achyut

Year 30

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I turned thirty last week.

I write one of these every year. It’s become a ritual. I start a week before my birthday and go through my photos, calendar, and journal - trying to remember what happened. I look for patterns, acknowledge the journey, and sketch what might come next. I find the whole process grounding.

Last year was about thriving. The one before was about survival. This year has been different. Turning the page on a decade feels heavy. I don’t have a theme to build around yet, but I have an urge to get this right. In the past, I would’ve forced a theme. Maybe even asked ChatGPT to help find one. But this time, I feel compelled to sit with the discomfort of squeezing ten years into one blog.

When I do, a couple of thoughts keep bothering me.
Did I do enough?
Shouldn’t I know more by now?

Society doesn’t help. Neither does the internet.

On one side, there’s family - quietly (or not so quietly) expecting the usual milestones: marriage, a house, stability. On the other side, there’s Instagram. Whatsapp. LinkedIn. A live, curated feed of people I grew up with. It becomes hard not to compare. We all started from roughly the same place, but at thirty the divergence feels insane.

So what does making it even mean? Have I?

The resume version of my twenties

I’m sure I’m missing plenty, but you get the idea. That’s the rĂ©sumĂ©. It looks full. Even impressive.

What it doesn’t show is the cost.

It doesn’t show what it feels like to move homes every year.
It doesn’t show what it feels like to miss festivals in India.
It doesn’t show the guilt of staying away from parents.
It doesn’t show how under-confident I felt starting my own company.
It doesn’t show the discomfort of setting boundaries.
It doesn’t show the battles I fought in my own head.
It doesn’t show how hard it can be to take care of myself.
And it doesn’t show the grief of losing Bruno and the guilt of not being there.

Throughout my twenties, I kept moving because movement felt like progress. Standing still felt dangerous.

At 30, I’m tired. But not defeated. I’ve stopped sprinting. I’m still clueless, just a bit wiser.

A toast to my next decade
Instead of goals, I have hopes for my next decade. When I turn forty, I want to look back at this list and either see what I became - or gently laugh at how little I knew. Either way, it’ll be fine. So here they are -

I’ve always liked how some authors end books - not with closure, but with continuity. A.A. Milne ends Winnie-the-Pooh with the sense that something is still moving, even after the page closes.

That’s how my twenties feel. They’re going into a box of nostalgia. I’ll open it often. Sometimes with pride. Sometimes with regret.

That feels like enough for now.

asdasd asdad Celebrated with friends at an art cafe in Brooklyn

#reflections