In My Hands Today…

Ô Jérusalem – Dominique Lapierre, Larry Collins

This book recounts, moment by moment, the process that gave birth to the state of Israel.

Collins & Lapierre weave a tapestry of shattered hopes, valor & fierce pride as the Arabs, Jews & British collide in their fight for control of Jerusalem.

O Jerusalem! meticulously recreates this historic struggle. It penetrates the battle from the inside, exploring each party’s interests, intentions & concessions as the city of their dreams teeters on the brink of destruction.

From the Jewish fighters & their heroic commanders to the Arab chieftain whose death in battle doomed his cause along with the Mufti of Jerusalem’s support for Hitler and the extermination of the Jews, but inspired a generation of Palestinians, O Jerusalem! tells the 3-dimensional story of this high-stakes, emotional conflict.

Hello 2026: Without Illusions, With Intent

I’m approaching 2026 differently. Not with a list of grand resolutions or a neatly packaged vision board. Not with the assumption that clarity must arrive before action. And definitely not with the belief that hope has to be loud to be real. If the past year taught me anything, it’s this: I don’t need certainty to move forward. I need honesty. I need room to adjust. I need a way of living and working that doesn’t require me to constantly negotiate my worth. So this isn’t a manifesto. It’s a quieter reckoning. A look at what I want more of, what I’m done carrying, and what kind of year I’m willing to build.

For a long time, I believed that the right role, the right organisation, the right external “yes” would bring alignment with it. That once the conditions were right, everything else would fall into place. 2026 is the year I stop outsourcing alignment. I want work that fits the shape of my life, not the other way around. Work that uses my experience without flattening it. Work that values judgment, context, and long thinking over constant visibility. This doesn’t mean lowering ambition. It means being precise about it. I’m no longer interested in roles that require me to fragment myself to fit in. Or in environments where sustainability is discussed but never practised. I want to build something that has coherence, even if it grows more slowly.

Progress used to mean movement that other people could see. Titles. Announcements. External markers that made sense on paper. In 2026, progress needs to feel different. It needs to feel like momentum without panic. Like effort without depletion. Like days that end with energy still intact. I want to measure progress by better questions, not louder answers. By decisions that feel grounded rather than reactive. By choosing depth over speed, even when speed is rewarded more visibly. This is not a rejection of growth. It’s a recalibration of pace.

One of my quiet hopes for 2026 is to spend more time practising my craft and less time explaining it. I want work that allows for thinking, shaping, and refining. Work where experience is trusted rather than constantly proven. Where contribution isn’t measured only by immediacy or volume. I’m drawn to roles and projects that sit at the intersection of strategy, storytelling, and stewardship. Where long-term thinking matters. Where care is not seen as a weakness. I don’t need everything I do to be public-facing. I don’t need applause. I need meaning.

Writing stays. Not as a side project squeezed into spare hours, but as a central way I make sense of the world. In 2026, I want to treat writing with more seriousness and less romanticism. That means showing up even when it’s unglamorous. Letting pieces take time. Allowing my voice to evolve without forcing it into trends. I want to write essays that ask better questions. Pieces that sit with ambiguity instead of rushing to resolve it. Work that feels lived-in rather than polished for effect. I don’t know exactly where this writing will land. And I’m making peace with that.

One of my most practical hopes for 2026 is stability. Not the kind that comes from locking myself into something that drains me, but the kind that allows me to breathe. To plan. To rest without guilt. I want income streams that are diversified but coherent. Work that respects my time and experience. Fewer compromises that feel like erosion. This is about dignity as much as security. I want to stop normalising anxiety as the price of ambition.

I am also entering 2026 with a deeper respect for my limits. Not as constraints to push against endlessly, but as information. I want days that include pauses. Weeks that don’t feel like endurance tests. A relationship with my body that is attentive rather than adversarial. Health is no longer a background concern. It’s part of the structure. So is rest.

Travel will remain important, but with a different intention. Not as a way to flee exhaustion, but as a way to expand perspective. To stay curious. To remember that there are many ways to live a good life. I want travel that allows for immersion rather than accumulation. Fewer places, more presence. Less documenting, more noticing.

In 2026, I want to invest more deeply in relationships that don’t require me to explain myself repeatedly. Where conversation can be quiet. Where presence matters more than productivity. Where I can show up as I am, not as who I’m supposed to be at that stage of life. This also means releasing relationships that are sustained only by obligation or history. That isn’t a loss. It’s honesty.

Perhaps the biggest shift I’m carrying into 2026 is this: I no longer believe in arrival. There is no final version of life where everything clicks and stays that way. There is only continued adjustment. Learning. Choosing again. This is oddly freeing. It means I don’t have to get everything right this year. I just have to stay awake.

I’m carrying forward patience, but not passivity. Discernment, not cynicism. Hope that is quieter, steadier, and less attached to spectacle. I’m carrying forward the knowledge that I can live well even when outcomes are unresolved.

So this is how I’m stepping into 2026. Not with fireworks, but with intention. Not with certainty, but with clarity about what no longer works. I don’t know exactly what the year will bring. And for once, that doesn’t feel like a failure of imagination. It feels like space. And space, I’ve learned, is where the most honest work begins. So watch this space as I navigate 2026 to become a better version of myself

In My Hands Today…

How the World Made the West: A 4,000 Year History – Josephine Quinn

In How the World Made the West, Josephine Quinn poses perhaps the most significant challenge ever to the “civilizational thinking” regarding the origins of Western culture—that is, the idea that civilizations arose separately and distinctly from one another. Rather, she locates the roots of the modern West in everything from the law codes of Babylon, Assyrian irrigation, and the Phoenician art of sail to Indian literature, Arabic scholarship, and the metalworking riders of the Steppe, to name just a few examples.

According to Quinn, reducing the backstory of the modern West to a narrative that focuses on Greece and Rome impoverishes our view of the past. This understanding of history would have made no sense to the ancient Greeks and Romans themselves, who understood and discussed their own connections to and borrowings from others. They consistently presented their own culture as the result of contact and exchange. Quinn builds on the writings they left behind with rich analyses of other ancient literary sources like the epic of Gilgamesh, holy texts, and newly discovered records revealing details of everyday life. A work of breathtaking scholarship, How the World Made the West also draws on the material culture of the times in art and artifacts as well as findings from the latest scientific advances in carbon dating and human genetics to thoroughly debunk the myth of the modern West as a self-made miracle.

In lively prose and with bracing clarity, as well as through vivid maps and color illustrations, How the World Made the West challenges the stories the West continues to tell about itself. It redefines our understanding of the Western self and civilization in the cosmopolitan world of today.

Goodbye 2025: A Year That Didn’t Ask for Permission

I thought this year would end neatly. With a sentence that closed the loop. A role that made sense of the effort. A clear signal that said, “This is where it was all leading.” That didn’t happen. And once the initial disappointment had settled, I realised something uncomfortable but useful. I had been holding the year hostage to one outcome. As if everything else only counted if that final note landed right. It didn’t. So here’s the honest version instead.

This was a year of motion, not resolution. Of showing up without guarantees. Of living fully while waiting and slowly learning that waiting can quietly take over your life if you let it. Much of this year sat in a strange in-between space. Not stuck, but not quite moving in the way I wanted. There were applications, interviews, and preparation that went deeper than usual. Hope that felt earned. And long stretches of silence. Waiting is deceptively draining. It looks passive, but it demands constant emotional regulation. You rehearse futures that may never arrive. You keep parts of yourself on pause. You tell yourself not to plan too far ahead, just in case. At some point, I noticed how much energy I was handing over to rooms I wasn’t in. Committees. Panels. Conversations about my future are happening without me. That realisation didn’t make the outcome easier. But it shifted something. It made me more protective of my present.

Europe was the high point of the year, without question. Not because it was perfect. But because it gave me distance from my own noise. This trip, with five of my sisters, people who have known me for decades, was the trip I didn’t know I needed. Something is clarifying about being away from the context that constantly defines you. No one knows your backstory. No one asks what you do in the shorthand ways that invite comparison. You are free to just exist. I walked a lot. Without tracking steps. Without destinations. I noticed how my mind slowed down when it wasn’t trying to optimise the day. Meals took longer. Thoughts had room to finish themselves. Travel, when it works, doesn’t distract you from real life. It reminds you of who you are when you’re not performing competence or ambition. Europe reminded me that I like slowness. That I pay attention. That I feel most myself when days are shaped by curiosity rather than urgency. That version of me isn’t exclusive to travel. She just gets crowded out at home.

Later in the year, I made a small trip to Bangalore to meet my parents. I spent the ten days chilling at home, being with them, taking them to doctor appointments, meeting family, and just spending more time with myself. While there, we found that my mum has cataracts in both eyes, one eye more severe than the other. So I will be taking a trip again in the new year to be a caregiver, along with my sister, and get both eyes operated on.

We ended the year with a family trip to the beautiful Cameron Highlands. This trip was also because S and I were celebrating a milestone anniversary. It was there that I went through both highs and lows. The trip was very relaxing, but on the day of our anniversary, I got the news that a position I was sure was my dream position in my dream organisation was not mine. It took me a couple of days to recover, but the mountains helped me realise that maybe this was not the dream I needed; it may have been the dream I wanted.

The Cameron Highlands had a gentleness, with mornings without rush and evenings without hurry. The kind of rest that doesn’t announce itself as recovery but leaves you steadier. It was also a reminder that life doesn’t pause for professional disappointment. Love continues. Family continues. Shared meals and ordinary conversations continue. That matters more than we admit when we’re busy chasing outcomes.

Professionally, this year forced a reckoning. I’ve always believed that the right role would bring a sense of arrival. That would quiet the internal questioning. That would validate the long, nonlinear path. This year challenged that belief. The disappointment wasn’t just about a no. It was about letting go of a future I had already lived in my head. And that takes time. I’ve had to sit with harder questions instead. What kind of work actually sustains me? How much flexibility am I willing to claim rather than apologise for? What does success look like when it isn’t tied to institutional approval? I don’t have tidy answers. But I’m no longer willing to trade alignment for legitimacy.

One thing I’m quietly proud of is that I kept writing. Not consistently. Not always confidently. But honestly. This year, writing became less about output and more about staying in conversation with myself. A way to think clearly when everything else felt provisional. I’m less interested now in metrics that don’t nourish me. Less tempted by external validation that fades quickly. More committed to depth, even when it’s slower. Words remain the place I return to when I need to make sense of things.

This year took certainty. It took a few carefully constructed narratives about timing and fairness. But it gave perspective. Distance from urgency. Proof that I can carry disappointment without letting it hollow me out. It gave me joy that had nothing to do with achievement. Long walks. Shared silence. Familiar places seen with new eyes. It reminded me that my life is larger than any single role.

I’m ending the year without the professional punctuation mark I wanted. But I’m ending it grounded. Still curious. Still willing to hope, just more carefully. This isn’t a victory lap. It’s a checkpoint. A pause to acknowledge the ground I’ve covered. And then, quietly, to keep going.

In My Hands Today…

The Tatas: How a Family Built a Business and a Nation – Girish Kuber

The Tatas is the story of one of India’s leading business families.

It starts in the nineteenth century with Nusserwanji Tata – a middle-class Parsi priest from the village of Navsari in Gujarat, and widely regarded as the Father of Indian Industry – and ends with Ratan Tata – chairman of the Tata Group until 2012.

But it is more than just a history of the industrial house; it is an inspiring account of India in the making. It chronicles how each generation of the family invested not only in the expansion of its own business interests but also in nation building.

For instance, few know that the first hydel project in the world was conceived and built by the Tatas in India. Nor that some radical labour concepts such as eight-hour work shifts were born in India, at the Tata mill in Nagpur.

The National Centre for the Performing Arts, the Tata Cancer Research Centre, the Tata Institute of Fundamental Research – the list about the Tatas’ contribution to India is a long one. A bestseller in Marathi when it was first published in 2015, this is the only book that tells the complete Tata story over two hundred years.