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Peanuts, Priorities, and the Flow of Time

The New Indian Express Kozhikode

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October 05, 2025

Not long ago, I had a conversation with a CEO who, somewhere between checking his phone and adjusting his tie, declared: “I just don’t have time to pursue what I really want.” It was a very solemn moment. Almost moving. Had it not been for the fact that, during our 20-minute chat, he checked his phone 17 times. That's once every 45 seconds—20 if you subtract the part where he closed his eyes and said “Mmm” to pretend he was listening

- Debashis Chatterjee

This obsession with being busy—without actually being productive—reminds me of college, where my friends and I had a word for such behaviour: time-pass. Imagine this: a group of half-asleep students, munching peanuts from a paper cone, producing a small hill of peanut shells while the lecture droned on in the background. The goal wasn’t learning, the goal was killing time. In truth, time wasn’t dying. We were. Slowly, but with excellent dental, rather than mental, exercise.

Here’s the uncomfortable truth:

Time is not some magical commodity you can stockpile in your cupboard like noodles packets during a lockdown. Time is simply thought flow—a stream of ideas floating through your mind like a lazy river

FLERE HISTORIER FRA The New Indian Express Kozhikode

The New Indian Express Kozhikode

Peanuts, Priorities, and the Flow of Time

Not long ago, I had a conversation with a CEO who, somewhere between checking his phone and adjusting his tie, declared: “I just don’t have time to pursue what I really want.” It was a very solemn moment. Almost moving. Had it not been for the fact that, during our 20-minute chat, he checked his phone 17 times. That's once every 45 seconds—20 if you subtract the part where he closed his eyes and said “Mmm” to pretend he was listening

time to read

2 mins

October 05, 2025

The New Indian Express Kozhikode

The New Indian Express Kozhikode

Honey, I Shrunk the Netherlands

Madurodam in The Hague is preserving Dutch heritage and identity with its ornately designed, functional miniatures

time to read

2 mins

October 05, 2025

The New Indian Express Kozhikode

The New Indian Express Kozhikode

The Lost Art of Agenda-free Conversations

I spent last weekend in Fuengirola, a seaside town on Andalusia’s Mediterranean coast. Successive waves of cultures and subcultures have shaped this Spanish region, each leaving its imprint in indelible ways. Yet what struck me even more than the pristine blue waters and fusion architecture was a unique conversational practice. Across Fuengirola’s restaurants, I kept noticing the same thing: tables where the meal had clearly ended but no one was leaving.

time to read

2 mins

October 05, 2025

The New Indian Express Kozhikode

The New Indian Express Kozhikode

Tariffs, Trump, Tradition, and the Tyranny of Tantrums

Only someone in nationalist self-denial will think Donald Trump’s tariffs are taxes, not taunts.

time to read

3 mins

October 05, 2025

The New Indian Express Kozhikode

The New Indian Express Kozhikode

Silent Bowls, Sacred Flavours

In a quiet corner of Busan, Korea where the city seduces with the aroma of street-food, the air holds a different rhythm.

time to read

1 mins

October 05, 2025

The New Indian Express Kozhikode

The New Indian Express Kozhikode

When Our National Spectacle Crushes Its Own

Hathras in 2024 at a religious satsang, where followers stampede in a rush of blind devotion, while the state machinery busies itself trying to control the narrative. Even at the greatest of religious festivals, the Kumbh Mela, where millions gather, crowd-related deaths occur with horrifying regularity, often covered up and casually dismissed as a ‘logistical inevitability.’

time to read

4 mins

October 05, 2025

The New Indian Express Kozhikode

The New Indian Express Kozhikode

Revisiting Childhood in Frames

Anoop Lokkur’s Don’t Tell Mother, which premiered at the Busan International Film Festival, is an intimate tale of a child navigating violence

time to read

2 mins

October 05, 2025

The New Indian Express Kozhikode

GOLDEN DIVIDEND FROM SILVER YEARS

THE human attitude to ageing is ambivalent. The final phase of life is often marked by a decline in utility health and mobility While in certain communities seniors are revered, many languish in neglect.

time to read

3 mins

October 05, 2025

The New Indian Express Kozhikode

The New Indian Express Kozhikode

Stew Happens in Ladakh

Shaped by the resilience of mountains, Ladakh's food story runs deeper than just momo and thukpa

time to read

2 mins

October 05, 2025

The New Indian Express Kozhikode

The New Indian Express Kozhikode

The Man Who Taught a Village to Draw

Artist BA Reddy's three-decade-long journey at Sanskriti School has turned weekend art lessons into lifelines for countless children

time to read

4 mins

October 05, 2025

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