The Gray Areas of Love: Stories We Can’t Fully Judge We were having one of those conversations the other day — the kind that begins casually and then, almost without warning, turns uncomfortably honest. It started with infidelity, but like most real conversations, it didn’t stay there for long. Someone brought up the present generation — how physical intimacy today often feels stripped of emotional weight. Almost like a biological need. Like eating food. No strings attached, no long-term promises, just moving from one connection to another until, perhaps, something feels worth holding on to. Or maybe not. The urgency to “stay” seems to have dissolved. And then came the inevitable comparison. The generation before us — the ones who stayed. Through disagreements, silences, distance, even quiet resentment. They built lives, had children, and passed down a value system that, somewhere along the way, began to feel outdated to the very people it was meant to guide. So natural...
The Man on the Balcony A few years ago, during my visit to the United States, I passed through Beverly Hills. My guide pointed out a residence once associated with Michael Jackson and began sharing stories , of how fans would gather, waiting for just a glimpse, hoping he might appear on a balcony and wave. It reminded me of something very familiar. In India too, outside the homes of beloved film stars, people wait patiently, looking up at balconies as though they hold something more than just a person. Almost a presence. And strangely, as I stood there, I could see it. I could almost visualise him standing on that balcony, quiet yet magnetic, while people waited below, holding onto a moment they would carry with them for a lifetime. Even years later, that image never quite left me. When I passed by, a few candles were still lit. It had been more than a decade since his passing, yet people continued to come, to remember. That kind of remembrance doesn’t arise from fame alone. It sp...