Skip to main content

Re: Re: Re: Blog@Viewpoint:Your take on how to handle job related stress?

Thursday, 9 April, 2009 10:43 PM

From:



To:
"Team Jagruti"
Hello Tushar

Thanks for your prompt reply.
I think we can look for a broader outlook and try to form a common platform for bloggers who write about social awareness and issues that make difference to life of society around us.
I think we can go ahead with that and i personally will look to play an active role to build it up.Let me know how you plan to go ahead with it.

THanks
Salil



On Thu, 09 Apr 2009 Team Jagruti wrote :
>Hey,
>We have several ideas lined up for the blog to progress,
>One is to get together with more bloggers who write about social
>awareness and merge thier blogs with ours, so as to build a solid
>platform
>Then registering our group into a society is yet another goal.
>
>Tushar
>
>On 05/04/2009, Salil Dhawan wrote:
> >
> > Hi
> >
> > Yes i think our goal is same:to bring awareness among the masses.
> > Going forward i am also look to professionalize Viewpoint to a awareness
> > website then being a blog only.
> > We can definitely take it forward.Before that can you give me an idea about
> > your plans and how you plan to go forward.
> >
> > Thanks
> > Salil
> >
> > On Wed, 25 Mar 2009 Team Jagruti wrote :
> >>Hey,
> >>Sorry for replying so late.
> >>Its a great blog, you made there.
> >>Would love to form some sort of association between Jagruti and View -
> >> Point.
> >>Any ideas as to how can we do it?
> >>Regards,
> >>Tushar
> >>
> >>On 22/03/2009, Salil Dhawan wrote:
> >> >
> >> > Hello

> >> > YOurs is a nice website.
> >> > Do visit my blog at

> >> > http://views-point.blogspot.com

> >> > Hope we can have association of some type as my aim is also to make a
> >> > difference through my blog.

> >> > Do have a look at my blog and maybe get back to me

> >> > Thanks
> >> > Salil
> >> > http://views-point.blogspot.com/

Comments

Also read

Spill the Tea: Ira and the quiet exhaustion of being watched

Ira comes for tea and slowly reveals a life shaped by emotional surveillance. Loved, watched, and quietly evaluated by her parents, she lives under constant explanation. Through food and confession, she names the exhaustion of being known too well and finds nourishment not just in eating, but in finally being heard. Ira arrived  five minutes early and apologized for it. The way people do when they are used to taking responsibility for time itself. She said it lightly, as if time itself had offended her. She wore a white A-line shirtdress, clean and careful, the kind that looks chosen for comfort but ends up signaling restraint. When she sat down, she folded herself into the chair unconsciously. One leg rested on the floor, the other tucked underneath her, knees visible. It was not a pose meant to be seen. It slipped out before her body remembered how to protect itself. I noticed the brief softness of it, the quiet vulnerability, before she settled and forgot. I was still pouring t...

Cutting people off isn’t strength—It is a trauma response

Your ability to cut people off and self-isolate is not a skill you should be proud of—It is a trauma response Cutting people off and self-isolating may feel like a protective shield, but it is often rooted in unresolved or unhealed trauma and an inability to depend on others. While these behaviors seem like self-preservation, they end up reinforcing isolation and blocking meaningful connections. Confronting these patterns, seeking therapy, and nurturing supportive relationships can help break this unhealthy cycle. Plus, a simple act like planting a jasmine plant can symbolise the start of your journey towards emotional healing. Why do we cut people off and isolate? If you’re someone who prides themselves on “cutting people off” or keeping a tight circle, you might believe it’s a skill—a way to protect yourself from betrayal, hurt, or unnecessary drama. I get it. I’ve been there, too. But here’s the thing: this ability to isolate yourself is not as empowering as it may seem. In fact, i...

Worst Idea Ever-Jane Fallon-Book review

Is your closest friendship built on trust or convenience? Have you ever questioned whether your closest friendship survives on love or habit? This detailed, non partisan review of Worst Idea Ever by Jane Fallon explores jealousy, insecurity, digital deception, and emotional convenience, while honestly critiquing its length, clichés, and uneven characterisation. A sharp look at friendship when kindness turns quietly toxic. Have you ever stayed in a friendship simply because walking away felt harder? You know that uncomfortable feeling when you realise a friendship no longer nourishes you, yet you keep showing up anyway. Not because it brings joy, but because history exists, routines are set, and absence would require uncomfortable explanations. Jane Fallon’s Worst Idea Ever taps directly into that quiet, relatable discomfort. It asks a question many of us avoid asking ourselves. Are we friends because we care, or because we always have been? Published in 2021 by Penguin B...