S2S
spirits to spirituality-A journey
Monday, 22 June 2026
The Distance Between Us
The Distance Between Us
Chapter One: After the Storm
At forty-eight, Meera Kapoor believed that love belonged to her past.
Ten years earlier, she had walked out of a bitter marriage. Her husband, Rajiv, had been successful, charming, and emotionally absent. After years of arguments, accusations, and disappointments, their divorce became inevitable.
The only good thing to emerge from that marriage was their son, Arjun.
Now twenty-four, Arjun was the center of Meera's world.
She had sacrificed everything to raise him.
Extra work shifts.
Sleepless nights.
Loneliness.
Missed opportunities.
She never complained.
Arjun was worth it.
Or so she told herself.
Yet when he moved into his own apartment after graduation, silence settled over her life like dust.
For the first time in years, she was alone.
Completely alone.
The realization frightened her.
She tried filling the emptiness with hobbies.
Yoga.
Painting.
Book clubs.
Nothing worked.
The evenings remained long.
The apartment remained quiet.
The loneliness remained.
Then one evening Arjun brought home a friend.
And everything changed.
His name was Kabir Malhotra.
Twenty-eight years old.
Confident.
Intelligent.
A successful architect.
He possessed an easy smile and a calm manner that immediately put people at ease.
Unlike most young men, he listened when people spoke.
Actually listened.
Meera noticed it immediately.
During dinner, Kabir asked questions about her paintings.
Her favorite books.
Her work.
No one had shown that level of interest in years.
Certainly not her ex-husband.
When the evening ended, she felt unexpectedly happy.
Then she laughed at herself.
Don't be ridiculous, she thought.
He's your son's friend.
Nothing more.
Weeks passed.
Kabir became a regular visitor.
Sometimes he came with Arjun.
Sometimes he dropped by alone to return books or deliver documents.
Gradually he and Meera developed a friendship.
They discussed literature.
Politics.
Films.
Travel.
Life.
Conversations flowed effortlessly.
She found herself looking forward to them.
Then worrying about looking forward to them.
One rainy evening Arjun called.
"Mom, I'm stuck at work. Kabir is coming over to pick up some files."
"Fine."
An hour later Kabir arrived.
The power suddenly failed during a storm.
The apartment plunged into darkness.
Candles were lit.
Rain battered the windows.
Hours passed while they talked.
For the first time, silence appeared between them.
Not uncomfortable silence.
Something else.
Something dangerous.
Then Kabir spoke.
"You know, you're extraordinary."
Meera froze.
"What?"
"I mean it."
She looked away.
"Kabir..."
"I've wanted to say that for months."
The room seemed smaller.
The air heavier.
"Don't."
"Why?"
"Because this is impossible."
Yet her voice lacked conviction.
And both of them knew it.
Chapter Two: The Shock
Meera spent the next week avoiding him.
No calls.
No messages.
No visits.
She convinced herself it had been a mistake.
A momentary lapse.
Nothing more.
Then Arjun arrived unexpectedly.
"You haven't spoken to Kabir."
Her heart skipped.
"What makes you say that?"
"He seems miserable."
Meera forced a smile.
"I'm sure he'll survive."
Arjun laughed.
Then suddenly stopped.
A strange expression crossed his face.
"You don't... like him, do you?"
The question landed like an explosion.
She said nothing.
Arjun stared.
Slowly understanding dawned.
His face turned pale.
"Oh my God."
The argument that followed was inevitable.
"He's my friend!"
"And I'm your mother."
"Exactly!"
Neither listened.
Both shouted.
Years of unspoken emotions erupted.
Arjun accused her of selfishness.
Meera accused him of treating her as though her life ended when she became a mother.
The fight ended with Arjun storming out.
For the first time in years, they stopped speaking.
Days later Kabir arrived.
"I told him."
"What?"
"That I care about you."
Meera closed her eyes.
The situation was spiraling out of control.
"He hates me now."
"He'll come around."
"No."
Kabir's expression hardened.
"Why are we acting as though we've done something wrong?"
Because she wasn't sure they hadn't.
Chapter Three: The Secret
The hostility continued for months.
Arjun refused to answer calls.
Family members took sides.
Friends whispered.
Judgments arrived from every direction.
The relationship seemed doomed.
Then a shocking revelation emerged.
One evening Kabir visited carrying an old photograph.
"Look at this."
Meera stared.
The picture showed a young woman she immediately recognized.
Her college roommate, Nandini.
But why would Kabir have it?
"What is this?"
Kabir swallowed.
"Nandini was my mother."
The room spun.
"What?"
Before Meera could process the revelation, he continued.
"My mother died when I was ten."
Meera remembered.
A tragic accident.
Years ago.
But she had lost contact with Nandini long before that.
"I never knew."
"Neither did I."
According to family records, Kabir discovered the connection only recently.
The revelation stunned both of them.
The world suddenly seemed much smaller.
And far more complicated.
The discovery raised questions.
How had fate brought them together decades later?
Coincidence?
Destiny?
Or something else?
The answers became even stranger.
While sorting through his late mother's belongings, Kabir found a diary.
Inside were repeated references to Meera.
Pages filled with affection.
Admiration.
Memories.
One passage caught his attention.
"If anything ever happens to me, I hope Meera knows how much she meant to me."
Meera cried while reading it.
Not because of romance.
Because of loss.
Because someone she had once loved as a friend was gone forever.
Yet somehow had returned to her life through her son’s friend.
Chapter Four: The Return of Rajiv
Just when things seemed impossible to complicate further, Rajiv reappeared.
After years of distance, Meera's ex-husband suddenly wanted reconciliation.
The timing was suspicious.
Too suspicious.
"You heard about Kabir."
Rajiv smiled awkwardly.
"Maybe."
"What do you want?"
"Another chance."
She nearly laughed.
A decade too late.
Yet Rajiv refused to disappear.
Flowers arrived.
Letters followed.
Then apologies.
Real apologies.
Not excuses.
Not manipulations.
Actual regret.
For the first time, Meera saw genuine remorse.
The development unsettled her.
Because she had spent years hating him.
Hatred was simpler.
Forgiveness required thought.
Meanwhile Arjun's anger softened unexpectedly.
The catalyst came from an unlikely source.
His grandmother.
Meera's mother.
She listened patiently to his complaints.
Then asked a simple question.
"Do you want your mother to be happy?"
"Of course."
"Then why are you punishing her for finding happiness?"
The question lingered.
Days later Arjun called.
For the first time in months.
Neither apologized immediately.
But the wall between them began to crack.
Chapter Five: The Twist Nobody Saw Coming
Just as reconciliation seemed possible, Kabir vanished.
No calls.
No messages.
No explanation.
One day passed.
Then two.
Then five.
Panic grew.
Meera feared the worst.
Finally, a letter arrived.
It contained a single sentence.
I need to tell you the truth.
And an address.
The location was a seaside town hundreds of kilometers away.
When Meera arrived, Kabir was waiting.
His face looked exhausted.
Haunted.
"What happened?"
He hesitated.
Then spoke.
"The age difference never bothered me."
"Then what?"
"My father."
The answer made no sense.
Until he explained.
Years earlier, Kabir's father and Rajiv had secretly been business partners.
Not merely partners.
Best friends.
Their families had known each other.
There were even photographs proving it.
Somehow those connections disappeared over time.
The discovery itself wasn't shocking.
The next revelation was.
Kabir's father had once wanted Meera and Kabir to meet.
Years before either of them knew one another.
A bizarre coincidence that never materialized.
The strange interconnectedness of their lives felt almost unbelievable.
Yet Kabir hadn't disappeared because of old photographs.
He had disappeared because he was afraid.
Afraid that every new revelation would make their relationship seem increasingly impossible.
"What if everyone is right?" he asked.
"What if we're forcing something that shouldn't exist?"
For a long time neither spoke.
Then Meera answered quietly.
"Every important thing in my life came with fear."
Chapter Six: Choices
Months passed.
The conflict slowly evolved.
Not everyone approved.
Many never would.
But approval was no longer the issue.
The real question became simpler.
Could two people build a future despite the complications surrounding them?
Then fate intervened one final time.
Kabir received a prestigious job offer overseas.
A dream opportunity.
A chance to lead an international architectural project.
The position required immediate relocation.
For years.
Perhaps permanently.
The decision tore him apart.
Accept the career opportunity.
Or remain.
Everyone assumed Meera would ask him to stay.
She did the opposite.
"You should go."
"What?"
"You'll resent me if you don't."
"I love you."
"And because you love me, you should go."
It was the hardest thing she had ever said.
The night before his departure, they sat together watching the city lights.
Neither wanted the evening to end.
"What happens now?" Kabir asked.
Meera smiled sadly.
"I don't know."
For once, uncertainty didn't frighten her.
Chapter Seven: The Distance Between Us
Three years passed.
Life changed.
Arjun married.
Rajiv eventually found peace and moved on.
Meera continued painting.
Exhibitions followed.
Recognition arrived.
For the first time, she built an identity independent of being someone's wife or mother.
Kabir remained abroad.
They spoke occasionally.
Then less often.
Life intervened.
Time intervened.
Distance intervened.
The relationship gradually transformed into memory.
A beautiful one.
But memory nonetheless.
Then came the final twist.
One winter afternoon, Meera attended an international art exhibition in Delhi.
As she walked through the gallery, she noticed a familiar building design displayed on a screen.
An architectural project.
Created by Kabir.
She smiled.
Then someone spoke behind her.
"I wondered if you'd come."
She turned.
Kabir stood there.
Older.
Wiser.
Still carrying the same smile.
"What are you doing here?"
"I came home."
The answer was simple.
Yet years seemed to collapse between them.
They spent hours talking.
Not about the past.
Not about missed opportunities.
About the present.
The people they had become.
The lives they had built separately.
The mistakes they had survived.
At sunset Kabir led her to a rooftop overlooking the city.
The skyline glowed gold.
For several moments neither spoke.
Then he asked quietly,
"Do you remember what I told you years ago during that storm?"
She laughed.
"That I was extraordinary?"
"Yes."
"You were very dramatic."
"I still mean it."
Meera looked at the horizon.
At the life behind her.
The uncertain future ahead.
She realized something surprising.
The greatest love story of her life wasn't about romance.
It was about rediscovering herself.
Kabir had been part of that journey.
An important part.
But not the whole story.
And that was why, when he finally took her hand and asked whether they should stop letting time make decisions for them, she answered without fear.
Without hesitation.
Without seeking anyone's permission.
"Yes."
Not because she needed saving.
Not because she feared loneliness.
But because, after years of loss, judgment, conflict, and impossible choices, she had finally learned the difference between living for others and living honestly.
Below them, the city lights flickered to life.
Above them, the evening sky deepened into blue.
And between them remained a distance once thought impossible to cross.
A distance that, at last, had disappeared.
Chapter One: The City of Hills and Sea
Chapter One: The City of Hills and Sea
The rain arrived over Chittagong like a familiar song.
For forty-two years, Anindita Roy had loved the city.
She loved the green hills that rolled toward the horizon. She loved the smell of salt carried inland from the Bay of Bengal. She loved the chaos of the markets, the tea stalls crowded with students, the old bookstores where forgotten novels gathered dust.
Most of all, she loved its people.
To Anindita, people were simply people.
Not Hindus.
Not Muslims.
Not Buddhists.
Not Christians.
Just human beings trying to survive another day.
Her father had taught her that.
A history teacher, he often said, "The moment you begin seeing labels before faces, you've already lost your humanity."
Anindita carried that philosophy into adulthood.
She became a journalist.
Her husband, Dr. Arup Roy, became a physician.
Together they built a modest but happy life.
They had no children.
Instead, they adopted causes.
Education.
Healthcare.
Women's rights.
Interfaith harmony.
Their apartment walls were covered with photographs of friends from every community imaginable.
Anindita often joked that if extremists from all sides saw her guest list, they would unite in hating her.
The joke became less funny as years passed.
The atmosphere around them slowly changed.
Conversations became sharper.
People began asking questions they never used to ask.
"What religion is your neighbor?"
"Whose side are you on?"
"Why aren't you speaking for your own community?"
The divisions deepened.
Anindita wrote article after article warning against hatred.
Few listened.
Hatred, she discovered, was easier to sell than peace.
One evening she returned home from work and found Arup unusually silent.
"What happened?" she asked.
He hesitated.
Then he handed her a note.
It had been slipped under the clinic door.
A threat.
Anonymous.
Crude.
Violent.
It accused him of treating patients from the "wrong" community.
Anindita stared at it.
Then laughed.
"Idiots."
Arup did not laugh.
"There's more."
He showed her three additional notes.
Each worse than the previous one.
For the first time in years, she felt fear.
Not for herself.
For him.
Weeks later violence erupted in several parts of the city.
Rumors spread faster than facts.
Buildings burned.
Shops were attacked.
People disappeared.
Nobody seemed certain what was true.
Yet everyone was angry.
Anindita covered the unrest as a journalist.
The things she witnessed haunted her.
A mosque damaged.
A temple vandalized.
Families fleeing.
Children crying.
Everyone blaming everyone else.
Everyone convinced they were the victims.
Nobody willing to acknowledge the suffering of others.
One night she returned home exhausted.
"I don't recognize this country anymore."
Arup placed a hand on hers.
"We may have to leave."
The words stunned her.
Leave?
Leave Chittagong?
Leave the city where generations of her family had lived?
Impossible.
Unthinkable.
Yet as the months passed, the possibility became increasingly real.
The attack came on a humid summer night.
A mob gathered outside the clinic.
Windows shattered.
Stones flew.
Someone set fire to a storage room.
Arup and his staff escaped through a rear exit.
The clinic burned for hours.
The next morning little remained.
Anindita stood before the ruins.
She felt something break inside her.
Not faith.
Not courage.
Belonging.
For the first time, Chittagong no longer felt like home.
Three months later they crossed the border into India carrying two suitcases and a lifetime of memories.
Or so Anindita believed.
She had no idea how quickly those memories would disappear.
Chapter Two: The Accident
The road to Kolkata was crowded.
Refugees.
Migrants.
Workers.
Dreamers.
People chasing better futures.
People escaping worse pasts.
Anindita watched the landscape blur outside the window.
She felt numb.
Arup squeezed her hand.
"We'll start again."
She nodded.
Then a truck appeared.
A horn screamed.
Metal crashed.
Glass exploded.
Darkness swallowed everything.
When Anindita opened her eyes, she was in a hospital.
Machines beeped.
Voices murmured.
Pain throbbed through her skull.
A stranger sat beside her bed.
He looked exhausted.
Relieved.
Terrified.
"Anu?" he whispered.
She frowned.
"Who are you?"
The man's face drained of color.
"My God."
Doctors rushed in.
Questions followed.
Name?
Age?
Address?
Family?
She had no answers.
Nothing.
The accident had stolen nearly every autobiographical memory she possessed.
She remembered language.
She remembered facts.
She remembered how to read.
How to write.
How to eat.
How to walk.
But she could not remember herself.
Not even her own name.
Arup was devastated.
Doctors called it retrograde amnesia.
Recovery was uncertain.
Some memories might return.
Others might never come back.
Days became weeks.
Weeks became months.
Anindita learned her identity from photographs and documents.
She studied herself like a detective examining evidence.
A wedding photograph.
Travel pictures.
News articles carrying her byline.
Letters from friends.
Yet the woman in those images felt like a stranger.
One evening she asked Arup a question.
"How do I know you're telling me the truth?"
The question struck him like a bullet.
"What?"
"What if you're not my husband?"
Silence filled the room.
She immediately regretted it.
Yet the doubt remained.
How could she trust memories that belonged to someone else?
Chapter Three: The Woman in Blue
Six months later they settled in Kolkata.
Life slowly regained structure.
Arup found work at a private hospital.
Anindita attended therapy.
Some fragments returned.
A school playground.
The smell of mangoes.
A rainy afternoon.
Nothing substantial.
Nothing coherent.
Then the letters started arriving.
No sender.
No address.
Each contained only one sentence.
"You were never supposed to remember."
At first she dismissed them as a prank.
Then a second letter arrived.
Then a third.
Then a fourth.
Always the same sentence.
Always typed.
Never handwritten.
Fear returned.
Who was sending them?
And what wasn't she supposed to remember?
One afternoon she noticed something strange.
A woman in blue clothing appeared repeatedly near their apartment.
At the market.
Outside a pharmacy.
Near a bus stop.
Watching.
Always watching.
Whenever Anindita approached, the woman disappeared.
The sightings became frequent.
She told Arup.
He dismissed it.
"You're under stress."
Maybe he was right.
Maybe.
Yet the feeling persisted.
Someone was following her.
Someone knew something.
The breakthrough came unexpectedly.
While visiting a library, Anindita stumbled upon an old newspaper archive.
Absentmindedly she searched her own name.
Dozens of articles appeared.
Most were familiar.
Then she found one she had never seen.
Published three weeks before they fled.
The headline froze her blood.
JOURNALIST CLAIMS TO POSSESS EVIDENCE OF SECRET EXTREMIST NETWORK.
The article quoted her extensively.
It described a major investigation.
One she could not remember conducting.
According to the report, she had uncovered a network responsible for orchestrating violence while pretending to represent opposing groups.
The article ended abruptly.
No follow-up existed.
No conclusions.
No arrests.
Nothing.
The story simply vanished.
So did her memory of it.
Chapter Four: Shadows from the Past
That night Anindita confronted Arup.
"Why didn't you tell me about this investigation?"
His expression changed.
A brief flicker.
Fear.
Then it vanished.
"I thought the doctors said not to pressure your memory."
"That's not an answer."
He looked away.
For the first time since the accident, she suspected he was hiding something.
The next day she secretly hired a private investigator.
Retired police officer Subhash Sen.
Gruff.
Observant.
Persistent.
Within weeks he uncovered troubling information.
Before fleeing Chittagong, Anindita had met several confidential sources.
Most were now dead.
Two had disappeared.
One was reportedly murdered days after speaking with her.
Subhash leaned back in his chair.
"Someone wanted that investigation buried."
Anindita felt a chill.
"What did I discover?"
"I don't know."
"But somebody thinks you still know."
Three nights later Subhash was killed in a hit-and-run.
Police called it an accident.
Anindita did not believe them.
Neither would anyone who saw the fear frozen on his face during their final meeting.
Now she knew one thing with certainty.
Her missing memories were dangerous.
The woman in blue finally approached her.
It happened during a thunderstorm.
The stranger appeared beneath a railway bridge.
"Don't scream," she said.
Anindita stared.
"Who are you?"
"My name is Farzana."
The woman handed her a flash drive.
"You trusted me once."
"How do you know me?"
"Because we worked together."
Farzana hesitated.
Then delivered a shocking revelation.
The investigation had exposed a criminal syndicate that profited from communal violence.
Weapons.
Extortion.
Political manipulation.
Disinformation.
They deliberately fueled hatred because chaos generated money and influence.
"They didn't care which religion people belonged to," Farzana said.
"They only cared about power."
Anindita's heart pounded.
"What happened next?"
Farzana's eyes filled with sorrow.
"You disappeared."
Chapter Five: The Greatest Lie
The flash drive contained encrypted files.
Videos.
Photographs.
Financial records.
Names.
Enough evidence to destroy powerful people.
But one file changed everything.
It was a video recorded by Anindita herself.
The timestamp showed it was made two days before the accident.
The screen flickered.
Then her own face appeared.
Tired.
Anxious.
Determined.
The recorded Anindita spoke directly into the camera.
"If you're watching this, memory loss may have already occurred."
Present-day Anindita froze.
The woman on screen continued.
"I discovered something terrible. The violence wasn't entirely spontaneous. Influential people from multiple factions secretly cooperated behind the scenes. They needed conflict."
The room spun.
But the greatest shock came next.
"If anything happens to me, do not trust everyone around you."
The recording paused.
Then resumed.
"Especially Arup."
Anindita stopped breathing.
"No..."
She replayed it.
Again.
And again.
The words remained unchanged.
Especially Arup.
Impossible.
The man had cared for her.
Protected her.
Stayed beside her through everything.
Hadn't he?
That evening she searched his study while he was at work.
Hidden inside a locked drawer she discovered passports.
Bank records.
False identities.
Encrypted correspondence.
The evidence was overwhelming.
Arup had been lying.
About many things.
But why?
When confronted, he did not deny it.
Instead he sat quietly.
As though he had anticipated the moment.
"You're finally remembering."
"Tell me the truth."
He closed his eyes.
Then began.
Years earlier he had infiltrated the criminal network as an informant.
His role was to gather evidence.
Eventually he met Anindita.
They fell in love.
Neither initially knew the other's secret investigations.
When they realized the truth, they joined forces.
Together they collected enough evidence to expose the entire operation.
Then the syndicate discovered them.
"They wanted you dead," Arup said softly.
"The accident wasn't an accident."
The words hung in the air.
"They tried to kill us?"
"Yes."
"And my memory?"
"The head injury was real."
Anindita struggled to absorb everything.
Then another question emerged.
"If all this is true, why did you hide it?"
His voice broke.
"Because after the accident, they believed you remembered nothing. The moment they learned otherwise, they'd come for you again."
Chapter Six: Remembering
The final pieces returned gradually.
A warehouse.
Hidden meetings.
Secret recordings.
Threats.
Fear.
Then one memory struck with overwhelming force.
The night before the accident.
She and Arup had arranged to transfer evidence to international journalists.
Someone betrayed them.
That betrayal led directly to the attack.
But who?
Not Arup.
He had been targeted too.
The answer arrived unexpectedly.
Farzana.
The woman in blue.
The realization hit like lightning.
Farzana had always appeared exactly when needed.
Too conveniently.
Too perfectly.
Anindita reviewed the flash drive.
Subtle inconsistencies emerged.
Altered timestamps.
Edited documents.
Manipulated evidence.
Farzana wasn't helping.
She was controlling the narrative.
A trap was arranged.
Anindita agreed to meet Farzana alone.
The location: an abandoned riverside warehouse.
Rain hammered the roof.
Farzana arrived smiling.
Then she noticed police emerging from the shadows.
Her smile vanished.
"You remembered."
"Enough."
Farzana laughed bitterly.
"You always were stubborn."
The truth spilled out.
Farzana had indeed worked with them.
Then greed intervened.
Rather than expose the syndicate, she chose to profit from it.
She betrayed everyone.
The attack.
The deaths.
The years of fear.
Everything traced back to her.
Yet another twist remained.
Farzana revealed the final secret before her arrest.
The syndicate's leaders had never cared about ideology.
They secretly financed multiple opposing groups simultaneously.
Communities fought.
Families suffered.
Ordinary people died.
Meanwhile the architects grew rich.
Hatred was simply their business model.
Chapter Seven: The River Remembers
Months later the trials began.
Politicians.
Criminals.
Financiers.
Propagandists.
Many were convicted.
Others escaped.
Justice, Anindita learned, was rarely complete.
But it mattered.
One evening she stood beside the Hooghly River.
The sun painted the water gold.
Arup joined her.
"How much do you remember now?"
She smiled.
"Not everything."
"Enough?"
She considered the question.
The answer surprised her.
"Yes."
Because memory wasn't only about the past.
It was also about understanding.
Understanding who she was.
What she believed.
Why she had fought.
She remembered Chittagong.
The hills.
The sea.
The markets.
The friends she had lost.
The home she could never fully return to.
She remembered the violence.
But she also remembered the countless people who had protected one another despite fear.
Muslims sheltering Hindu families.
Hindus protecting Muslim neighbors.
Ordinary people refusing to surrender their humanity.
Those memories mattered too.
Perhaps more.
A year later Anindita published a book.
Its title was The River That Forgot Her Name.
In the final chapter she wrote:
"I lost my memory, but I found a truth larger than memory itself. Fanatics often speak as though communities are eternal enemies. Yet the people who saved me belonged to every faith imaginable. The people who endangered me did too. Goodness and cruelty do not recognize religious boundaries. They recognize only human choices."
The book became widely read.
Not because it offered easy answers.
But because it refused easy hatred.
On a monsoon evening, she received one final anonymous letter.
Her hands trembled as she opened it.
Inside was a single line.
This time different from before.
"Now you remember enough."
There was no signature.
No clue.
No explanation.
Perhaps one mystery would always remain unsolved.
Anindita smiled and tossed the letter into the river.
The paper drifted away.
For years she had chased memories.
Now she understood that memory alone was not identity.
Identity was the choices one made after remembering.
And she had finally chosen.
Not fear.
Not vengeance.
Not division.
But the difficult, stubborn belief that people could still see one another as human beings.
The river carried the letter into darkness.
The woman who had once forgotten her name watched it disappear.
Then she turned toward home.
The Last Judgment
The Last Judgment
Michael D'Souza had never believed that a human heart could contain so much rage.
For twelve years, his life had revolved around one person—his wife, Sarah. They lived modestly in a small town, sharing dreams of growing old together. Sarah possessed a kindness that softened every rough edge in Michael's personality. Where he was impulsive, she was patient. Where he was stubborn, she was understanding.
Then came the diagnosis.
A rare neurological disease.
The doctors spoke carefully, but Michael heard only fragments.
"Progressive."
"No known cure."
"Months, perhaps a year."
The world collapsed in that sterile hospital room.
Michael spent every rupee he had. He sold his car. Mortgaged the house. Borrowed money from friends. Consulted specialists in different cities. He prayed in temples, churches, mosques—anywhere that offered hope.
Nothing worked.
Sarah deteriorated day by day.
The woman who once danced in the kitchen struggled to lift a spoon.
One rainy evening, she squeezed his hand.
"Promise me something."
Michael fought tears.
"Anything."
"When I'm gone... don't become angry at the world."
He nodded.
But it was a promise he would not keep.
Sarah died three days later.
And something inside Michael died with her.
At first, his grief appeared normal.
Funeral.
Condolences.
Sympathy.
People brought flowers.
People offered prayers.
People moved on.
Michael didn't.
The anger grew.
He blamed doctors.
He blamed pharmaceutical companies.
He blamed politicians.
He blamed God.
Most of all, he blamed people for continuing to live as though nothing had happened.
The sight of laughter became unbearable.
A month later, he entered a bar.
A drunken man accidentally spilled beer on his shirt.
The man laughed.
"Sorry, buddy."
Michael stabbed him in the neck with a broken bottle.
The entire room froze.
Blood sprayed across the counter.
Michael stared at the dying stranger.
And felt nothing.
No guilt.
No fear.
Only silence.
He walked away before police arrived.
The newspapers called it a senseless murder.
The police found no motive.
No connection.
No robbery.
Nothing.
The victim simply happened to be there.
Michael watched the news from his apartment.
A strange realization formed.
The world had taken Sarah.
Now the world would suffer.
The killings became more frequent.
A businessman shot in a parking lot.
A gang member stabbed in an alley.
A corrupt moneylender beaten to death.
Then innocent victims.
A taxi driver.
A teacher.
A college student.
The pattern made no sense.
Police profilers struggled.
Some believed multiple killers were involved.
Others suspected terrorism.
Michael became a ghost.
He moved constantly.
Changed appearances.
Used fake identities.
Every murder made headlines.
The public gave him a nickname.
The Mourner.
A man who left a single white rose beside every body.
The same flower Sarah had loved.
The nationwide manhunt intensified.
Leading the investigation was Inspector Daniel Fernandes.
A brilliant detective.
Patient.
Methodical.
Relentless.
For eight months Daniel chased shadows.
Then finally, a breakthrough emerged.
A traffic camera captured Michael near a crime scene.
The image was blurry but usable.
Police distributed it nationwide.
Michael's face appeared everywhere.
Television.
Newspapers.
Billboards.
Social media.
The hunter had become the hunted.
One night, police surrounded a warehouse where Michael was hiding.
Floodlights illuminated the building.
Sirens echoed.
Daniel stood outside with a loudspeaker.
"Michael D'Souza! Come out with your hands up!"
Silence.
Then gunfire erupted.
A fierce battle followed.
Bullets shattered windows.
Officers took cover.
Three policemen were injured.
Amid the chaos, Michael escaped through underground drainage tunnels.
When police entered the warehouse, they found only a white rose.
Daniel punched a wall in frustration.
The killer had vanished again.
Winter arrived.
Michael's appearance became increasingly disheveled.
His beard grew long.
His eyes seemed permanently exhausted.
The killings slowed.
Not because he felt remorse.
Because he felt empty.
Revenge had failed.
Nothing eased the pain.
Every victim died.
Yet Sarah remained gone.
One evening, while wandering through heavy rain, he collapsed near an old church on the outskirts of the city.
The church bells rang softly.
The building was ancient.
Weathered.
Forgotten.
A place called St. Matthew's Church.
An elderly priest discovered him unconscious on the steps.
The priest recognized him immediately.
Everyone knew the face of The Mourner.
Yet he carried Michael inside.
Fed him.
Treated his wounds.
Asked no questions.
For several days Michael remained there.
Hidden.
Safe.
The priest never contacted police.
That puzzled him.
Finally, he asked.
"Why haven't you turned me in?"
The priest smiled.
"Because God hasn't finished with you."
Michael laughed bitterly.
"God took my wife."
The priest said nothing.
That night Michael experienced a dream.
Or perhaps something else.
He found himself standing in endless darkness.
Then light appeared.
A figure emerged.
Radiant.
Peaceful.
Wearing white.
Michael immediately knew who it was.
Jesus Christ.
The figure looked at him without anger.
Without condemnation.
Only sorrow.
Michael fell to his knees.
"Why?" he shouted.
"Why did she die?"
No answer came.
Instead, Jesus extended a hand.
Suddenly Michael saw every victim.
Every face.
Every family destroyed.
Every tear.
Every funeral.
The suffering he had created stretched endlessly before him.
Michael screamed.
The vision ended.
The dreams continued.
Night after night.
He saw Sarah.
Smiling sadly.
Standing beside Jesus.
Neither spoke.
Yet somehow he understood.
His pain did not justify the pain he inflicted on others.
The realization shattered him.
For the first time since Sarah's death, he cried.
Not from grief.
From guilt.
Hours passed.
Then days.
The church became a prison of conscience.
Finally, Michael approached the priest.
"I'm ready."
The priest nodded.
"Ready for what?"
"To surrender."
The nation was stunned.
After nearly a year of terror, The Mourner walked into a police station accompanied by an elderly priest.
Television crews gathered instantly.
Crowds shouted.
Some demanded execution.
Others demanded answers.
Michael offered no resistance.
He confessed to every murder.
Forty-three victims.
The number horrified the country.
Inspector Daniel couldn't believe it.
The nightmare was finally over.
The trial became one of the most publicized in national history.
Every day the courtroom overflowed.
Families of victims attended.
Reporters filled every seat.
Michael pleaded guilty.
No excuses.
No insanity defense.
No attempts to reduce punishment.
When the judge asked if he wished to make a statement, Michael stood.
"I cannot return the lives I stole."
The courtroom remained silent.
"I spent months blaming the world for my suffering. Then I became the very thing I hated."
Some family members cried.
Others stared with hatred.
Michael continued.
"I deserve whatever judgment comes."
The sentencing was scheduled for the following week.
No one doubted the outcome.
Life imprisonment.
Possibly death.
Justice seemed inevitable.
But fate had one final twist.
On sentencing day, security was tighter than ever.
Metal detectors.
Armed officers.
Snipers positioned on nearby rooftops.
Authorities feared retaliation or disruption.
The courtroom filled early.
Judge.
Lawyers.
Victims' families.
Journalists.
Police.
Everyone awaited the final chapter.
Michael entered wearing handcuffs.
For the first time in years, he appeared calm.
Almost peaceful.
The judge began reading the sentence.
Then a loud crack echoed through the room.
At first people thought it was equipment malfunctioning.
Then Michael staggered.
Blood blossomed across his chest.
A sniper shot.
Panic exploded.
People screamed.
Officers rushed forward.
Another shot shattered a window.
Michael collapsed.
Chaos consumed the courtroom.
Investigators initially assumed an assassin had targeted him.
But the truth proved far stranger.
The sniper wasn't an accomplice.
Wasn't a victim's relative.
Wasn't a vigilante.
The shooter was Inspector Daniel Fernandes.
The very man who had hunted Michael.
The revelation shocked the nation.
Daniel surrendered immediately.
He offered no resistance.
Only one explanation.
Months earlier, Daniel's younger sister had become one of Michael's victims.
The information had never been made public.
Daniel concealed the relationship to remain on the case.
He wanted justice.
Or so he believed.
But seeing Michael escape punishment through legal procedures wasn't enough.
The grief he carried finally overwhelmed him.
So he smuggled a rifle component by component into a nearby building over several weeks.
And when sentencing began...
He executed Michael himself.
As paramedics worked desperately, Michael drifted in and out of consciousness.
The courtroom noises faded.
The ceiling blurred.
Then something extraordinary happened.
At least according to the priest who stood beside him.
Michael smiled.
A genuine smile.
The first anyone had seen.
He whispered three words.
"I see her."
Then he died.
The story should have ended there.
But another twist awaited.
Weeks later investigators discovered a sealed envelope among Michael's possessions.
The letter was addressed to Inspector Daniel Fernandes.
Inside was a handwritten confession.
Michael had learned months earlier that Daniel's sister was among his victims.
He wrote:
"If you're reading this, then grief has probably consumed you as it consumed me. I pray you make a better choice than I did."
The letter ended with one sentence.
"The moment you kill me for revenge, you become my reflection."
When Daniel read those words, he broke down.
Because they were true.
The hunter had become the hunted.
The avenger had become the murderer.
The cycle had repeated itself.
Exactly as Michael had warned.
Years later, people still debated the meaning of the case.
Some believed Michael found redemption.
Others believed his crimes were unforgivable.
Some viewed Daniel as a hero.
Others called him a criminal.
But Father Thomas, the old priest who sheltered Michael, offered a different perspective.
During an interview he said:
"Two men lost someone they loved. One answered grief with violence. The other answered grief with violence as well. The tragedy wasn't that Michael died. The tragedy was that hatred claimed two souls instead of one."
The priest paused.
Looking toward the church window where sunlight streamed through colored glass.
Then he added:
"Mercy arrived for both men. One accepted it. One rejected it."
And that became the final mystery.
Not who killed Michael D'Souza.
Not how he escaped police.
Not whether his visions were real.
But whether redemption can still exist for a man who has walked so far into darkness.
The answer, perhaps, belonged to a Judge far beyond any earthly court.
SELF-DESTRUCTION
Good Morning!!!
SELF-DESTRUCTION
Around the Year with Emmet Fox
June 23
Some thought should be given to the fate
of those who commit suicide.
The majority of those who take their own lives
are so terrorized at the time
that they are not entirely responsible for the act.
Such people fare on the other side like anyone else.
Conscious and intentional self-destruction
is a refusal to meet the problems of life,
and obviously it cannot be possible to do that successfully.
These persons are apt to find themselves
in a confused mental state.
Of course, they can be greatly helped by prayer,
as can all others.
Ultimately, they have to face all over again
precisely the kind of problem they have run away from.
"Like a father pitieth his children,
so, the Lord pitieth them that fear Him,
For He knoweth our frame;
he remembereth that we are dust"
Psalm 103:13-14
"the goodness of God endureth . . ."
Psalm 5:1
In the 1920s,
In the 1920s, a Stanford psychologist tracked genius children for 50 years.
Malcolm Gladwell breaks down what he discovered:
Rich families → successful. Poor families → failures.
Not average. Failures. Genius-level IQs that produced nothing.
He spent 60 minutes at Microsoft explaining why we're wrong about success:
The psychologist was named Terman. He gave IQ tests to 250,000 California schoolchildren.
He identified the top 0.1%. Kids with IQs of 140 and above.
His hypothesis: these children would become the leaders of academia, industry, and politics.
He tracked them. And tracked them. For decades.
The results split into three groups:
The top 15% achieved real prominence. The middle group had average, moderately successful professional lives.
And the bottom group? By any measure, failures.
The difference wasn't personality. Wasn't habits. Wasn't work ethic.
It was simple: the successful geniuses came from wealthy households. The failures came from poor families.
Poverty is such a powerful constraint that it can reduce a one-in-a-billion brain to a lifetime of worse than mediocrity.
There's a concept called "capitalization rate."
It asks a simple question: what percentage of people who are capable of doing something actually end up doing that thing?
In inner city Memphis, only 1 in 6 kids with athletic scholarships actually go to college.
If our capitalization rate for sports in the inner city is 16%, imagine how low it must be for everything else.
Here's something stranger.
Gladwell read the birth dates of the 2007 Czech Junior Hockey Team:
January 3rd. January 3rd. January 12th. February 8th. February 10th. February 17th. February 20th. February 24th. March 5th. March 10th. March 26th...
11 of the 20 players were born in January, February, or March.
This isn't unique to the Czechs. Every elite hockey team in the world shows the same pattern. Every elite soccer team too.
Why?
The eligibility cutoff for youth leagues is January 1st.
When you're 10 years old, a kid born in January has 10 months of maturity on a kid born in October. That's 3 or 4 inches of height. The difference between clumsy and coordinated.
So we look at a group of 10 year olds, pick the "best" ones, give them special coaching, extra practice, more games.
We think we're identifying talent. We're just identifying the oldest.
Then we give the oldest more opportunities, and 10 years later they really are the best.
Self-fulfilling prophecy.
The capitalization rate for hockey talent born in the second half of the year? Close to zero.
We're leaving half of all potential hockey players on the table because of an arbitrary date on a calendar.
Kids born in the youngest cohort of their school class are 11% less likely to go to college.
11% of human potential squandered because we organize elementary school without reference to biological maturity.
Now here's the part about math.
Asian kids dramatically outperform Western kids in mathematics. The gap is enormous and consistent across decades of testing.
Some people say it's genetic. It's not.
It's attitudinal.
When Asian kids face a math problem, they believe effort will solve it.
When Western kids face a math problem, they believe the answer depends on innate ability they either have or don't.
Here's the proof.
The international math tests include a 120-question survey. It asks about study habits, parental support, attitudes.
It's so long most kids don't finish it.
A researcher named Erling Boe decided to rank countries by what percentage of survey questions their kids completed.
Then he compared it to the ranking of countries by math performance.
The correlation was 0.98.
In the history of social science, there has never been a correlation that high.
If you want to know how good a country is at math, you don't need to ask any math questions. Just make kids sit down and focus on a task for an extended period of time.
If they can do it, they're good at math.
Why do Asian cultures have this attitude?
Gladwell's theory: rice farming.
His European ancestors in medieval England worked about 1,000 hours a year. Dawn to noon, five days a week. Winters off. Lots of holidays.
A peasant in South China or Japan in the same period worked 3,000 hours a year.
Rice farming isn't just harder than wheat farming. It's a completely different relationship with work.
There's a Chinese proverb: "A man who works dawn to dusk 360 days a year will not go hungry."
His English ancestors would have said: "A man who works 175 days a year, dawn to 11, may or may not be hungry."
If your culture does that for a thousand years, it becomes part of your makeup.
When your kids sit down to face a calculus problem, that legacy of persistence translates perfectly.
Now consider distance running.
In Kenya, there are roughly a million schoolboys between 10 and 17 running 10 to 12 miles a day.
In the United States, that number is probably 5,000.
Our capitalization rate for distance running is less than 1%.
Kenya's is probably 95%.
The difference isn't genetic. The difference is what the culture values and where it spends its attention.
Here's the most fascinating finding.
30% of American entrepreneurs have been diagnosed with a profound learning disability.
Richard Branson is dyslexic. Charles Schwab is dyslexic. John Chambers can barely read his own email.
This isn't coincidence. Their entrepreneurialism is a direct function of their disability.
How do you succeed if you can't read or write from early childhood?
You learn to delegate. You become a great oral communicator. You become a problem solver because your entire life is one big problem. You learn to lead.
80% of dyslexic entrepreneurs were captain of a high school sports team. Versus 30% of non-dyslexic entrepreneurs.
By the time they enter the real world, they've spent their whole life practicing the four skills at the core of entrepreneurial success: delegation, oral communication, problem solving, and leadership.
Ask them what role dyslexia played in their success and they don't say it was an obstacle.
They say it's the reason they succeeded.
A disadvantage that became an advantage.
Here's what Gladwell wants you to understand:
When we see differences in success, our default explanation is differences in ability.
We forget how much poverty, stupidity, and attitude constrain what people can become.
We refuse to admit that our own arbitrary rules are leaving talent on the table.
We cling to naive beliefs that our meritocracies are fair.
The capitalization argument is liberating.
It says you don't look at a struggling group and conclude they're incapable. It says problems that look genetic or innate are often just failures of exploitation.
It says we can make a profound difference in how well people turn out.
If we choose to pay attention.
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.
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