Why?: Why does this blog exist? Why these topics, from this perspective? Here’s the story.
The View from Many Cities
I have spent much of my life moving between cities and across borders. Living in different countries didn’t just change my address; it changed my perspective.
When you view India both from the inside and from the outside—through different cultures and systems—you begin to notice patterns that are invisible when you stay in one place. You see the gap between lived reality and the global narrative built around it.
This blog emerges from that gap.
From Silicon to Society
By profession, my world is governed by the hard logic of FPGAs, processors, and embedded systems. My journey has taken me from a Master’s degree in Germany to leading firmware teams across Automotive, Medical Devices, and Aerospace in EU and the UK.
In engineering, when a system fails, we don’t argue over opinions—we debug. We trace the fault, isolate the root cause, and fix what’s broken.
When I first began writing, I stayed close to what I knew: technical pieces on hardware, systems, and design. But as I ventured into broader platforms, I noticed a different kind of system failure—one in our public discourse.
Much of what I read about India felt oddly disconnected from the country I knew.
The Moderation of Thought
I kept asking a simple question: Why is there no counter-perspective to these narratives?
So I started writing—offering a different lens on Indian society, policy, and power. Many of those essays never surfaced. They were filtered, moderated, or quietly removed for reasons that were never clearly explained.
Over time, it became obvious why only one perspective appeared dominant: alternatives were often erased before they could be read.
Infinite Sea of Opportunities was born out of that absence.
It exists on a simple belief: a different viewpoint should not need permission to exist.
Navigating the Deluge
We live in an age of information overload. Content is everywhere, yet clarity is rare. As volume increases, it becomes harder to separate insight from agenda.
I am not a professional blogger in the sense that I seek no financial gain from this platform, nor am I a political affiliate. I write as a happily full-time working professional engineer and a concerned citizen who believes narratives—like systems—deserve debugging.
My aim is not to persuade blindly, but to reason carefully.
If you agree with me, that’s fine.
If you disagree, that’s even better—disagreement forces me to revisit my own assumptions.
A Blueprint for the Common Citizen
I’m often asked: “I want India to develop, but I have a 9-to-5 job. What can I realistically do?”
I don’t believe nation-building is the sole responsibility of governments. It is the cumulative effect of millions of small, conscious choices. From my own experience, these choices matter:
- Strategic Investment
Growth needs capital. Investing in Indian mid-caps, startups, defence, and space isn’t just about returns—it’s about backing long-term sovereignty. - Conscious Consumerism
Geopolitics is personal. Every rupee spent is a vote for an economy. It’s worth asking who ultimately benefits from our consumption choices. - Critical Thinking
In the age of viral clips and instant outrage, research matters. A democracy is only as strong as the discernment of its voters. Social Media is powerful. - Ethical Gatekeeping
We must call out those exploiting the aspirations of youth—overpriced “10-day MBAs” and hollow AI masterclasses. Legal doesn’t always mean ethical. - Creating Value
The most meaningful contribution is creation. A startup, a tool, or even a single job created adds more to society than endless commentary.
A Shared Journey
This blog has allowed me to interact with many young readers—especially students—seeking clarity on careers, culture, and the larger systems shaping their lives.
India today is frequently misunderstood, both outside and within. I believe it is the responsibility of thinking citizens to question dominant narratives, highlight overlooked realities, and contribute—however modestly—to a more developed India.
This is not a monologue.
It’s an ongoing conversation. Together, through reasoned debate and conscious action, we can contribute to the India we envision
Thank you for your time! I hope to see you more often on the blog. Please do take a look at my latest posts—I’d love to hear your thoughts on them.