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Friday, July 10, 2026

Grade 1 or IIT? Every Parenting Survival Story


June has been a month full of pressure.

Pressure not because of my office work. Pressure because my son is in Grade 1 👊

Before you judge me as the parent who sits behind a child with a pile of books and forces him to study every evening, let me clarify something.

I consciously decided years ago that I would never turn my home into a second classroom.

My belief was simple.Until at least Grade 5, children should be children.

They should play outside. They should get dirty and make home dirty. They should climb walls, chase dogs and cats, ask silly questions and create memories that will stay with them forever. 

Whatever they learn in school should be enough.

That was my philosophy.

But, It's just a month since the school reopened, yet somehow my son has already completed his Unit 1 Formative Assessments in every subject. I am still trying to figure out which notebook belongs to which subject, and now Unit 2 assessments for all subjects are starting this week.

Suddenly, I find myself feeling pressured as a parent.

When I open a Maths chapter, it is no longer just a simple lesson on addition or a single concept. Every topic comes with multiple types of questions, and each question has several variations that require practice.

Then comes homework. Then comes revision. Then comes preparation for the next assessment.

Then comes another set of activities.

In between, every week introduces a new concept activity, project, or assignment that needs attention.

And somewhere in all of this, there is a six-year-old child who still wants to play.

As parents, we focus so much on helping our children succeed academically. But are we giving the same attention to protecting their mental and emotional well-being?

I am not blaming the curriculum, the teachers, or the school structure.

But I do wonder: When did we stop asking children, "Did you have fun today?" and start asking, "What homework do you have today?"

Study. Study. Study.

Again, I am not writing this to criticize schools.

Perhaps I feel this pressure more because I consciously chose not to turn my home into a classroom. I wanted my son to play freely every day, explore the world around him, and learn naturally without spending hours studying at home.

Now, I find myself questioning that decision.

Am I doing enough?

Should I be teaching more at home?

Or should childhood still be allowed to remain childhood?

I am writing this because I know thousands of parents feel exactly the same way. They want their children to succeed, but they also want them to be happy. 

They sit beside their children every evening, helping with homework and revision. And if you are a working parent? Well, congratulations! The moment you walk through the door, you are greeted with, "You don't spend enough time teaching your child!" Instant guilt delivered free of cost. 😄

June taught me something important.

The pressure is real. The overwhelm is real.

And as parents, we know we cannot simply ignore studies. We want our children to learn, grow, and build a strong foundation for the future.

And if you are a parent like me, someone who has consciously decided not to turn evening into a second classroom, I know it can feel uncomfortable.

There is always that little voice asking, "Am I doing right?"

Should I make him revise more?

Should I make him practice another worksheet?

Should I be spending more time teaching?

But I made a choice.

I chose to protect my child's evenings.

I chose outdoor play over extra worksheets.

I chose conversations, cycling, running around, and simply being a child.

And honestly, I believe it is one of the boldest decisions a parent can make today.

Not because studies are unimportant. They absolutely matter.

But because childhood matters too.

When I see my son come home excited to play, when I watch him laugh outdoors, when I see him discover the world beyond textbooks, I am reminded that these moments are also a form of learning.

The pressure to do more will always be there.

Another worksheet will always be waiting.

Another assessment will always be around the corner.

But childhood will not wait.

A happy child learns better than a pressured child.

So if you have chosen to let your child play a little longer, explore a little more, and simply enjoy being a child, don't feel guilty.

You are not doing right thing

You are making a choice.

And perhaps, in a world that is constantly asking children to grow up faster, that choice is more valuable than we realize.

Parenting | Child Education | Academic Pressure | Grade 1 Learning | School Stress | Modern Parenting

Sunday, July 5, 2026

The Honk That Saved Us 🚨📢


Sometimes the most unexpected stories happen on the ordinary days.

What started as a routine drive to Bangalore became an experience our family will never forget, and it taught me two important lessons.

We were driving to Bangalore. A flyover construction project was in progress near the Thoppur forest area, forcing all vehicles onto a temporary service road. If you haven't heard of the famous Thoppur Ghat, It was one of those chaotic stretches near Thoppur Ghat - heavy traffic, ongoing elevated flyover construction, patchy mobile signal, and a road known for its steep descents and sharp curves.

The traffic map was glowing deep red, showing a 30-minute delay ahead. Usually, I sit in the front passenger seat. But that day was different.

My son had a fever. He was exhausted, restless, and struggling to sleep. So I moved to the back seat beside him, hoping to comfort him and help him rest during the drive.

A few minutes later, I noticed a strong, pungent smell.

"What's that smell?" I asked my husband.

"It's probably from the road," he replied and I went back to focusing on my son.

Then came the honking from a lorry driver.

Not once. Not twice. But Continuously, An annoying one!

The kind of honking that immediately makes you think, "Okay, what mistake did we make?"

If you have driven in India, you know that a horn is rarely used for an actual emergency.

Most of the time, honking is simply a driver's way of expressing impatience or irritation.

My husband, like many others (and I suspect many men), seems to have multiple personalities while driving.

Most of the time, he is calm. But the moment another vehicle tries to overtake from the wrong side, or someone manages to touch his wrong nerve, a completely different personality takes over.

It's as if an Ajith Kumar racing character suddenly wakes up inside him. Suddenly, it is no longer a family drive. One speeds up. The other refuses to give way. It becomes the final lap of a Formula 1 championship. 

So when the lorry driver kept honking behind us, my first thought was not danger.

I casually asked my husband, "What did you do to the lorry driver this time?"

What happened next was scary then we could imagine.

Suddenly, we saw smoke. At first, it appeared near the road. Then more smoke. Then even more.

The service road was narrow. Cars surrounded us on both sides. In typical Indian traffic, vehicles seemed to occupy every available inch of space.

The lorry driver somehow managed to overtake us.

As he passed, he shouted urgently through his window:

"Smoke! Smoke!"

The smoke was coming from our vehicle.

Everything changed instantly. Now it felt dangerous.

I don't know whether movies conditioned me, but the moment I saw the smoke, my mind immediately jumped to all the worst-case scenarios.

Get my son to safety. I looked to the right to open car door. No space.

I looked to the left. Still no space.

Cars everywhere. The smoke was getting thicker.

I lowered the window, preparing myself for the possibility of jumping out with my son if things got worse.

By then, the smoke had become so dense that it was beginning to obscure the windshield.

My son and I managed to get out through a small gap between the vehicles.

My husband couldn't stop abruptly in the middle of the road, as traffic was moving around us from every direction.

I got down blocked the approaching vehicles and guided him toward the left side so he could safely pull over and park the car.

Finally, we halted and we got out of the car without fully understanding what had just happened.

Behind us was a massive cloud of smoke. We all stood there, staring at it, coughing as the harsh smell of smoke filled the air.

As we stood there staring at the smoke, a bus slowly passed behind us.

Painted across the back was a large image of Lord Murugan, his hand raised in blessing.

I have never been particularly religious. Yet, over the past few months, I kept hearing about Lord Murugan from different people. Somehow, that led us to visit one of his Arupadai Veedu temples, and it hadn't even been a week since we had returned.

Standing there beside the road, coughing and staring at a cloud of smoke, I couldn't help but wonder if that bus appearing at that exact moment meant something.

Maybe it was just a coincidence. Or maybe it was a reminder that life can change in the blink of an eye.

We needed help. Roadside assistance. Insurance. Anyone.

I grabbed my phone and saw that it had only 3% battery left. Within moments, it died.

By then, it was around 7:00 in the evening, and darkness had already settled in.

My husband tried calling roadside assistance. The calls weren't connecting.

We searched through the car's papers, looking for insurance details and roadside assistance numbers. We Googled support numbers. showroom support. Insurance contacts. No luck.

My son, who was already down with a fever, looked at me and said,

"Amma, can you make me sit somewhere? My legs are hurting, and the noise from the road is giving me a headache."

Hundreds of vehicles passed by.

But not a single one stopped.

To be Continued...