lifestyle

KRAFTON India Builds the Future of Indian Esports Through Nationwide 128-College Campus Tour; Now in Its Second Year

Bengaluru (Karnataka) , January 27: As India’s Esports ecosystem enters a high-growth phase, KRAFTON India is doubling down on grassroots development…

Bajaj Foundation Takes Climate Conversations to College Campuses Ahead of Mumbai Climate Week

Mumbai (Maharashtra) , January 27: As the city gears up for Mumbai Climate Week, a growing platform that brings together government,…

Dr. Biswaroop Roy Chowdhury Launches English Edition Cure Autism Now (C.A.N.) on Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose Jayanti

New Delhi , January 27: Following the success of his Hindi book Autism se Azadi (ऑटिज़्म से आज़ादी), which became…

Why Tea Is Still a Booming Business in India and Why Most Entrepreneurs Get It Wrong

New Delhi , January 26: Tea is still a booming business in India because it never needed permission to exist.…

Why Emily Dickinson Still Feels Uncomfortably Modern

London , January 24:  Emily Dickinson still feels modern because she never tried to be legible. That’s the part…

Jaun Elia and Indian Youth: How a Defiant Poet Became a Cultural Obsession

New Delhi , January 24: Jaun Elia did not arrive in India quietly. He arrived amplified. Through a microphone that…

Homes With Opinions: Why Personalised, Experience-Led Luxury Is Rewriting Interior Design In 2026

For years, homes were treated like showroom checklists. Neutral sofa? Check. Minimal lighting? Check. A marble countertop nobody actually uses?…

Guns Are Bad, Bows and Swords Were Cool and Society Knows Why

In ordinary, civilian life, society has made a fairly clear judgment without ever holding a formal meeting about it. Guns…

Rules Were Optional Anyway: Why Gen Z Men Are Quietly Rewriting Fashion In 2026

Menswear didn’t collapse in 2026. It simply stopped asking for permission. Somewhere between oversized knits, thrifted denim, pearl necklaces worn…

Mirza Ghalib: Why India’s Most Quoted Poet Is Still Its Most Misunderstood Mind

New Delhi , January 24: Mirza Ghalib is treated like a relic. Framed. Sanitised. Quoted on calendars and WhatsApp forwards…