Festivals of India: Champakulam Boat Race

There are festivals you attend and festivals you enter, whether you intend to or not. The Champakulam Boat Race belongs firmly to the second category. Even before the first boat touches water, there is a sense of alignment taking place. People gather not around a stage, but along a river. They wait without distraction. They look in the same direction. Something older than scheduling takes over.

Held every year on the Pamba River near Champakulam, the race is often described as the oldest of Kerala’s snake boat races. That description is accurate but incomplete. The Champakulam Boat Race is not simply old. It is dense with meaning, habit, contradiction, and quiet negotiation. It is religious without being preachy, competitive without being slick, and traditional without being frozen in time.

The 2026 edition matters not because it promises spectacle on a grander scale, but because it unfolds in a Kerala that has changed in subtle but irreversible ways. Migration, climate anxiety, digital consumption, and shifting ideas of labour and gender all sit just beneath the surface of the river. The race continues, but it does not continue untouched.

The origins of the race are traced to a journey by Lord Krishna to the Sree Krishna Temple at Ambalappuzha. According to tradition, villagers raced their boats to welcome him, beginning a custom that would eventually turn into an annual event. This story is retold every year, often briefly, sometimes mechanically.

What is interesting in 2026 is not whether people believe the story literally, but how belief functions now. For many participants and observers, Krishna is not a presence expected to intervene. He is a reference point. The story gives the race a moral and temporal anchor, situating it within the Malayalam month of Chingam and within a ritual calendar that links water, harvest, and gratitude.

This distinction matters. Faith here is not spectacle. It is scaffolding. It holds the event steady without demanding uniform devotion. People row for different reasons: duty, pride, community loyalty, and memory. The religious narrative accommodates this plurality without insisting on explanation. In a time when religious festivals are often either aggressively commercialised or loudly politicised, Champakulam’s restraint feels deliberate. The sacred is present, but it does not shout.

The Pamba River is not a neutral backdrop. It is central to the race’s meaning and increasingly central to its unease. Kerala’s recent history of floods has altered how people relate to water. Rivers are no longer taken for granted. They are monitored, discussed, and worried over.

In 2026, this awareness sits quietly alongside celebration. The race is still held during the monsoon season, still shaped by the rhythms of rain and current. But the river is no longer simply a giver. It is fragile. It requires care. The race, intentionally or not, becomes a reminder of dependence.

This is one of the less spoken about aspects of the event. Environmental consciousness is not announced from loudspeakers, yet it is present in the way locals speak about water levels, safety, and timing. Tradition here is not blind to consequence. It absorbs it slowly.

The chundan vallams, the long snake boats that define the race, look unchanged from a distance. Their length, symmetry, and narrowness give them an almost mythical quality. Up close, they reveal a different story. Maintaining these boats in 2026 requires money, logistics and modern coordination. Sponsorships, diaspora funding, local business patronage and committee structures play a larger role than romantic accounts usually admit. This does not diminish the race. It explains its survival.

There is a persistent idea that tradition must remain economically untouched to remain authentic. Champakulam quietly disproves this. The form stays traditional. The systems supporting it evolve. What matters is not purity, but continuity. The boats are ancient in design, contemporary in upkeep. Both realities coexist without apology.

Each boat carries over a hundred rowers. The physical demand is immense, but what stands out more than strength is synchronisation. The race does not reward individual excellence. It punishes it. One person out of rhythm affects everyone. This produces a specific public masculinity, one that values restraint over bravado and coordination over dominance. In a culture increasingly shaped by individual visibility, this collective anonymity feels almost countercultural.

At the same time, the race remains overwhelmingly male. This is usually explained through tradition and physicality, but the explanation is incomplete. Women have always been present, just not on the boats. They organise, cook, fundraise, manage logistics, train younger participants, and preserve songs and stories. Their absence from the river is not a result of non-participation but of selective tradition.

In 2026, this selective flexibility is more noticeable. Younger observers, especially women, question why some traditions adapt easily while others are declared non-negotiable. The article does not need to resolve this tension. It needs to acknowledge it honestly. Champakulam’s strength lies in its ability to hold contradiction without collapsing.

Photographs of the race focus on boats slicing through water. Videos chase the finish line. Neither captures the heart of the experience. The race is built on sound. The vanchipattu, the rhythmic boat songs, regulate movement. Drumbeats set the pace. Calls ripple across the river. The crowd’s reaction rises and falls like breath.

In 2026, amplified sound systems sit uneasily alongside this organic acoustics, especially near designated viewing areas. The enhancement is understandable, but it risks flattening something that depends on nuance. The original soundscape does not need to be louder. It needs to remain layered. If the race ever loses its auditory complexity, it will lose more than atmosphere. It will lose its internal discipline.

Tourism is no longer peripheral. Curated viewpoints, travel packages, and social media coverage are part of the Champakulam experience in 2026. This creates friction but also funding. The issue is not whether visitors should be present. They already are. The real question is who sets the tempo. So far, Champakulam has resisted rearranging itself for convenience. The race still follows local timing. It still assumes patience. It does not apologise for discomfort or crowds. This refusal to become overly consumable is perhaps its quietest strength. Visitors are welcome, but not centred. The river does not bend to itineraries.

The Champakulam Boat Race in 2026 does not declare itself relevant. It simply continues, carrying with it layers of belief, labour, inequality, pride, and adaptation. It excludes and includes. It relies on unpaid effort. It resists simplification. And yet, it offers something increasingly rare: a collective act that cannot be digitised, outsourced or condensed into a highlight reel. You have to wait for it. You have to listen. You have to share space.

Perhaps that is why it endures. Not because it has perfected balance, but because it refuses closure. Each year, the race returns to the same river and asks the same question in slightly altered conditions: how do you move forward without losing your rhythm?

Champakulam does not answer this cleanly. It does something harder. It keeps rowing.

In My Hands Today…

The Song of the Cell: An Exploration of Medicine and the New Human – Siddhartha Mukherjee

Mukherjee begins this magnificent story in the late 1600s, when a distinguished English polymath, Robert Hooke, and an eccentric Dutch cloth-merchant, Antonie van Leeuwenhoek looked down their handmade microscopes. What they saw introduced a radical concept that swept through biology and medicine, touching virtually every aspect of the two sciences, and altering both forever. It was the fact that complex living organisms are assemblages of tiny, self-contained, self-regulating units. Our organs, our physiology, our selves—hearts, blood, brains—are built from these compartments. Hooke christened them “ cells. ”

The discovery of cells—and the reframing of the human body as a cellular ecosystem—announced the birth of a new kind of medicine based on the therapeutic manipulations of cells. A hip fracture, a cardiac arrest, Alzheimer’s dementia, AIDS, pneumonia, lung cancer, kidney failure, arthritis, COVID pneumonia—all could be reconceived as the results of cells, or systems of cells, functioning abnormally. And all could be perceived as loci of cellular therapies.

Filled with writing so vivid, lucid, and suspenseful that complex science becomes thrilling, The Song of the Cell tells the story of how scientists discovered cells, began to understand them, and are now using that knowledge to create new humans. Told in six parts, and laced with Mukherjee’s own experience as a researcher, a doctor, and a prolific reader, The Song of the Cell is both panoramic and intimate—a masterpiece on what it means to be human.

Listening to the Clock Within: A Clear-Eyed Look at Sleep Chronotypes

Sleep is often spoken about in absolutes. Eight hours. Early nights. No screens. Fixed routines. These rules circulate with the confidence of settled truth, yet they rarely account for the inconvenient reality that people are not built on identical internal clocks. What feels restorative for one person can feel punishing for another, even when both are following the same advice with equal sincerity.

Sleep chronotypes offer a more precise language for this mismatch. They describe the timing of our internal rhythms rather than the quantity of our sleep. They explain why some people think clearly at dawn while others only warm up after sunset, and why discipline alone cannot flatten these differences without cost.

This article does not argue for radical lifestyle redesign, nor does it romanticise any chronotype. Instead, it asks what the science reasonably supports, where popular narratives overreach, and how a better understanding of chronotypes can reduce friction between biological reality and daily expectation. The aim is not optimisation, but alignment.

What is a Chronotype?
A chronotype reflects how an individual’s circadian rhythm aligns with the 24-hour day. Circadian rhythms are internally generated cycles that regulate sleep and wakefulness, hormone release, body temperature, appetite, and aspects of mood and cognition. They are influenced by genetics, light exposure, age, and environment.

Chronotype is about timing, not virtue. It does not measure willpower, ambition, or seriousness. It does not predict success or failure. Nor does it remain fixed across a lifetime. Adolescents tend to shift later, older adults earlier. Illness, caregiving, travel, and work schedules can temporarily distort natural patterns.

What tends to remain stable is preference. Given freedom from alarms and obligations, most people gravitate back towards a familiar rhythm. That pull is the chronotype at work.

The persistent error is assuming that strong habits can permanently override this pull. Habits can compensate, sometimes impressively, but compensation is not the same as alignment. Over time, the body usually keeps score.

The Common Chronotypes
Popular writing often groups chronotypes into animal categories. These labels are simplifications, but they are useful as long as they are held lightly.

Morning Types
Morning-leaning individuals tend to wake easily, often before alarms. Mental clarity appears early, sometimes sharply. Energy declines steadily across the day, with evenings feeling quieter and less cognitively rewarding. Research often links morning preference with conscientiousness and emotional stability. This association is real but easily misinterpreted. When institutions reward early alertness, morning-oriented people receive positive feedback sooner and more consistently. Behaviour that is socially reinforced tends to consolidate. Morning types can underestimate the cost of this advantage. Because their rhythm aligns with dominant schedules, fatigue is often interpreted as a personal lapse rather than a biological limit. There is also a tendency to assume universality, to mistake one’s own rhythm for a reasonable baseline.

Evening Types
Evening-leaning individuals experience delayed alertness. Mornings are slow, sometimes cognitively dull, even after adequate sleep. Focus, creativity, and emotional fluency often peak later in the day. Later chronotypes are frequently associated with openness to experience and creative thinking. Again, correlation needs care. When peak functioning occurs outside standard hours, people often work alone or against the grain, which shapes thinking style and self-reliance. The structural disadvantage faced by evening types is well documented. Early school start times and fixed office hours create chronic sleep debt. This debt is often mistaken for poor self-management rather than misalignment. Over time, it can affect mood, metabolic health, and risk-taking behaviour, not because of personality, but because of sustained circadian strain.

Intermediate Types
Most people fall between the extremes. Their rhythms broadly track daylight, with alertness rising in the morning, peaking around midday, and declining in the evening. This apparent normality can obscure vulnerability. Because intermediate types can usually cope, they are less likely to interrogate sleep quality until something breaks. Their challenge is not misalignment but neglect.

Flexible or Variable Patterns
Some individuals show genuine adaptability. Their energy responds strongly to routine, light exposure, and context. Flexibility can be protective, but it can also mask gradual depletion. When internal signals are muted, external demands tend to fill the space.

Chronotype and Personality
Chronotypes do not create personality traits in isolation. They shape when traits are expressed and how they are perceived.

A person whose peak cognitive window occurs at 6 am is likely to appear decisive and organised in conventional settings. Another whose clarity emerges at 9 pm may appear disengaged in the morning and insightful in the evening. The same individual, placed in different temporal conditions, can be read in radically different ways.

Chronotype shapes exposure. Exposure shapes behaviour. Behaviour, repeated under reinforcement or constraint, begins to look like personality. This is not determinism, but adaptation.

The danger lies at both extremes. On one side is moral judgment, reading punctuality or lateness as character. On the other is identity rigidity, using chronotype as a fixed label that limits experimentation. Chronotype explains tendencies. It does not absolve effort, nor does it justify inflexibility.

Identifying your Chronotype without reducing it to a Quiz Result
Formal questionnaires exist, but careful observation is often more revealing. The most reliable approach begins with removing constraints rather than adding rules. Over a period of ten to fourteen days, prioritise sleep duration over sleep timing where possible. Go to bed when genuine sleepiness appears. Wake without an alarm if circumstances allow.

Track three elements daily:

  • Natural wake time
  • Periods of mental clarity and cognitive ease
  • Points of sharp or persistent fatigue

Patterns tend to surface quickly when the body is not being forced into compliance. The hours that consistently resist adjustment often reveal more than those that cooperate. It is important to distinguish chronotype from exhaustion. Chronic sleep deprivation flattens rhythms and distorts perception. Rest first, observe second. Context matters. Caregivers, shift workers, and those managing illness may be operating far from their natural rhythm. Chronotype still exists, but it may be partially obscured by necessity.

Working with Chronotype without turning it into another Discipline
The value of understanding chronotype lies in reducing unnecessary friction, not in perfect alignment. Few people can design their lives around sleep. Most can make small, strategic adjustments.

Morning-Leaning Patterns
Early clarity can be protected by reserving cognitively demanding work for the first part of the day. This does not require starting work at dawn. It requires recognising when the mind is most responsive. Evening fatigue should be interpreted as information, not failure. Consistently pushing past it often erodes the very clarity that mornings provide. Short afternoon rest periods, when culturally acceptable, can restore a narrow secondary window of alertness without undermining night sleep, provided they remain brief and early.

Evening-Leaning Patterns
For later chronotypes, sleep length matters more than sleep timing. A well-rested late sleeper is cognitively different from a sleep-deprived early riser. Where schedules are fixed, mornings can be reframed. Low-stakes tasks, movement, or administrative work can act as a warm-up rather than proof of inefficiency. High-stakes or creative work, when possible, can be batched into later windows instead of being spread thinly across the day. Stimulants deserve scrutiny. They can mask misalignment without correcting it, prolonging strain.

Intermediate and Flexible Patterns
Regularity is protective. Small daily shifts accumulate quietly. Seasonal changes often affect energy more than expected. Adjusting consciously to daylight changes tends to be gentler than reacting after fatigue sets in. Assumed resilience should be questioned periodically. Ease is not immunity.

Common Misuses of Chronotype Thinking
One misuse is avoidance. Biology explains limits, but it does not remove responsibility. Growth often requires temporary discomfort. Another is overcorrection. Forcing alignment where it creates conflict can be as damaging as ignoring chronotype entirely.

There is also a social dimension rarely addressed. The ability to adjust work hours, protect sleep, or nap assumes a degree of autonomy. Advice that ignores these risks sounds abstract. The most meaningful implication of chronotype research may not be personal optimisation, but structural empathy in how institutions are designed.

What Chronotypes Ask Us to Notice
Chronotypes do not ask for reverence. They ask for acknowledgement. They remind us that bodies are patterned, not programmable. That uniform schedules reward some rhythms while taxing others. That much of what we label as discipline or laziness is often timing.

The more useful question is not which chronotype one belongs to, but where daily life demands constant override, and whether that cost is being honestly counted. Sleep is not a tool for productivity. It is a biological negotiation. Paying attention to it is not indulgence. It is simply accurate.

2026 Week 25 Update

Today is Father’s Day, a time to honour the fathers and father figures who have shaped our lives through their guidance, sacrifice, and unwavering support. Often, their love is expressed not through grand declarations but through countless everyday acts of care, responsibility, and presence. Whether they are still with us or live on in our memories, Father’s Day offers an opportunity to pause, reflect, and appreciate the role they have played in helping us become who we are. Sometimes the greatest gift we can give is simply our gratitude, our time, and the acknowledgement that their efforts mattered more than they may ever know. To all the fathers and father figures reading this, here’s wishing you a very happy Father’s Day!

This week’s quote is by American motivational author and founder of Hay House Publishing, Louise Hay, best known for her bestselling book You Can Heal Your Life, which explored the connection between thoughts, beliefs, and well-being. The quote reflects a powerful philosophy of openness, trust, and active participation in life. At its heart, the quote suggests that our attitude toward life influences what we experience. When we approach life with curiosity, optimism, and a willingness to engage, we often become more receptive to opportunities, relationships, and personal growth. Saying “yes to life” does not mean agreeing with everything that happens or pretending that difficulties do not exist. Rather, it means choosing not to close ourselves off because of fear, disappointment, or past setbacks. It is about meeting life with an open heart instead of a defensive one. When we say yes to learning, change, new experiences, and even uncertainty, we expand our world and allow new possibilities to enter.

The quote also highlights the connection between mindset and perception. Two people can encounter the same situation and experience it very differently. Someone who approaches life with openness is more likely to notice opportunities, solutions, and moments of joy. In contrast, someone who expects disappointment may overlook those same possibilities. In this sense, life often reflects back the energy and attention we bring to it. There is also a gentle reminder here about trust. Not everything will go according to plan, but saying yes to life means believing that even challenges can teach us something valuable. It is a commitment to participation rather than withdrawal.

In verse 4.40 of the Bhagavad Gita, the Gita is not sentimental about doubt. Unresolved, habitual doubt paralyses action and fractures stability. This is not a condemnation of inquiry. It is a warning against indecision rooted in fear. Discernment clarifies; doubt immobilises. Knowledge dispels hesitation. It does not amplify it. Clarity demands commitment.

This week I learned that rushing down a path that isn’t meant for you is futile. However, in stillness, we reconnect with what truly aligns with our soul. From that space, you can cultivate a sense of relaxed awareness. The best outcomes will always unfold in their own time. They cannot be forced or rushed. Rather than obsessing over what could be, use this waiting season to uncover hidden strengths. Embrace gratitude, and make space for the lessons that come along the way. You are always connected to the goodness of life.

This week felt like one of steady progress rather than dramatic breakthroughs. There were conversations to be had, ideas to refine, relationships to nurture, and plans gradually taking shape. Some days moved quickly, filled with activity and momentum, while others invited a slower pace and a chance to reflect. It was the kind of week that reminded me that meaningful progress often happens quietly, built through small actions repeated consistently rather than grand gestures. There was also a sense of looking ahead. Mid-year is approaching, and with it comes the natural urge to take stock of where we are, what is working, and what deserves more attention in the months to come. Not everything is settled, and not every effort has produced visible results yet, but there is value in trusting the process and continuing to show up. As the week draws to a close, perhaps the theme is appreciation: for progress that is unfolding, for relationships that sustain us, and for the people who have quietly helped guide us along the way.

In My Hands Today…

A Hidden History of the Tower of London: England’s Most Notorious Prisoners – John Paul Davis

Famed as the ultimate penalty for traitors, heretics and royalty alike, being sent to the Tower is known to have been experienced by no less than 8,000 unfortunate souls. Many of those who were imprisoned in the Tower never returned to civilization and those who did, often did so without their head!

It is hardly surprising that the Tower has earned itself a reputation among the most infamous buildings on the planet.

Beginning with the early tales surrounding its creation, this book investigates the private life of an English icon. Concentrating on the Tower’s developing role throughout the centuries, not in terms of its physical expansion into a site of unique architectural majesty or many purposes but through the eyes of those who experienced its darker side, it pieces together the, often seldom-told, human story and how the fates of many of those who stayed within its walls contributed to its lasting effect on England’s—and later the UK’s—destiny.

From ruthless traitors to unjustly killed Jesuits, vanished treasures to disappeared princes and jaded wives to star-crossed lovers, this book provides a raw and at times unsettling insight into its unsolved mysteries and the lot of its unfortunate victims, thus explaining how this once typical castle came to be the place we will always remember as THE TOWER.