S2S
spirits to spirituality-A journey
Monday, 22 June 2026
Being a veterinarian,
Being a veterinarian, I had been called to examine a ten-year-old Irish Wolfhound named Belker. The dog’s owners, Ron, his wife Lisa, and their little boy Shane, were all very attached to Belker, and they were hoping for a miracle.
I examined Belker and found he was dying of cancer. I told the family we couldn’t do anything for Belker, and offered to perform the euthanasia procedure for the old dog in their home.
As we made arrangements, Ron and Lisa told me they thought it would be good for six-year-old Shane to observe the procedure. They felt as though Shane might learn something from the experience.
The next day, I felt the familiar catch in my throat as Belker‘s family surrounded him. Shane seemed so calm, petting the old dog for the last time, that I wondered if he understood what was going on. Within a few minutes, Belker slipped peacefully away.
The little boy seemed to accept Belker’s transition without any difficulty or confusion. We sat together for a while after Belker’s Death, wondering aloud about the sad fact that dogs' lives are shorter than human lives. Shane, who had been listening quietly, piped up, ”I know why.”
Startled, we all turned to him. What came out of his mouth next stunned me. I’d never heard a more comforting explanation. It has changed the way I try and live.
He said, ”People are born so that they can learn how to live a good life — like loving everybody all the time and being nice, right?” The six-year-old continued,
”Well, dogs already know how to do that, so they don’t have to stay for as long as we do.”
Live simply.
Love generously.
Care deeply.
Speak kindly.
Remember, if a dog was the teacher you would learn things like:
• When your loved ones come home, always run to greet them.
• Never pass up the opportunity to go for a joyride.
• Allow the experience of fresh air and the wind in your face to be pure Ecstasy.
• Take naps.
• Stretch before rising.
• Run, romp, and play daily.
• Thrive on attention and let people touch you.
• Avoid biting when a simple growl will do.
• On warm days, stop to lie on your back on the grass.
• On hot days, drink lots of water and lie under a shady tree.
• When you’re happy, dance around and wag your entire body.
• Delight in the simple joy of a long walk.
• Be faithful.
• Never pretend to be something you’re not.
• If what you want lies buried, dig until you find it.
• When someone is having a bad day, be silent, sit close by, and nuzzle them gently.
*What is Lipid Profile?*
*What is Lipid Profile?*
A famous doctor explained Lipid Profile very beautifully and shared a beautiful story that explains it in a unique way.
Imagine our body is a small town. The biggest troublemaker in this town is - *Cholesterol*.
He also has some companions. His main partner in crime is - *Triglyceride*
Their job is to roam the streets, create chaos and block the roads.
The *Heart* is the city center of this town. All roads lead to the heart.
When these troublemakers start increasing, you can imagine what happens. They try to block the work of the heart.
But our body-town also has a police force deployed - *HDL*
The good cop catches these troublemakers and puts them in jail *(Liver)*.
Then the liver removes them from the body - through our drainage system.
But there is a bad cop who craves power - *LDL*.
LDL takes these criminals out of prison and puts them back on the streets.
If the good cop *HDL* goes down, the whole city will be in chaos.
Who would want to live in such a city?
Do you want to reduce these criminals and increase the number of good cops?
Start *walking*!
With every step, *HDL* will increase, and criminals like *cholesterol, triglycerides* and *LDL* will decrease.
Your body (city) will come back to life.
Your heart - the city center - will be protected from *(heart block)* by criminals.
When your heart is healthy, you will be healthy too.
So whenever you get the chance - start walking!
*Be healthy...* and *Wish you good health*
*This article tells you the best way to increase HDL (good cholesterol) and reduce LDL (bad cholesterol) namely walking.*
Every step increases HDL. So - *Come on, move forward and keep moving.*
*Happy Senior Citizens Week*
Reduce these:-
1. Salt
2. Sugar
3. White Refined Flour
4. Dairy Products
5. Processed Foods
*Eat these daily:-*
1. Vegetables
2. Pulses
3. Beans
4. Nuts
5. Cold Pressed Oils
6. Fruits
*Three things to try to forget:*
1. Your Age
2. Your Past
3. Your Flaws
*Four Important Things to Adopt:*
1. Your Family
2. Your Friends
3. Positive Thinking
4. Keep the House Clean and Welcoming
*Three Basic Things to Adopt:*
1. Always Smile
2. Do Regular Physical Activity at Your Own Pace
3. Check and Control Your Weight
*You Six Essential Lifestyle Habits to Adopt:*
1. Don’t wait until you are thirsty to drink water. 2. Don’t wait until you are tired and need to rest.
3. Don’t wait until you are sick to get medical tests.
4. Don’t wait for miracles, have faith in CREATOR.
5. Never lose faith in yourself.
6. Be positive, always have hope for a better tomorrow.
If you have friends in this age group *(45-80 years old)* please send this to them.
Send this to all the good senior citizens you know.
What habits destroy a person’s future slowly?
What habits destroy a person’s future slowly?
I’d say scrolling on the phone is a big one these days.
I read a recent study that showed a dramatic drop in fertility rates after the arrival of smartphones in 2007.
People just aren’t socializing or interacting anymore. They will lay on their couches on their phone for days on end.
One strategy to help with this is to do a nothing alternative (which helps enormously with procrastination).
People often think they did nothing on a given day. But they actually did do something: they were scrolling on their phone.
If you give yourself the option of doing nothing but the important task, you’ll eventually realize that boredom is even worse than doing that task.
The Three Hearts of Destiny
The Three Hearts of Destiny
Chapter One: The Promise
In the bustling city of Jaipur, two boys grew up inseparable.
Aarav Sharma and Kabir Malhotra had been friends since kindergarten.
They shared lunch boxes, cricket bats, dreams, failures, and secrets.
If one got punished, the other stood beside him.
If one cried, the other fought the world.
Everyone believed nothing could ever come between them.
They were wrong.
The storm arrived when they were nineteen.
Her name was Meera Kapoor.
She entered college on a rainy July morning.
The entire campus seemed to pause.
She possessed the kind of beauty that made conversations stop midway.
Long dark hair.
Emerald eyes.
A smile that promised heaven.
And a personality that concealed dangerous contradictions.
Meera loved attention.
She adored admiration.
She enjoyed being desired.
Yet she rarely knew what she truly wanted.
Within weeks, both Aarav and Kabir fell in love.
Aarav first.
Kabir soon after.
But neither knew about the other's feelings.
Aarav was quiet and thoughtful.
He wrote poems nobody read.
Stories nobody published.
Dreams nobody understood.
Kabir was charming.
Athletic.
Confident.
Every girl on campus wanted to date him.
Except he wanted only Meera.
One evening Aarav gathered courage and confessed his feelings.
To his astonishment, Meera smiled.
"I like you too."
His heart exploded with joy.
For six months they dated.
Aarav believed he had found his soulmate.
What he didn't know was that Meera's heart was far more complicated.
She genuinely loved Aarav.
His sensitivity touched her.
His sincerity moved her.
But she was also deeply attracted to Kabir.
His confidence fascinated her.
His physical presence stirred emotions she couldn't explain.
Thus began the first lie.
While loving one friend, she secretly desired the other.
Chapter Two: The Triangle
Kabir eventually discovered Aarav and Meera were dating.
He smiled and congratulated them.
Inside, however, something shattered.
For the first time in his life, he envied his best friend.
Yet he never revealed his feelings.
Months later fate intervened.
A college theatre production required Meera and Kabir to perform romantic scenes together.
Rehearsals stretched late into evenings.
They spent countless hours together.
The attraction intensified.
One rainy night after rehearsal, Meera kissed Kabir.
The moment lasted only seconds.
But it changed everything.
Both immediately regretted it.
Kabir pulled away.
"This is wrong."
"I know."
"You love Aarav."
"I do."
"Then why?"
Meera couldn't answer.
Because she herself didn't know.
For weeks guilt consumed them.
Kabir avoided her.
Meera grew restless.
Aarav noticed something was wrong but couldn't identify it.
Eventually Kabir confessed everything.
Not to Aarav.
To Meera.
"I can't continue this friendship if I keep feeling this way."
She cried.
He left.
The triangle remained unresolved.
Chapter Three: Different Roads
After graduation, life scattered them.
Aarav moved to Mumbai with nothing but a suitcase and manuscripts.
Kabir joined an acting institute.
Meera entered beauty pageants.
The next decade transformed all three lives.
Aarav struggled terribly.
Publishers rejected him repeatedly.
Twenty-six rejection letters arrived in a single year.
Yet he continued writing.
Loneliness became his fuel.
Heartbreak became his inspiration.
One manuscript changed everything.
A novel titled The Girl Between Two Monsoons became an overnight sensation.
Millions of copies sold.
Translations appeared worldwide.
Critics hailed him as a literary genius.
Soon Aarav became India's most celebrated bestselling author.
Meanwhile Kabir's journey wasn't easier.
Years of auditions brought only disappointment.
Minor advertisements.
Forgettable television roles.
Then a famous director cast him in a major film.
The movie became a blockbuster.
His second film earned even greater success.
Within five years Kabir became Bollywood's brightest superstar.
His face adorned billboards across the country.
Fans screamed his name wherever he went.
As for Meera?
She entered the world of glamour.
Competed nationally.
Won state titles.
Eventually she stood beneath dazzling lights before millions of viewers.
The host announced:
"Miss India 2035 is... Meera Kapoor!"
The nation erupted.
She had achieved her dream.
Three young dreamers from one college had conquered India.
Yet none had conquered their hearts.
Chapter Four: Reunion
A decade after graduation, destiny reunited them.
Aarav's bestselling novel was being adapted into a Bollywood film.
Kabir was cast as the lead actor.
Meera, now a celebrated beauty queen and influencer, attended the launch event.
The media went wild.
Old college friends.
Three celebrities.
One glamorous reunion.
Photographs flooded social media.
Smiles concealed old wounds.
That evening they met privately.
For hours they laughed about college memories.
At first it felt magical.
Then emotions resurfaced.
Kabir looked at Meera and realized he still desired her.
Aarav looked at Meera and realized he still loved her.
Meera looked at both men and realized she had never truly chosen.
Years had passed.
Yet nothing had changed.
Chapter Five: Confessions
Several months later Aarav proposed marriage.
Meera hesitated.
Then accepted.
The media celebrated.
India's bestselling author was marrying Miss India.
It seemed like a fairy tale.
Yet beneath the surface doubts lingered.
Three weeks before the wedding, Meera met Kabir privately.
Their conversation changed everything.
"I still think about you," Kabir admitted.
"So do I."
"Then why marry Aarav?"
"Because I love him."
Kabir laughed bitterly.
"You love him."
"Yes."
"But desire me."
She lowered her eyes.
The silence became an answer.
For the first time Kabir understood the tragedy.
Meera's heart and body wanted different men.
And she lacked the courage to choose one completely.
The wedding proceeded.
She married Aarav.
The world applauded.
Kabir attended.
Smiled.
And silently buried his feelings.
Chapter Six: Cracks
Marriage brought unexpected difficulties.
Aarav worshipped Meera.
He gave her affection.
Respect.
Security.
Companionship.
Everything except excitement.
His world revolved around books and ideas.
Kabir's world revolved around lights and passion.
Gradually Meera felt trapped.
Not unhappy.
Simply incomplete.
One evening she met Kabir again.
Then again.
Then again.
Soon an emotional affair developed.
Nothing physical occurred.
Yet emotionally she drifted away from her husband.
Aarav eventually discovered messages.
The betrayal devastated him.
"What do you want?" he asked.
Meera cried.
"I don't know."
That answer hurt most.
Not hatred.
Not rejection.
Confusion.
Months later the marriage ended.
India's favorite literary couple divorced.
The media exploded.
Speculation dominated headlines.
Nobody knew the truth.
Only three people did.
Chapter Seven: The Choice
After the divorce, Kabir expected Meera would finally choose him.
Instead she surprised everyone.
Including herself.
She left both men.
For two years she traveled the world.
Seeking answers.
Meaning.
Identity.
She dated nobody.
Spoke little.
Appeared rarely in public.
Meanwhile Aarav's writing grew darker and more powerful.
His books achieved international fame.
Kabir became an even bigger superstar.
Yet both remained emotionally stuck in the past.
Then came another twist.
Meera returned.
And announced her engagement.
Not to Aarav.
Not to Kabir.
But to a wealthy entrepreneur named Rohan Khanna.
The nation was stunned.
Both friends were stunned.
The wedding took place in Italy.
Aarav attended.
Kabir did not.
Everyone believed the story had finally ended.
They were wrong.
Chapter Eight: The Fall
Three years later disaster struck.
Rohan was arrested for massive financial fraud.
Billions disappeared.
His empire collapsed overnight.
Meera found herself dragged into investigations.
Though innocent, her reputation suffered.
Friends vanished.
Sponsors withdrew.
The glamorous world abandoned her.
For the first time she experienced loneliness.
The very loneliness Aarav had endured as a struggling writer.
The same loneliness Kabir had faced during failed auditions.
One rainy evening she opened an old box.
Inside were photographs from college.
Three smiling faces.
Before fame.
Before ambition.
Before confusion.
She cried for hours.
Not because she had lost wealth.
But because she had lost simplicity.
Chapter Nine: The Unexpected Truth
Years passed.
Aarav turned fifty.
Kabir fifty-one.
Meera forty-nine.
All remained successful.
Yet none had found lasting happiness.
One day Aarav received a mysterious letter.
No sender.
No signature.
Inside was a DNA report.
He stared in disbelief.
Then called Kabir immediately.
"What is this?"
Kabir arrived.
His face turned pale upon seeing the document.
The report revealed a shocking truth.
Both men shared the same biological father.
A man neither had ever known.
The discovery explained strange coincidences.
Similar features.
Shared talents.
Instant connection from childhood.
They weren't merely friends.
They were half-brothers.
The revelation shook them profoundly.
All those years they had fought silently over one woman.
Without knowing they were family.
Together they confronted their aging father.
The truth emerged.
Decades earlier he had lived a double life.
Two families.
Two sons.
One secret.
The betrayal hurt.
Yet it also changed their perspective.
Suddenly their rivalry felt meaningless.
Chapter Ten: The Last Surprise
Months later Aarav and Kabir met Meera.
For the first time in years, all masks disappeared.
No celebrities.
No headlines.
No fame.
Just three aging souls.
They talked for hours.
Then Meera revealed a secret of her own.
A secret she had hidden for thirty years.
"I owe both of you an apology."
Neither spoke.
"I wasn't in love with either of you."
The statement stunned them.
"What?" Aarav whispered.
"I loved how you made me feel."
She looked at Aarav.
"You made me feel understood."
Then at Kabir.
"You made me feel desired."
She smiled sadly.
"But I never truly understood myself."
Silence filled the room.
Then something unexpected happened.
Nobody became angry.
Nobody cried.
Nobody argued.
Instead all three laughed.
The absurdity of life suddenly became obvious.
Decades of longing.
Confusion.
Heartbreak.
Success.
Failure.
And nobody had known what they actually wanted.
Chapter Eleven: The Ending Nobody Expected
Five years later a literary festival invited Aarav as chief guest.
Kabir attended as a speaker.
Meera arrived as an advocate for women's education.
Thousands gathered.
At the end of the event, a journalist asked a simple question.
"Do any of you have regrets?"
The audience expected dramatic answers.
Instead Aarav smiled.
"If I hadn't loved Meera, I would never have become a writer."
Kabir nodded.
"If I hadn't lost her, I might never have become an actor."
Meera laughed.
"If I hadn't confused both of them, neither would have become famous."
The crowd laughed.
Then the journalist asked:
"So who won?"
Aarav looked at Kabir.
Kabir looked at Meera.
Meera looked at the audience.
And said:
"Nobody won the love story."
She pointed toward Aarav and Kabir.
"But they won a brother."
Then toward herself.
"And I finally found myself."
Years later, after their deaths, biographies were written.
Movies were made.
Books were studied.
People debated endlessly.
Did Meera truly love Aarav?
Did she love Kabir?
Had she made the wrong choice?
Historians searched for answers.
But the truth remained surprisingly simple.
The greatest love story among the three was never romantic.
It was the friendship that survived jealousy.
The brotherhood discovered too late.
And the wisdom gained after decades of mistakes.
That was the unexpected ending.
Not marriage.
Not passion.
Not possession.
But understanding.
For sometimes destiny brings people together not so they can belong to one another—
but so they can become who they were meant to be.
And in the end, that was enough.
The Ashes of Queen
In the ancient kingdom of Ratnapur, surrounded by emerald forests and silver rivers, there ruled a queen whose beauty was spoken of in distant lands. Her name was Queen Mrinalini.
Her eyes shone like dark sapphires, her skin glowed like moonlight, and her long black hair fell to her waist like a silken waterfall. Poets compared her to celestial apsaras, and princes crossed deserts hoping for a glimpse of her.
But beauty had made her proud.
She believed no one in the world was worthy of her affection. Courtiers trembled before her sharp tongue, and even nobles bowed their heads rather than meet her gaze.
Though her people respected her, few truly loved her.
One summer afternoon, Queen Mrinalini rode into the great Mahavan Forest with a small hunting party. She was determined to hunt a rare white deer rumored to live deep within the jungle.
As fate would have it, the queen became separated from her guards.
The forest grew darker.
The sounds of birds disappeared.
Then she heard a growl.
A massive tiger emerged from the bushes.
Another appeared behind it.
Then a third.
The queen's horse reared in terror and threw her to the ground.
For the first time in years, Queen Mrinalini felt fear.
The tigers moved closer.
She screamed.
Suddenly an arrow pierced the air.
One tiger collapsed.
Another arrow struck a second beast.
A young man burst from the trees carrying a spear.
He was tall, strong, and handsome, dressed in simple village clothes.
His name was Arjun.
He fought fiercely.
The remaining tiger leaped toward him.
With remarkable courage, Arjun drove his spear into the animal's chest.
The beast fell dead.
Silence returned to the forest.
The queen stared in astonishment.
No soldier had ever displayed such bravery before her.
Arjun extended his hand.
"Are you hurt?"
Mrinalini hesitated but accepted his help.
"Do you know who I am?" she asked.
"The Queen of Ratnapur."
"Then kneel."
Arjun frowned.
"I saved your life."
"That does not change who I am."
Reluctantly, he knelt.
The queen smiled.
For the first time, she looked upon him not merely as a subject but as a man.
And she found him attractive.
The journey back to the palace was quiet.
Yet the queen could not stop thinking about him.
Days later, she summoned Arjun to court.
The villagers were astonished.
A common youth standing before the throne was unheard of.
Mrinalini praised his bravery and offered him gold.
Arjun accepted only enough to help his aging parents.
His humility intrigued her.
Over the following weeks she summoned him repeatedly.
Soon admiration became desire.
One evening she dismissed her attendants and met Arjun alone in a royal garden.
Moonlight shimmered upon lotus ponds.
The queen approached him.
"You are different from other men."
Arjun remained silent.
She touched his face.
"I desire you."
Arjun stepped back.
The queen looked shocked.
No man had ever refused her.
"My Queen," he said gently, "I respect you. I am grateful for your kindness. But my heart belongs to another."
Mrinalini's face darkened.
"Another?"
"A village girl named Kavya. We have loved each other since childhood."
The queen's pride shattered.
A mere village girl had been chosen over her.
"You reject your queen for a peasant?"
"I cannot betray my heart."
Her humiliation transformed into rage.
The sky suddenly darkened.
A violent wind swept through the garden.
Mrinalini raised her hands.
"I am queen by divine right. If my love is insulted, let those who gave birth to this arrogance suffer."
Arjun stared in horror.
"My Queen, do not—"
"I curse your village!"
Thunder exploded overhead.
"May every field dry. May every child know sorrow. May happiness abandon your people for generations."
A terrible light burst from her palms.
The curse spread across the land.
Arjun fell to his knees.
The queen immediately regretted her words.
But the curse had already taken form.
No power she possessed could recall it.
Within months, disaster struck.
Rains vanished.
Crops failed.
Disease spread.
Families starved.
The once-prosperous village became a place of misery.
Arjun spent his days helping the suffering.
The queen watched from her palace, tormented by guilt.
Yet her pride prevented her from admitting her mistake.
Among the villagers lived an elderly priest named Somdev.
He was wise and deeply devoted to Lord Shiva.
Seeing the destruction around him, Somdev traveled to a sacred mountain cave.
For forty days and forty nights he fasted.
He chanted Shiva's name without rest.
His body weakened.
His voice grew faint.
Yet his faith never faltered.
On the fortieth night, the cave filled with brilliant light.
Before him appeared Lord Shiva.
The great god spoke.
"Somdev, your devotion pleases me."
The priest prostrated himself.
"Lord, save my people."
Shiva remained silent for several moments.
Then he said something unexpected.
"The curse cannot simply be removed."
Somdev's heart sank.
"Why, Lord?"
"Because the suffering is not only the village's burden. It is the queen's lesson."
"Then what must be done?"
Shiva smiled mysteriously.
"The one she desired must become what destiny intends."
The vision vanished.
Somdev returned puzzled.
Months later, a rebellion erupted in Ratnapur.
Corrupt ministers exploited the kingdom's troubles.
The king, Mrinalini's father, was assassinated.
The royal family plunged into crisis.
Enemies gathered at the borders.
Amid the chaos, Arjun emerged as an unlikely leader.
His courage inspired soldiers.
His honesty united nobles.
His wisdom gained the support of the people.
Eventually he defeated the rebels and saved the kingdom.
The royal council insisted only one solution remained.
Queen Mrinalini needed a strong husband.
To everyone's astonishment, they proposed Arjun.
The very man who had rejected her.
The queen remembered Shiva's strange prophecy relayed by Somdev.
Perhaps destiny had spoken.
After much hesitation, Arjun agreed.
Not for ambition.
Not for power.
But because he believed he could help the suffering people.
Their wedding became the grandest event in Ratnapur's history.
The cursed village rejoiced.
Priest Somdev blessed the marriage.
As the sacred fire burned, the curse began weakening.
Rains returned.
Fields grew green.
Disease vanished.
The people celebrated.
The curse was broken.
Yet destiny had another surprise.
After becoming king, Arjun fulfilled his duties faithfully.
But he never truly loved Mrinalini.
His heart still belonged to Kavya.
Years passed.
The queen tried everything to win his affection.
She became kinder.
More humble.
More compassionate.
But love cannot be commanded.
One day Arjun secretly met Kavya again.
Their old feelings returned instantly.
Unable to resist, he married her according to ancient customs.
When news reached the palace, Queen Mrinalini felt her world collapse.
She had finally learned humility.
She had changed.
Yet fate denied her happiness.
Arjun visited her chambers.
"I never wished to hurt you."
"But you did."
"I respect you."
"Respect is not love."
Tears flowed down her face.
For the first time, she looked not like a queen but a wounded woman.
Arjun lowered his head.
"I am sorry."
The queen laughed bitterly.
"Sorry cannot heal a broken heart."
Months later, Arjun officially recognized Kavya as his beloved consort.
The humiliation became unbearable.
Rumors spread.
Courtiers whispered.
The queen withdrew from public life.
Then tragedy struck.
Arjun died unexpectedly from a snakebite during a hunting expedition.
The kingdom plunged into mourning.
The funeral pyre was prepared.
As flames rose around the king's body, Mrinalini made a shocking decision.
She declared she would perform Sati.
Priest Somdev begged her not to.
"Life remains sacred."
But the queen had lost the will to live.
She believed her destiny ended with Arjun.
Dressed in white, she stepped toward the fire.
Before entering the flames she whispered:
"If there is another life, I shall return. And I shall reclaim what fate stole from me."
She entered the pyre.
The flames consumed her.
The kingdom mourned both king and queen.
Years passed.
Decades passed.
Then centuries.
Far away, in another age, a girl was born in a noble household.
Her name was Maya.
From childhood she experienced strange dreams.
A palace.
A jungle.
Tigers.
A wedding.
Fire.
Betrayal.
As she grew older, the visions intensified.
At seventeen she met a young prince named Veer.
The moment their eyes met, Maya froze.
She recognized him instantly.
Though she had never seen him before.
He carried the soul of Arjun.
The memories of Queen Mrinalini awakened completely.
Rage flooded her heart.
All the pain of betrayal returned.
She remembered everything.
The curse.
The marriage.
The abandonment.
The fire.
She swore vengeance.
Maya used her intelligence to gain Veer's trust.
Eventually he fell deeply in love with her.
They married.
Just as Arjun had once married Mrinalini.
Years later, when Veer loved her completely, Maya revealed the truth.
One moonlit night she brought him to an ancient temple.
"There is something you must know."
Veer listened.
Maya recounted her previous life.
At first he laughed.
Then she revealed secrets no living person could know.
The prince's face turned pale.
As she spoke, fragments of Arjun's memories surfaced within him.
He remembered.
Everything.
The jungle.
The queen.
The sorrow.
The fire.
Veer collapsed.
"My God..."
"You remember now."
"Mrinalini..."
"Maya is merely my current name."
The prince trembled.
"What do you want?"
She stared into his eyes.
"For years I believed I wanted revenge."
"And now?"
Maya looked toward the temple of Shiva.
Something had changed.
The hatred she had carried for lifetimes suddenly felt heavy.
Meaningless.
Exhausting.
"I finally understand."
"Understand what?"
"You did not betray me."
Veer looked confused.
"You never loved me."
She smiled sadly.
"I tried to force love. Then I cursed innocent people. Then I blamed fate for my suffering."
Tears filled her eyes.
"The true enemy was my pride."
A gentle wind passed through the temple.
The bells began ringing on their own.
A familiar divine presence filled the air.
Lord Shiva appeared.
Radiant beyond description.
Both fell to their knees.
Shiva spoke.
"The cycle is complete."
Maya bowed.
"My Lord, was this always your plan?"
"The curse could never be broken by power."
"Then how?"
"Through understanding."
Veer lowered his head.
"And my role?"
"You taught her what love cannot be."
The prince looked puzzled.
Shiva smiled.
"Love cannot be demanded. Love cannot be earned through beauty, status, sacrifice, or force."
Maya's eyes overflowed with tears.
For the first time across two lifetimes, she felt peace.
The anger vanished.
The bitterness dissolved.
The need for revenge disappeared.
She turned toward Veer.
"I forgive you."
Veer embraced her.
"And I forgive myself."
The divine light grew brighter.
Shiva raised his hand.
"Both of you are free."
At that moment every memory of pain became light.
Every wound healed.
Every regret faded.
The souls of Queen Mrinalini and Arjun finally escaped the chain of karma that had bound them across centuries.
The temple bells echoed through the night.
And somewhere beyond mortal sight, destiny smiled.
For the greatest twist of all was that revenge had never been the ending.
Forgiveness was.
And thus ended the story of a queen whose pride cursed a village, whose love became obsession, whose death sparked rebirth, and whose long journey through suffering finally taught her the meaning of true love.
Not possession.
Not desire.
But acceptance.
In order to quench her thirst Lord Krishna
In order to quench her thirst Lord Krishna stopped the chariot and made water of Holy River Ganga come out and flow by digging with his toe on the ground. Rukmini took a sip without offering Rishi Durvasa Annoyed by her impoliteness he cursed Rukmini that she would be separated from her beloved husband.
Wednesday, 17 June 2026
Adversity Leadership – Part 11: The Sinking Facts by Flt Lt Sonali Shirpurkar
Adversity Leadership – Part 11: The Sinking Facts
Flt Lt Sonali Shirpurkar(Retd) CFTP, CPD (UK)
Flt Lt Sonali Shirpurkar(Retd) CFTP, CPD (UK)
The Adversity Aviator - Adversity Leadership & Behavioral Transformation Facilitrainer | Founder Upskill With Sonali LLP | Leadership Excellence Award | Keynote Speaker | Mrs India Adventerous | POSH | Author
June 18, 2026
April 14, 1912. The Royal Mail Ship (RMS) Titanic was slicing through the frigid waters of the North Atlantic. It was the largest, most luxurious ship afloat. A triumph of modern engineering. Declared by the world to be practically "unsinkable."
It was a routine maiden voyage with a grand vessel steaming toward New York.
Until 11:40 PM.
An iceberg appeared out of the darkness. A collision occurred. And in less than three hours, the pride of maritime engineering was at the bottom of the ocean.
The Illusion of Invulnerability Unlike Flight 1549, where adversity struck out of nowhere, the Titanic’s leadership had warnings. Lots of them.
Seven wireless ice warnings were received that day alone. The hazard was known and the risk was clear.
Yet, Captain Edward Smith and his officers did not slow down. They did not increase lookouts. They maintained a breakneck speed of 22 knots into a known ice field.
Why? Because overconfidence blinds us to risk. When you believe your system is flawless, you stop looking for threats.
The Nature of False Security Adversity doesn’t always arrive as a sudden lightning strike. Sometimes, it is built slowly through complacency. And when the crisis finally hits, arrogance is stripped to its core. No reputation matters. No technology saves you. No status shields you. Just reality.
What Caused the Catastrophe? It wasn’t just a block of ice that sank the Titanic. It was a breakdown in adversity leadership.
The command structure failed in three critical ways:
They denied reality until it was too late Even after the impact, there was a costly delay in recognizing the danger. Precious minutes were wasted before ordering the lifeboats to be prepared.
They complicated the execution There was no clear crisis plan. Lifeboats were launched half-empty one with only 12 people despite a capacity of 65 because the crew had never conducted a single evacuation drill.
They allowed rigid hierarchy to dictate survival Instead of universal leadership, organizational bias took over. Third-class passengers were left trapped below decks, proving that in a crisis, a fractured culture leads to fractured outcomes.
The Hidden Layer of Failure What emerges : Leadership behavior in a crisis is contagious.
The confusion on the bridge travelled to the crew, and then to the passengers. Because the leadership lacked clear, decisive communication, panic and inefficiency ruled the night.
They had lifeboats for 1,178 people. They only managed to save 705.
The Outcome More than 1,500 lives lost. Not because the iceberg was unavoidable, but because the leadership was unready.
What This Means for Us?
Most of us aren’t commanding a cruise liner in an ice field. However, we do captain organizations, teams, and projects.
We face our own "icebergs" every day:
A market shift we chose to ignore.
A warning sign from a team member we dismissed.
An overreliance on past successes.
A belief that our business model is "unsinkable."
When you are at the top, the question is not: "How great is my track record?" The question is: "Am I humble enough to respect the risks in front of me?"
Leadership Reflection
Do I heed early warning signs, or do I sail ahead regardless?
Have I prepared my team for a worst-case scenario, or am I relying on luck?
Does my organizational culture protect everyone, or only a select few?
Adversity doesn’t care about your past achievements; it only tests your current humility and readiness.
Final Thought
Anyone can lead when conditions are perfect, but true adversity leadership requires you to respect the environment.
If you build a culture around the myth that you cannot fail, you guarantee that you will not know what to do when you do.
Sometimes it is important : Slowing down the ship… before you hit the ice.
What is the "iceberg warning" you might be ignoring in your business today?
#AdversityLeadership #CrisisManagement #RiskMitigation #ExecutivePresence #HumilityInLeadership #LeadershipDevelopment #Titanic Lessons
Upskill With Sonali LLP
Flt Lt Sonali Shirpurkar (Retd)
The Adversity Aviator
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