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Sunday, March 8, 2026

Early Years Graduation Day πŸŽ“ My Biggest Emotional Moment

When my 6 years old son first told me about his Early Years Graduation Day, my reaction was honestly… Spiky.

Come on.

I am an MBA, M.Sc. graduate and I never had a graduation ceremony in my life.

My sister, who holds a PhD said, “I only had a graduation ceremony for my PhD!”

So naturally, my first thought was, “Wow, graduation already?” But today, my perspective completely changed.

When the Tiny Graduates Walked In πŸŽ“

The moment the ceremony started, the little kids walked in wearing graduation robes and tiny caps.

And suddenly…

There was a lump in my throat.

Those little six-year-olds looked adorable in their graduation hats, blushing shyly when they saw their parents😊

Each child carried a small lamp and sang their graduation song.

It was unbelievably cute.

But more than that, it was emotional for me.

And for those tiny ones they believed this was a big day.

The excitement had been real for the past week. 

πŸŽ“πŸŽ“

Why Early Years Graduation Actually Matters Now:

When we were kids, moving from LKG to Grade 1 was just… another day.

No ceremony.

No celebration.

Honestly, our teachers barely knew us.

I remember having 62 students in my UKG class.

The teacher probably recognized my name only when she read my report card.

Things are very different today.

Schools now have:

Smaller classrooms (18 : 1 Ratio)

More teacher involvement

Personal attention

Emotional bonding with children

These teachers know the kids deeply.

They celebrate their small wins, their personalities, and their progress.

So when children move to Grade 1, it’s actually a big transition:

New and more teachers, New structure, More assessments, A different environment

For these kids, it really is a milestone.

And today I understood that.

πŸŽ“πŸŽ“πŸŽ“

One moment that  touched my heart was when the teachers called each child’s name.

But they didn’t just call names.

They spoke about something special about each child.

When my son’s name was announced, the teacher said:

"Our little author who wrote Kumki, The Elephant."

I was stunned.

The teachers had observed the children so closely.

For another child, they said: "Our Yellow Belt holder."

For someone else, they spoke about her curiosity.

The teachers weren’t just teaching.

They were truly seeing each child.

πŸŽ“πŸŽ“πŸŽ“

The Moment That Made My Eyes Wet

While my husband was busy capturing videos and photos, I was simply watching.

Observing and Absorbing.

My son was standing there holding his Early Years Graduation Certificate proudly.

On the other side, the teachers were smiling at him with genuine pride.

That was the moment.

My eyes filled with tears.

Because suddenly I realized:

This was not about the certificate.

It was about his years of tiny steps, learning, friendships, and growth.

πŸŽ“πŸŽ“πŸŽ“

The Beautiful Teacher Handover Ritual

One part of the ceremony was incredibly thoughtful.

The Early Years teacher handed a bouquet to the Grade 1 teacher, with each flower in it representing a child’s name. 🌸

It symbolized something beautiful: "We took care of them until now. Now they are yours."

Each child then walked forward and shook hands with Ms.Usha mam thier future teacher.

It felt like a mini convocation with heart.

Small touches. But unforgettable.

πŸŽ“πŸŽ“πŸŽ“

A Father’s Love That Made This Day Special

My husband was actually not supposed to be here today. He had other plans and commitments.

But my son insisted. He cried. He pleaded. He wanted his dad to be there.

So he travelled all the way just to attend this half-day graduation ceremony and then travelled back again.

Watching that… made the day even more meaningful.

Because sometimes children don’t remember what we say.

But they remember who showed up.

πŸŽ“πŸŽ“πŸŽ“

My Final Thought Before Sleeping Tonight

When I lay down on my bed tonight, I kept replaying the day in my mind.

Tonight I feel something different.

These ceremonies are not for the certificate.

They are for the memories.

For the teachers (Principal Mrs. Minni Adhikari mam, Ms.Maria Pavithra mam, Ms. Lakshmi mam, Ms. Priya Anand mam and Grace mam) who nurtured them.

For the parents who watched their babies grow a little bigger.

And most importantly…

For the children who walked proudly today believing:

“I graduated.”

And honestly…

Maybe they did. πŸŽ“

Wednesday, March 4, 2026

When One Person Gives Up in a Relationship

As I sat down to write this, I didn’t plan to be emotional.
But somewhere along the way, I realized that even the strongest couples don’t stay the same. And if I am being honest, mine changed too.


In the beginning, every couple fights, argues, cries, even tries to control but we always run back to each other, say sorry first, patch things up at any cost, because losing the person feels far more terrifying.

I remember those days.

If he didn’t talk to me for ten minutes, my heart would pain.
If we fought at night, I would not sleep.
Not even one single night passed without patching up each other.

And now?

Now, after a decade… when we argue, I don’t rush back to patch up.
I withdraw. 
Because, I want silence, peace and space.

And that scares me.

Relationships almost follow a strange pattern.

In the beginning, you spend all your time together.
Then children come. Responsibilities grow. Careers expand.
The middle years almost 30 to 45 years become survival mode.

You are not lovers.
You are not even best friends sometimes.
You are no longer lovers dreaming together.
you are just two exhausted souls managing a house and quietly ticking the boxes of being “good parents".

They tell you, “After 60, when the children are settled, you will have time again for just the two of you. Love blossoms again”

But what about the 28+ years in between?

Does love dry out there?
Or do we just stop watering it?

Honestly… I don’t know.

Now we fight less.
Not because we understand better.
But Arguing with him? Feels Waste of energy.πŸ˜“

He thinks, “She will talk tomorrow… she has to.”
I think, “He will come back to me in a week… he has no choice.”

Now we patch things up not because we miss each other,
but because life forces us to talk.

Because,
we have Decisions to make.
Parents meetings to attend.

So we speak.

Not to heal. Not to reconnect. But to FUNCTION.

So somewhere in between responsibilities and routines, we stop choosing/loving each other and start taking each other for granted.

But moving away from a fight without resolving it is a big Red Flag.

Have you ever thought about how many unresolved emotions a person carries when you extend silence or unresolved emotions like that?

The Illusion of “I have Got Them”

At some point, both partners start thinking:

“I have got my wife.”
“I have got my husband.”

That’s when effort reduces.

It’s not space.

We stop trying to impress.
We stop trying to understand.

But here’s the truth, people evolve.

Think about your childhood best friend.
Is that person still your best friend today?

Maybe yes.
If yes, you are blessed.

But most of us our personality change.
After a crisis.
After loss.
After success.
After motherhood.
After failure.

A fun person becomes calm.
A calm person becomes guarded.
A soft heart becomes practical.

The man I met on day one is not the man today.
And I am not the same woman either.

But we are still tied to each other not because we are the same, but because marriage doesn’t allow easy exits like friendships do.

And sometimes that scares me.


There was a time I had a thousand packets of love.

Today?
I don’t have hatred.
But I have layers.
Mixed feelings.
Exhaustion.
Distance.

Maybe this is what emotional giving up looks like.

Not dramatic.
Not loud.
Just… quiet.

You stop expecting.
You stop chasing.
You stop fighting to be heard.

And that is more dangerous than anger.


Let me end with something lighter. Remember the possessiveness in early love?
Before marriage, 
If another girl talked to him,  "war."
If he looked at some girl,  "mini heartbreak"
If some girl text hims, "World War III."

Now?

If a girl talks to him, I don’t burn anymore.
I laugh and I tease him.
And somewhere, I genuinely feel happy that there are still women who notice him.πŸ˜‰

I look at him and smile,
“Ah… so the charm hasn’t faded after all.”

But sometimes I wonder:

Did I lose that cute possessiveness?

Or worse…
Did I stop caring the way I used to?


When a person gives up in a relationship, it doesn’t happen in one day.

It happens slowly.

When you stop resolving fights.
When you assume they will stay anyway.
When silence becomes normal.
When effort feels unnecessary.

Love doesn’t die loudly.
It dries quietly.
And maybe the real danger isn’t fighting too much in the beginning.
Maybe the real danger is not fighting at all later.

Because at least fighting means you still care enough to react.
Silence or not resolving it?
It means someone has already given up.