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Good morning [%first_name |Dear Reader%],
I’m writing to you from a belatedly rain-blessed Bengaluru, where after the driest August in decades, a continuous 10-hour overnight spell of rain through Thursday night reduced our rain deficit from 42% to 8%. And there’s more rain forecast for September.
For the privileged, rain is often an indulgence or inconvenience. But for India’s farmers, it is life itself. So here’s wishing the late rains make up for what we missed in August.
Today’s edition took shape over lunch at a restaurant in Indiranagar this week. I was meeting Dhruv Saxena, the co-founder of design and product consulting firm, Obvious. Dhruv was a few weeks shy of finishing his three-month paternity leave, and the break from work had turned him more reflective and philosophical.
We were meeting at Infinitea, the reliable and friendly restaurant and tea room run by Gaurav Saria. As we were discussing our respective experiences around entrepreneurship, ambition, and self-belief, Dhruv said something that struck a chord with me.
He said that spending nearly three months away from work had allowed him the distance to truly observe himself and his own work. Dhruv has been practicing mindfulness and meditation for a while, so his ability to “see” himself from a vantage point has sharpened.
“There have been times when I’ve been in conversations with people and I find myself saying things that I don’t truly believe. And I tell myself, ‘Hey, that doesn’t sound like you’,” he said.
Saying things that sound like yourself doesn’t sound like much of a First Principle, you will think.
But conversations are how we innovate, deliberate, negotiate, and yes, decide on things. If we can find a way to have conversations that are truer to ourselves, then we can’t but arrive at better decisions in the process too.
Dhruv’s observation stayed with me because I use a “sibling” version of it myself. One of my longest running principles has been “write like you speak”.
That advice is usually given to writers, because it leads to clearer prose. But over the years I’ve come to realize that writing like you speak means much more.
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Executive Chairperson, Biocon Limited
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Co-founder and CEO, Obvious Ventures