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Friday, December 19, 2025

🌿Can Someone Ruin Your Day 🌿


Have you ever gone to a grocery shop, taken a bus, or spoken to an auto driver only to be greeted with unexpected rudeness?

Or your normal day suddenly disturbed because someone behaved rudely?

Just a sharp tone. A careless attitude.

And suddenly, your mood is spoiled

Does this happen to you?

You walk away feeling heavy and someone around you says, “You are too sensitive.”

"Why are you overreacting. Ignore thier behaviour?”

And slowly, a question starts forming inside you: Am I weak? Am I broken?

The words ‘sensitive’ and ‘don’t overreact’ are often misused. 

Being sensitive does not mean you are fragile or emotionally unstable. It means you are more empathic.

Carefree people often say, ‘If someone is rude, they have a psychological problem. It’s their issue, so ignore it and move on.’

But those words don’t really console you.

Psychologically speaking, when something feels rude or disrespectful, your nervous system reacts. Not because you are weak but because your inner values are deeply rooted in kindness, respect, and empathy. When those values are violated, your body responds before logic steps in.

You feel their tone, the energy, the intention behind them.

So no you are not broken. You are deeply human.

Does this mean you should become thick-skinned and stop caring?

Absolutely not.

Instead, ground yourself.

When something like this happens, touch something real.

A tree. A book. Your phone. Your bag.

Feel its texture. Come back to the present moment.

Tell yourself gently: “This is not mine to carry" and stretch a big smile, because kindness costs nothing, and peace is always worth protecting.

Your sensitivity is not a weakness. It’s your strength.

Tuesday, November 25, 2025

The Day I Lost My Cool


Some mornings start with Kaavaalaa song Vibe with the bgm of Mani Ratnam's Kannathil Muthamittal.

That’s exactly how our day began. My son and I were happily getting down the stairs and then one tiny moment changed everything.

A mistake happened.

Actually… not one. Two.

And yes, both were from my son’s side which has a zero-tolerance.

I lost my patience.

I did something I usually never do.

I slapped him. YES!

The moment my hand touched him, I knew it wasn’t just his mistake anymore, it became my (our) moment of heartbreak.

Before I could take a breath to fix it, to hold him, to say “sorry” or “come here,” the school bus arrived like the worst timed guest.

No time to talk.

No time to hug.

No time to repair.

He got in with a sad face.

We both stood there helpless.

And that… that was the worst feeling a parent can experience.

The Whole Day Felt Heavy

I carried the guilt like a stone in my chest.

I cried more times than I can admit.

In the office, at my desk, even while drinking coffee, I kept replaying that moment.

I kept asking myself: If I, as a grown-up with 30+ years of experience in controlling myself, broke down so easily,  How was my little boy handling it at school?

Was he sad? Confused? Angry?

Was he blaming himself? Or me?

That thought shattered me all over again.

The Guilt Spiral Every Parent Knows

We parents don’t just feel guilty.

We feel three layers of it:

Guilt

More guilt

And extra guilt with interest

I tried to distract myself, didn’t work.

I then ordered his favourite toy on BlinkIt, so he would feel excited after school. And while returning from office, I picked up all the snacks for him.

We finally patched things up… and just when I thought the storm had passed, he made another mistake. And boom !!! the loop continues. 😉

But, What I Learned something today. Parenting is not a straight line.

It’s a messy, emotional rollercoaster where both the parent and the child are learning how to love better.

  1. Kids make mistakes. Parents do too. It’s normal. Human. Natural. (Even AI does mistake)
  2. Losing control doesn’t make you a bad parent. It makes you a parent who needs a breath, not punishment.
  3. Kids forgive faster than we forgive ourselves. Their hearts don’t hold grudges the way ours do.
  4. The repair matters more than the mistake. What you say after the anger matters more than what caused the anger.

To Every Parent Reading This

If you have ever lost your cool…

If you have ever shouted…

If you have ever reacted too fast…

You are not alone.

And your child doesn’t need a perfect parent.

They just need a parent who comes back, hugs them tight, and tries again.

Parenting is not about never making mistakes

It’s about repair, connection, and growing together.