Sunday, 12 July 2026

Whispers Beneath the Brahmaputra

Whispers Beneath the Brahmaputra Part I: The River Keeps Its Secrets By the time the sun slipped behind the blue hills of Assam, the Brahmaputra had turned the color of molten bronze. It wound through the valley like an ancient serpent, broad, majestic, and deceptively calm. Boatmen often said that the river had moods like a human being. Some days she sang. On others, she swallowed. Captain Hari Das had spent forty-two years navigating her shifting channels. He trusted neither the weather forecast nor the river's silence. "The Brahmaputra never repeats herself," he would tell young deckhands. "She changes her mind faster than people." On the evening of 14 October, as the passenger launch Padmajyoti prepared to leave Neamati Ghat for Majuli Island, Hari stood at the helm watching dark clouds gather over the eastern horizon. Something felt wrong. Not dangerous. Different. The wind had stopped. Birds that usually skimmed the water had disappeared. Even the river dolphins, playful companions of the ferry, had vanished beneath the surface. His assistant, nineteen-year-old Nayan, came running with the manifest. "One hundred and eighteen passengers, Captain." Hari frowned. "The boat is licensed for one hundred." "The festival crowd, sir." Hari looked toward the waiting passengers. A newly married couple carrying jasmine garlands. A retired judge travelling to inaugurate a rural library. A famous environmental scientist. Two monks. Three foreign tourists. Mothers with sleepy children. An old violinist protecting a weather-beaten instrument case. Ordinary lives. Each carrying invisible stories. Hari sighed. "No one gets left behind before Durga Puja." He ordered the ropes untied. The Padmajyoti eased into the current. None aboard imagined they were sailing into history. ________________________________________ Among the passengers sat investigative journalist Ananya Sen, notebook balanced on her lap. She had come to Majuli to investigate illegal sand mining along the Brahmaputra. Satellite images suggested entire islands were disappearing faster than nature alone could explain. Someone was stealing the river itself. Her editor had laughed. "Who steals a river?" "People who become rich before anyone notices." She had already received two anonymous warnings to abandon the story. Instead, she boarded the ferry. ________________________________________ Near the stern, a soft-spoken elderly priest named Father Dominic watched children chase each other between rows of benches. Every few minutes he glanced nervously toward a middle-aged businessman travelling alone. The businessman never removed his expensive sunglasses. Even after sunset. Even while reading. The priest seemed to know him. But the man pretended otherwise. ________________________________________ Down in the cargo hold, mechanic Nayan noticed something peculiar. One of the emergency fuel valves had fresh scratches around it. He frowned. He had serviced the engine that morning. Those scratches hadn't been there. He bent closer. The locking pin was missing. "Captain!" Before he could climb the stairs, the boat lurched violently. A sudden crosscurrent struck from nowhere. Passengers screamed. Hari steadied the wheel expertly. "Nothing to worry about!" The launch recovered. Yet he continued staring into the dark water. The river felt alive beneath the hull. Restless. Waiting. ________________________________________ Rain arrived without warning. Not gentle rain. Sheets of water crashed against the deck. Lightning tore open the sky. The Brahmaputra transformed within minutes. Calm water became walls of swirling current. The wind roared like a freight train. Children cried. Passengers prayed. Hari shouted orders over the storm. "Everyone inside!" But many remained on deck, mesmerized by nature's fury. ________________________________________ Then came the explosion. Not large. A sharp metallic bang beneath the engine room. The lights flickered. The engine coughed. Silence. The propeller stopped turning. The ferry drifted helplessly. Hari's face drained of color. "We've lost propulsion." The current seized the Padmajyoti. It spun broadside. Toward the infamous Kachari Bend. Every boatman feared that stretch. Hidden whirlpools formed where underwater sandbanks shifted daily. Several vessels had vanished there over decades. Hari fought the useless wheel. "Drop both anchors!" Nothing happened. The anchor winch refused to respond. Nayan raced below. His flashlight revealed the horrifying truth. The hydraulic cables had been cleanly severed. Not snapped. Cut. With a blade. ________________________________________ "This wasn't the storm," he whispered. ________________________________________ The Padmajyoti drifted straight toward a cluster of half-submerged rocks. Hari made one desperate decision. "Life jackets!" Crew members threw them frantically into the crowd. Chaos erupted. People pushed. Children became separated from parents. Luggage scattered across the deck. The businessman in sunglasses calmly walked toward the lifeboats. Father Dominic followed him. "You can't leave yet." The man smiled coldly. "I disagree." He struck the priest hard enough to knock him unconscious. Only Ananya witnessed the attack. Before she could react— The ferry slammed into the rocks. The sound echoed across the valley like thunder. Steel screamed. Glass exploded. Water rushed through the torn hull. Within seconds the deck tilted violently. People were thrown into the raging river. ________________________________________ Ananya hit the freezing water. For one terrifying moment she saw nothing but bubbles. Then she surfaced. Cries surrounded her. A mother clung desperately to two children. The violinist floated beside his instrument case. Captain Hari remained on the bridge, refusing to abandon the vessel. He shouted directions even as water reached his knees. "Swim downstream! Not across!" The ferry broke apart. One half disappeared beneath the current. The other spun away into darkness. ________________________________________ At dawn, rescue teams found sixty-three survivors. Thirty-eight bodies. Seventeen people remained missing. Captain Hari was among the dead. Still gripping the wheel. The newspapers called it the worst river disaster in twenty years. Officials blamed an unexpected storm. Nature. Nothing more. The investigation was closed within forty-eight hours. Too quickly for Ananya. ________________________________________ She remembered the cut hydraulic cables. The missing locking pin. The businessman striking Father Dominic. The explosion. None of it matched an ordinary accident. When she told the authorities, they smiled politely. "Trauma affects memory." "No." "It was sabotage." "There is no evidence." She looked toward the river. The evidence had sunk beneath forty feet of muddy water. ________________________________________ Three days later, a fisherman found something caught in his net. A waterproof satchel. Inside lay Father Dominic's Bible. Between its pages was a folded envelope addressed only to: "If anything happens during the crossing..." The fisherman delivered it to Ananya. Inside was a handwritten note. "The man wearing dark glasses is not who he claims to be." "His name is not Vikram Saha." "Do not trust the police inspector." "And whatever you do..." The final sentence ended abruptly. The bottom half of the page had been torn away. ________________________________________ Ananya began digging. Passenger records revealed no Vikram Saha. The address on his ticket belonged to an abandoned warehouse. His phone number did not exist. Even stranger, CCTV footage from the ghat showed him boarding the ferry... without casting a reflection in the rain-soaked glass doors behind him. It made no sense. Experts insisted it was merely an angle of light. Yet the image disturbed her. ________________________________________ The post-mortem reports arrived. Every victim had drowned. Except one. The businessman in sunglasses. He had been shot. Once. Through the heart. At close range. Before entering the water. No weapon was found. No witness reported hearing a gunshot. The storm had swallowed the sound. Now the mystery had become far darker. Someone had sabotaged the ferry. Someone aboard had committed murder during the chaos. And someone else was determined that the truth remain buried beneath the restless waters of the Brahmaputra. As Ananya looked across the winding river, where mist drifted like forgotten souls over the current, she realized the crash itself had been only the beginning. The river had yielded its first secret. Many more were still waiting below.

The Other Side of Midnight

The Other Side of Midnight By day, Ethan Carter was invisible. At precisely 8:15 every morning, he arrived at the headquarters of Greenfield Insurance carrying the same black briefcase and drinking the same medium-sized coffee. He nodded politely to the security guard in the lobby, took the elevator to the seventh floor, and settled into his cubicle. His job involved processing insurance claims. It was neither exciting nor particularly difficult. For eight hours a day, Ethan examined forms, reviewed reports, and entered data into spreadsheets. He answered emails. Attended meetings. Filed paperwork. The work was predictable. The people were predictable. Even Ethan seemed predictable. His coworkers described him as quiet, reliable, and somewhat boring. No one knew much about him. No one thought there was much to know. That was exactly how Ethan preferred it. Because every evening, when the office lights dimmed and employees headed home, Ethan became someone else entirely. At 6:03 p.m., he left the building. By 7:00 p.m., his second life began. And in that life, he wasn't invisible at all. He was known across the city by a different name. Ghost. The nickname had appeared years ago and somehow stuck. Nobody knew his real identity. Nobody knew where he lived. Nobody knew what he did during the day. All they knew was that Ghost had an unusual talent. He could find things. Missing people. Missing information. Missing truths. It had started accidentally. Five years earlier, Ethan's younger sister, Lily, had disappeared for nearly forty-eight hours. The police eventually found her safe, but during those terrifying days Ethan discovered something important about himself. He had a gift for investigation. While authorities followed official procedures, Ethan had tracked down witnesses, examined security footage, connected unrelated details, and uncovered leads everyone else had overlooked. His efforts played a crucial role in finding Lily. Afterward, friends began asking for help with smaller problems. A stolen motorcycle. A missing pet. An online scam. A runaway teenager. Ethan solved them all. Word spread quietly. Soon strangers were contacting him. At first he refused. Then curiosity drew him in. Eventually he created an anonymous online profile. Ghost Investigations. No photographs. No personal details. Only results. Years later, hundreds of people knew the name Ghost. Yet nobody suspected he spent his mornings approving insurance claims. Maintaining two lives required discipline. Ethan followed strict rules. Rule one: Never reveal personal information. Rule two: Never meet clients near home. Rule three: Never let one life interfere with the other. For years the system worked perfectly. Until everything began falling apart. The trouble started on a rainy Tuesday. Ethan was reviewing a claim involving minor vehicle damage when his phone vibrated. The message came through an encrypted application used exclusively for Ghost's clients. URGENT. PLEASE HELP. MY BROTHER IS MISSING. Normally Ethan ignored messages until after work. This one felt different. The sender attached a photograph. A young man. Twenty-two years old. University student. Missing for three days. The family had already contacted police. No progress. Ethan studied the information during his lunch break. Something about the case bothered him. Missing-person reports often contained obvious explanations. Arguments. Financial troubles. Relationship issues. This case didn't. The young man had vanished without warning. His phone was inactive. His bank account untouched. His friends knew nothing. By evening Ethan accepted the case. He told himself it was routine. Just another investigation. He was wrong. Over the next week, Ghost followed dozens of leads. Most went nowhere. Some created more questions. The deeper he dug, the stranger the situation became. Then he discovered something unexpected. The missing student had been investigating corporate corruption before disappearing. Specifically, he had been researching fraudulent insurance claims. Ethan froze. Insurance claims. The connection felt uncomfortably familiar. He opened another file. Then another. Patterns emerged. Claims approved unusually quickly. Large payments. Identical documentation submitted under different names. The fraud appeared sophisticated. Organized. And somehow connected to the company where Ethan worked. Greenfield Insurance. His day job. For the first time, his two worlds collided. The realization sent a chill through him. He spent several nights reviewing records. The evidence grew stronger. Someone inside Greenfield was helping criminals steal millions. And the missing student had gotten too close. Ethan knew he should contact authorities immediately. Yet he hesitated. His evidence remained incomplete. And if corruption existed within the company, warning the wrong person could end the investigation instantly. So Ghost continued digging. Meanwhile, Ethan maintained appearances at work. He attended meetings. Answered emails. Smiled politely at coworkers. All while secretly investigating people seated only a few feet away. The experience felt surreal. Every conversation carried new meaning. Every interaction became suspicious. One afternoon Ethan sat through a departmental meeting while secretly observing everyone around him. Richard from finance. Melissa from compliance. Daniel from claims management. Any one of them could be involved. Or none of them. The uncertainty was exhausting. Then another problem emerged. A new employee joined Ethan's department. Her name was Sophia Bennett. Unlike most coworkers, she refused to accept Ethan's carefully constructed invisibility. She asked questions. Started conversations. Invited him to lunch. At first Ethan kept his distance. Relationships complicated things. Secrets created barriers. Yet Sophia persisted. Gradually they became friends. Then something more. For the first time in years, Ethan found himself genuinely enjoying someone's company. That should have made him happy. Instead it created anxiety. Because every meaningful conversation increased the risk of exposure. Sophia knew Ethan. Ghost remained hidden. The two identities could not coexist forever. One evening they shared dinner at a small restaurant downtown. Halfway through the meal, Sophia studied him thoughtfully. "Can I ask you something?" "Sure." "Why are you always looking over your shoulder?" Ethan nearly dropped his fork. "What?" "You do it constantly." He forced a laugh. "I don't know what you mean." "Yes, you do." Her gaze remained steady. "You act like you're expecting someone to find you." The observation struck closer to the truth than she realized. Ethan changed the subject. But her words stayed with him. Maintaining two lives required constant vigilance. Maybe people were starting to notice. A week later, Ghost finally found a breakthrough. Security footage from a parking garage showed the missing student entering a vehicle registered to a shell company. Further investigation linked the company to fraudulent insurance operations. The evidence was substantial. Enough to involve law enforcement. Ethan prepared an anonymous report. Then disaster struck. Someone broke into his apartment. The intruder took nothing valuable. Television untouched. Laptop untouched. Cash untouched. Only one thing disappeared. The investigation file. Someone knew. The realization hit like a punch to the stomach. His anonymity had been compromised. Ghost was no longer hunting. Ghost was being hunted. For the first time in years, genuine fear entered Ethan's life. He installed additional locks. Changed routines. Increased precautions. Yet anxiety followed him everywhere. At work. At home. Even during sleep. The pressure intensified when he noticed unfamiliar faces watching him. A black sedan parked near his apartment. A man lingering outside a coffee shop. Footsteps behind him late at night. Maybe coincidence. Maybe not. Either way, Ethan understood the message. Someone wanted him to stop. He refused. The missing student still mattered. The corruption still existed. Walking away would only protect the people responsible. So Ghost continued. Carefully. Quietly. Determinedly. Then everything unraveled on a Thursday afternoon. Ethan was reviewing documents when security personnel entered the office. Several executives followed. Employees exchanged confused glances. The atmosphere changed instantly. Something was wrong. Very wrong. A few moments later, federal investigators entered. Conversations stopped. Silence spread across the room. Ethan's heart pounded. Had they discovered Ghost? Had someone exposed him? Instead, investigators approached Daniel from claims management. Then Richard from finance. Then two additional employees. The suspects looked stunned. Some protested. Others remained silent. All were escorted away. The fraudulent operation had been uncovered. Authorities had been investigating independently for months. Ghost's anonymous evidence had provided the final piece. Relief washed through Ethan. The criminals were caught. The corruption exposed. The nightmare was ending. Or so he believed. That evening, while leaving work, he found Sophia waiting outside. "We need to talk." Her tone immediately alarmed him. "What happened?" She handed him a folder. Inside were photographs. Documents. Notes. Evidence. Evidence about him. Specifically, evidence connecting Ethan Carter to Ghost. His stomach dropped. Sophia sighed. "I knew something was strange." "You investigated me?" "I was worried." Ethan struggled to respond. Years of secrecy suddenly felt fragile. "I wasn't trying to hurt you," she said softly. "Then why?" "Because I care about you." The words carried unexpected weight. Sophia continued. "When those arrests happened today, I started connecting things." She pointed toward the folder. "You disappear every evening." "You know people all over the city." "You always seem to know things before anyone else." Ethan looked away. Silence stretched between them. Finally he asked, "How much do you know?" "Enough." For several moments neither spoke. Then Sophia surprised him. She smiled. "You know, I expected something less interesting." Ethan blinked. "What?" "I thought you were secretly married." Despite everything, he laughed. The tension eased slightly. Sophia stepped closer. "You're not a criminal, Ethan." "No." "You're helping people." "Usually." "Then why hide it?" The question lingered. Why indeed? At first secrecy had protected his investigations. Later it became habit. Then identity. Eventually the mask felt safer than honesty. Yet standing there, facing someone who knew the truth, Ethan experienced something unexpected. Relief. The secret no longer belonged entirely to him. Sophia already knew. And the world hadn't ended. Months passed. The corruption case concluded successfully. The missing student was found alive and entered witness protection. The criminal network collapsed. Life gradually returned to normal. Or at least as normal as possible. Ethan still worked at Greenfield Insurance. Still processed claims. Still occupied the same cubicle. From the outside, nothing appeared different. Yet internally everything had changed. Sophia remained part of his life. And for the first time, another person understood both versions of him. The ordinary employee. The mysterious investigator. The duality no longer felt like a burden. Instead it felt complete. One evening, after solving another case, Ethan sat on a rooftop overlooking the city skyline. The lights below stretched endlessly across the darkness. Thousands of windows. Thousands of lives. Thousands of secrets. His phone buzzed. A new message. Someone needed help. Another mystery. Another problem waiting to be solved. Ghost was still needed. Yet Ethan no longer viewed his double life the same way. For years he had believed his identities existed in conflict. One ordinary. One extraordinary. One public. One hidden. But perhaps they were never truly separate. Both lives reflected different parts of the same person. The patient analyst reviewing insurance claims. The determined investigator pursuing truth. Both required observation. Persistence. Attention to detail. The skills were identical. Only the purpose differed. Ethan smiled as he stood. The city waited below. His next case awaited. Tomorrow morning he would return to the office. Drink his coffee. Review paperwork. Appear invisible. And tomorrow evening, Ghost would return to the shadows. Helping strangers. Solving mysteries. Protecting people who had nowhere else to turn. Two lives. One man. And somewhere between them, he had finally discovered who he really was.

The Last Clause

The Last Clause When seventy-nine-year-old industrialist Devendra Nath Roy died on a rain-soaked August evening, Kolkata mourned a titan. Television channels replayed footage of his factories, schools, and charitable hospitals. Editorials called him the man who built fortunes with discipline and gave them away with dignity. Politicians praised him. Business rivals admired him. Employees lit candles outside the headquarters of the Roy Group. Only those who knew him well understood one uncomfortable truth. Devendra Roy trusted no one. Not his lawyers. Not his accountants. Certainly not his family. And with good reason. His only son, Arindam, had squandered three successful businesses before the age of forty-five. His daughter-in-law, Malini, possessed the polished smile of a diplomat and the calculating instincts of a chess grandmaster. His twin grandchildren, Riya and Rohan, had learned from childhood that affection was measured in property values. The old man had often joked, "If I leave my fortune to my family, they'll stop speaking to one another. If I don't, they'll stop speaking to me." No one had laughed. ________________________________________ A week after the funeral, the family assembled in the wood-paneled office of Advocate Somesh Mukherjee, Devendra Roy's lawyer for nearly thirty years. Rain lashed the tall windows. A silver tray of untouched tea grew cold. Mukherjee adjusted his spectacles. "Mr. Roy left a detailed will." Everyone leaned forward. "The estate, including factories, real estate, investments, artwork, and liquid assets, is valued at approximately two thousand crore rupees." Even those who knew the number felt a thrill hearing it aloud. Mukherjee continued. "The estate shall not be divided immediately." Four faces stiffened. "Instead, every beneficiary must reside together for one calendar year in Roy House." Rohan laughed. "That's ridiculous." Mukherjee ignored him. "During that year, none of the assets may be sold, mortgaged, transferred, or gifted." Malini frowned. "And after a year?" Mukherjee turned the page. "Only if all beneficiaries jointly certify that harmony has been maintained shall the estate be divided equally." Silence. "And if not?" "The entire estate shall pass to the Devendra Roy Charitable Trust." The room erupted. "This is absurd!" "He can't do this!" "This is emotional blackmail!" Mukherjee quietly folded the will. "My late client anticipated your reactions." ________________________________________ Roy House had once echoed with laughter. Now it echoed with suspicion. Each family member occupied a different wing, avoided shared meals, and hired private detectives to watch one another. The staff whispered. Within a week, strange things began happening. Jewellery disappeared. Documents went missing. Anonymous notes appeared beneath bedroom doors. "Someone is recording your conversations." "Don't trust Malini." "Rohan has met property brokers." Every accusation deepened the cracks. ________________________________________ Three months later, the priceless emerald necklace belonging to Devendra Roy's late wife vanished from the family vault. The alarm had never sounded. Only four fingerprints were found. Those of the heirs. Police found nothing. Everyone blamed everyone else. The inheritance seemed cursed. ________________________________________ Meanwhile, Advocate Mukherjee behaved oddly. He insisted on monthly inspections of Roy House. He checked security cameras himself. He questioned servants. He wandered through unused rooms carrying an old notebook. Riya noticed. "What exactly are you looking for?" He smiled vaguely. "Your grandfather believed every house remembers." She assumed grief had affected him. ________________________________________ Christmas arrived without celebration. By New Year's Day, Arindam announced he was leaving. "I don't care about the money." No one believed him. Mukherjee reminded him calmly, "If anyone leaves before the year ends, the trust inherits everything." Arindam unpacked his suitcase. ________________________________________ One February evening, a gardener discovered a rusted iron key buried beneath an ancient banyan tree. Attached was a brass tag. LIBRARY - LOWER CABINET Inside the cabinet lay a sealed envelope. It contained only one sentence. "The first thief has already stolen far more than jewellery." Unsigned. No explanation. Panic spread like wildfire. Who was the first thief? What had been stolen? ________________________________________ The accusations became vicious. Malini hired forensic accountants. Rohan hacked into company emails. Riya secretly copied financial records. Arindam drank heavily. Nobody trusted anybody. Exactly as Devendra Roy had predicted. ________________________________________ Then came the first death. Advocate Somesh Mukherjee collapsed during dinner. A heart attack, doctors said. Natural. Yet before dying, he whispered only three words. "Not... the... will..." Those present exchanged uneasy glances. What did he mean? ________________________________________ Among his papers, they found another sealed instruction. It read: "If I die before the inheritance is settled, open the blue safe behind the portrait." Behind Devendra Roy's portrait stood an antique wall safe. Inside rested another will. Dated six months later than the first. Everyone stared. Which was genuine? The first divided everything equally. The second disinherited Arindam entirely. Malini smiled. Too quickly. Riya noticed. ________________________________________ The family rushed to court. Handwriting experts examined signatures. Ink specialists analyzed paper. Forensic laboratories compared impressions. The newer will appeared authentic. Almost impossibly authentic. ________________________________________ Justice Ananya Basu frowned. "Either Mr. Roy changed his mind..." She paused. "...or someone committed one of the finest document frauds I've ever seen." ________________________________________ Private investigator Kabir Sen entered the story almost by accident. Retired from the police, he had been asked only to verify the history of the safe. Instead, he noticed something everyone else ignored. The old grandfather clock in the library lost exactly seven minutes every midnight. Not randomly. Every single night. He opened the clock. Hidden inside was a tiny digital recorder. Months of conversations. Every argument. Every confession. Every conspiracy. Devendra Roy had secretly recorded his family. But why? ________________________________________ Listening carefully, Kabir made a startling discovery. Several conversations had been edited. Voices were missing. Someone had accessed the recorder after Devendra's death. Someone wanted certain evidence erased. ________________________________________ Only one person possessed unrestricted access. Advocate Mukherjee. But he was dead. Unless... Kabir requested the lawyer's financial records. A transfer caught his attention. Twenty crore rupees. Paid three weeks before Mukherjee died. From an offshore account. Recipient unknown. ________________________________________ The investigation widened. Eventually, the offshore account led to an astonishing name. Not a family member. Devendra Roy himself. Transferred before his death. Impossible. Dead men did not move money. Unless someone had anticipated his death. ________________________________________ Kabir reopened the medical records. The industrialist had died of cardiac arrest. Routine. No autopsy. Because nobody requested one. He ordered toxicological testing on preserved blood samples. Tiny traces of digitalis. Enough to trigger fatal arrhythmia. Devendra Roy had been murdered. ________________________________________ Now everyone had motive. The inheritance transformed from civil dispute into homicide. Police searched Roy House thoroughly. Inside the false bottom of Malini's dressing table they found... Nothing. She had expected them. The hiding place had been emptied hours earlier. Someone else was playing a larger game. ________________________________________ Then Kabir noticed the gardener. Old Haripada. Invisible. Silent. Always present. Haripada had served the Roy family for forty-eight years. He knew every hidden passage, every duplicate key, every family secret. Kabir asked gently, "Did Mr. Roy trust you?" The old gardener smiled. "He trusted flowers more than people." "And you?" "I watered both." ________________________________________ Haripada produced a faded notebook. "Saheb asked me to keep this if anything happened." Inside were dates. Meetings. Conversations. Names. One name appeared repeatedly. Aarav Sen. No one knew the man. ________________________________________ Kabir found him in Darjeeling. A schoolteacher. Forty years old. Quiet. Ordinary. He had never heard of Devendra Roy. Or so he claimed. Then Kabir showed him an old photograph. The teacher turned pale. "Where did you get this?" "You know him." "He visited my orphanage every birthday." "What?" "He paid for my education anonymously." Kabir stared. "Why?" "I never asked." ________________________________________ DNA testing revealed the impossible. Aarav Sen was Devendra Roy's biological son. Born decades earlier from a relationship the businessman had hidden to protect both families from scandal. He had supported the boy secretly all his life. Only Haripada had known. ________________________________________ Everything changed. The dubious inheritance plan was never about dividing wealth. It was bait. Devendra had known someone wanted him dead. He designed an inheritance so outrageous that the guilty would expose themselves trying to control it. The fake wills. The hidden keys. The recorded conversations. The impossible conditions. Every twist forced the conspirators into the open. ________________________________________ But one mystery remained. Who killed him? Kabir replayed the recorder again. Not the conversations. The silences. Every night at exactly 11:47 p.m., seven minutes disappeared. Then inspiration struck. The clock lost seven minutes because those minutes had been physically removed. Not digitally. Someone had cut the recording tape. But tiny magnetic traces remained. Forensic audio reconstruction recovered a fragment. A woman's voice. Soft. Calm. "I've dissolved it in your evening tea." Then laughter. Not malicious. Relieved. ________________________________________ The voice belonged not to Malini... Nor Riya... But to Devendra Roy's personal nurse. Sister Anjali. The woman everyone considered beyond suspicion. ________________________________________ Confronted, she wept. "I didn't want his money." "Then why?" "He begged me." Silence. "What?" "He knew his heart was failing." "He knew the family would destroy itself." "He asked me to help him leave before disease stole his dignity." Kabir stared. "Mercy killing?" "No." "He drank the tea himself." "I tried to stop him." "He smiled." "He said, 'Sometimes the only way to reveal true faces is to remove the one everyone performs for.'" ________________________________________ There had been no murder. Only assisted suicide. Painfully illegal. Morally complicated. Entirely in character. ________________________________________ The court eventually ruled that because Devendra Roy had deliberately engineered uncertainty, neither disputed will could safely represent his final intention. The estate would instead be administered under trust supervision until all legal issues were resolved. The family received modest annual allowances. Nothing more. The empire they had fought over became permanently dedicated to hospitals, scholarships, and rural health programs. Exactly the outcome Devendra had privately hoped for. ________________________________________ Months later, Aarav visited Roy House for the first time. The mansion was no longer a private residence. It had become the Devendra Roy Centre for Public Health. Children ran through gardens where heirs had once plotted against one another. The library had become a reading room. The dining hall served free meals to cancer patients' families. Haripada, now retired, smiled as he watched. "You know," he said, "people still argue about the inheritance." Aarav looked around. "They're wrong." "How so?" "They think the inheritance was money." "It wasn't." "What was it?" "A lesson." ________________________________________ Before leaving, Aarav paused before a bronze plaque engraved with Devendra Roy's final words, discovered inside a sealed envelope months after every court battle had ended. "If wealth makes a family forget love, then wealth deserves a better family." Visitors often stopped to read the sentence. Most smiled politely before walking on. Only those who knew the extraordinary story behind it understood its true meaning. Devendra Roy had indeed left behind a dubious inheritance plan. Not because he doubted his fortune. Because he doubted the people who wanted it. And in the end, the greatest twist was not that no one inherited his billions. It was that the only heir who never expected a single rupee inherited the one thing the others had lost long before the will was ever opened— His father's integrity. For fortunes can be divided, stolen, forged, hidden, or contested. Character cannot. That was the last clause. And it was the only one that truly mattered.

- The Borrowed Name

- The Borrowed Name - On the morning she turned sixty-eight, the woman known to the residents of Shantiniketan Apartments as Mrs. Mira Sen stood before the mirror, adjusted the red border of her white cotton sari, and practiced the same lie she had told every day for the past twenty-three years. - "My husband was a civil engineer." - She smiled. - "My son lives in Toronto." - She smiled again. - "I was a history teacher." - Perfect. - Three lies. Smooth as silk. - She had repeated them so often they had acquired the comforting texture of truth. - Outside, the neighborhood was waking. Vendors shouted about fresh vegetables, the milkman's bicycle bell rang through the lane, and children hurried toward school with oversized backpacks. - Mira folded her bed carefully. - People who lived alone developed rituals. - The rituals prevented questions. - At precisely eight, the doorbell rang. - It was little Rohan from the third floor. - "Aunty, Mummy sent you birthday payesh." - "Oh! Tell her thank you." - He looked at the framed photograph on the shelf. - "That's your son?" - "Yes." - "When is he coming from Canada?" - "Soon." - "When?" - She hesitated only a fraction. - "Very soon." - The boy grinned and ran downstairs. - She closed the door gently. - The photograph was not of her son. - It was clipped from a magazine twenty-three years ago. - ________________________________________ - Across the city, investigative journalist Arjun Dutta stared at a yellowing newspaper from 1999. - The headline read: - SOCIAL WORKER VANISHES AFTER FLOOD RESCUE - There was no body. - No explanation. - Just disappearance. - The woman's name was Leela Mukherjee. - Arjun frowned. - Something about the photograph tugged at him. - The eyes. - He enlarged the image. - His heart skipped. - Those eyes belonged to someone he had seen only yesterday buying jasmine flowers outside Kalighat Temple. - Mrs. Mira Sen. - ________________________________________ - Arjun believed coincidences were lazy explanations. - He began watching her. - Every morning she fed stray dogs. - Every Thursday she visited the old age home. - Every Sunday she left anonymous grocery bags outside the homes of struggling families. - She never accepted praise. - Never allowed photographs. - Never attended celebrations. - A woman hiding from attention. - Or hiding within it. - ________________________________________ - One afternoon he approached her. - "Excuse me, Mrs. Sen?" - She smiled. - "Yes?" - "I'm writing a feature on retired teachers." - "Oh." - "I heard you taught history." - "For many years." - "Which school?" - There was the slightest pause. - "St. Mary's." - "Really?" - "Yes." - "My mother studied there." - "Perhaps I taught her." - "My mother says the school never had a teacher named Mira Sen." - Silence. - Then she laughed. - "I must be getting old. I meant St. Agnes." - A graceful recovery. - Too graceful. - ________________________________________ - That evening Arjun visited St. Agnes. - No Mira Sen had ever worked there. - ________________________________________ - His editor was delighted. - "Find out who she really is." - "But what if she isn't dangerous?" - "Everyone hiding a past has a reason." - Arjun nodded. - He wasn't so sure anymore. - ________________________________________ - Days later, he saw her buying expensive medicines. - Not for herself. - For a rickshaw puller's wife. - She quietly paid the pharmacist and disappeared before anyone could thank her. - Why would a fraud spend her modest pension helping strangers? - Nothing fit. - ________________________________________ - He followed her one rainy evening. - She entered a forgotten cemetery. - Not to visit a grave. - To clean one. - The stone bore a single name. - Leela Mukherjee - Arjun froze. - His pulse hammered. - If Mira was standing before Leela's grave... - Who was buried beneath it? - ________________________________________ - He stepped from behind a banyan tree. - "Mrs. Sen." - She looked startled. - "You've been following me." - "Who are you?" - She remained silent. - "I know about Leela Mukherjee." - Rain drummed softly on umbrellas. - She knelt before the grave. - "I wondered how long it would take." - "So you are Leela?" - "No." - "Then why are you here?" - She touched the stone lovingly. - "Because she saved my life." - ________________________________________ - The story unfolded slowly. - Twenty-four years earlier, devastating floods had swallowed entire villages in North Bengal. - Leela Mukherjee, a fearless social worker, had led rescue operations. - Among those rescued was a terrified woman named... - "Madhabi." - "My real name." - She looked at him calmly. - "I was nobody." - Her husband had trafficked women across the border. - When she threatened to expose him, he sold her instead. - She escaped. - Barely. - The police couldn't protect her. - The traffickers had money. - Influence. - Weapons. - Leela hid her. - Fed her. - Gave her hope. - Then the flood came. - During the rescue, the traffickers found them. - There was a struggle. - The rescue boat overturned. - When the waters settled... - Leela had vanished. - Only one survivor remained. - Madhabi. - ________________________________________ - "The police assumed Leela drowned." - "And you?" - "I was officially dead too." - She smiled sadly. - "So I borrowed another life." - "You became Mira Sen." - "Yes." - "You stole an identity." - "I inherited one." - ________________________________________ - Arjun frowned. - She continued. - "There really was a Mira Sen." - She was an orphan who died as a child before any documents became digitized. - A retired magistrate sympathetic to Leela's work quietly helped create a legal identity. - "It wasn't legal." - "No." - "But it kept me alive." - ________________________________________ - Arjun expected outrage. - Instead he felt profound sadness. - "You've lived twenty-three years pretending." - "No." - She looked at him steadily. - "I've spent twenty-three years becoming worthy of the life I was given." - ________________________________________ - He wanted to publish everything. - His editor demanded it. - "This is front-page material!" - Woman lives under false identity! - Government failure! - Fake documents! - Exclusive! - Arjun couldn't sleep. - Journalism demanded truth. - But truth could destroy someone who had spent two decades serving others. - ________________________________________ - Before deciding, he visited her once more. - She was teaching neighborhood children beneath a banyan tree. - Not history. - Reading. - One little girl stumbled over a difficult sentence. - Mira smiled patiently. - "No hurry." - The child tried again. - Succeeded. - Her face lit up. - Watching them, Arjun realized something unsettling. - The lies had built a life filled almost entirely with kindness. - ________________________________________ - That night someone knocked violently on Mira's door. - Three men. - Expensive shoes. - Cold eyes. - "Mrs. Sen?" - "Yes." - "We've been looking for someone." - "I don't understand." - "You used to be called Madhabi." - Her face lost all color. - After twenty-three years... - The past had arrived. - ________________________________________ - Arjun happened to be nearby. - Instinct made him follow. - The men forced their way inside. - He called the police. - Too late. - The apartment was empty. - Only an overturned chair remained. - ________________________________________ - The kidnappers drove toward the outskirts of the city. - Their leader laughed. - "Thought changing your name would save you?" - Madhabi remained silent. - "Your husband is dead." - She looked up. - "So who sent you?" - His smile widened. - "Your son." - "My..." - "You didn't know?" - Impossible. - She had never had children. - Or had she? - ________________________________________ - Twenty-four years earlier, while imprisoned by traffickers, she had given birth. - The baby had been taken away immediately. - She believed he had died. - Now she learned the horrifying truth. - He had lived. - Raised by criminals. - Taught that his mother abandoned him. - ________________________________________ - At an abandoned warehouse she met him. - Forty years old. - Hard eyes. - Expensive watch. - The face of a stranger. - He studied her. - "So." - "You remember nothing of me." - "I remember being told you didn't want me." - She whispered, - "I searched for you." - "Liar." - "They told me you died." - "They told me you ran away." - Two stolen lives stood facing one another. - Both built upon lies neither had chosen. - ________________________________________ - Meanwhile, Arjun discovered something astonishing while searching old court archives. - Leela Mukherjee had not drowned. - She had survived. - Severely injured. - Without memory. - She had spent years in a Himalayan monastery under another name. - Only recently had fragments returned. - She was alive. - ________________________________________ - Arjun raced to find her. - He succeeded. - An elderly woman with serene eyes listened quietly. - "Madhabi?" - She smiled. - "I wondered whether she found peace." - "She needs you." - ________________________________________ - When Leela entered the warehouse, everyone froze. - Even the gangsters. - Madhabi stared as though seeing a ghost. - "You..." - Leela smiled warmly. - "You've grown older." - "So have you." - They embraced. - Years dissolved. - Even the criminals looked away. - ________________________________________ - The leader sneered. - "Touching." - Leela turned calmly toward Madhabi's son. - "Your mother never abandoned you." - "How would you know?" - "Because I carried you." - Silence. - "What?" - "Across floodwaters." - "I held you while your mother searched for food." - She looked into his eyes. - "You laughed whenever it rained." - The man frowned. - A forgotten memory flickered. - A lullaby. - A warm voice. - A woman humming. - Not his kidnappers. - Someone else. - Leela. - ________________________________________ - The gang leader drew a pistol. - "No more stories." - Before he could fire, the son stepped between them. - "No." - "You've forgotten who raised you." - "No." - "I finally remembered who didn't." - The police stormed in moments later. - The gang surrendered. - Not because of weapons. - Because decades of manipulation had collapsed in a single conversation. - ________________________________________ - Months later, the government quietly regularized Madhabi's identity. - Not because she had deceived society. - Because society had first failed her. - She no longer needed to pretend to be Mira Sen. - Officials asked which name she wished to keep. - She thought for a long time. - Then smiled. - "Both." - They looked puzzled. - She explained. - "Madhabi survived." - "Mira learned to live." - "I cannot abandon either woman." - ________________________________________ - Arjun eventually wrote the story. - But not the sensational version. - His opening paragraph read: - "Sometimes a false name hides a criminal. - Sometimes it hides a survivor. - The difficult task is learning the difference." - The article won national awards. - Not because it exposed deception. - Because it exposed compassion. - ________________________________________ - On the first anniversary of the article, the apartment residents organized a surprise celebration. - Rohan, now much taller, handed her a new photograph. - It showed everyone in the building gathered together. - "This one is real," he said proudly. - "No magazine people." - She laughed until tears filled her eyes. - For the first time in twenty-three years, the frame on her shelf no longer held a stranger pretending to be family. - It held her family. - ________________________________________ - Years later, when children asked why she had two names, she would smile. - "Because one name was given to me." - "And the other?" - "I earned." - They never fully understood. - Perhaps they didn't need to. - For names, like stories, are only doors. - It is the life lived behind them that matters. - Some people spend a lifetime pretending to be someone they are not because they hunger for power. - Others do so because they are running from fear. - And a rare few borrow another identity only long enough to discover the courage to become themselves again. - In the end, the greatest surprise was not that a woman had lived under a false name for twenty-three years. - It was that the truest thing about her had never been her name at all. - It was her kindness. - And kindness, unlike identity, never needs to pretend. -

The Processor

The Processor The auditorium at the Advanced Neuropsychiatry Institute in Kolkata was unusually quiet. The audience had expected a lecture on Alzheimer's disease. Instead, the silver-haired psychiatrist standing before them smiled and asked a simple question. "How many of you have forgotten where you kept your spectacles this week?" Almost every hand went up. Dr. Rash Behari Bose chuckled. "Good. Then most of you are probably healthier than you fear." Soft laughter rippled through the hall. He clicked the remote, and the screen behind him displayed a single name. Professor Bruno Dor A memory returned—not from a patient, but from another lifetime. ________________________________________ Thirty years earlier. Paris. La Pitié-Salpêtrière Hospital. Young Dr. Bose had crossed continents to study under the legendary Professor Bruno Dor of the Institute of Memory and Alzheimer's Disease. On the first day, the professor had walked into class carrying no notes. He looked at his students and asked, "Why are you all taking notes?" Nobody answered. "Because you're afraid you'll forget." He smiled. "Excellent. Fear of forgetting is proof that memory still argues with you." One student raised a hand. "What if someone constantly forgets names, where they left their keys, or the title of a film?" Professor Dor nodded. "Normal aging." Another student asked, "And Alzheimer's?" The professor became serious. "The dangerous patient is not the one who says, 'I'm losing my memory.'" He paused. "The dangerous patient is the one who insists nothing is wrong." He wrote one word across the board. ANOSOGNOSIA "A lack of awareness of one's neurological deficits." He looked at every student individually. "Remember this. Memory is not merely storage. It is also awareness." Those words never left Rash Behari Bose. ________________________________________ Years later, he became one of India's most respected neuropsychiatrists. Journalists called him "The Man Who Remembered Memories." He disliked the title. "The brain," he often said, "is not a library. It is a living city." His clinic overflowed with anxious patients. "I forgot my granddaughter's birthday." "I couldn't remember my bank password." "I entered the kitchen and forgot why." He reassured most of them. "The information is still there. Sometimes the processor simply takes longer." They always left smiling. Until Ms. Lily Chatterjee arrived. ________________________________________ She entered his chamber wearing a pale blue sari and carrying an old leather diary. Her smile possessed unusual calm. "I'm seventy-one." "I know." "I have forgotten many things." "Like?" "My neighbours." "Anyone else?" "My favourite recipes." "Anything more?" She looked directly into his eyes. "You." Dr. Bose frowned. "We've never met." She smiled. "Exactly." ________________________________________ The statement lingered strangely in the room. He asked routine questions. Date. Time. Current Prime Minister. Simple calculations. She answered flawlessly. Perfect orientation. Perfect reasoning. Near-perfect memory. No evidence of dementia. "So why are you here?" She opened the diary. Every page contained names. Hundreds. Every person she'd ever met. Birthdays. Addresses. Tiny observations. "Mr. Das whistles while watering plants." "Mrs. Kapoor cries during thunderstorms." "Taxi driver Imran has twins." Dr. Bose stared. "Why write all this?" "I don't want to lose people." ________________________________________ He recommended stress reduction. Better sleep. Regular walks. She smiled politely. "I knew you would." His pen stopped. "What?" "I knew you would prescribe that." "I prescribe it to many patients." "No." She closed the diary. "You prescribed the same thing twenty-seven years ago." He blinked. "I've never seen you." She simply stood up. "I'll come again." ________________________________________ That evening he searched the hospital archives. Nothing. No Lily Chatterjee. No consultation. No records. His memory insisted they had never met. Yet something unsettled him. ________________________________________ Weeks later she returned. This time she carried photographs. Old black-and-white photographs. Paris. Snow. A classroom. Students standing beside Professor Bruno Dor. Dr. Bose leaned closer. There he was. Young. Thin. Laughing. Beside him... A young Indian woman. Lily. His heartbeat accelerated. "I don't remember this." "I know." "You studied there?" "Yes." "Why aren't you in the alumni records?" "They erased me." He laughed nervously. "Universities don't erase students." "They erase mistakes." ________________________________________ She left behind one photograph. On the back someone had written— "To Rash. Never forget me." The handwriting wasn't hers. It was his. ________________________________________ Sleep abandoned him. He examined old trunks. Letters. Certificates. Passports. Nothing. No Paris photographs. No Lily. Yet forensic examination confirmed the photograph was genuine. His own handwriting. His own face. His own signature. Memory and evidence collided. ________________________________________ He flew to Paris. Professor Bruno Dor was now ninety-four. Fragile. Brilliant eyes. The professor embraced him warmly. "My brightest student." Dr. Bose smiled. "I need your help." He placed the photograph on the table. The old professor stared for a long time. Then tears gathered. "Oh God." "You remember?" "I hoped nobody ever would." ________________________________________ Silence filled the room. Finally Professor Dor spoke. "Lily was extraordinary." "Who was she?" "The finest memory researcher I ever supervised." "Then why don't I remember her?" The professor looked away. "Because you asked me not to let you." ________________________________________ The room froze. "What?" "You volunteered." "For what?" Professor Dor sighed deeply. "In 1998 we conducted an experimental study." "No..." "You insisted." ________________________________________ The experiment had been revolutionary. Not drugs. Not surgery. Targeted memory suppression. Removing traumatic memories without harming intelligence. Lily had opposed it. "It's dangerous," she had warned. "Memory cannot be edited like film." But Rash Behari Bose believed otherwise. "If we can erase unbearable pain, we can save lives." He volunteered. Lily volunteered too. The trial failed spectacularly. Instead of removing selected memories... It disconnected entire emotional networks. Faces remained. Knowledge remained. Feelings vanished. Relationships dissolved. Lives became fragmented stories. The project was buried forever. Records destroyed. Participants sworn to secrecy. ________________________________________ Professor Dor whispered, "You both signed consent." "Why don't I remember signing?" "Because that memory was among those erased." ________________________________________ Dr. Bose sat speechless. His own research had stolen part of his own life. ________________________________________ Back in Kolkata, Lily was waiting. "I knew he'd tell you." "You remembered everything?" "No." "I remembered enough." "You loved me." She smiled sadly. "Yes." "And I forgot." "Yes." He looked shattered. "I am so sorry." "I stopped expecting apologies twenty years ago." ________________________________________ Days turned into weeks. They met often. Not as lovers. As archaeologists excavating buried years. She produced train tickets. Letters. Restaurant bills. Concert stubs. Each object awakened tiny flashes. Not complete memories. Just feelings. Laughter. Rain. Music. The smell of coffee. Sometimes he recognized her smile before remembering her name. Sometimes he remembered conversations but not places. Their shared past floated like islands in fog. ________________________________________ Then came another twist. Professor Dor died peacefully in Paris. Among his belongings lay one sealed envelope. Addressed to Dr. Rash Behari Bose. Inside was a handwritten letter. "If you are reading this, then Lily has found you." "There is one truth I never told either of you." Dr. Bose continued reading. "The experiment did not fail." He frowned. "It succeeded beyond expectation." ________________________________________ The letter explained that the suppression technology had indeed worked. Too well. It had selectively erased one specific network. Not trauma. Love. Every participant had lost the ability to emotionally recognize the person they loved most during the trial. Professor Dor had ended the research immediately. No government. No corporation. No military force could ever be allowed such power. The data was destroyed. Or so everyone believed. ________________________________________ Attached was a flash drive. Inside were encrypted files. Research logs. Brain scans. Participant videos. One video showed Rash Behari Bose looking directly into the camera. "I understand the risks." He turned toward Lily. "If I forget you...promise you'll remind me." She laughed through tears. "I'll remind you every day." ________________________________________ Neither had remembered making that promise. Until now. ________________________________________ A week later Lily disappeared. No calls. No messages. No diary. Her apartment stood empty. Neighbours claimed she had moved. No forwarding address. Dr. Bose searched desperately. Hospitals. Airports. Friends. Nothing. Months passed. He feared history had repeated itself. ________________________________________ Then a courier arrived. Inside lay the leather diary. Every page remained. Except the last. On the final page she had written— "Memory is not keeping someone forever." "Memory is allowing them to become part of who you are." "You finally remembered enough." "Now live." No signature. Only a pressed blue flower. ________________________________________ Years later. Dr. Bose retired. He no longer chased impossible cures. Instead he counselled frightened elderly people. Whenever someone said, "I forget names." He smiled. "So do I." "I misplace my glasses." "So do I." "I worry I'm losing myself." He shook his head. "You are still aware of it." He would explain that ordinary forgetfulness often comes with aging, while loss of awareness can signal a more serious neurological condition. Fear itself was not the enemy. One winter afternoon a young intern asked him, "Sir, after everything you've studied, what exactly is memory?" He looked out of the window where children chased paper boats through rainwater. Then he answered quietly. "Memory is not a filing cabinet." "It isn't perfect recall." "It isn't never forgetting." "It is the invisible thread that tells us who we have loved, what we have learned, and why tomorrow matters." The intern nodded. "But can love survive forgotten memories?" Dr. Bose smiled. "I've seen it do something stranger." "What?" "It can survive being forgotten." ________________________________________ That evening he opened Lily's diary one final time. Between two pages he discovered something he had never noticed. A faded Polaroid. The two of them beneath the Eiffel Tower. Young. Laughing. Professor Bruno Dor stood behind them pretending to push the tower over. Across the bottom, in Lily's handwriting, were eight words. "The heart remembers what the brain sometimes cannot." For the first time in nearly three decades, Dr. Rash Behari Bose did not struggle to remember her face. He closed the diary gently. Outside, the city lights shimmered like distant neurons firing across the night. Some memories fade. Some are misplaced. Some return unexpectedly. And some, though hidden beyond the reach of the mind's processor, wait patiently in the quiet chambers of the heart—until the moment they are needed most. The End

I AM AN INSTRUMENT

God grant me the Serenity to accept the things I cannot change; Courage to change the things I can; and Wisdom to know the difference. Thy will, not mine, be done. *~*~*~*~*^Daily Reflections^*~ *~*~*~* July 9, 2026 I AM AN INSTRUMENT Humbly asked Him to remove our shortcomings. Twelve Steps & Twelve Traditions, p.70 The subject of humility is a difficult one. Humility is not thinking less of myself than I ought to; it is acknowledging that I do certain things well, it is accepting a compliment graciously. God can only do for me what He can do through me. Humility is the result of knowing that God is the doer, not me. In the light of awareness, how can I take pride in my accomplishments? I am an instrument and any work I seem to be doing is being done by God through me. I ask God on a daily basis to remove my shortcomings, in order that I may more freely go about my A.A. business of "love and service." *************************************************** Beyond Agnosticism We of agnostic temperament found that as soon as we were able to lay aside prejudice and express even a willingness to believe in a Power greater than ourselves, we commenced to get results, even though it was impossible for any of us to fully define or comprehend that Power, which is God. << << << >> >> >> "Many people soberly assure me that man has no better place in the universe than that of another competing organism, fighting its way through life only to perish in the end. Hearing this, I feel that I still prefer to cling to the so-called illusion of religion, which in my own experience has meaningfully told me something very different." 1. Alcoholics Anonymous, p. 46 2. Letter, 1946 As Bill Sees It, P. 137 © 1967 by Alcoholics Anonymous ® World Services, Inc ***************************************************** Going with the Flow Go with the flow. Let go of fear and your need to control. Relinquish anxiety. Let it slip away, as you dive into the river of the present moment, the river of your life, your place in the universe. Stop trying to force the direction. Try not to swim against the current, unless it is necessary for your survival. If you've been clinging to a branch at the riverside, let go. Let yourself move forward. Let yourself be moved forward. Avoid the rapids when possible. If you can't, stay relaxed. Staying relaxed can take your safely through fierce currents. If you go under for a moment, allow yourself to surface naturally. You will. Appreciate the beauty of the scenery, as it is. See things with freshness, with newness. You shall never pass by today's scenery again! Don't think too hard about things. The flow is meant to be experienced. Within it, care for yourself. You are part of the flow, an important part. Work with the flow. Work within the flow. Thrashing about isn't necessary. Let the flow help you care for yourself. Let it help you set boundaries, make decisions, and get you where you need to be when it is time. You can trust the flow, and your part in it. Today, I will go with the flow. ******* Just considering.................. Topic: CONTROL "Most of us have been unwilling to admit we were real alcoholics. No person likes to think he is bodily and mentally different from his fellows. Therefore, it is not surprising that our drinking careers have been characterized by countless vain attempts to prove we could drink like other people. The idea that somehow, someday he will control and enjoy his drinking is the great obsession of every abnormal drinker. The persistence of this illusion is astonishing. Many pursue it into the gates of insanity or death." Alcoholics Anonymous, p. 30 Thought to consider........... When a person tries to control their drinking, they have already lost control. Topic Question: How well did this part of Chapter 3, "More About Alcoholism" describe your life before recovery? © Alcoholics Anonymous World Services, Inc. ***************************************************** Difficult People Few things can make us feel crazier than expecting something from someone who has nothing to give. Few things can frustrate us more than trying to make a person someone he or she isn't; we feel crazy when we try to pretend that a person is someone he or she is not. We may have spent years negotiating with reality concerning particular people from our past and our present. We may have spent years trying to get someone to love us in a certain way, when that person cannot or will not. It is time to let it go. It is time to let him or her go. That doesn't mean we can't love that person anymore. It means that we will feel the immense relief that comes when we stop denying reality and begin accepting. We release that person to be who he or she actually is. We stop trying to make that person be someone he or she is not. We deal with our feelings and walk away from the destructive system. We learn to love and care differently in a way that takes reality into account. We enter into a relationship with that person on new terms – taking our needs and ourselves into account. If a person is addicted to alcohol, other drugs, misery, or other people, we let go of his or her addiction; we take our hands off it. We give his or her life back. And we, in the process, are given our life and freedom in return. We stop letting what we are not getting from that person control us. We take responsibility for our life. We go ahead with the process of loving and taking care of ourselves. We decide how we want to interact with that person, taking reality and our own best interests into account. We get angry, we feel hurt, but we land in a place of forgiveness. We set him or her free, and we become set free from bondage. This is the heart of detaching in love. Today, I will work at detaching in love from troublesome people in my life. I will strive to accept reality in my relationships. I will give myself permission to take care of myself in my relationships, with emotional, physical, mental, and spiritual freedom for both people as my goal. ******* Grapevine quote of the day "Alone in the town, I was scared to death of getting drunk. I was no longer a teacher or a preacher, I was an alcoholic who knew that he needed another alcoholic, as much as that one could possibly need me. Driven by that urge, I was soon face to face with Dr. Bob." AA Co-Founder, Bill W., July 1965 "A Fragment of History: Origin of the Twelve Steps" The Language of the Heart © AA Grapevine, Inc. 1944-2014 ***************************************************** No Orders Issued "Neither the A.A. General Service Conference, its Board of Trustees, nor the humblest group committee can issue a single directive to an A.A. member and make it stick, let alone mete out any punishment. We've tried it lots of times, but utter failure is always the result. Groups have sometimes tried to expel members, but the banished have come back to sit in the meeting place, saying, "This is life for us; you can't keep us out." Committees have instructed many an A.A. to stop working a chronic backslider, only to be told: "How I do my Twelfth Step work is my business. Who are you to judge?" "This doesn't mean that an A.A. won't take good advice or suggestions from more experienced members, but he surely won’t take orders." ~~~~~TWELVE AND TWELVE, P. 173

SELF-CONDEMNATION KEEPS US BACK

Good Morning!!! SELF-CONDEMNATION KEEPS US BACK Around the Year with Emmet Fox July 9 People who are honestly trying to follow the spiritual life often make the mistake of being too hard on themselves. Because they do not seem to be progressing as fast as they would naturally like, or because they find themselves repeating some old fault that they thought they had completely overcome, they feel discouraged, and condemn themselves mercilessly. All this is foolish. If you are doing your best to use what Truth you know, at present, you are doing all that you have a right to expect of yourself. Don't be impatient with yourself— but this does not mean that you are to be lazy or complacent. Handle yourself as a wise parent handles an obstreperous child— kindly, patiently, but with gentle firmness, not expecting too much too quickly, but foreseeing inevitable growth and improvement. “and all of you are children of the highest” Psalm 82:6