonutrients for metabolic and anti-microbial benefits. Because this is a no-onion, no-garlic recipe, it is suitable for satvik diets, making it a healthful condiment during fasting or religious observances.

Guava Chutney

Ingredients:

  • 1 medium-sized firm guava, de-seeded, and chopped
  • 1 bunch fresh coriander leaves, washed and roughly chopped
  • ¼ cup mint leaves, optional
  • 3-4 green chillies, chopped. Add more or less to the desired spice level
  • ½ inch piece of ginger, roughly chopped
  • ½ tsp roasted cumin powder
  • ½ tsp black salt, or regular salt to taste
  • Lemon juice or lime juice to taste
  • 1 tsp sugar or jaggery (optional)
  • Water to blend the chutney

Method:

  • Prepare the guava by washing well, removing seeds, and chopping into pieces. There’s no need to peel the guava unless desired. Wash the coriander leaves, mint leaves (if using), green chillies, and ginger well and drain.
  • Combine chopped guava, coriander leaves, mint leaves, green chillies, ginger, cumin powder, black salt, lemon juice, and jaggery in a blender.
  • Blend all the ingredients together, adding water to reach a smooth, spoonable consistency.
  • Taste and adjust salt, lemon juice, or jaggery as needed.
  • Serve chilled or at room temperature as a dip or side with Indian snacks, chaats, or meals.

Notes:

  • Use firm, slightly unripe guava for the best texture and tang.
  • The mint is optional; omit if only coriander is desired for a pure green flavour.
  • This chutney is naturally vegan and gluten-free, making it ideal for festive or satvik meals.

This chutney is tasty and goes well with pretty much everything that you use the green coriander chutney with. It is also a wonderful addition to a sandwich.

In My Hands Today…

Diplomats & Admirals: From Failed Negotiations and Tragic Misjudgments to Powerful Leaders and Heroic Deeds, the Untold Story of the Pacific War from Pearl Harbor to Midway – Dale A. Jenkins

It’s November 1941. Japan and the US are teetering on a knife-edge as leaders on both sides of the Pacific strive to prevent war between them. But failed diplomacy, foiled negotiations, and possible duplicity in the Roosevelt administration thwarted their attempts.

Drawing on now-declassified original documents, Diplomats & Admirals reveals the inside story of one fateful year, including:

  • How the hidden agendas of powerful civilian and military leaders pushed the two nations toward war
  • The miscommunications, misjudgments, and blunders that doomed efforts at peace
  • China’s role in the US ultimatum that triggered the attack on Pearl Harbor
  • Why the carrier-to-carrier showdown at Coral Sea proved a fatal mistake for Japan
  • How courageous US navy pilots snatched victory from defeat at the Battle of Midway

The defining events of WWII could have ended very differently. Combining perspectives from both military and civilian leaders, Diplomats & Admirals uncovers new insights into the Pacific naval battles that shaped the world—and the men behind them.

The Domestic Divide and the Birth Rate Question

Every few years, the same anxiety resurfaces. Fertility rates are falling. People are marrying later. Women are having fewer children, or none at all. Governments commission reports. Economists debate incentives. Newspapers run op-eds heavy with concern and light on imagination. And then, almost as an aside, a finding appears that feels too small to carry such weight. When men do more unpaid work at home, fertility rates tend to rise. Not intentions. Not aspirations. Actual births.

This is often framed as an interesting correlation, a sociological curiosity. But it should unsettle us far more than it does. Because if this link holds, even partially, it suggests that declining fertility is not simply about money, housing, or childcare costs. It is about how life feels inside a home. Who is stretched thin. Who carries the invisible load? Who gets to remain a person once parenting enters the picture? And perhaps most confronting of all, it suggests that fertility is not falling because people dislike children, but because they dislike the conditions under which children are raised.

The quiet dishonesty of the word “help”
Language matters here because it exposes the problem before the data ever does. We often say men “help” around the house. They help with the cooking. Help with the kids. Help when asked. Help when reminded. Help when it fits around their real responsibilities. But help implies that the work belongs to someone else. You help a neighbour move house. You help a friend during a rough patch. You help with something that is not fundamentally yours.

A home, however, is not a favour. It is a shared responsibility. Or at least, it should be. In many patriarchal societies, including the ones I grew up observing closely in India, the contradiction is sharper still. The house is culturally and often legally the man’s. His name is on the deed. His family name defines the household. And yet the labour of maintaining that house, physically and emotionally, is treated as women’s work. Expected. Endless. Largely unacknowledged. So when a man washes dishes or manages bedtime, it is applauded as a sign of progress. When a woman does the same, it disappears into the background noise of daily life.

This imbalance persists even with education or professional success. I have seen highly qualified women, including doctors, come home from demanding jobs and immediately step into a second shift that includes cooking, caregiving, emotional management, and the care of ageing in-laws. Their husbands, meanwhile, move through domestic life with remarkable lightness, as if the household runs on autopilot. The assumption that education alone dismantles patriarchy collapses very quickly at the kitchen sink.

Why does housework have anything to do with fertility
At first glance, the link between housework and fertility sounds almost absurd. Surely people do not decide to have children based on who loads the washing machine. But that is not the decision being made. The real question couples are asking, often without articulating it, is this: What will my life look like if we have another child?

Not the milestone photos. Not the well-meaning congratulations. The daily reality. Who will wake up at night? Who will remember school forms and vaccination schedules? Who will coordinate childcare? Who will absorb the stress when work deadlines collide with sick days and family obligations?

In households where domestic and caregiving labour is shared more equally, the answer to that question looks difficult but manageable. In households where one partner, usually the woman, is already operating at capacity, another child feels less like joy and more like self-erasure.

This is where the uncomfortable truth needs to be stated plainly. Women will not have more children if having children means losing themselves. Loss of self is not always dramatic. It is cumulative. The steady disappearance of rest. The constant mental scanning of needs. The knowledge that someone else’s comfort depends on your vigilance. If men’s fuller participation at home changes fertility outcomes, it is not because housework is romantic. It is because shared responsibility makes life feel survivable.

The invisible work that shapes everything
One of the most misleading moves in conversations about domestic labour is focusing only on visible chores. Who cooks. Who cleans. Who does school drop-offs. These matter, but they are only the surface.

The heavier burden is cognitive. Knowing what needs to be done before it becomes urgent. Remembering preferences, schedules, social obligations, and emotional fault lines. Anticipating problems before they become crises. Holding the household together not through action, but through attention. Many men participate in chores and still leave this mental load untouched. They wait to be told. They complete tasks without owning outcomes. They perform competence without carrying responsibility.

From the outside, the household looks balanced. From the inside, one person is still running the system. This distinction matters deeply for fertility. Because you can outsource cleaning. You can hire help. You cannot outsource the constant low-level vigilance that drains people over time. When that vigilance rests primarily on women, the prospect of another child feels less like expansion and more like collapse.

Desire, resentment, and the parts we rarely say out loud
There is another layer people are often reluctant to acknowledge. Unequal domestic labour reshapes attraction. Resentment does not create intimacy. Exhaustion does not invite closeness. Feeling like someone’s caretaker does not nourish desire.

When men step fully into domestic responsibility, not as a performance but as ownership, it shifts how women experience the relationship. Not as a manager supervising tasks, but as a partner sharing the weight. This is not about rewarding men with affection for doing basic adult work. That framing trivialises the issue and misses the point. The shift is psychological. It is about no longer being alone inside a shared life. Fertility does not increase because chores are seductive. It increases because equality stabilises relationships.

Where the argument needs discipline
It is important not to overclaim. Some of the most gender-equal societies in the world still have low fertility rates. This tells us immediately that domestic equality alone does not raise fertility. It is one part of a larger system. Time matters. Money matters. Housing matters. Work culture matters.

In Singapore, long working hours collide brutally with family life. The expectation of constant availability leaves little room for caregiving, especially for men. In India, childcare is often informal and heavily reliant on women’s unpaid labour, reinforced by extended family structures that frequently increase, rather than reduce, women’s responsibilities. In both contexts, involved fatherhood is praised in theory and penalised in practice.

If your workplace quietly punishes men for leaving early to care for children, do not act surprised when women decide not to have more children. If your culture celebrates fatherhood rhetorically but undermines it structurally, fertility statistics will reflect that contradiction.

Policy, performance, and what societies actually reward
Governments tend to favour solutions that do not require cultural change. Financial incentives. Tax benefits. One-off bonuses. These help at the margins, but they do not alter the daily texture of life. They do not redistribute time, energy, or responsibility.

Parental leave for fathers is a good example. On paper, it signals progress. In reality, many men take little or none of it, not because they do not care, but because workplaces subtly discourage it. Until caregiving is normalised for men, rather than treated as exceptional or optional, policy will remain performative. Fertility is shaped by what societies reward in practice, not by what they claim to value in speeches.

The harder truths we should not avoid
Any honest conversation about fertility must make space for complexity. Not everyone who wants children can have them. Fertility discussions can be painful. They can reopen grief. This reality should not be used to silence discussion, but it should temper it with care.

It is also true that some women continue to have children in deeply unequal setups. Their choices are shaped by love, hope, culture, and constraint. Acknowledging this does not undermine the argument. It reminds us that people adapt to systems even when those systems are unfair.

And yes, there are men who genuinely want to do more and feel trapped by work expectations or cultural norms. Structural change matters precisely because individual goodwill is not enough.

Responsibility, plainly stated
If declining fertility is treated as a public problem, then domestic labour is a public issue. Not a private quirk of individual marriages. Not a lifestyle choice to be negotiated quietly behind closed doors. Men need to do more unpaid work at home because they are adults who live there. Not because it boosts birth rates. Not because it earns praise. Because fairness is the baseline, not the reward. Housework should not be gendered. Caregiving should not be exceptional. Mental load should not default to one person simply because she has always carried it. And societies that refuse to redistribute care should stop demanding growth from the very people they exhaust.

For couples navigating this in real time
For those living this tension personally, the work does not begin with perfection. It begins with ownership. Who notices when things fall apart. Who plans ahead. Who absorbs anxiety. Who carries responsibility even when no one is watching.

Rebalancing is not about doing more tasks. It is about holding responsibility differently. About moving from “tell me what to do” to “this is mine to manage”. These conversations are rarely comfortable. But neither is burnout. And pretending otherwise only postpones the reckoning.

A mirror, not a crisis
Fertility decline is often framed as a crisis to be solved. It may be more honest to see it as a mirror. A reflection of how societies organise work, care, and value. A signal of what people are willing, and unwilling, to give up. When men step fully into domestic life, fertility sometimes rises not because babies are the goal, but because life feels possible again. And if that possibility depends on equality, then the question is not why fertility is falling.

The question is why we are still surprised.

2026 Week 23 Update

This quote by the author of one of my favourite books, “The God of Small Things,” Arundhati Roy is a powerful expression of hope in times of uncertainty. At first glance, it may seem poetic and abstract, but at its heart lies a profound belief that change is possible, even when the evidence is not yet visible. Roy personifies the future as a living presence, describing a better world as “she” — something already emerging, not merely imagined. The quote suggests that progress often happens quietly, beneath the surface of headlines and daily frustrations. While it may seem that injustice, conflict, and division dominate the world, there are also countless unseen acts of kindness, courage, creativity, and resistance taking place every day. These are the early signs of that “other world” making its way into existence.

The phrase “On a quiet day, I can hear her breathing” is especially striking. It implies that hope is easiest to detect when we step back from the noise and pay attention. Change rarely arrives all at once. It grows gradually through individuals, communities, and ideas that challenge the status quo. The future begins long before it becomes obvious. The quote is also a reminder against cynicism. It acknowledges that the world is imperfect but refuses to accept that things must remain that way. Hope, in Roy’s view, is not passive optimism. It is the conviction that human beings can imagine and create something better.

The first few days of June have felt less like a dramatic new beginning and more like a continuation of several stories already in motion. There has been work to advance, conversations to follow up on, plans to refine, and opportunities that are still taking shape rather than fully revealing themselves. Much of the week has been spent balancing the practical demands of the present with hopes for the future. There has also been a noticeable thread of transition running through these days. Some long-term decisions have moved closer to completion, bringing a sense of satisfaction and anticipation. At the same time, other areas remain in that familiar space between effort and outcome, where patience is required because the next chapter has not yet fully unfolded. Family life has continued its quiet evolution too. The people closest to you are increasingly living their own lives, pursuing their own paths and responsibilities, creating that mixture of pride, affection, and occasional nostalgia that accompanies changing seasons of life.

Professionally, there has been a recurring theme of building rather than harvesting. Much of the work has involved laying foundations, strengthening relationships, creating systems, and investing effort whose rewards may not be visible immediately. It has been a week that required faith in the process. Personally, there has been a growing awareness that 2026 is moving quickly. The first half of the year is nearly behind you. There is a sense of taking stock: What has worked? What needs adjusting? What deserves more attention during the months ahead?

Perhaps the best way to describe this week is that it has been about quiet momentum. Not spectacular breakthroughs. Not major crises. Just the steady accumulation of actions, decisions, and conversations that, taken together, are gradually shaping the rest of the year. And sometimes, those are the weeks that matter most, even if they don’t feel remarkable while you’re living them.

This week, in verse 4.38, we learn that knowledge in the Gita is not information; it is purification. It removes confusion, illusion, and misidentification. It clears the fog that makes the transient appear permanent. Clarity does not arrive through intensity. It arrives through steady discipline and time. Knowledge is not borrowed. It is realised. The month begins here, with the reminder that understanding transforms more deeply than emotion.

In this week’s motivation, uncertainty challenges the illusion of control we cling to. Yes, it’s uncomfortable, but within that discomfort lies the seeds of growth. These moments teach us how to navigate unease with intention and awareness. Though it may feel like this season of waiting is taking so much from you, it is actually equipping you with unshakeable strength that only grows with time. You’re building an arsenal of tools to navigate uncomfortable thoughts and emotions. You’re learning to better respond to unexpected situations.

That’s all I have for this week. Take care and keep smiling!

In My Hands Today…

Wireless Wars: China’s Dangerous Domination of 5G and How We’re Fighting Back – Jonathan Pelson

As the world rolls out transformational 5G services, it has become increasingly clear that China may be able to disrupt—or even access—the wireless networks that carry our medical, financial, and even military communications.

This insider story from a telecommunications veteran uncovers how we got into this mess—and how to change the outcome.

In Wireless Wars: China’s Dangerous Domination of 5G and How We’re Fighting Back, author Jon Pelson explains how America invented cellular technology, taught China how to make the gear, and then handed them the market. Pelson shares never-before-told stories from the executives and scientists who built the industry and describes how China undercut and destroyed competing equipment makers, freeing themselves to export their nation’s network gear—and their surveillance state. He also reveals China’s successful program to purchase the support of the world’s leading political, business, and military figures in their effort to control rival nations’ networks.

What’s more, Pelson draws on his lifelong experience in the telecommunications industry and remarkable access to the sector’s leaders to reveal how innovative companies can take on the Chinese threat and work with counterintelligence and cybersecurity experts to prevent China from closing the trap. He offers unparalleled insights into how 5G impacts businesses, national security and you. Finally, Wireless Wars proposes how America can use its own unique superpower to retake the lead from China.

This book is about more than just 5G wireless services, which enable self-driving cars, advanced telemedicine, and transformational industrial capabilities. It’s about the dangers of placing our most sensitive information into the hands of foreign companies who answer to the Chinese Communist Party. And it’s about the technology giant that China is using to project its power around the world; Huawei, a global super-company that has surged from a local vendor to a $120 billion-a-year behemoth in just a few years.

For anyone curious about the hottest issue at the intersection of technology and geopolitics, Wireless Wars offers an immersive crash course and an unforgettable read.