2nd March to 8th March

Tell me why I clicked this screenshot,
Hint:- Related to me

🏋️ Health

Health-wise this week felt really strong. I was surprisingly disciplined with food. I ate very little junk and tried to stay consistent with healthy meals, which is something I didn’t expect from myself. Because of that, I can feel the difference — the bloating is slowly reducing and my body feels lighter. Sometimes the smallest changes in diet make the biggest difference in how your body feels.

I also spent some time meditating this week. I’ve been trying to understand my mind more and control my thoughts better. Instead of reacting to everything instantly, I’m trying to observe things. Meditation helped slow down the noise in my head and gave me a bit of clarity.

One of the most exciting physical things I did this week was rock climbing. I went to TIBC in South Bombay, which is an amazing place for climbing. This was my first time doing proper structured rock climbing. Earlier I had only done random climbing in trampoline parks where you just climb whatever you see without technique.

But here it was a proper physical challenge. I could feel my body working, my grip strength getting tested, and my endurance getting pushed. The best part was realizing that my body is still capable of doing hard things. That was satisfying.

I recorded some vlog clips there as well which I will post soon.

📸 Attach images here

💻 Work

This week at work we are building the UGC pipeline again, and it’s very close to completion now. Once the pipeline stabilizes, I think I will have more flexibility in my role because a lot of the repetitive parts will start running automatically.

I’m honestly excited about finishing this stage because I want to move toward more creative work again.

Another interesting thought about the industry came from a tweet by Ram Gopal Varma which I read recently. In the tweet he talks about how AI will completely change filmmaking and how producers will operate in the near future.

📎 Attach Ram Gopal Varma Tweet Here
https://x.com/RGVzoomin/status/2027258936936857926

His idea is that we might soon see movies that look like 300–1500 crore productions, but they could be produced for a fraction of that cost using AI tools.

That changes the entire economics of cinema.

Earlier a big production required massive teams, expensive sets, and years of work. But with AI-assisted pipelines you might be able to build powerful visuals with much smaller teams. Instead of finding just five highly skilled editors, you might suddenly have access to fifty capable editors who can operate AI tools effectively.

This means filmmaking may shift from a few extremely large projects to many smaller projects.

For example:

Instead of one 100 crore movie, imagine 100 movies made with 1 crore budgets each.

If even a few of those succeed massively, the returns could multiply.

It opens doors for micro-producers and independent creators.

Someone who invests even 5 lakh rupees in AI tools and editing pipelines could potentially produce something impressive.

But there’s also a downside.

If everyone can create films, there will be massive noise and clutter. Every week there might be a new visually stunning movie or short film breaking previous standards.

That means the real challenge will become standing out.

🧠 Brain Refreshment

This week I read and watched a lot about creativity and AI.

One piece that stood out was a short note about Steve Jobs and creativity.

📎 Attach Steve Jobs Creativity Blog Here
https://fs.blog/steve-jobs-on-creativity/

One line stayed with me:

“An idea is nothing more nor less than a new combination of old elements.”

Creativity is not magic. It’s pattern recognition.

It’s about seeing relationships between things that others don’t notice.

That idea connected deeply with the Naval AI conversation I watched.

📎 Attach Naval AI Page Here
https://nav.al/ai

📎 Attach Naval AI Podcast Video Here
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sXCKgEl9hBo

The conversation was around 50 minutes long, and honestly I loved every part of it. Naval talks about how AI will reshape creativity, art, entrepreneurship, and even the concept of jobs.

One thought from that conversation stayed in my mind:

A true artist creates something that has never existed before but still resonates with human nature.

Naval also talks about how AI will enable incredible art and movies that were previously impossible to produce.

This made me realize something:
We are entering a time where execution becomes easier, but taste becomes more important.

I’m planning to write a separate long post about this Naval podcast because it deserves deeper discussion.

📖 Learning

The biggest lesson this week surprisingly came from rock climbing.

While climbing, sometimes you reach a point where you cannot move upward from the current position. You keep trying the same move again and again but it doesn’t work.

In that moment you have two options:

You can keep forcing the same movement.
Or you can shift your grip, step sideways, and find another path.

That felt like a metaphor for life.

Sometimes when progress stops, it doesn’t mean you should push harder in the same direction. It means you should change the angle.

☕ Small Wins

One of the small wins this week was posting again on LinkedIn.

📎 Attach LinkedIn Post Here
https://www.linkedin.com/feed/update/urn:li:activity:7432301044056973312/

The post got some negative marketing reactions, but honestly I’m okay with that. Visibility matters more right now. I’m trying to become consistent there by posting weekly.

More posts are already coming soon.

Another small win was recording new videos, which I will post very soon.

And emotionally, this week had a strange moment because Holi happened on 4th March.

Normally I celebrate Holi with friends and family in my hometown, and it’s one of those festivals where everyone gathers and chaos becomes happiness.

This time I was in Mumbai.

I felt grateful for being here, but at the same time I missed home a lot. That mix of gratitude and nostalgia stayed with me.

📚 A Line from a Book (and beyond)

“An idea is nothing more nor less than a new combination of old elements.”
— Inspired by Steve Jobs

Creativity is not invention from nothing.
It’s connection.

🎶 A Song I’m Listening To

https://open.spotify.com/track/5ZZhIvuLUwUtQdJKPDCCT4?si=b7301fb6285d4282
Dhundhta Hoon – Bella

✍️ A Poem by Me

Kaise khwahishen lamhe banke toot gayi,
Adhoori si baatein dil mein hi chhoot gayi,
Mujhe hi yaadon mein chupke se bulaati hain,
Phir khud hi mujhse door chali jaati hain.

Translation / Meaning

How did those wishes break apart into fleeting moments?
Half-spoken conversations remained trapped inside the heart.
Memories quietly call me back to them,
Yet the same memories drift away from me again.

For me this poem represents the strange relationship we have with memories. They invite us back into the past, but at the same time remind us that those moments are gone.

💭 Closing Thoughts

This week was a mix of physical challenges, creative thinking, and emotional reflections.

From rock climbing to reading about AI, from posting on LinkedIn to missing Holi at home — everything felt like a reminder that life is constantly shifting between movement and memory.

And maybe the biggest realization is this:The world is moving toward a future where creation becomes easier.
But meaning will still come from how deeply we think, feel, and express.

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