BhaskART : One is not the enemy of Zero

Better AI Output Starts With Better Input: A Painter’s Perspective

How do I get better AI Output?

This has been question on everyone’s mind since LLM’s arrived.

What started off as FOMO, became a fascination and very soon became an essential part of daily life. The dependency on AI for even drafting a simple email or WhatsApp message is part disturbing and part smart. The jury is still out there on this.

How do I get better output from AI? The question itself is the problem.

It makes AI the driver and you the passenger taken on a ride. Or should I say, ‘token’ for a ride?

Every bad prompt. Every unnecessary word in your input. Every file you attached that was not needed. Every conversation you let run longer than the task required. All of it burning tokens faster than the response is delivering value.

A painting I did few years ago seemed to hold the real question we should be asking.

How do I give better inputs to AI?

A basket overflowing with fruits. Each one demanding attention, all at once.

That’s what most prompts look like right now. Throw everything in. See what comes out. The basket is the prompt. The fruits are context you never needed, files that were not relevant, conversations running past their purpose, questions that have not been thought through.

More input doesn’t mean more value. Usually it means more noise.

When you paint, you do not load every colour onto the brush before a stroke. You choose. Deliberately. The discipline is not in having more colours. It is in knowing which one the painting needs right now.

It is in knowing which one the painting needs right now.The outputs will always be proportional to the quality of your thinking before you type.

One of the most important skills we can practice is discipline. The kind that asks: do I actually need to say this? Does the model need to know this? Is this conversation still serving the task, or is it now serving my uncertainty?

This is not a new skill AI demands. It is the same discipline that was always worth practicing.

Zero unnecessary tokens is not a target. It is a practice.

And the pear hanging outside the basket?

That is the thought you almost included. The context that nearly made it in. The extra paragraph you were about to paste.

Leave it outside. The basket is already full.

Colorful fruit basket with animated fruit characters, cheerful and vibrant artwork showing the importance of restraint in getting AI Output

Whimsical fruit basket painting featuring lively, expressive fruit characters in bright colors.

By |2026-06-12T02:36:08+00:0012/06/2026|Perspectives on AI|2 Comments

Vaibhav Suryavanshi is to IPL what AI is to the World

In the Cricket world, Vaibhav Suryavanshi, the 15 year old boy wonder batsman is toying with experienced and seasoned internal bowlers. In the business world, AI is reshaping the landscape at a rapid pace making seasoned professionals doubting their relevance. We are living in an exciting and scary times for sure.

I have not been watching IPL matches regularly for the past few years. It was getting too predictable for me. Shorter boundaries, powerful bats, longer hits and hapless bowlers.

But then, Vaibhav Suryavanshi, has taken this bowler bashing to a whole new level. It’s almost voyeuristic to watch this 15-year-old boy making seasoned international bowlers of repute, look pedestrian. Experience don’t matter. Reputation, even less. Every bowler and coach is left scratching their heads. Unlearn all that you have mastered over the years and learn entirely new techniques, is the name of the game.

Why does this sound too familiar?

Suryavanshi is doing to cricket what AI is doing to the business world. He is not just tonking the cricket ball but is mirroring life itself.

Seasoned professionals are having self-doubts like never before, their reputation counts very little, learning new ways is non-negotiable. And learn it fast because the LLM that you are trying to figure out will become obsolete with 20 new models in the market in a month. The boy will be past 100 in 30 odd balls.

What’s exciting and scary is that both are just kids yet. The chaos we are seeing right now? That’s them warming up.

Note: This painting is called ‘Rapids.’ The water does not negotiate with the rocks. It does not ask for permission. It simply moves. The rocks may have been there for centuries, but the water shapes them anyway. Suryavanshi bats the same way. AI works the same way. I did this oil on canvas after purchasing a video tutorial by Michael James Smith.

By |2026-05-24T03:25:25+00:0024/05/2026|Perspectives on AI|0 Comments

The Game of Death

Is there a life after death, we wonder

But could there be a life without death, just ponder

Why do we think it’s the road’s end?

When life is just taken through a sharp bend

What do we lose, if there are no corners to turn

Would life be easier without having to mourn?

Yet death is as certain as certain can be

Lurking in the shadows for you and for me

Where there is shadow, there will always be light

It’s in the darkness we see all that is bright

The sands of time, the dream of afterlife

Turned tombs to wonders, death to lasting life

There is never a beginning without an end

And life is always there waiting behind the bend

Fear not death, there is no need to hide

For it’s death that gives life its finest ride

Painting of Pyramid, Sphinx and desert depicting the after life that the ancient Egyptians believed in

By |2026-05-18T01:26:29+00:0018/05/2026|No Rhyme or Reason|0 Comments

The Game of Life

The Game of Life has its own way,

Where the rules make sense to none who play.

A game that was, before anything was created

The rules so complex that no one is defeated

We strut like kings though we are only a guest

Fooled into thinking we are above the rest.

It makes us strangers sharing the same space

And we lose ourselves in this endless chase

We can’t help but feel like someone’s toy

Moved by invisible hands for someone’s joy

And yet the ocean needs the shark beside the clown

Every being plays its part, none wears a crown

The game goes on and stops never

No soul so great the game would pause, not ever

For we are just the players, not the play

Here for a scene,then fading away.

Underwater scene with a sea turtle, a shark, a jellyfish, and colorful coral reef.

By |2026-05-18T01:28:22+00:0017/05/2026|No Rhyme or Reason|3 Comments

Every AI output is Paris in a wine glass.

I did an oil painting of Paris in a wine glass

“Is the moon inside the glass or behind it?”

A friend asked when I shared it.

“How does it matter?. It is a glass after all”, I responded.

But the question triggered something. The question about the moon was not about the moon at all. It was about how LLM’s work.

AI takes the entire internet and squeezes it into one answer. Years of research become a paragraph. All that knowledge, all that data, all those contradictions, squeezed into one neat paragraph. It is like pouring an entire city into a wine glass.

But here is the thing about my painting. The Eiffel Tower inside the glass is obviously not the real Eiffel Tower. It is a version of it. Filtered through curved glass and red wine. The proportions are slightly off. The colours are warmer than reality. The context of the city around it is gone. What you see is compelling, but it is not complete.

That is AI in 2026.

Every AI output is Paris through a wine glass. It looks right. It feels right. It might even be more beautiful than the original. But it has been filtered, compressed, and reframed. The mess, the complexity, the contradictions of the real city are missing.

It works as long as you know you are looking through a glass.

The danger is not AI getting things wrong. The danger is AI presenting a filtered view so confidently that we forget there is an entire city behind the glass that we are not seeing. After all, every AI output is Paris through a wine glass

We do not ask these questions because the glass is so beautiful.

Use AI. Look through the glass. Appreciate what it shows you. But never forget to look beyond it too.

Because there might be a more beautiful moon outside the glass than the one inside it.

Oil painting of Paris in a wine glass

By |2026-05-23T13:38:20+00:0005/05/2026|Perspectives on AI|0 Comments

Why AI Is Not One of the Technology Waves

Ten years ago, I wrote a blog post about the three Technology Waves  that changed the world. The internet was the first wave that connected people to information. Mobile was the second that put the world at our fingertips. IoT was promising to be the third, connecting everything to everything else.

Humans rode those waves well.

But what has arrived now is not a wave. It is the ocean itself.

Artificial Intelligence is the water in which all future waves will form. Every industry, every function, every role is being reshaped by it, and the speed of that reshaping has caught even the optimists off guard.

In that 2015 post, I wrote something that still holds true today.

Consumers will not fear the technology that they don’t understand. But will embrace the one that can seamlessly become a part of their life and help them too.

That sentence holds true for AI with far more accuracy.

People are having natural conversations with it without knowing or caring about the large language models behind the screen. That makes the adoption fast and effortless.

But here is where AI differs from every technology that came before it.

Every previous wave changed what you could do. The internet gave you access to information you could not reach before. Mobile gave you that access anywhere. IoT promised to connect objects so they could talk to each other. In every case, the technology extended your capability. But it stayed in its lane. The machine did the mechanical part. The human did the thinking. The boundary between the two was never in question.

AI is the first technology that operates in the same space as human thinking. It does not just give you a better tool and step aside. It produces work that looks like something a person made. A strategy document. A piece of writing. A design. An analysis. And it does it fast enough and well enough that you have to genuinely stop and ask yourself whether what it made is better than what you would have made.

That is why we feel excited and nervous, at the same time.

The excitement comes from the fact that your ceiling just got higher. You can do more, explore more, produce more than you ever could alone. The nervousness comes from the fact that the floor shifted. Every previous technology made you more valuable by making you more capable. AI is the first one that can do the work without you and still produce something good.

And that nervousness is legitimate. Not because AI is coming for your job. But because most professionals have never had to consciously answer the question of what they bring that a machine does not. Until now, nobody asked..

The first three waves changed how we work. This one is changing how we think about our own value. And the people who will thrive are not the ones who adopt AI the fastest. They are the ones who can clearly answer what they bring to the table that AI cannot, and then use AI to make that contribution even bigger.

We rode the first three waves successfully. This one is bigger than all of them combined. But the principle remains the same. The winners will not be those who understand the technology best. They will be those who adopt it most thoughtfully.

AI is not one of the Technology Waves but the ocean itself. An acrylic painting of a swirling wave

AI is not one of the  Technology Waves but the ocean itself. Acrylic painting of swirling wave

By |2026-05-24T06:26:45+00:0028/04/2026|Perspectives on AI|0 Comments

Why Organizations Struggle to Trust AI, Even When It Works

A question from the 1700s and an Instagram reel about the Andromeda Galaxy explain Organizations struggle to trust AI.

We recently heard of an AI building in three hours what a team had been working on for three months. By now, everyone knows AI can do this. Yet the moment felt uncomfortable. Not because it was shocking, but because someone said it out loud, that AI did it.

That discomfort is not an AI problem. It is a very old human problem.

In 1710, George Berkeley posed a question. If a tree falls in a forest and no one is around, did it make a sound? At its core, the question is simple. Can something be accepted as true without validation?

Most people have heard it and moved on. I did too, until an Instagram forward connected it to something far more current.

The video described a thought experiment about travelling to the Andromeda Galaxy, about 2.5 million light years away. If someone could travel close to the speed of light, the journey might feel short to them. But by the time they returned, millions of years would have passed on Earth. Everyone they knew would be gone. Perhaps even the human species.

So, with no one left to hear the story or validate it, did the journey truly happen?

This is exactly where we are with AI.

We need validation. So even when the AI output is strong, we tweak it, rewrite it, or present it as our own intuition. It works, because it is now validated by human intelligence.

Without that validation, it feels uncomfortable to accept it as truth.

The tree fell. Loudly. Clearly. Undeniably. But without someone in the forest to acknowledge it, we hesitate to accept that it made a sound.

The companies moving ahead are not the ones who fully trust AI. They are the ones who have reduced the amount of validation required before acting. They test, they iterate, and they own the outcome, even when the work was not produced in the traditional way.

They do not wait for the forest to fill up.

They see a fallen tree, decide it made a sound, and move.

Note: This painting is the first oil work I created 10 years ago, titled “The edge is not the end.” The fox does not wait for validation of its strategy. It sees the bird and jumps. Ten years later, the world has changed, but the instinct to move forward has not. Wait for validation and AI will move ahead without you. Take the leap. The edge is often the beginning.

 

Original painting by BhaskART showing a fox committing to a leap — not blind faith, but deliberate action despite uncertainty — mirroring how organizations must approach AI adoption

By |2026-05-05T10:58:22+00:0023/04/2026|Perspectives on AI|0 Comments

5 Power Moves. 5 Backfires. One Dangerous Word: Certainty.

Certainty is the most dangerous word in today’s world. In a single week in 2026, five powerful moves by governments, tech companies, and militaries all backfired, each one made with absolute conviction that it would succeed.

When certainty is not certain anymore

A few days ago the most powerful military in the world went to war with a country halfway across the globe. Their certainty almost convinced the world of a quick victory. They were ready to blow their Trump’et.

That move literally backfired. They now realise they are not dealing with an also-ran army.

In the same week, the world witnessed another fight of unequals. The Pentagon and the US government picked a fight with an AI company practically down the street and blacklisted them.

That move backfired too.

They did not expect the world to C’LAUD’e the very company they went against. Large numbers of people downloaded Claude almost as an act of solidarity. Reddit threads appeared explaining how to migrate from ChatGPT. Someone even drew chalk art outside Anthropic’s office in San Francisco saying “you give us courage.”

Then came Sam Altman. The genius. The man considered incapable of a wrong move.

He announced a deal with the Pentagon on the same day Anthropic was officially blacklisted. Seemed like a smart move. Fill the vacuum, grab the contract, look decisive.

That backfired too. So badly that he publicly admitted it looked “opportunistic and sloppy.” Not a great sentence to have to say out loud when your whole brand is built on being the good guy.

Meanwhile Claude spiked. From 42nd on the App Store to number one in a matter of days. Claude may not have been the choice of the US government, but it certainly became the choice of everyone else. Anthropic was beginning to bask in the glory. People felt happy propping the victim to the podium.

And guess what. That backfired too.

All those people who downloaded Claude in an act of righteous solidarity promptly crashed it. The servers slowed. The app hung. Social media filled with frustrated posts from users who had just made a principled stand for ethical AI and now could not get the thing to load.

Meanwhile, two of the most powerful and strategically sophisticated militaries in the world, with all their precision weapons and war games, almost managed to choke Iran. Almost.

But did they win? We will never know. What we do know is that this move backfired too.

What weapons could not achieve, geography did. A narrow strait became the convenient choke point to starve the world of its fuel. Powerful nations came to their knees.

In the space of one week, everyone who made a move they were completely sure about got it wrong.

Maybe the most dangerous thing in today’s world is not AI. It is not wars either.

It is certainty.

That is the irony of it all. Or should we say, AI’rany of it all.

Serene Buddha portrait with closed eyes and peaceful expression.

By |2026-05-24T06:23:16+00:0029/03/2026|While the paint was drying|2 Comments

What a Painting of an Elephant Taught Me About Surface and Depth

Surface and depth are not enemies. A painting of an elephant taught me that. The hard way.

From the canvas, the elephant watched me in silence, vast and unhurried. Was she trying to tell me something? Was that pain in her eyes? Clearly, she was carrying the weight of something I had not yet learned to name.

When you paint a large elephant on canvas, you can get away with missing a few details. But not when you attempt a giant close-up of its face. Those melancholic eyes really do make you feel so much without a word. They hold power, strength, and wisdom. They carry the pleasures and pains of many years of memory.

I wanted my elephant to speak to the viewer. I was so focused on capturing that melancholy in the eyes that I lost focus on the other equally important pressure points of the painting. I knew something was amiss. Maybe she was trying to tell me that.

The Eyes Were Speaking

“Those eyes are telling a story,” applauded a friend.

“The dirt brown colour is a good choice,” added another.

I was thrilled. People were seeing what I wanted them to see.

“My God, this is shaping up well. I am waiting to see the finished painting,” said a third.

Finished painting? I froze.

“What do you mean, waiting for the finished painting? This is it,” I clarified.

“After such powerful eyes, I thought you would paint the trunk as well.”

And there it was. The elephant in the room.

My elephant looked flat. Now I could not unsee it and I had to fix it.

The trunk that refused to move

No matter how many times I tried, the trunk refused to push forward in three dimensions. Stroke after stroke fell flat. The more I pushed, the more stubborn it seemed. I almost gave up.

And then, finally, after several failed attempts, one curve came alive.

The trunk leaned out of the canvas, no longer a flat line but a form with weight and depth. Relief washed over me. The elephant was finally looking back the way I had imagined. I could swear I saw a glint of a smile in her eyes.

That moment stayed with me. I remember it every time I struggle with a section of a painting, especially when every instinct screams give up.

The Paradox the Elephant Taught Me

Here is what surprised me most. I had been adding more and more detail to the trunk, hoping it would pop forward. But the magic happened when I blurred the face instead, especially the sides around the trunk. Once I removed detail from the cheeks, the trunk stood out. It was a trade-off well worth it.

It reminded me of the phrase we use, the elephant in the room. We say it is the problem everyone sees but no one confronts. But my elephant taught me something different. The problem was not that it was being ignored. The problem was that I was only seeing its surface, not its depth.

Those eyes carried it all. Strength wrapped in gentleness, patience stretched over years of memory. They spoke without a word. But the trunk taught me another truth.

The surface gives us the first impression, the shape we can hold on to. Depth gives us the meaning, the truth that lives beyond what we first see.

For a long time I had been fighting the surface, thinking that more detail would turn into depth. The lesson was the opposite. Depth emerged only when I allowed the surface to step aside.

Surface and depth Are Partners

The world may first notice what is on the surface. But meaning, connection, and truth are always found in what lies beneath.

Surface and depth are not rivals. They are partners. The surface invites us in. The depth keeps us there.

And like every paradox worth living, you cannot have one without the other.

By |2026-03-25T01:40:55+00:0022/03/2026|While the paint was drying|0 Comments

Why Fixing a Problem Sometimes Makes It Worse

I made a small dent in my car bumper last year. It was not big enough to warrant a fix. It was cosmetic.

But it was bothering me. Maybe it was a dent on my pride.

Months later, I covered it with a sticker.

That’s when people started noticing.

“Oh, there’s a dent? I never saw it before.”

How often does the fix highlight the issue more than the issue ever did?

By |2026-03-21T11:45:31+00:0031/01/2026|Accidental Philosophy|0 Comments

Why progress looks easier in hindsight

Progress looks easier in hindsight than it ever felt while it was happening. Watching a time-lapse of a painting I worked on over two weekends, it looked smooth, almost deliberate. It did not feel like that at all.

This phenomenon often leads us to wonder

why progress looks easier in hindsight

There were pauses and second guesses. Moments where I changed things that had taken time, and others where I stepped back because I was not sure what to do next. Feedback and suggestions along the way also helped shape the final outcome.

The progress itself was anything but smooth.

Watching it back, I realised how a time-lapse hides the effort, the apprehensions, and the second-guessing that actually make progress possible.

Life and at times, work, feels much the same way.

Some of what we do comes from experience, but a lot of it comes from intent, common sense, instinct, and hope. Doubts and course corrections are part of the everyday routine.

What we do have is motion. We try things, adjust, sometimes undo decisions we were confident about not long ago, and then move forward again.

Most days, it does not feel like progress. It just feels like grind.

Maybe that is the part the time-lapse hides.

And maybe, like the painting, we are doing better than it feels in the moment.

Majestic mountain landscape with colorful sunset sky and rugged terrain.

By |2026-05-24T06:12:11+00:0016/01/2026|While the paint was drying|4 Comments

Will the AI Bubble Burst? Why History Says No

AI bubble with cloud, internet, mobile data, and electricity labels.

Image Courtesy:ChatGPT

Will the AI bubble burst? History says no. Every major technology, from electricity to cloud computing, was declared a doomed bubble before it became essential infrastructure. AI is following the same pattern.

Exploring the Question: Will the AI Bubble Burst

Lately, conversations about AI have begun to change tone. Will this AI bubble burst or will it sustAIn? Will the AI bubble burst is a question many are pondering. Many experts are asking, ‘Will the AI bubble burst?’ as they analyze the current landscape.

After the initial euphoria, awe, amazement, and fear of missing out, reality is starting to set in. Enterprises are realizing that while large language models are powerful, they are also expensive. Training costs are high, but inference costs are often the real surprise. Every prompt, every response, and every token carries a compute cost. GPU time, energy consumption, latency, and cloud bills scale linearly with usage. These costs accumulate quietly in the background.

As we consider the future, one cannot help but wonder: will the AI bubble burst in the next few years, or will we continue to see growth? Many are optimistic that the potential of AI will keep the bubble from bursting.

As a result, a growing chorus of experts is predicting that the AI bubble is about to burst.

The volume of articles and analyst reports warning of an imminent collapse continues to rise. Many analysts appear to be betting on AI’s failure. This may sound dramatic, but it also sounds familiar.

We have seen this pattern before, not once or twice, but countless times.

For thousands of years, humanity has greeted every meaningful technological shift with the same mix of fascination, anxiety, and firm conviction that this time, the bubble will burst. Yet that conclusion feels premature.

The question, ‘will the AI bubble burst?’ is not just rhetorical; it drives discussions across industries as we evaluate technology’s trajectory.

Expensive today does not mean economically unviable tomorrow. History does not support the idea that cost shock reliably signals a bubble burst. Technology bubbles tend to collapse when there is no real demand or when the value created is illusory. AI satisfies neither condition.

Demand for AI is not speculative. It is tangible and already embedded in analytics, productivity, compliance, software development, and more. The value may be uneven and occasionally overstated, but it is undeniably real.

What we are witnessing is not a collapse in demand or value. It is reality catching up with expectations. Every major technology goes through a phase where excitement outpaces engineering. AI is firmly in that phase today.

Those who remember the early days of cloud computing will recognize this pattern. Cloud was initially marketed as cheaper than on-premises infrastructure. Security and reliability concerns followed. Then enterprises realized their cloud bills were higher than expected. Soon after, commentators declared that cloud economics were fundamentally broken.

“Cloud computing is a trap.” – Richard Stallman

What followed was not abandonment, but refinement.

Hybrid architectures emerged. Edge computing addressed latency and cost. FinOps introduced discipline and governance. Cloud did not burst. It settled into its role as core infrastructure.

We have seen this cycle many times. In every successful case, the technology did not disappear. It matured.

Electricity shocked society before it rewired the world.

“The use of alternating current is a foolish fad.” – Thomas Edison

The internet did not collapse as predicted. It quietly permeated everything.

“The internet will catastrophically collapse in 1996.” – Robert Metcalfe, 1995

Mobile data did not overwhelm networks. It made work portable.

In discussions about market trends, the phrase ‘will the AI bubble burst’ often comes up, highlighting the uncertainty that surrounds emerging technologies.

“There is no reason anyone would want a computer in their home.” – Ken Olsen, 1997

Each of these technologies faced similar anxieties around cost, security, and unintended consequences. AI is following the same trajectory.

Yes, large language models are expensive today. But cost shock is not a bubble-burst signal. It is an early-adoption signal.

For many, the question ‘will the AI bubble burst?’ serves as a reminder to stay cautious and aware as we proceed with AI innovations.

The industry has already begun making corrections. Smaller language models are emerging as cost-effective solutions for focused use cases. They are efficient and capable, but they are not replacements for large models. They are complements. Engineering will catch up with excitement, and as history suggests, it will eventually surpass it.

Legal challenges around training data will also find resolution. Data will be licensed, regulated, and governed more carefully. AI will become more structured and responsible, not extinct.

We no longer need to be Isaac Newton, Albert Einstein, or Aryabhata to access centuries of accumulated knowledge. A few well-crafted prompts can surface insights built on thousands of years of human thought. The playing field is being permanently leveled.

For a species that has long romanticized effort, struggle, and persistence as prerequisites for insight, this shift will be deeply disruptive. As much as we like to think we love disruption, humans crave the boring. Predictability comforts us. AI is still in its infancy, so feeling anxious about it is only human.

I remain optimistic about AI’s future and its impact on humanity. We are experts at using the difficulties to thrive. We have done this since the Pleistocene Glaciation or the end of the last ice age.

But one practical concern persists. If AI multiplies productivity, and it will, what happens to jobs? More importantly, if large segments of society become unemployed or underemployed, who will purchase the efficiently mass-produced goods AI helps create?

As we ponder these concerns, the question remains, ‘will the AI bubble burst?’ and how will society adapt to the changes brought by AI?

Who knows.

Perhaps AI itself will help answer that question.

“We tend to overestimate the effect of a technology in the short run and underestimate the effect in the long run.” – Roy Amara

As we navigate these discussions, the phrase ‘will the AI bubble burst’ echoes in the minds of many, emphasizing the critical need for thoughtful responses to technology’s impact.

By |2026-05-05T10:58:46+00:0003/01/2026|Perspectives on AI|15 Comments

Pale Blue Dot of Organizations

This post reflects on the Pale Blue Dot image and how the the most important thing in the frame is the one you almost miss.

A strange stillness emerges when you look at the Pale Blue Dot long enough.

At first, you see almost nothing. A vast black canvas, streaks of light, cosmic silence. Then someone tells you where to look. A tiny speck, barely there. And suddenly your chest tightens a little, because that speck is home. That Pale Blue Dot is earth.

As Carl Sagan would say,

“That’s here. That’s home. That’s us. On it everyone you love, everyone you know, everyone you ever heard of, every human being who ever was, lived out their lives… on a mote of dust suspended in a sunbeam.”

Carl Sagan saw the Pale Blue Dot as a humbling reminder of our smallness. He was right. But there is another truth hiding in that image, one that feels equally important.

From the universe’s point of view, it is insignificant. From ours, it is everything.

The universe may barely notice Earth, but life does not exist anywhere else we know. Remove that dot and the solar system would continue to spin, but without life, without memory, without meaning.

The system may survive, but it becomes empty, losing its soul.

Organisations often celebrate the big things. Bold ideas, high-impact visual drama, and breakthrough campaigns. Moments of inspiration that feel electric. These are the stars of our universe, loud, radiant, impossible to ignore.

But beneath all of this sits something much smaller and much quieter, just as significant and sometimes more important than we know.

Processes, discipline, and operational rhythm.

Yet, in this photo taken by Voyager 1, from the edge of the solar system, Earth is barely seen. It is but a tiny speck of dust.

Processes play that role inside organisations. They stabilise growth. They protect people. They make creativity sustainable instead of accidental.

The irony is simple and easy to overlook.

We call these things boring because they work silently.
We notice them only when they are gone.

And sometimes, the most important thing in the frame is the one you almost miss.

Pale Blue Dot, the iconic photo of earth taken by voyager 1

By |2026-03-01T01:11:18+00:0013/12/2025|Technology Evolution|4 Comments

Why boring consistency is the secret to lasting progress

Boring consistency is the secret behind every lasting achievement. Coastlines are not shaped by storms but by waves that show up day after day, same rhythm, same beat.

If there is one lesson I have learned watching the crashing waves, it is their relentless boring consistency.

The waves just show up, day after day, same rhythm, same beat.
Beautiful coastlines are shaped not with intensity but with this quiet, boring consistency.

Painting a seascape is no different.

Layering the paints, one coat after another with patience and purpose.
There is a calming rhythm to it.

Marketing in a B2B world works pretty much the same way.
Brands are not built by one big campaign or a flashy video.

They grow because some marketeer quietly keeps the rhythm going.
It applies to people too.

The ones who make real impact are not sprinting, they are pacing.
Meeting after meeting, task after task, showing up with small improvements that compound.

In the end, success is rarely dramatic.
It is a result of boringly beautiful repetitions

By |2026-05-24T06:00:32+00:0001/12/2025|While the paint was drying|0 Comments

Why a painting is never finished

A painting is never finished. Every artist knows this.

You step back, decide it is done, and then notice one more thing that needs fixing. The same is true of most things worth making.

We recently had one of those rare and unlikely conversations about business growth at our company. The topics wandered into uncomfortable yet necessary zones like process improvements, utilization, and a few other metrics we had long chosen to politely ignore.

Two mantras stood tall through that storm of spreadsheets.

“We are creative problem solvers, not just problem solvers,” said the Chairman

“We will continue to deliver creativity at the speed of light,” reiterated the CEO, for perhaps the zillionth time.

Creativity seeks perfection, while speed demands release. Two seemingly mutually exclusive thoughts. Perfect opposite binaries of 1 & 0.
But then, I know the answers usually reside in that in-between or between 2 seemingly opposite views. One is not the enemy of Zero.

It is about learning when to pause the brushstroke and when to let it go.

Recognizing that perfection is a moving target, and progress is the real masterpiece.

Because whether it’s a painting or a project, creativity doesn’t thrive in endless tweaking.

It thrives in the courage to release it into the world, let it breathe, and evolve.
After all, a painting, or a project is never done, unless you have the courage to call it done.

Because, A painting is never done.

By |2026-04-10T08:12:26+00:0001/12/2025|While the paint was drying|0 Comments

Why Every Good Idea Goes Through an Ugly Phase First

Ugly phase is important.

Every painting has an ugly phase — a point where the colours feel wrong, the shapes are clumsy, and every instinct says stop.

The ugly phase is not a sign of failure. It is a sign you are doing the work. Not just paintings, every new beginning has an ugly phase that should not be skipped.

As I worked on this painting, I was reminded of that truth again and again. For most of the process, the strokes were unsure, the colours felt off, the shapes were clumsy. Every instinct screamed, “give up.”

The trick is to keep going and trust the process. At some stage, usually towards the end, ugly becomes less ugly.

Whether it is a business idea, a new role, learning a skill, or building a brand, progress is never a smooth gradient. It is smudges, corrections, and stubborn repetition.

If you are in the ugly phase right now, good news.
You are not failing.
You are simply doing the work that beautiful outcomes demand.

Keep going.
Ugly is inevitable. Ugly is necessary.

By |2026-05-24T06:17:32+00:0001/12/2025|While the paint was drying|0 Comments

Why Marketing Feels Like Chaos — and Why That’s Fine

Vibrant painting of Hindu gods riding a chariot pulled by white horses against mountain scenery.

The marketing rhythm of chaos is not a problem to solve. It is a reality to navigate. Brand, content, digital, and demand — four forces pulling in different directions. The job is not to control them. It is to find the rhythm.

When you start seeing marketing lessons, in your own painting, it is probably time to take that vacation.

Yesterday, while I was dusting off this painting, that I did couple of years ago, I did not think of Mahabharat or the Kurukshetra war. I saw marketing.

The 4 horses reminded me of Brand, Content, Digital, and Demand.

All 4 horses dramatic in their own way. Each one with its own personality. Each convinced it is the real hero of the journey.

Brand, the proud one, walks in like a royalty.
Content, the expressive one, wants to talk non-stop
Digital, the hyper one, sprinting ahead without instructions.
Demand, the impatient one, asking if the destination is reached even before starting.

When priorities pull in different directions the chariot rattles, but rein the horses in too much and everything stalls.

The four do not need the same strength or the same speed, they just need the same rhythm. The real art of marketing is knowing which horse to bet on, and when, because marketing moves best when each one pulls just enough to keep the chariot moving forward.

So if you are wondering which horse to bet on, and feel tempted to toss the coin for marketing decisions, trust me, that instinct is usually right.

PS: Krishna lovers, please forgive me for messing up His face. I am sure He will fix it himself with an avatar update soon.

By |2026-03-25T01:38:59+00:0001/12/2025|While the paint was drying|0 Comments

What If We Painted Life Like We Paint on Canvas

What if we painted life on canvas the same way we actually live it. Not in straight lines, not with a clear plan, but with pauses, second guesses, and stubborn hope that it will come together in the end?

I have been painting this piece for the past two weeks, not because I had free time, but because life felt hectic.

A bit overwhelming even.

In the middle of all the chaos, something strange happened.

As the landscape emerged from a blank canvas, the stillness in the scene began to speak.

And through that silence, I heard three reminders.

1. “What if” is more important than “What next.”

What if Rajendra Chola built a temple by the Ganges with silent mountains standing guard?

I will never know if he contemplated this idea, but I am glad I asked that ‘what if’.

The rustic looking temple may look out of place in this landscape but then it is my world.

When stress peaks, it’s “what if” that rewires our thinking and keeps us going.

2. Stillness can be faster than hustle.

Rivers don’t rush, yet they shape landscapes.

Mountains don’t move, but everything around them does.

Progress is not always loud. Sometimes, it flows quietly without a to-do list.

3. The way to move a mountain is one rock at a time.

This painting reminded me about the power of that first step. The next one. And the one after…

One brushstroke at a time.

One section, one breath, one shift in attention.

Before you know it, you have built a world. Your world.

Sometimes, when life gets overwhelming, it’s not a sign to speed up.

It is an invitation to pause. (Or paint)

Or simply let the Stillness lead.

Ancient temple by a river with snow-covered mountains in the background, inspired by artistic imagin.

By |2026-05-24T06:09:37+00:0011/08/2025|While the paint was drying|0 Comments

Problems to a Solution with Google search

A sparrow starring at a cow

Ah, those frustrating Google answers.

My relationship with Google search engine was like Tom’s relationship with Jerry – Can’t be without it even if it drove me up the wall, every time. Its infinite wisdom notwithstanding, Google searches invariably resulted in creating Problems to a Solution, not the other way around.

Once stuck, I trusted Google to bail me out. Instead, it spun me in circles with cryptic wisdom and contradictions until I figured—better to keep the problem than search for the solution. Here are some pearls of wisdom Google generously offered as answers to my conundrum:

“Problems are the stepping-stones to success.”

An eternally optimistic quote but a convenient excuse to avoid giving me an actual solution. I was not in the mood for stepping-stones or success that day. I wanted a simple answer. Period.

“There is no such thing as a problem without a gift for you in its hands. You seek problems because you need their gifts.”

This gem almost made me believe that the problem was my choice. I was not giving into Google’s mind games until I got a simple fix.

“If the problem can be solved, why worry? If the problem cannot be solved, worrying will do you no good.”

Wow. A philosophical uppercut. Who said anything about worrying?

“I am not smart. I stay with problems longer.”

That was a cheap shot quoting Einstein. He spent his time breaking down teeny tiny atoms, so his problems probably were smaller. ‘Relatively’ speaking, at least!

“There is no problem so complicated that it cannot be run away from.”

Finally! If you can’t fix it, avoid it. A solution I could get behind.

Or so I thought.

“All too frequently, a problem evaded is a crisis invited.”

And just like that, Google ruined it. Evade or not to evade—that was now the question and it pushed me back to square one.

“Sometimes problems don’t require a solution to solve them; instead, they require maturity to outgrow them.”

Great. Just grow older and outgrow your problem. What an elegant answer.
Just as I was about to thank Google, it threw a Googly.

“That’s the real trouble with this world. Too many people grow up.” – Walt Disney

Tom & Jerry might one day make peace with each other, but Google and I? Never. Yet, much like those iconic cartoon rivals, I know I couldn’t live without it either.

And then came #OpenAI.

By |2025-03-16T06:33:04+00:0016/03/2025|Technology Evolution|0 Comments

What It Really Means to Celebrate Women

Painting of a woman carrying her child

To truly celebrate women is not to rage against the naysayers. It is to recognise the quiet majority of good people who already show up every day. The noise distracts from the real story.

My heart longs for the day when women rise above the noise of negativity and instead, focus on the multitude of men who uplift, support, and celebrate them.

I yearn to see women beaming with pride, inspired by their own successes, and encouraged by the men who believe in them.

I look forward to the day, when every one realizes that happiness cannot be achieved through daily battles.

I hope that one day all woman believe that they don’t have to make noise to be heard. Good men can hear you through your silence.

So here’s wishing all the ‘happy’ woman who already know they belong. Because, real good men, already know you do. And know that we are better off, because of you.

By |2026-03-29T11:17:35+00:0008/03/2025|While the paint was drying|5 Comments
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