My First Blog 🙋 : A Journey of Nervousness and Excitement As I sit here, typing away at my keyboard , my heart is racing with a mixture of nervousness and excitement. This is my first blog, and I am eager to share my thoughts and experiences with the world. As someone who is passionate about food, friends and new things that happen around me, I feel that blogging is the perfect platform for me to express myself and connect with others who share my interests. One of the things that I am most excited about is the opportunity to share my love of travel. While I have never actually traveled solo, the idea of exploring new places and meeting new people is something that has always appealed to me. Of course, I am also a bit scared - after all, the idea of being in a foreign place with no one to rely on but myself is a daunting prospect. But I believe that facing our fears is what makes us grow as individuals, and I am ready to take on this challenge. When it...
RICH DAD POOR DAD : What the Rich teach their kids about money that the Poor and Middle class do not. Robert Kiyosaki's personal finance book Rich Dad and Poor Dad has amassed enormous popularity. The principles of money, wealth creation, and financial independence are presented from an original point of view in the book. I'll go over the book's major topics and ideas in my review, as well as share my opinions on its overall message. The book also stresses the significance of taking calculated risks and adopting an abundant mindset. In order to succeed financially, the author advises readers to take calculated risks and to embrace an abundance attitude as opposed to a scarcity mindset. He urges individuals to adopt a positive outlook on money and riches and to concentrate on the opportunities rather than the constraints that the world offers Financial education is one of the book's major themes. The author contends that people are not sufficiently prepared for wea...
Dear Sita, How do you endure so much and yet have time to smile? And when I read about you in The Forest of Enchantments, I admired you and also felt sorry for you. Your love for Ram — it was so innocent, so infinite but life left no stone unturned to challenge it. I closed the book, and your time in the forest haunted me. You had escaped palaces and rules and expectations— you were freer than you ever remembered being. You and Ram, against the world — living for yourselves in this newfound life of your own making. I imagined you picking flowers, cooking, and walking with him through the trees; I pictured you smiling. For a while, it seemed like you truly belonged to yourself, didn’t it? But life, as it always does, took that tranquility away. It was pathetic the way you questioned Lakshman, who sacrificed everything to serve you and Ram. He never faltered in his loyalty, but your rage cut him deep. Even so, he never blamed you. How many hearts shattered in those moments ...
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