"But how could you live and have no story to tell?" The narrator is unreliable but credentialed.

Joined April 2020
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22 Jul 2025
I keep coming back to these words from Carl Jung, “Know all the theories, master all the techniques, but as you touch a human soul, be just another human soul.”
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Intensity of life is only possible at the expense of self!!
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I wish more people actually read the books they share pictures of.
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I wrote this blog post explaining the meaning of The Last Ride song by Sidhu in English about 3 years ago. It has had readers from more than 60 countries. I’ve written more than 100 blog posts, many with far more views but none has reached readers in more than 20 countries. Sidhu’s reach is unreal.
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An independent thinker marking the passing of another independent thinker.
Jan 26
On Scott Adams. A man finds, to his astonishment, that he exists. After the elation of childhood wears off, he asks, who am I, why am I here, how does this work? These are hard questions, so after a brief struggle, he selects a readymade answer and goes about the motions of life. Scott Adams was not such a man. He was a live player, ever curious, intent on figuring out this simulation that he found himself in. From first principles, Scott unraveled, understood, and ultimately controlled his own reality. He hacked himself with affirmations, others with persuasion, the world with simultaneous sips. He explained people as moist robots, two movies happening on one screen, his world as Gods’ debris. He carved a personal mission to “be useful,” and made us all better writers, public speakers, and persuaders. He preached the footwear theory of motivation, the Adams Law of slow-moving disasters, the skill stack, systems over goals, and of course, the Dilbert Principle. Besides cartooning, philosophizing, and teaching, Scott rose to the occasion and displayed, “the one virtue that cannot be faked” - courage. Scott had the courage to speak honestly as he saw it - about Trump, about his nation, and about his time, even though it cost him friends, audience, money, and his ticket to polite society. Scott had true courage, the kind that makes you unpopular, the kind that is always and everywhere in short supply, At the end, as any hacker of reality, Scott covered all of his bases - he left as a Buddhist, a Christian, and a player in the Simulation. Scott, we didn’t get enough time with you, but you were a mentor and a marvel. You were useful and you were courageous. You were incompressible and indivisible. One of a kind, and generous with your drawing, writing, and speaking. Unlike your squealing critics in the chattering class, you will be read generations from now. On this earth there are many long-lived hells but no lasting heaven. Each heaven must be created and nurtured, ex-nihilo, from mind and from mud. Scott, you created a small heaven for us all, and to a larger heaven you go. A man finds, to his astonishment, that he no longer exists. He asks why, what it was for, and how will the new reality work? When the rest of us get there, we’ll find Scott, ever useful, ready to explain, having figured it all out. Notes: • First line paraphrasing Schopenhauer. • Courage quote via Taleb.
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I’ve read every book you’ve ever recommended.
Jan 24
If you're a writer, write ‘i love you’ without writing i love you.
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The whole idea of becoming better has been sold to us as suppressing whatever isn’t rewarded, treating growth as a matter of mere conditioning. In contrast, Jung’s concept of wholeness says the exact opposite, “How can I be substantial if I do not cast a shadow? I must have a dark side also If I am to be whole."
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Jasmeet retweeted
18 Aug 2025
Three decades turned the man who wrote "White Nights" into the man who wrote "The Brothers Karamazov." It’s terrifyingly beautiful how much a human being can outgrow themselves.
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Jasmeet retweeted
we become gentler the moment we understand how many battles others are fighting in silence. the very fact that every face holds a private storm softens the gaze, slows the judgment, and turns even brief encounters into acts of quiet respect.
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Jasmeet retweeted
🥂
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About 5 years ago, when I went for my first therapy session seeking help, the therapist said things like: “have some gratitude,” “you’re being ungrateful,” “start writing a thank-you note to yourself.” That was my first realization that even therapists can be shitty. Some will tell you “everything happens for a reason.” Others will suggest you “focus on the positive” or “fake it till you make it.” Some will ask “have you tried smiling more?” when you can barely breathe. Others will nod through your pain and end with “just take it one day at a time.” If the sessions leave you emptier and nothing seems to be changing after months of being in therapy, the therapist can be the problem. Change the Therapist.
I've been in the depths of despair with depression. A state where nothing matters. No one can say anything to convince you otherwise. For those of you who've also been there or who are there now, what advice would you give others about how to speak with people in this state?
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As fellow humans, we can be present, consistently. Shut our mouth. Open our ears. Just sit with them. This is in addition to professional help, which is non-negotiable.
I've been in the depths of despair with depression. A state where nothing matters. No one can say anything to convince you otherwise. For those of you who've also been there or who are there now, what advice would you give others about how to speak with people in this state?
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A good book changes a reader by refining their perception in whatever they do.
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Jasmeet retweeted
Jan 21
The fundamental human disease is separation, and its symptom is loneliness.
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Jasmeet retweeted
15 Jun 2025
Anyone who wants to know the human psyche will learn next to nothing from experimental psychology. He would be better advised to abandon exact science, put away his scholar's gown, bid farewell to his study, and wander with human heart through the world. — Carl Jung
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"Ah, Harry, we have to stumble through so much dirt and humbug before we reach home." — Steppenwolf
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If you’ve ever struggled with the contradictions within yourself, you’ll love Steppenwolf by Hermann Hesse. Perhaps the best book I’ve read in a long time.
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Jasmeet retweeted
It’s sad how often people turn a bad experience into a general rule of life.
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choice of books is more important than ever.
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You can build a successful business and still need the therapy you’ve been avoiding.
Building a business is an underrated form of therapy because, to grow your business, you must grow yourself. 10 times out of 10, the thing holding back the business is you.
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Once you see how "Raat di Gedi" and "Pind Pehra Lagda" complete each other, you can’t unsee it.
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