This blog is not written for everyone. It is written for clarity, not comfort; for sharp truth, not polite illusions. If you read further, know that you are stepping into commentary that is unfiltered, uncomfortable at times, and brutally honest.
Who This Blog Speaks To
It would be unjust to pretend that my writings apply universally. Human society is stratified, and experiences differ drastically across economic layers.
The poorest 50% of society (in India, families whose combined income does not exceed ₹4–5 lakh per annum in 2025) live under resource scarcity so profound that survival itself dictates their choices. Their struggles are real and raw, but outside the scope of my observation, and it would be dishonest to generalize about them.
The top 1% elite — the corporate titans, celebrities, ultra-rich, earning ₹10 crore or more per annum — live in a different reality altogether. Their marriages, choices, and lifestyles are games of power, legacy, and image. They set trends but do not represent the lived experience of most people.
The focus of this blog is the 49% in between: the middle and aspirational classes, urban and semi-urban, who have enough resources to make choices but not enough to be free of consequences. This is the class where cultural programming, financial strain, and psychological expectations collide most violently. This is where marriages crack, families stretch, aspirations inflate, and reality bites.
This space is where I examine the three undeniable forces shaping this 49%:
Mind — the psychology, illusions, and manipulations that drive human behavior.
Money — the financial decisions, systemic pressures, and cultural imitations that build or break lives.
Soul — the search for meaning and dignity in a system designed to commodify both.
These writings are not endorsements, not prescriptions, and not propaganda. They are observations — sometimes harsh, sometimes unsettling, but always honest.
If you belong to the middle spectrum, you may recognize your own life reflected in these arguments. If you belong to the extremes, you may find yourself alienated — and that is by design.