Tuesday, May 19, 2026

Real Estate in India Is Riskier Than You Think


Lessons in Investing    « Previously


Real Estate in India Is Riskier Than You Think

Buying a home is the biggest financial decision most Indians will ever make. Yet, the market is often painted with a single brush: property prices only go up, renting is throwing away money, and the earlier you buy, the richer you get. These myths persist because we only hear the success stories. The relative who made a 5x return on a flat in 1998 rarely mentions the piece of land stuck in litigation, or the under‑construction apartment that took ten years and endless stress to deliver. Real estate is far more nuanced – and far riskier – than the dinner‑table conversations suggest.

1. Real Estate Is Not a Single Asset Class

Just as stocks are split into small‑cap, mid‑cap, and large‑cap, real estate spans a spectrum of risk and return profiles. A plot in a developing suburb, an under‑construction apartment in a metro, and a ready‑to‑move‑in flat in a prime location are as different as a penny stock is from a blue chip. On top of that, every city, micro‑market, and even individual building has its own dynamics. The common thread that ties them all together, however, is sentiment.

When people feel optimistic about jobs and the economy, they buy. When uncertainty creeps in, they delay or exit. Sentiment is the first domino; everything else – project quality, builder reputation, price – comes later. Understanding this emotional foundation is critical because it explains why prices can stagnate for years or fall abruptly, even in so‑called “hot” markets.

2. The Construction Stage Spectrum: From Small‑Cap to Blue Chip

A useful way to think about risk is to map the construction stage to equity investing:

Construction Stage Equity Analogy Risk Profile Typical Expectation
Early launch (just a plan) Small‑cap stock Very high – delays, legal issues, developer funding crunches possible High upside but high probability of capital erosion or long lock‑in
Mid‑level construction Mid‑cap stock Moderate – some visibility, but still subject to external shocks Reasonable appreciation with manageable risk
Near completion (OC applied) Blue‑chip stock Lower – limited scope for delay, quality largely visible Steady, inflation‑indexed returns; lower gains
Ready‑to‑move‑in (post‑OC) Fixed deposit Minimal project risk (location and market risks remain) Capital preservation; appreciation tracks broader market trends

The earlier you enter, the greater the discount you must demand – because you are, in effect, funding the developer’s risk. And in India, developers face a maze of approvals, environmental clearances, and judicial interventions that can stall a project for months or years, often through no fault of their own.

3. The Price Illusion: Under‑Construction Discounts and the 30% Rule

Many buyers believe under‑construction properties are always cheaper than ready homes. The truth is more subtle. If the price gap does not adequately compensate for the risk, you are better off waiting. A practical rule of thumb is the 30% discount rule: buy an under‑construction unit only if the price is at least 30% lower than the expected final (ready) price of a comparable property in the same micro‑market.

Example:
Ready‑to‑move‑in price in the area: ₹1.5 crore
Under‑construction quote: ₹1.2 crore
Discount = (1.5 – 1.2) / 1.5 = 20%
Verdict: Not enough cushion. The risk of delays, quality compromise, or price stagnation can easily wipe out that 20% advantage.

Had the under‑construction price been ₹1.05 crore (a 30% discount), the risk‑reward would be more justifiable.

This buffer is the minimum “hazard pay” for taking on the many uncertainties that lie between a blueprint and a finished home.

4. City‑Wise Construction Realities: Timelines and Risks

Construction speed and the underlying developer model vary dramatically across India’s major cities, directly affecting your exposure.

City Typical High‑Rise Completion Time Dominant Model Investor‑Friendliness
Mumbai ~5 years (60‑floor tower) End‑user focused; tall buildings require deep foundations Slow but relatively transparent; resale demand from actual occupants
Gurugram Often 4‑5 years (30‑floor tower) Investor‑driven; artificial scarcity and “house‑full” narratives common High FOMO risk; exit liquidity depends on finding the next buyer
Bengaluru ~3 years (30‑35 floors) Efficient, clinical operations; less marketing hype Most predictable; shorter lock‑in, lower delay risk
Pune 3‑3.5 years Balanced approach; good construction pace and buyer orientation Comparable to Bengaluru, with healthy end‑user demand
Average High‑Rise Completion Time by City 0 1 2 3 4 5 Mumbai 5y Gurugram 4.5y Bengaluru 3y Pune 3.2y

Longer timelines amplify funding risk and the chance of regulatory or legal delays.

5. RERA: A Shield, Not a Panacea

The Real Estate (Regulation and Development) Act has undoubtedly improved transparency: mandatory project registrations, escrow accounts, and standardised sale agreements have curbed many old‑world malpractices. However, RERA is a quasi‑judicial body and lacks direct enforcement powers. Many large developers maintain legal teams that outweigh their construction teams; they can – and do – challenge RERA orders in higher courts. For the buyer, this means RERA provides valuable safeguards but is not a silver bullet. If a project stalls, getting your money back or forcing completion can still be a multi‑year ordeal.

6. Picking a Developer: Brand Name vs. Quality

In Indian real estate, a “branded” developer often guarantees delivery but not necessarily quality. Several marquee names have delivered apartments on time only to face buyer backlash over peeling tiles, weak plumbing, or inferior fixtures. The premium for a branded developer can be as high as 25‑30% over an unbranded competitor – but you may not feel that premium in the finished product.

How do you separate the reliable from the risky? Three practical checks can help:

  • Track record: Visit the developer’s last three to five completed projects. Talk to residents. Look at the finishing, maintenance, and how grievances were handled.
  • Legal agreement: Read the builder‑buyer agreement carefully. If it’s full of escape clauses (force majeure defined broadly, one‑sided cancellation terms), the developer is already planning an exit.
  • Lender’s confidence: Ask which banks are financing the project and at what interest rate. If lenders – who do rigorous due diligence – are charging high rates or have imposed strict conditions, treat that as a red flag.

7. Opportunity Cost: Should You Rent and Invest Instead?

A common argument for buying early is leverage: you pay 20% now (say, ₹40 lakh for a ₹2 crore property) and hope to benefit from price appreciation on the full asset value. But that leverage cuts both ways. If the project stalls, your ₹40 lakh is locked, and you’re still paying pre‑EMI interest or losing rent.

Contrast this with investing the same ₹40 lakh in a diversified equity mutual fund. Assuming a modest 10‑12% annual return over five years, the maths is illuminating:

Scenario: Invest ₹40 lakh in a mutual fund for 5 years
At 10% CAGR: ₹40 lakh × (1.10)5 = ₹40 lakh × 1.6105 ≈ ₹64.42 lakh
At 12% CAGR: ₹40 lakh × (1.12)5 ≈ ₹70.5 lakh
Meanwhile, if you had bought under‑construction and the project completes on time, your ₹2 crore home may appreciate by, say, 5‑6% annually, reaching about ₹2.55‑2.70 crore. But you would have paid stamp duty, registration, interest during construction, and faced illiquidity. The net gain is often far less impressive than it appears on paper. The decision to rent and invest often wins when you factor in flexibility, lower stress, and the ability to buy a ready home with a larger down payment later.

8. The Liquidity Conundrum: Selling in the Secondary Market

Unlike stocks, you cannot sell a fraction of your home. It’s an all‑or‑nothing asset. When you decide to sell, the price is not what your broker tells you when you are buying; it’s what a genuine buyer is willing to pay. Brokers often inflate valuations when they sense you are a buyer, but the moment you become a seller, the same property suddenly has “market challenges” – oversupply, high interest rates, geopolitical tensions, you name it.

The true test of your property’s value is whether your broker can actually bring a buyer at your expected price, not the feel‑good number they quote over the phone. Overpricing and holding on for an unrealistic amount is one of the costliest mistakes. If your property is not likely to appreciate meaningfully in the near term (a common scenario in many mature micro‑markets), selling today – even at a slight discount – and redeploying the capital elsewhere can be a far smarter financial move.

FACTS

  • 30% Discount Rule: Buy under‑construction only if the price is at least 30% below the expected ready‑to‑move‑in value, to compensate for delay, quality, and legal risks.
  • Mumbai high‑rise completion: Approximately 5 years for a 60‑floor tower; the deeper the foundation, the longer the timeline.
  • Bengaluru efficiency: 30‑35 floor projects often finish in 3 years, making it one of the most predictable metro markets.
  • RERA’s limitation: It is a quasi‑judicial body without direct enforcement powers; large developers frequently challenge orders in court.
  • Branded developer premium: Can be 25‑30% over unbranded, but does not guarantee superior quality – only higher certainty of delivery.
  • Sentiment rules: Real estate prices are driven first by sentiment, then by location, builder reputation, and price. Ignoring sentiment cycles can be financially damaging.
  • Liquidity trap: Selling a single property is difficult; overpricing based on broker‑supplied valuation is the most common reason homes remain unsold for years.

CONCLUSIONS

Real estate in India is not the safe, one‑way bet it is often made out to be. It demands the same rigour you would apply to any major investment: research, diversification, and a clear exit plan. The most critical takeaways are:

  1. Assess the stage, not just the price. Treat under‑construction like a high‑risk investment and demand a substantial margin of safety.
  2. Don’t rely solely on RERA. Use it as a transparency tool, but never assume it will rescue you swiftly from a stuck project.
  3. Judge the developer by their past, not their marketing. Physical inspections, legal documents, and lender confidence reveal far more than a glossy brochure.
  4. Weigh the opportunity cost carefully. Renting and investing the surplus can often outperform a leveraged, illiquid property purchase over a 5‑year horizon.
  5. Be realistic about resale. Your home’s value is what a ready buyer pays today, not what a broker whispered in your ear when you bought. Cut your losses early if the market has peaked.

Buying a home is an emotional milestone, but letting emotions dictate the financial logic is a recipe for regret. The Indian real estate market offers genuine opportunities – if you approach it with eyes wide open and a healthy scepticism of the prevailing myths.

Disclaimer: Written by DeepSeek. Deepseek is an AI and can make mistakes. Use this information as a starting point, not as financial or legal advice.


Lessons in Investing    « Previously

Monday, May 18, 2026

End of the India's Growth Story? Capital Flight Heats Up as Investors Look Overseas


See All News by Ravish Kumar    « Previously


The Two Storms: How India’s Economic Shine Turned to Dust

Ravish Kumar | May 2026

Two fierce winds are tearing through this country. One brings inflation, unemployment, and vanishing jobs. The other, moving in the opposite direction, is the storm of capital fleeing India. Currency, dollars, foreign investors, and now even Indian investors are sending their money abroad at breakneck speed. The common people hauling the economy on their shoulders have no idea that the root of their misery lies in a decade of claims that never became reality. Foreign investors are pulling out, and Indian companies are following suit. The question is no longer whether the economy is in trouble—it’s whether anyone is left to care.

The Great Capital Escape

The numbers are staggering. Between March 2025 and February 2026, Indians pumped $2.2 billion into foreign stock markets, a 60% jump over the previous year. In the same period, retail investors’ share in Indian stocks shrank by 9.2%. Overseas investments by Indian companies surged 138% in February and March alone, and a later Business Standard report pegged the year-on-year rise at 27.5%, with a jaw-dropping 138% spike between February and March of 2026. Foreign institutional investors yanked out 2 lakh crore rupees in just the last two months. Sensex market capitalisation plummeted from 473 lakh crore on November 12 to 454 lakh crore, wiping out nearly 20 lakh crore of investor wealth in seven months. The exodus is no longer a trickle; it is a flood.

Market Cap Percentage Change (One Year, Selected Economies)

+74.6
S Korea
+45.5
Taiwan
+17.4
China
+11.3
Japan
+7.2
US
-4.2
France
-8.5
India

Source: Bloomberg data, May 2026. India’s market cap contracted even as peers surged, well before war-related disruptions.

The Rupee’s Silent Collapse

In the past year, the rupee fell 11.2% against the dollar, and it lost ground against the Thai baht, Bangladeshi taka, and Pakistani rupee as well. Economist Kaushik Basu noted that total foreign direct investment over the last 22 months has been virtually zero—what came in went out. He warned that if crude oil stays above $100 per barrel without Arab intervention, the rupee could slide to 102 to the dollar. The government’s standby excuse—the war—is wearing thin. Analysts from Goldman Sachs confirmed that even after April’s ceasefire and falling crude prices, foreign investors did not return. The rot is older and deeper.

The Adani Contrast: $10 Billion for America, Sermons for the Poor

While the common man is advised to cut down kitchen oil consumption to save foreign exchange, the Adani Group is reportedly moving 96,000 crore rupees out of India. Reports surfaced that Adani will invest $10 billion in the US to settle legal troubles and create 15,000 American jobs. The government allegedly settled a case for $18 million. Ask yourself: can Prime Minister Modi stop Adani from taking that investment abroad? The silence is deafening. The administration that sold India as the world’s fastest-growing economy now watches its biggest capitalists bet on foreign shores.

The Disaster Decade That Was Never Acknowledged

Prime Minister Modi now proclaims the coming ten years will be a decade of disasters for the world. But what about the decade just gone? From demonetisation in 2016 to today, the country lurched from one crisis to another. In 2019, news of peak unemployment was buried. For years, reports have shown that India’s savings rate is abysmal, household incomes are among the lowest, and per capita income hovers around 18,000–20,000 rupees a month. This is a nation where 80 crore people have survived on free rations since 2020—six years of subsistence on government grain. No prime-time debate shows this. The economy crawls on the backs of a pauperised majority.

Indicator Data Period/Source
Indian retail investor share in stocks -9.2% Past 1 year
Overseas investment by Indian companies +138% (Feb-Mar) 2026 vs 2025
FII outflows 2 lakh crore INR Last 2 months
Sensex market cap loss ~20 lakh crore INR Nov 2025 – May 2026
Indians investing abroad $2.2 billion Mar 2025 – Feb 2026
Rupee depreciation vs USD -11.2% 1 year
Citizenship renunciations 18 lakh (1.8 million) Up to 2024
BA graduates getting corporate jobs Only 4% Azim Premji University

Jobless Growth and Cyber Slavery

The government loves the phrase ‘digital India’, but the reality is grim. Young men from Bihar are lured to Vietnam and Cambodia with fake job promises, then forced into scamming people worldwide—what the National Investigation Agency calls cyber slavery. Others go to Russia and are thrown into the army to catch bullets; some go to Israel as labourers and get trapped in war zones. This is the ‘demographic dividend’ in action. And yet, only 4% of BA graduates find corporate employment. The rest are pushed into gig work that pays so little they remain indistinguishable from the poor. Permanent jobs are a dying dream.

Systemic Rot: From Municipality to Judiciary

The decay is not limited to the economy. An army Major had to stage a sit-in protest outside the Madhya Pradesh Chief Minister’s house just to get an FIR registered for his sister’s suspicious death. Twisha Sharma, a former Miss Pune, died within five months of marriage; her husband, a lawyer, is absconding, and his mother is a retired district judge. The family alleges manipulation, a compromised post-mortem, and obstruction at every level. “We are fighting a system,” the Major said, describing how the accused have deep links in the judiciary and medical establishment. The body has not been sent for an independent autopsy. The message is clear: in today’s India, even justice is a privilege of the connected.

The AI Miss and the End of the Market Darling

When the world pivoted to artificial intelligence, India missed the bus. Headlines now mock: “India missed the AI opportunity, and its days as a market darling could be over.” The AI Global Summit turned into a spectacle. What product has India created to claim global tech leadership? Investors listened to grand speeches for ten years and finally understood that those speeches were meant for winning elections in the Hindi heartland, not for building an innovation ecosystem. Since 2024, foreign investors have simply stopped looking at India.

“At the very moment AI is reshaping global investment flows, India has proven to be one of the world’s biggest losers.” — Japanese Business Newspapers, May 2026

Tax Cuts for the Rich, Hardships for the Rest

Each time a crisis erupts, a familiar chorus begins: slash taxes for corporations and the rich. In 2018, corporate tax for companies with turnover of 50–250 crore was cut from 30% to 25%. What followed? Investment did not surge, jobs did not appear, and Indian companies continued parking money abroad. Now the demand is to bring tax on sovereign bonds to zero to attract foreign capital. Even if implemented today, analysts say the effect will take two years. Meanwhile, the middle class gets no such relief; their real incomes are shrinking, and their purchasing power is eroding. The government’s own circular asking banks to cut travel and adopt video conferencing betrays a panic—the siren is blaring.

The Business Climate of Fear

Why would anyone invest in a country where a YouTuber’s channel can be shut down by a single government order? Where businesses flourish only if they donate crores to the ruling party? Where bulldozers demolish homes and shops without court orders, and the public applauds because it aligns with a perverted notion of “Hindu happiness”? Bribery, fake cases, land grabbing—all are shrugged off. The middle class has sold its conscience for religious polarisation. From the municipal corporation to the highest courts, institutions have been hollowed out. When the state itself becomes the biggest threat to enterprise, capital will always choose the exit door.

Climate Blindness Amid Record Heat

This April, all fifty of the world’s hottest cities were in India. While tree-planting photo-ops are staged in the name of mothers, real forests are being cleared and those who protest face police batons. The middle class remains obsessed with stock market returns, oblivious to the environmental collapse mirroring the economic one. The government’s proposed hike in fixed electricity charges will squeeze households further, adding to the burden of a population already surviving on free grain.

The story of India was sold as a miracle. Now even its own people are beginning to say that the story was a lie, and the truth is finally catching up.

Facts

  • Between March 2025 and February 2026, Indian retail investors moved $2.2 billion into foreign equities — a 60% year-on-year increase.
  • Sensex market capitalisation fell from 473 lakh crore (Nov 2025) to 454 lakh crore (May 2026), destroying nearly 20 lakh crore in investor wealth.
  • Overseas direct investment by Indian companies surged 138% in Feb-Mar 2026, with an extraordinary 138% spike between the two months.
  • Foreign portfolio investors pulled out 2 lakh crore rupees in just the last two months.
  • The rupee depreciated 11.2% against the dollar in one year and also weakened against the Thai baht, Bangladeshi taka, and Pakistani rupee.
  • Kaushik Basu stated total FDI over 22 months was near zero; crude above $100/barrel could push rupee to 102 per dollar.
  • 1.8 million Indians renounced citizenship up to 2024.
  • Only 4% of BA graduates secure corporate jobs (Azim Premji University).
  • 80 crore citizens have been dependent on free government rations since 2020.
  • India’s market cap contracted 8.5% in a year while Taiwan and South Korea posted double-digit gains.
  • Adani Group reportedly moving 96,000 crore rupees overseas; plans $10 billion US investment to settle legal cases.
  • India’s sovereign bond market has a minuscule 3% foreign investor share due to high taxation.

Criticisms

  • The Modi government deliberately suppressed data on peak unemployment in 2019 to protect its narrative of a booming economy.
  • Ten years of claims about ‘fastest-growing economy’ have collapsed under the weight of stagnant incomes, mass emigration of capital, and a jobless workforce.
  • While preaching austerity to ordinary citizens, the government facilitates crony capitalists like Adani to export billions of dollars for personal legal bailouts.
  • Corporate tax cuts in 2018 failed to stimulate investment or job creation; instead, Indian companies accelerated overseas investments.
  • The administration has created a business environment riddled with extortion, political donations as licence to operate, and arbitrary use of bulldozers without due process.
  • Institutions from municipal bodies to the judiciary have been systematically weakened, leaving citizens without recourse—as witnessed in the Twisha Sharma case where judicial and medical networks obstructed justice.
  • The Prime Minister’s speeches, once marketed to global investors, are now openly understood as election rhetoric for the Hindi belt, not blueprints for economic reform.
  • Media houses that function as government mouthpieces have normalised economic distress, turning a blind eye to cyber slavery, falling savings, and the precarity of 80 crore ration-dependent Indians.
  • Climate policy is a charade: record-breaking heat and deforestation are met with photo-ops, while dissenters are brutalised by police.
  • The middle class has traded its material interests for communal polarisation, cheering the demolition of Muslim homes as ‘Hindu happiness’ while its own economic foundations crumble.
  • YouTubers and independent voices live under constant threat of having their channels terminated by government diktat, revealing a regime allergic to scrutiny.
  • The coming decade may well be disastrous for the world, but the past decade of disaster was homegrown and entirely of this government’s making.
Disclaimer: This article was produced with assistance from artificial intelligence (DeepSeek) to help draft and edit content. While efforts were made to ensure accuracy, the AI may introduce errors or omissions. Readers should verify facts and exercise their own judgment.

See All News by Ravish Kumar    « Previously
Tags: Ravish Kumar,Hindi,Video,Indian Politics,

Comparing 2-in-1 Windows Tablet PCs

View Other Techonology Listings    « Previously

The Lightest Windows Tablet PCs in 2026: Weight vs Price Guide

If you want a full desktop operating system without carrying a heavy laptop, a Windows tablet PC is your best solution. These machines pack Intel, Snapdragon, or AMD hardware into slim, touch-enabled screens. Choosing the right one means balancing portability, performance, and cost. Here is a breakdown of the lightest options on the market right now, including their weights and latest pricing in India.

The Top Lightweight Tablet PCs By Category

1. Ultra-Portable Champ: Microsoft Surface Go 3

This is the ultimate choice if your main goal is reducing bag weight. It handles everyday office tasks, video calls, and casual media consumption with ease.

  • Weight: ~522 grams (1.15 lbs)
  • Key Specs: 10.5-inch display, Intel Pentium Gold or Core m3, Windows 11 Home (S Mode).
  • Best For: Light browsing, reading, and simple document editing on the move.

2. Premium Performance: Microsoft Surface Pro 11 (Copilot+ PC)

The Surface Pro 11 uses next-generation processors to deliver long battery life and fast performance. It easily replaces a premium laptop while remaining incredibly thin.

  • Weight: 895 grams (1.97 lbs)
  • Key Specs: 13-inch PixelSense touchscreen, Snapdragon X Plus or Elite processors.
  • Best For: Professionals needing desktop-grade software in a true tablet format.

3. Convertible Flexibility: LG Gram Pro 2-in-1 (14-inch)

If you want a traditional keyboard that never detaches, this option bends backward 360 degrees. It breaks records for standard laptop portability.

  • Weight: ~1.25 kg (2.75 lbs)
  • Key Specs: Intel Core Ultra processor, 14-inch OLED/IPS display, 360-degree hinge.
  • Best For: Users who type heavily but still need tablet flexibility for drawing or notes.

Price Comparison Table

Below are the current estimated market prices and standard configurations available across major retail channels:

Model Base Configuration Approx. Price Range (INR)
Microsoft Surface Go 3 Intel Pentium / 8GB RAM / 128GB SSD Rs. 57,999
Microsoft Surface Pro 11 Snapdragon X Plus / 16GB RAM / 256GB SSD Rs. 91,990 - Rs. 1,24,999
Microsoft Surface Pro 11 Snapdragon X Elite / 16GB RAM / 512GB SSD Rs. 1,65,990 - Rs. 1,77,999
LG Gram 14 2-in-1 Intel Core Ultra 5 / 16GB RAM / 512GB SSD Rs. 1,18,419
Hidden Costs Warning: Remember that weights listed for Microsoft Surface devices are for the tablet portion only. The official Type Cover keyboard adds 200 to 300 grams to your travel weight and costs an additional Rs. 10,000 to Rs. 15,000. The LG Gram 14 2-in-1 includes its attached keyboard and stylus pen in the box, giving it excellent out-of-the-box value.

Deep Dive: Snapdragon vs. Intel Battery Life Benchmarks

The choice between Snapdragon (ARM architecture) and Intel (x86 architecture) is the biggest decision you will make when buying a modern ultra-light tablet PC. Industry benchmarks show a clear split in how these chips handle power consumption:

Snapdragon X Elite / Plus Benchmarks

  • Video Playback Endurance: Up to 20 to 22 hours on a single charge.
  • Real-World Productivity: 12 to 14 hours of continuous web browsing, spreadsheet work, and active background sync.
  • Unplugged Consistency: Snapdragon chips maintain full processing performance when running on battery power without aggressively downclocking.

Intel Core Ultra Benchmarks

  • Video Playback Endurance: Up to 11 to 14 hours depending on display configurations (OLED vs. IPS).
  • Real-World Productivity: 8 to 11 hours under identical multitasking scripts.
  • Power Conservation: Intel systems rely on stepping down performance cores to match Snapdragon efficiency when unplugged, which can slightly slow down heavy background tasks.
The Performance Verdict: Snapdragon holds a 25% to 40% battery life advantage in lightweight, day-to-day productivity loop testing. However, Intel Core Ultra closes this efficiency gap dramatically if your usage involves running older x86 applications that require software emulation on ARM chips, or if you require maximum 3D graphics processing power.

Summary

Pick the Surface Go 3 if weight is your only priority and your tasks are basic. Step up to the Surface Pro 11 for elite speed and marathon battery life. Pick the LG Gram 14 2-in-1 if you require 100% legacy application compatibility alongside premium hybrid flexibility.

Tags: EdTech,

Sunday, May 17, 2026

Failures


See All on Motivation    « Previously


Failure Is Not the Opposite of Success.
It Is the Path.

A reflection on what the world's greatest achievers learned by losing

There is a particular kind of humiliation reserved for people who try and fail publicly. A manuscript rejected. A business shuttered. An election lost. A career-ending miss. Society has long treated these moments as verdicts — as proof of inadequacy. But look closely at the lives of those who have genuinely changed the world, and a strange pattern emerges: almost all of them failed, spectacularly, before they succeeded.

This is not mere consolation. It is a structural truth about how meaningful achievement actually works.

"If you want a culture of innovation, your organization must visibly and repeatedly reward employees whose projects fail." -- Astro Teller, Head of X (Google's Moonshot Lab)

The Map We Are Given Is Wrong

Most people picture the journey to success as a fork in the road: you either win or you fail. Clean. Binary. Final. But that map is a lie told to children and reinforced by award ceremonies that only ever celebrate the outcome, never the wreckage that preceded it.

What successful people actually know is something messier and more honest: the road to any meaningful win is paved with a series of failures, each one a checkpoint rather than a dead end. The path does not split into win or lose. It winds — through loss after loss — until it eventually arrives at a win. The trophy at the end looks identical. The journey to get there could not be more different.

Famous Failures — The Ones History Chose to Remember

J.K. Rowling

Before Harry Potter changed the world, Joanne Rowling was a completely broke, clinically depressed single mother living on welfare support. She wrote her first novel in cafes because she could not afford to heat her flat. Twelve major publishers rejected the manuscript. The thirteenth gave her a modest advance and told her not to quit her day job. She was, at that precise moment, a famous failure. Today she is one of the wealthiest women on the planet — not because she avoided failure, but because she refused to let it be the final word.

Abraham Lincoln

Lincoln lost not one but several elections across the course of his political career before finally being elected to the highest office in the land. He failed in business, suffered a nervous breakdown, and was defeated repeatedly at the polls. The man who would go on to abolish slavery and hold a fractured nation together spent most of his adult life being told — by voters, by events, by circumstance — that he was not enough. He persisted anyway. His legacy is not despite his failures. It is inseparable from them.

Michael Jordan

The man widely considered the greatest basketball player of all time was cut from his high school varsity team. He went on to miss more than 9,000 shots in his professional career, lose nearly 300 games, and miss 26 game-winning shots when the ball was placed in his hands at the decisive moment. In his own words: "I have failed over and over and over again in my life. And that is why I succeed." Jordan did not win in spite of failure. He built his greatness on the raw material of it.

Walt Disney

Walt Disney was fired from one of his early newspaper jobs by an editor who concluded that he "lacked imagination and had no good ideas." He went on to create the most recognizable entertainment empire in human history. The man who gave the world Mickey Mouse, Fantasia, and Disneyland — whose name has become synonymous with imagination itself — was told, by someone who should have known better, that he had none. Failure, in Disney's case, was not a signal to stop. It was simply wrong.

Thomas Edison

Edison's approach to failure was perhaps the most deliberate in this entire catalogue. While developing the incandescent light bulb, he ran thousands of unsuccessful experiments — testing filament after filament, each one burning out or failing to hold. He did not treat these as failures. He treated them as data. Each unsuccessful test was a necessary discovery, narrowing the space of what was possible until the solution became almost inevitable. He put it simply: "I have not failed. I've just found 10,000 ways that won't work." This was not bravado. It was a genuine epistemology of progress.

Steve Jobs

In 1985, Steve Jobs — the man who co-founded Apple — was publicly and humiliatingly forced out of the very company he had built. For most people, this would have been a terminal event. For Jobs, it was a crucible. Freed from the constraints of running Apple, he founded NeXT and provided the funding that turned Pixar into a studio that would redefine animation. The period of being, as he described it, "a beginner again" unlocked a creative depth he had not previously accessed. When he returned to Apple more than a decade later, he brought that hard-won understanding with him. The iMac, the iPod, the iPhone — none of it exists without the failure that came first. As he told Stanford graduates in 2005: "Sometimes life is going to hit you in the head with a brick. Don't lose faith."

What Failure Is Actually Telling You

Across all of these stories, a single thread runs: failure is not a verdict. It is feedback. It is information. It is the universe's way of telling you that a particular approach, at a particular moment, did not work — not that you will never work.

The people who internalize this distinction are the ones who keep going. And the ones who keep going are the ones who eventually arrive somewhere worth arriving at.

Edison understood this intellectually. Jordan understood it physically — in his body, in the muscle memory of ten thousand missed shots that eventually made him unguardable. Rowling understood it emotionally, in the way that continued rejection strips away everything except the core commitment to the work itself. Jobs understood it structurally — that being removed from one context can free you to build something more enduring in another.

"Many of life's failures are people who did not realize how close they were to success when they gave up." -- Thomas Edison

The Culture We Need to Build

The implications extend beyond the individual. Astro Teller's provocation — that organizations serious about innovation must visibly and repeatedly reward employees whose projects fail — points to something most institutions still refuse to accept: that the fear of failure kills more good ideas than failure itself ever could.

When people are punished for trying and failing, they stop trying. They optimize for safety, for the predictable, for the already-been-done. Innovation requires the opposite: a culture where a well-reasoned failure is understood as evidence of ambition, and ambition is treated as a resource worth protecting.

A Final Word

If you find yourself accumulating failures — if the rejections are stacking up, if the path keeps redirecting, if success keeps feeling like it belongs to someone else — consider the possibility that you are not on the wrong path. You may simply be on the right one, further back than you would like to be.

If you are encountering failures along the way, just know that you are on the right path.

Three Tips for a Happy Life


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Inner Guide Program

Three Advices
of the Supreme Buddha

A path to peace in this life — and the next

- - -

Namo Buddhaya. Among the countless teachings left behind by the Supreme Buddha, there exist three instructions so pure, so practical, and so profound that following them is said to yield not only a peaceful life in this world, but a blessed rebirth in the next. They do not require wealth, renunciation, or scholarship. They require only will — and that will is tested precisely because these three things are hard.

Five Key Takeaways
  • 01Always speak the truth — bitter truth is always better than a sweet lie, no matter the short-term cost.
  • 02Anger is easy; peace is the achievement. Cultivating loving kindness, especially under pressure, is among the hardest and most worthy human acts.
  • 03True generosity is measured not by the size of the gift but by the size of the sacrifice — giving from little is the highest form of generosity.
  • 04Evil and reactive behaviour is effortless; doing good requires conscious, sustained effort. That effort is the entire point.
  • 05These three practices — truthfulness, non-anger, and generosity — form an integrated inner architecture, not a checklist.
I

Always Speak the Truth

The first advice the Supreme Buddha gave is disarmingly simple: always speak the truth. In a world that rewards clever evasion, where a well-placed lie can dissolve a difficult moment like sugar in warm water, this instruction cuts against the grain of instinct.

When we are cornered by a problem, a lie feels like an exit. And in one narrow sense, it is — it exits the immediate discomfort. But it does not exit the consequence. Karma, in Buddhist thought, is not punishment dispensed from above. It is the natural unfolding of causes and effects. A lie plants a seed. That seed does not ask your permission before it flowers.

"Bitter truth is better than sweet lies."

This is the operating principle. Whatever disadvantage the truth brings in the short term — the awkward conversation, the professional setback, the damaged ego — it is still preferable to the invisible damage accumulating inside a life built on falsehood. Truthfulness, practiced consistently, builds a kind of internal cleanliness. It simplifies the mind, because a person who always tells the truth has only one story to remember.

A Parable to Sit With

A merchant once had two sons. The elder lied his way through difficulties — always finding escape, always avoiding consequence. The younger bore the sting of truth at every turn. In his youth, the elder seemed fortunate and the younger unfortunate. In old age, the elder had lost all trust and lived in restless suspicion of others. The younger had built a life of such transparency that even strangers trusted him with their keys. The truth, it turned out, had been constructing something all along — quietly, without announcement.

II

Do Not Get Angry

The second advice is harder still: do not get angry. The Supreme Buddha acknowledged this directly — maintaining patience is hard. Maintaining kindness when someone has wronged you is hard. Maintaining compassion when the world feels hostile is very hard. He did not pretend otherwise.

But the Buddha also noted something important about the nature of evil and reactive action: it is easy. It is the path of least resistance. Anger rises with almost no effort. Resentment settles in without invitation. The reactive mind is always the lazier mind. Goodness, by contrast, requires constant, deliberate choice.

"Doing good things is very hard. Being patient and not getting anger into your mind is very hard. We have to admit that."

This admission is itself a form of wisdom. The teaching does not shame us for feeling anger — it simply asks us not to be governed by it. The practice recommended is the active cultivation of loving kindness: metta. Not merely the suppression of anger, but its replacement with something generative. A person who spreads loving kindness, even imperfectly, is practicing one of the most radical acts available to a human being.

III

Give Even When You Have Little

The third advice arrives like the final note of a well-composed raga: give, even when you have little. The Supreme Buddha frames this with a precise illustration. If you have a thousand dollars and give one, the transaction costs you almost nothing psychologically. But if you have only one dollar and you give it away — that is where the real battle is fought.

That battle is not with an external adversary. It is with ego. It is with craving. It is with the deeply human tendency to clutch what little we have all the more tightly when we feel scarcity pressing in. The generous act in poverty costs more than the generous act in abundance — and therefore, the Buddha says, it is worth more.

"To give even when we have little — that is the maximum point of generosity."

Generosity, in this teaching, is not an economic act. It is a spiritual one. It is the deliberate loosening of the grip that craving has on the mind. Each act of giving — however small — weakens that grip slightly. Over time, the generous person moves through the world more lightly, less burdened by the anxiety of accumulation, less imprisoned by the fear of loss.

~ ~ ~

An Integrated Path

These three instructions — speak the truth, do not be angry, give generously — are not three separate disciplines. They are one discipline, approached from three angles. Truth purifies speech. Non-anger purifies the mind. Generosity purifies action. Together, they form a complete inner architecture for a life lived with integrity.

None of this is easy. The Supreme Buddha never claimed it was. But the path that is hard in the doing tends to be the one that repays you fully in the living. Practice this. May you have a wonderful and peaceful life in this world.

Namo Buddhaya.


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