Krishna Bhaskar https://krishnabhaskar.com/author/krishnabhaskar-com/ Born in Patna, India | Storyteller | Foodie | Texas Lover Thu, 30 Apr 2026 15:39:46 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 https://krishnabhaskar.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/03/kblogo-3-150x150.png Krishna Bhaskar https://krishnabhaskar.com/author/krishnabhaskar-com/ 32 32 OCI in 2026: A Practical Guide for Indian-Born US Citizens With US-Born Kids https://krishnabhaskar.com/oci-2026-rules-changes-us-citizens-guide/ https://krishnabhaskar.com/oci-2026-rules-changes-us-citizens-guide/#respond Thu, 30 Apr 2026 15:37:10 +0000 https://krishnabhaskar.com/?p=2539 OCI in 2026: A Practical Guide for Indian-Born US Citizens With US-Born Kids If you’re like my crowd in the US suburbs, your life looks something like this: you and your spouse were born in India, you’re both US citizens now, you already have OCI, and your kids were born in the US and travel […]

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OCI in 2026: A Practical Guide for Indian-Born US Citizens With US-Born Kids

If you're like my crowd in the US suburbs, your life looks something like this: you and your spouse were born in India, you're both US citizens now, you already have OCI, and your kids were born in the US and travel on US passports.

The big question is always some version of: "Do my kids really need OCI, what's changed in 2026, and what should I actually do next?"

This post is exactly for you.


Quick Refresher: What Does OCI Really Give You?

Think of OCI as a lifelong multi-entry visa plus some NRI-style conveniences. Not full Indian citizenship, but pretty close for travel purposes.

For a US-born kid of Indian-origin parents, OCI mainly means:

  • No visa drama every time you book tickets to India. Just carry US passport + OCI card. Lifelong, multiple entry. No "visa valid till..." stress.
  • You can stay in India as long as you want each trip. There's no 180-day cap like with some visas.
  • Easier dealings in India later: buying property, inheriting assets, opening NRE/NRO accounts, investing, etc. with parity comparable to NRIs.
  • No political rights: no voting, no contesting elections, no constitutional posts. Some activities like research or missionary work still need special permission.

For kids, OCI is basically a future-proof travel and connection card with India.


Are Your US-Born Kids Eligible for OCI?

In your situation, the answer is almost certainly yes, as long as there's no Pakistan or Bangladesh link in the ancestry.

The rule in simple terms: a minor child whose parents are Indian citizens or OCI cardholders is eligible for OCI, provided no parent, grandparent, or great-grandparent was a citizen of Pakistan or Bangladesh.

You and your wife were born in India and you both already hold OCI, so your US-born daughters qualify through you.


What Actually Changed in 2026 That You Should Care About?

Plenty of noise online, but for a family like yours, these are the practical changes that matter.

Stuff That Matters for Your Kids' Future OCI

  • The 6-month "ordinary residence in India" requirement is gone. No more proving you lived there for six months first.
  • Fees are now standardized globally: fresh OCI is about 275 USD when applying from outside India, Rs. 15,000 if applying inside India.
  • Every OCI holder must update their profile within 3 months of getting a new passport, or pay a 25 USD late fee.

Stuff That Matters for You (Parents) Right Now

  • Each time you renew your US passport, update your new passport details on the OCI portal within 90 days.
  • Miss the 3-month window? You'll be charged a 25 USD late penalty.
  • India is shifting to e-gates and tighter biometric checks, so your passport and OCI data must match exactly.

Step-by-Step: Getting OCI for US-Born Kids

Here's how I'd lay it out for a family like yours applying from the US.

Step 1: Decide When to Apply

You can apply anytime while your kids are minors. Try to avoid applying right before big travel plans. Build in a comfortable buffer.

Step 2: Collect the Documents

  • Child's US passport: copy of bio page.
  • Child's US birth certificate showing parents' names.
  • Parents' Indian origin proof: usually your old Indian passport copies and/or your own OCI cards.
  • Parents' current US passports.
  • Marriage certificate of parents (some missions insist on this for minors).
  • Photos: recent, as per the portal specs.
  • Signed declarations and consent from both parents (for minors).

Step 3: Online Application

Fill the OCI form online on the official government site and upload the required documents. Double-check spellings of names, place of birth, and passport numbers.

Step 4: VFS/Consulate Submission

Take your printout and originals + photocopies to the VFS center or consulate. Pay the fee (around 275 USD per child, plus VFS service fees where applicable).

Step 5: Track and Receive OCI

Track the application status online using the file number. Once approved, you either receive the physical OCI card by mail or collect it as instructed.

After that, travel formula for the kids becomes: US passport + OCI card, done.


What About Kids Over 18 Years Old?

This is where many families get confused. A US-born child of Indian-origin parents can still be eligible for OCI after turning 18, but the application is no longer treated like a minor child case.

In plain English, that means your son or daughter can still apply, but the paperwork becomes more independent. They will use their own passport, their own application, and their own supporting documents showing Indian origin through parentage.

Typical documents will include:

  • Current US passport.
  • US birth certificate showing parents' names.
  • Parents' proof of Indian origin, such as old Indian passports, surrender certificates, or OCI cards.
  • The adult child's own address and identity proofs as required by the consulate or VFS center.

Once the child is 18+, parental consent paperwork usually drops out, but document scrutiny can become stricter because the application has to independently establish the family line to India.


Ongoing Responsibilities Once Your Kids Have OCI

Once your daughters have OCI, they're bound by the same 2026 compliance rules as you.

  • Whenever their US passport renews (kids renew more often), update the OCI portal within 3 months.
  • Keep scanned copies of passports, OCI cards, and key documents in a secure cloud folder.
  • Remind older kids that OCI is not a free-pass for legal issues in India. Serious violations can lead to cancellation.

Why I'd Still Bother Getting OCI for US-Born Kids

You could just keep getting e-visas for them, but there are reasons many of us go ahead with OCI.

  • Emotional continuity: they can treat India as a second home base without expiry dates hovering over every visit.
  • Practical future-proofing: if you own or will inherit property in India, OCI makes paperwork, banking, and compliance smoother.
  • Travel simplicity: one less moving part in trip planning, especially during peak seasons when visa sites are slow.

If the upfront hassle and fee fit your family's situation, OCI is usually a do-it-once and forget-about-visas decision.


Key 2026 OCI Changes: Cheat Sheet for Everyone

Change What It Means
6-month stay requirement removed No more needing to prove you lived in India for 6 months before applying for OCI from inside India.
Standard global fees Fresh OCI is about 275 USD abroad / Rs. 15,000 in India. Reissue about 25 USD. Duplicate about 100 USD.
3-month passport update rule Every OCI holder must update their new passport details on the OCI portal within 3 months of getting a new passport.
Late penalty Miss the 3-month window? You pay a 25 USD penalty when you finally update.
No more postal submissions Most missions now expect in-person submission via consulate or VFS. Mailing documents is being phased out.
e-Arrival and tighter checks Digital arrival forms and biometric e-gates mean clean, updated OCI and passport data is more important than ever.
PIO cards no longer valid Legacy PIO cards are no longer accepted for travel to India. Holders must convert to OCI to enter.

Also, one quick point for parents with older kids: if your son or daughter is already 18, don't assume you missed the OCI window. You probably didn't. The case just gets handled more like an adult OCI application instead of a minor child file, so the main job is proving the family link cleanly through documents.

P.S. If you want, I can turn this into a ready-to-publish WordPress draft with headings, slugs, and meta description tailored to your site's style.

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Hindu Funerals https://krishnabhaskar.com/hindu-funerals-usa/ https://krishnabhaskar.com/hindu-funerals-usa/#respond Tue, 10 Mar 2026 16:08:59 +0000 https://krishnabhaskar.com/?p=2401 A practical guide for Hindu families in the U.S. Dealing with a Sudden Death: A Hindu Family’s Guide in the USA I have seen many Hindu families dealing with the unexpected, unfortunate loss of loved ones here in the United States. Many times, they struggle to gather resources while simultaneously trying to grieve or process […]

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A practical guide for Hindu families in the U.S.

Dealing with a Sudden Death: A Hindu Family’s Guide in the USA

I have seen many Hindu families dealing with the unexpected, unfortunate loss of loved ones here in the United States. Many times, they struggle to gather resources while simultaneously trying to grieve or process the trauma. I’m sharing this guide to help with practical information about dealing with hospital staff, funeral homes, arranging pundits, and other necessities for Hindu funeral and cremation arrangements in the U.S.

By Krishna Bhaskar

A small note before we begin: You don’t need to do everything perfectly. You just need to do the next right thing, one step at a time.

The first 24–48 hours

1) Choose one “point person”

If possible, appoint one calm friend or family member to handle calls and coordination. Grief makes paperwork feel heavier than it is.

  • Keep a single notes thread: names, phone numbers, promises, timing.
  • Ask the hospital/funeral home for “next steps” in writing if you can.
2) Decide the immediate direction

Most families decide between: (a) cremation in the U.S. with Hindu rites, or (b) repatriation to India.

  • If timing, cost, or complexity feels overwhelming, cremation in the U.S. is often the most practical.
  • Many families later carry or ship ashes (urna) to India.

What happens to the body in the U.S.?

When a person passes away in the United States, the process is handled strictly under local and state laws. Here’s what typically happens:

Medical review and release

  • Medical Review: If the death occurs at a hospital or home, the local county medical examiner is notified. If the death appears natural and expected, the examiner may approve the release of the body within 2–3 days.
  • Autopsy delay: If the death was sudden, unexplained, or involved trauma (suicide, accident, or suspected foul play), an autopsy is usually required. This process can delay the release by up to a week or more.
  • Body release rules: The body is stored in the hospital or county morgue until it is officially cleared. Bodies are not released to family members directly—only to licensed funeral homes or airline mortuary services for repatriation.

Sending the body to India

Some families wish to return their loved one’s body to India. This process can be done but is often expensive, complex, and time-sensitive. The overall cost can easily be between $10,000 to $25,000.

Estimated cost breakdown when shipping a deceased body (USA → India)

Cost item Typical range (USD) Notes
Airline cargo fees $4,000 – $15,000 Influenced by airline, route, and weight of remains.
Funeral home services $1,000 – $3,000 Embalming, documentation, and coordination.
Embalming + coffin $1,000 – $4,200 Embalming $500–$1,200; sealed coffin $500–$3,000.
Documentation + permits $100 – $500 Death certificates, embalming certificates, consular documents, etc.

What’s needed

  • Clearance from the local health department
  • County medical examiner clearance
  • Indian consulate documentation
  • Embalming of the body
  • Approved casket meeting international transport standards
Recommended option: Many choose to cremate the body in the U.S. and carry or ship the ashes (urna) to India. Most funeral homes can help with international transport of ashes, and airlines allow you to carry them—but you must notify the airline in advance.

Required documentation

To facilitate transportation, the following documents are typically required:

  • Certified death certificate
  • Embalming certificate
  • Coffin certificate
  • No Objection Certificate (NOC) from the Indian Consulate
  • Copy of the deceased’s passport
  • Consular mortuary certificate

It’s advisable to consult with the Indian Embassy or Consulate for the most current requirements and procedures.

Funeral home and cremation process in the USA

Once a funeral home is finalized, they take over the coordination from the hospital or morgue. They will:

  • Pick up the body once legal clearance is given
  • Handle preservation and preparation for viewing
  • Dress the body in clothes provided by the family
  • Arrange viewing and cremation services as per Hindu customs
Cost can range from $3,000 to $20,000 depending on services and location.

Dallas–Fort Worth resources

In Dallas–Fort Worth, many families use:

Hughes Family Tribute Center
9700 Webb Chapel Road, Dallas, TX 75220 Phone: (214) 350-9951 Website: hughesftc.com

Hughes offers options on the lower end and is familiar with Hindu traditions.

If you know of other funeral homes that offer culturally respectful and affordable services, especially for Hindu families, please email me at kb@krishnabhaskar.com so we can add them to this resource.

🧘‍♂️ Puja / prayer arrangements

Hindu pundits will ask you to bring some puja samagri (list of items) for the funeral. You can find everything in the puja section of any big-size Indian store like Patel Brothers, Hareli, or India Bazaar (or similar stores in your city).

Hindu samagri list (funeral / cremation day)

  • Jau ka aata (Barley flour) – small packet
  • Kala Til – small packet
  • Kush (looks like dry grass)
  • Ghee (clarified butter) – small bottle
  • Pan ke patte (beetle leaves) 5
  • Nariwal (coconut) 3
  • Supari (beetle nut) 3
  • Panchamrit (A mix of milk, yogurt, honey, jaggery, and ghee)
  • Fruits (Just a couple of fruits of five kinds)
  • Chandan (sandalwood powder)
  • Kumkum (red powder)
  • Chawal (rice) – small packet
  • Saphed kapada (white cloth piece)
  • Mauli (the red thread)
  • Janeu (yellow thread)
  • Agarbatti (incense sticks)
  • Flowers (buy a bunch with lots of flowers, another bunch of red roses, pull the red petals out and keep it in tray for people to pick and place it on the body at the end of the puja)
  • Milk
  • Kalas mitti ka (clay pot of medium size)
  • Diya (clay lamps)
  • Tulasipatra (Tulsi leaves, take it from home. If not, you may have to buy a plant from the Indian store)
  • Gangajal (Ganga water)
  • Sone ka tukada (any small gold item. Usually, the family decides to use a small gold item that can be used in cremation. This does not come back home)
  • Paper plate – 5
  • Paper cup – 5
  • Spoon – 5
  • Lighter – 1
  • Aluminum Foil tray – 1 large, 2 small
  • Paper towel – 1 role

Pundit contacts

Most metro areas in the U.S. have Hindu temples or communities with knowledgeable pundits. In Dallas-Fort Worth, I recommend:

Pundit Tulsiram Ji
Dallas–Fort Worth, Texas Phone: (469) 235-5328

He is reliable, respectful, understands the emotional nature of funerals, and is self-sufficient in terms of transport.

If you know pundits in other U.S. cities who perform cremation pujas, please send me their name, phone number, and photo if possible. Email: kb@krishnabhaskar.com. Let’s build a shared resource for our entire community.

Live telecast option

Most funeral homes offer live streaming services for out-of-town family and friends. The telecast typically shows:

  • The casket and ceremonial rituals
  • Pundit’s chanting and prayers
  • The family’s final goodbye before the cremation begins
Cameras are turned off before the actual cremation. Make sure the viewer is emotionally prepared before sharing the streaming link.

The day of the funeral

  • Arrive 20–30 minutes early, never late.
  • Double-check your puja samagri list before leaving home.
  • Communicate funeral time, location, and livestream link to friends and family the night before.
  • Prepare close friends or family members to say a few words or sing bhajans if appropriate.
  • If reading Gita shlokas or bhajans, consider printing a small booklet with copies for guests.
  • Keep cash on hand for pundit’s dakshina or unexpected needs.

After the ceremony

  • Finalize funeral home payments, urn handling, and request death certificates.
  • If the deceased had property or accounts in India, ask for 10–15 copies. If not, 4–5 is usually enough.
Please share this article on your social channels or WhatsApp groups. You never know who it might help in a moment of need.
For suggestions or additions

Contact me at kb@krishnabhaskar.com. For future helpful posts like this follow me on Facebook or my other social media handles listed here: krishnabhaskar.com/about-kb/

Disclaimer: This is a practical community guide, not legal advice. Processes can vary by state, county, and circumstances of death.

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Kailash Mansarovar Guidance | Mona Bhaskar https://krishnabhaskar.com/kailash-mansarovar-guidance-mona-bhaskar/ https://krishnabhaskar.com/kailash-mansarovar-guidance-mona-bhaskar/#respond Tue, 10 Mar 2026 16:03:28 +0000 https://krishnabhaskar.com/?p=2391 Faith-led, experience-based guidance for pilgrims in the USA Kailash Mansarovar Yatra Guidance with Mona Bhaskar Mona Bhaskar is a cancer survivor and a devoted follower of Lord Shiva. She lives in Frisco, Texas, works as an IT professional, and is also an ex-pilot—someone who understands discipline, preparation, and calm decision-making. After receiving a second life, […]

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Faith-led, experience-based guidance for pilgrims in the USA

Kailash Mansarovar Yatra Guidance
with Mona Bhaskar

Mona Bhaskar is a cancer survivor and a devoted follower of Lord Shiva. She lives in Frisco, Texas, works as an IT professional, and is also an ex-pilot—someone who understands discipline, preparation, and calm decision-making. After receiving a second life, Mona rebuilt her physical and mental strength and undertook the sacred journey to Kailash Mansarovar. She now goes to Kailash every year and offers guidance purely out of devotion.

See her journey by exploring #monatokailash

What Mona Can Help You With

Should you go?Readiness, mindset, clarity
PreparationPhysical, mental, altitude
Shoes & clothingWhat actually works
PackingEssentials, not clutter
Health & sicknessWhat to watch for
Food & weatherWhat surprises people
ExpensesWhat’s real vs assumed
Travel & visaPaperwork and timing
blank

Need Kailash guidance? Schedule a complimentary conversation below.

If this tool gives you issues, you can email Mona at monabhaskar19@gmail.com

The moment is now. Go see Shiva’s abode.

Travel Agents & Resources (Mona’s Experience)

You are free to choose any Kailash excursion agent or travel resource you prefer. If you want, Mona can share trusted operators she has used in the past so you have a starting point. Her role is guidance and preparation; your booking choice stays yours.

In Mona’s recent visits, one agency she personally felt most comfortable with is Karnali Excursions, owned by Hira Dhamala. What Mona appreciates is not “marketing” — it’s the way their team works: disciplined, detail-oriented, and genuinely friendly. They are especially familiar with pilgrims traveling from the USA, Canada, and the UK, and they prepare people weeks in advance so the journey feels thoughtful instead of rushed.

Preparation that starts early

  • Structured weekly calls that begin well ahead of departure
  • Mental and physical readiness guidance (pacing, altitude expectations, habits)
  • Clear packing guidance—what matters, what doesn’t, what people forget
  • Practical help with planning timelines and documentation/visa-related needs

On-the-ground steadiness

  • Seasoned staff who have seen every scenario (small to serious)
  • Support that helps travelers adjust as altitude changes
  • Strong attention to food, safety, and health—without drama
  • Fewer surprises because details are discussed before you arrive

Mona also mentions a practical reality: cheaper options can look attractive upfront, but later you may realize key pieces weren’t covered—hotel coordination, logistics, or health-focused support—and you end up spending equal or more while managing parts of the trip yourself. Mona’s analogy is simple: Karnali felt like flying Southwest—steady and prepared—while some alternatives can feel like Spirit once the journey begins. For this yatra, Mona believes safety, food, and health matter more than headline pricing.

Shared as personal experience, not a recommendation requirement
If the website preview appears blank, the site may block embedding for security (common). You can still visit directly: karnaliexcursions.com.

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One Heart Test Every South Asian Needs (That Most Doctors Miss) https://krishnabhaskar.com/heart-test-south-asians/ https://krishnabhaskar.com/heart-test-south-asians/#respond Fri, 27 Feb 2026 20:32:19 +0000 https://krishnabhaskar.com/?p=2328 One Heart Test Every South Asian Needs (That Most Doctors Miss) Every year, thousands of South Asians suffer heart attacks in their 40s and 50s—despite “normal” cholesterol levels and no obvious warning signs. The reason? A critical heart test that most doctors never order. Why South Asians Face Higher Heart Disease Risk If you’re of […]

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One Heart Test Every South Asian Needs (That Most Doctors Miss)

Every year, thousands of South Asians suffer heart attacks in their 40s and 50s—despite “normal” cholesterol levels and no obvious warning signs. The reason? A critical heart test that most doctors never order.

Why South Asians Face Higher Heart Disease Risk

If you’re of South Asian descent—Indian, Pakistani, Bangladeshi, Sri Lankan, or Nepali—your risk of developing coronary artery disease is significantly higher than other populations. Studies show South Asians experience heart attacks 5-10 years earlier than Caucasians, often with traditional risk factors appearing “normal.”

Standard cholesterol panels and blood pressure readings don’t tell the whole story. Many South Asian patients with textbook-perfect labs still develop life-threatening blockages.

The Hidden Danger:

South Asians tend to have higher levels of small, dense LDL particles, elevated lipoprotein(a) [Lp(a)], increased inflammation, and greater insulin resistance—even when standard tests look fine.

The One Heart Test Most Doctors Miss

According to Dr. Sripathi Reddy Kethu, a board-certified gastroenterologist and health advocate based in Richardson, Texas, the test every South Asian should ask for is the Coronary Calcium Score (CAC).

What is a Coronary Calcium Score?

A Coronary Calcium Score is a quick, non-invasive CT scan that measures the amount of calcium buildup in your coronary arteries. Calcium deposits indicate plaque—the stuff that causes heart attacks.

  • CAC Score of 0: Very low risk
  • CAC Score 1-99: Mild disease
  • CAC Score 100-399: Moderate disease
  • CAC Score 400+: Severe disease

Unlike cholesterol tests that show risk factors, the CAC score reveals actual disease already present in your arteries.

Why Don’t Doctors Order It?

Most primary care physicians follow general population guidelines, which recommend CAC screening for intermediate-risk patients aged 40-75. But these guidelines don’t account for the uniquely elevated risk in South Asians.

Many South Asian men and women in their 30s and 40s have significant coronary calcium—but never get screened until after a heart attack.

🎥 Watch Dr. Kethu explain heart disease risk in South Asians

Don’t forget to SUBSCRIBE to his channel for more life-saving health advice!

Dr. Kethu, who practices in Richardson, Texas (serving the Dallas area), has been vocal about the need for better heart disease prevention in the South Asian community. Through his YouTube channel and community outreach, he emphasizes:

  • Proactive screening starting in your 30s
  • Aggressive management of prediabetes
  • Plant-forward diets with reduced refined carbohydrates
  • Regular exercise and stress management

“Don’t wait until your cholesterol is high or you feel chest pain,” Dr. Kethu advises. “South Asians need to be screened earlier and more aggressively.”

Advanced Heart Screening Every South Asian Should Consider

Beyond the Coronary Calcium Score, Dr. Kethu and other experts recommend South Asians discuss these tests with their doctors:

  • Lipoprotein(a) [Lp(a)] test: Genetic marker for high heart attack risk, common in South Asians
  • ApoB (Apolipoprotein B): Better measure of harmful cholesterol particles than LDL alone
  • High-sensitivity CRP (hs-CRP): Measures inflammation in arteries
  • Fasting insulin and HbA1c: Checks for prediabetes and insulin resistance

Take Action Today

If you’re South Asian and over 35, ask your doctor about a Coronary Calcium Score and advanced lipid panel. Early detection can prevent a heart attack before it happens.

About Dr. Sripathi Reddy Kethu, M.D.

Board-Certified Gastroenterologist | Richardson, Texas

📍 Address: 2821 E President George Bush Hwy #205, Richardson, TX 75082

🌐 Website: sripathikethumd.com

📞 Phone: (972) 238-9696

Dr. Kethu makes personal connections with his patients by actively listening to them and letting them talk about their concerns. With more than 20 years’ experience as a Gastroenterologist in both academic settings and private practice, Dr. Kethu provides comprehensive GI care while making patient safety and well-being his top priority.

Beyond Medicine: Dr. Kethu is an accomplished long-distance runner who has participated in more than 100 marathons and ultramarathons. He has completed a marathon in all 50 states and on all 7 continents, including Antarctica—a testament to his commitment to health, endurance, and pushing boundaries.

Key Takeaways

  • South Asians get heart disease earlier—often with ‘normal’ standard tests
  • The Coronary Calcium Score reveals hidden plaque buildup
  • Consider advanced tests like Lp(a), ApoB, and hs-CRP
  • Start preventive screening in your 30s and 40s, not 50s or 60s
  • Work with a doctor familiar with South Asian cardiovascular risk

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Consult your healthcare provider before making any changes to your health regimen.

Written by Krishna Bhaskar | February 27, 2026

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Birha Song of Separation | Bhojpuri Viraha, Bidesiya Pain & Diaspora Memory | Krishna Bhaskar https://krishnabhaskar.com/birha-song-separation-bhojpuri-girmitiya-bidesiyas/ https://krishnabhaskar.com/birha-song-separation-bhojpuri-girmitiya-bidesiyas/#respond Tue, 24 Feb 2026 23:09:37 +0000 https://krishnabhaskar.com/?p=2311 Birha: When a Bird Calls Across the Ocean — Krishna Bhaskar 🕊️ Birha / Nirgun • Bhojpuri Separation Song Birha: When a Bird Calls Across the Ocean By Krishna Bhaskar For the diaspora — the ones who carry longing in their blood There is a kind of pain that does not scream. It just sits […]

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Birha: When a Bird Calls Across the Ocean — Krishna Bhaskar

There is a kind of pain that does not scream. It just sits quietly in the courtyard.

In the late 1800s and early 1900s, thousands of Indians — mostly from Bihar and Eastern Uttar Pradesh — were taken away to unknown lands: Trinidad, Suriname, Guyana, Fiji… plantations owned by the British and the French.

Many were tricked. Many were promised work. Many did not even understand where they were going. Families woke up one day and someone was just… gone.

No address. No map. No globe to point at. No guarantee of ever seeing them again.
Those who were left behind did what our people have always done in unbearable times: they sang.

This genre came to be called Birha — from viraha — separation, longing, grief. Sometimes it is also called Nirgun, because the pain is so vast, it feels beyond form, beyond religion, beyond ritual.

The song below is written in the voice of a bird searching for its life partner. But listen carefully — it is not just a bird. It is a husband searching for a wife. A wife searching for a husband. A mother calling for a son. A courtyard waiting for footsteps that may never return.

If you belong to the diaspora — especially from the Bidesia lands — this is your song. Listen to it not just with your ears. Listen with your blood.

Romanized Lyrics (Singing Friendly)

Romanized Bhojpuri
Kauna birichhiya ae chirai, khotwa lagawalu jaake,
Soon karke aangna hamar ho,
Ud gailu pankhiya pasaar ho…
Nehiya ke dori tori, chal gailu chhupe chori,
Kaune nagariya, kaune gaon?
Khojta phiru man ban me,
Dhaai dhaai ghar-aangan me,
Dharti-aakaash thaav-thaav ho…
Deke na paata gailu,
Kahwan na paata bhailu,
Ho gailu kaahe faraar ho?
Soon karke aangna hamar ho,
Ud gailu pankhiya pasaar ho…
Suruj aa chanwa se, badri pawanwa se,
Poochta rahin kaun khor ho?
Talwa-talain se, nadiya-tarai se,
Kehu na de la kauno jor ho…
Kekra se poochi jaai,
Tohra ke kaise paayi?
Kekra se kari ab guhaar ho?
Soon karke aangna hamar ho,
Ud gailu pankhiya pasaar ho…
Kaahe tu aisan kailu?
Kuchhuo na kah ke gailu,
Batiya ke lagal kaun thes ho?
Kahlu jaisan jab jaise,
Kaili ham turate taise,
Tabo de gailu kales ho…
Apne ta langh gailu
Lamhar sagarwa ke,
Hamra ke chhor gailu paar ho…
Ud gailu pankhiya pasaar ho…

Hindi Lyrics (Original)

Devanagari
कौना बिरिछिया ऐ चिरई खोतवा लगावलु जा के,
सून कई के आँगना हमार हो, उड़ गइलू पंखिया पसार हो।
नेहिया के डोरी तोरी, चल गइलू छुपे चोरी,
कौने नगरिया, कौने गाँव?
खोजी ले मन में बन में, धाई घर आँगन में,
धरती आकाश ठाँवें-ठाँव हो।
देके न पाता गइलू, कहँवाँ न पाता भइलू,
हो गईलू काहें फरार हो?
सून कई के आँगना हमार हो, उड़ गइलू पंखिया पसार हो।
सुरुज आ चनवा से, बदरी पवनवा से,
पूछी ले गईलू कौन खोह हो?
तलवा-तलाईन से, तरैयन से,
केहु नाही देता कौनो जोह हो।
काहें तू अइसन कइलू? कुछुओ न कह के गईयलु,
बतिया के लागल कौन ठेस हो?
अपने ता लांघे गईलू लमहर सगरवा के,
हमरा के छोर अईलु पार हो।
उड़ गइलू पंखिया पसार हो।

English Song Version (Rhyming)

You Flew Away
On which tree, little bird, did you build your home so far?
You left my courtyard empty, like a sky without a star.
You spread your wings in silence, without a word to say,
You broke the thread of love… and quietly flew away.
Oh why did you fly away, leaving my skies so gray?
I call your name in the wind, but you don’t hear me pray.
My home is filled with echoes where your song used to stay,
You spread your wings, my love… and you flew away.
I asked the sun and moonlight, I asked the clouds above,
I asked the restless rivers, “Where has gone my love?”
Through forests of my memories, through every night and day,
I search for your soft footsteps… fading far away.
Did I ever hurt you, did my words cause you pain?
I walked the path you showed me, again and again.
You crossed the endless ocean, left me on the shore to stay,
Holding broken dreams… as you sailed away.

Hear the Song

© Krishna Bhaskar • Birha/Nirgun remembrance page

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KB’s Weekly Meal Plan #1: Mon–Fri Lunch & Dinner (Oven-Baked) https://krishnabhaskar.com/kb-weekly-meal-plan-1/ https://krishnabhaskar.com/kb-weekly-meal-plan-1/#respond Tue, 24 Feb 2026 21:00:07 +0000 https://krishnabhaskar.com/?p=2301 KB’s Weekly Meal Plan #1 (Mon–Fri Lunch & Dinner) | KrishnaBhaskar.com Family of 3 • Mon–Fri (Lunch + Dinner) Mostly oven-baked “fall apart” style Veg swaps included (Tofu / Paneer) KB’s Weekly Meal Plan #1 Protein-forward. Vegetable-heavy. Mostly oven. Two nights of Indian flavor. A grocery list and a PDF link that for your convenience. […]

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KB's Weekly Meal Plan #1 (Mon–Fri Lunch & Dinner) | KrishnaBhaskar.com
Family of 3 • Mon–Fri (Lunch + Dinner) Mostly oven-baked “fall apart” style Veg swaps included (Tofu / Paneer)

KB's Weekly Meal Plan #1

Protein-forward. Vegetable-heavy. Mostly oven. Two nights of Indian flavor. A grocery list and a PDF link that for your convenience.

Monday–Friday Meal Plan

Each meal includes a veg swap. Most are sheet-pan / oven friendly.

Monday

Sheet-pan friendly

Lunch — Lemon Herb Baked Chicken + Asparagus + Red Onion

Oven 400°F • Roast ~35–40 mins. Same tray veggies.

Veg swap: Thick tofu slabs with the same lemon-herb seasoning.

Dinner — Garlic Butter Salmon + Roasted Zucchini & Squash + Cilantro

Oven 400°F • Salmon 15–18 mins. Veggies roast alongside.

Veg swap: Paneer “steaks” baked with garlic butter + lemon.

Tuesday

Indian flavor night

Lunch — Sheet Pan Ground Chicken + Carrots + Sweet Potatoes

Oven 400°F • Press ground chicken thin, bake, slice.

Veg swap: Crumbled tofu baked and crisped with the same spices.

Dinner — Tandoori-Style Chicken or Paneer + Roasted Brussels Sprouts

Oven 425°F • Yogurt marinade + high heat = charred edges.

Veg option: Paneer cubes or slabs in the same tandoori marinade.

Wednesday

Mashed potato day

Lunch — Lemon Dill Rainbow Trout + Spinach

Oven 375°F • Trout ~15 mins. Spinach quick sauté or oven-wilt.

Veg swap: Tofu slabs with lemon + dill.

Dinner — Fall-Apart Baked Chicken + Mashed Potatoes + Roasted Carrots

Oven 375°F • Chicken 45–50 mins. Comfort meal night.

Veg swap: Paneer “steaks” baked with herb butter + black pepper.

Thursday

Clean & repeatable

Lunch — Herb Crusted Paneer or Chicken + Zucchini & Red Onion

Oven 400°F • Italian herbs + olive oil. Great leftovers.

Veg option: Paneer is already the star here (tofu works too).

Dinner — Sweet Paprika Salmon + Sweet Potato + Asparagus

Oven 400°F • Start sweet potatoes 10–12 mins early, then add salmon + asparagus.

Veg swap: Tofu slabs seasoned with paprika + lemon.

Friday

Not boring. Promise.

Lunch — Tandoori Ground Chicken (or Tofu) Stuffed Sweet Potatoes

Oven 400°F • Bake sweet potatoes whole 45–50 mins, stuff with spiced protein.

Veg swap: Use crumbled tofu for the same filling and bake it to crisp.

Dinner — Cilantro Chili Crusted Salmon (or Paneer) + Charred Brussels Sprouts + Light Garlic Mash

Oven 400°F • Bake 12–15 mins, then quick broil 2–3 mins for a restaurant finish.

Veg option: Paneer “steaks” with the same cilantro-chili paste, baked + broiled.

Grocery List (Family of 3 • 5 Days)

Clean list below + the PDF button that goes to your uploaded file.

Proteins

  • Chicken thighs — ~4 lbs
  • Ground chicken — ~2 lbs
  • Salmon fillets — ~3 lbs
  • Rainbow trout — ~2 lbs
  • Paneer — ~3 lbs
  • Extra-firm tofu — ~3 blocks

Vegetables

  • Asparagus — 4 bunches
  • Brussels sprouts — ~3 lbs
  • Carrots — ~2 lbs
  • Sweet potatoes — 4 large
  • Zucchini — 6
  • Yellow squash — 4
  • Red onions — 2 large
  • Fresh spinach — 2 large bags
  • Potatoes (for mash + sides) — ~5 lbs
  • Cilantro — 2 bunches
  • Lemons — 6–8
  • Limes — 4–5
  • Green chilies — 6–8 (or 1 small pack)

Dairy & Pantry

  • Olive oil
  • Butter
  • Yogurt (for tandoori + stuffed sweet potato filling)
  • Milk (or alternative) for mashed potatoes

Spices & Seasonings

  • Garlic powder
  • Paprika
  • Smoked paprika (optional but great)
  • Cumin
  • Garam masala
  • Red chili powder
  • Black pepper
  • Salt
  • Ginger-garlic paste (or fresh ginger + garlic)
  • Dill (optional for trout)
  • Italian herb blend (optional)
Pro move: cook extra protein at dinner → tomorrow’s lunch becomes “planned,” not “leftovers.”

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The Avocado Boy Who Became the Most Wanted Man in Mexico https://krishnabhaskar.com/el-mencho-rise-fall-story-krishna-bhaskar/ https://krishnabhaskar.com/el-mencho-rise-fall-story-krishna-bhaskar/#respond Mon, 23 Feb 2026 18:23:23 +0000 https://krishnabhaskar.com/?p=2238 The Avocado Boy Who Became the Most Wanted Man in Mexico A story about poverty, power, ambition, and the cost of choices. There’s something about stories like this that feel unreal. A boy grows up in a dusty village, drops out of school, crosses the border chasing something bigger… and decades later, entire highways burn […]

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The Avocado Boy Who Became the Most Wanted Man in Mexico

A story about poverty, power, ambition, and the cost of choices.

There’s something about stories like this that feel unreal. A boy grows up in a dusty village, drops out of school, crosses the border chasing something bigger… and decades later, entire highways burn because the government is trying to catch him.

That was the life of Nemesio Rubén “El Mencho” Oseguera Cervantes — the head of the Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG) — who died on February 22, 2026, after being wounded in a Mexican military operation.

But if you strip away the headlines, the rewards, the politics, the violence — what you are left with is a story that begins in a poor avocado field in Michoacán.

El Mencho early life image

The Boy in the Fields

Born in 1966 in rural Michoacán. Poor family. Five brothers. Fifth-grade education. By 14, he was guarding marijuana plantations.

Like many young men from villages across Mexico, he crossed illegally into California in the 1980s. The dream was simple: money. Opportunity. A better life.

Arrests in San Francisco. Deportations. Federal charges. Prison in Texas. Back to Mexico.

If you look closely, it’s not glamorous. It’s messy. Desperate. The kind of story that starts with poverty and ends with choices stacking up.

El Mencho mugshot

From Policeman to Cartel Boss

After deportation, he briefly joined local police in Jalisco. Then entered the Milenio Cartel. Married into the family. Survived internal wars.

When leaders were arrested or killed, he climbed. When factions split, he fought. Eventually, his group became the CJNG — one of the most powerful criminal organizations in Mexico.

Governments offered up to $15 million for information leading to his arrest.

CJNG operations image

The Highway Fires

What made him different from older cartel bosses was not just money — it was audacity.

Vehicles burned across highways. Cities shut down. In 2015, his men shot down a Mexican Army helicopter with a rocket launcher.

He became known as “the enemy of the state.”

Military operation image

The Manhunt

For years, he evaded capture. Authorities believed he moved constantly through mountain terrain in Jalisco and surrounding states.

Road blockades would appear before security forces could move in. Security circles within security circles.

It almost became mythological — the idea of a man who could not be caught.

Aftermath clashes image

The Final Operation

On February 22, 2026, he was taken into custody during a military operation in Tapalpa, Jalisco, but died from gunshot wounds while being transported.

The aftermath was immediate: road blockades, burning vehicles, clashes across multiple states.

The Bigger Question

Whenever I see stories like this, I don’t just see crime. I see systems.

Poverty in rural Mexico. Demand for drugs globally. Corruption. Immigration struggles.

If the demand remains… does the supply ever really disappear?

History will record him as a drug lord.

But the more important story is not about one man.

It’s about the conditions that allow men like him to rise in the first place.


Written by Krishna Bhaskar

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The Most In-Demand Bachelor’s Degrees in 2026 https://krishnabhaskar.com/the-most-in-demand-bachelors-degrees-in-2026/ https://krishnabhaskar.com/the-most-in-demand-bachelors-degrees-in-2026/#respond Wed, 18 Feb 2026 15:26:39 +0000 https://krishnabhaskar.com/?p=2147 The Most In-Demand Bachelor’s Degrees in 2026 The Most In-Demand Bachelor’s Degrees in 2026 Engineering is still strong — but the #1 spot may surprise you. Here’s what employers are actually planning to hire for. Top 10 Degrees Employers Want (Class of 2026) # Degree % Hiring 1 Finance 61.3% 2 Mechanical Engineering 61.3% 3 […]

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The Most In-Demand Bachelor’s Degrees in 2026

The Most In-Demand Bachelor’s Degrees in 2026

Engineering is still strong — but the #1 spot may surprise you. Here’s what employers are actually planning to hire for.

Top 10 Degrees Employers Want (Class of 2026)

# Degree % Hiring
1Finance61.3%
2Mechanical Engineering61.3%
3Computer Science60%
4Accounting58.7%
5Business Administration / Management58.7%
6Electrical Engineering51.3%
7Information Sciences & Systems48%
8Logistics / Supply Chain44.7%
9Marketing44%
10Human Resources40%

A More Measured Job Market

After a very strong hiring year in 2024, the pace naturally moderated in 2025. The U.S. added 181,000 jobs in 2025 compared to 1.46 million the year prior.

This doesn’t signal crisis. It signals normalization. Companies are hiring more intentionally — focusing on practical skills and measurable value.

In a disciplined hiring cycle, readiness matters more than ever — internships, real skills, and the ability to solve real problems.

The Quietly Good News: Salaries Are Rising

Starting salaries are projected to increase across most major categories. Computer science grads, for example, are projected to earn $81,535 in 2026 — up 6.9% from last year.

Research also shows that every additional $1,000 earned in your first job can translate into roughly $700 more per year five years later.

What This Really Means

Finance, engineering, computer science, accounting, and business all remain strong because they connect directly to operations, systems, and money flow.

This is a market rewarding competence, discipline, and practical skill sets.

Sources:
  • National Association of Colleges and Employers (Winter 2026 Salary Survey)
  • Cengage Group – 2025 Graduate Employability Report
  • National Bureau of Economic Research
  • CNBC – Sarah Jackson (Feb 17, 2026)

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KB Ultimate List — Calm, Meaningful Hindi Films https://krishnabhaskar.com/kb-ultimate-list-calm-meaningful-hindi-films/ https://krishnabhaskar.com/kb-ultimate-list-calm-meaningful-hindi-films/#respond Mon, 09 Feb 2026 17:48:26 +0000 https://krishnabhaskar.com/?p=2052 KB’s Top 25 Calm & Meaningful Hindi Films Quiet classics only. Posters + director + runtime are pulled privately (server-side) and served from your own domain.

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KB’s Top 25 Calm & Meaningful Hindi Films

Quiet classics only. Posters + director + runtime are pulled privately (server-side) and served from your own domain.

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KB’s Ultimate Top 50 TV Shows of All Time https://krishnabhaskar.com/kbs-ultimate-top-50-tv-shows-of-all-time/ https://krishnabhaskar.com/kbs-ultimate-top-50-tv-shows-of-all-time/#respond Fri, 06 Feb 2026 02:36:38 +0000 https://krishnabhaskar.com/?p=2027 KB’s Top 50 TV Shows of All Times The greatest television shows across decades — ranked, rewatchable, and worth your time. Showing 50 shows Data source: TVMaze Loading posters, seasons, and cast… Reload posters + cast

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KB’s Top 50 TV Shows of All Times

The greatest television shows across decades — ranked, rewatchable, and worth your time.

Showing 50 shows
Data source: TVMaze
Loading posters, seasons, and cast…

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KB’s Foolproof Oven Cooking Guide: Exact Temperatures & Times for Chicken, Fish & Vegetables https://krishnabhaskar.com/oven-cooking-temperature-time-chart/ https://krishnabhaskar.com/oven-cooking-temperature-time-chart/#respond Wed, 28 Jan 2026 19:27:50 +0000 https://krishnabhaskar.com/?p=1933 No-Nonsense Oven Baking Temperatures & Times I’m not writing a life story here. You came for two things: temperature and minutes. These are exactly what I use in my kitchen. Tried. Tested. Tasted. KB Method Foil-First = Juicy Broil Finish = Restaurant Color Fall-Apart Friendly Cook covered for tenderness and moisture. Uncover and broil briefly […]

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No-Nonsense Oven Baking Temperatures & Times

I’m not writing a life story here. You came for two things: temperature and minutes. These are exactly what I use in my kitchen. Tried. Tested. Tasted.

KB Method

  • Foil-First = Juicy
  • Broil Finish = Restaurant Color
  • Fall-Apart Friendly
  • Cook covered for tenderness and moisture.
  • Uncover and broil briefly for char.
  • Preheat oven, use middle rack, single layer always.

Proteins — Ultra-Juicy Foil-First Oven Chart

Item Temp Covered Time Broil Finish Notes
Chicken Drumsticks 375°F 45–50 min 5–7 min Tightly covered. Uncover + broil for char. Flip halfway optional.
Chicken Thighs (bone-in) 375°F 40–45 min 5–7 min Very forgiving. Broil skin-side up for color.
Chicken Breast 375°F 55–65 min Optional 3–4 min Add 2–3 tbsp water/broth. Shreddable + juicy.
Tandoori Chicken 375°F 50–55 min 6–8 min Cover first. Broil hard for tandoori char.
Ground Chicken/Turkey Kabobs 425°F 22–28 min (no cover) 3–5 min Bake on rack if possible. Pull at 165°F.
Shrimp (large) 400°F 8–10 min Optional 1–2 min Pull when pink + curled. Do not overcook.
Salmon 375°F 18–22 min 1–2 min Loose foil tent. Broil briefly for top color.
Rainbow Trout 375°F 20–25 min 2–3 min Cover first. Lemon inside works beautifully.
Catfish 375°F 20–25 min 2–3 min Covered keeps it tender. Broil for slight crust.

Vegetables — Two-Stage Restaurant Method

Item Temp Covered Time Broil Finish Notes
Potatoes 400°F 30–35 min 8–10 min Cover to soften, broil to crisp.
Sweet Potatoes 400°F 25–30 min 6–8 min Broil for caramelized edges.
Cauliflower 400°F 25–30 min 6–8 min Deep browning after broil.
Carrots 400°F 25–30 min 5–7 min Broil adds restaurant glaze vibe.
Broccoli 400°F 12–15 min 3–5 min Short cover only. Don’t over-soften.
Zucchini / Yellow Squash 400°F 10–12 min 2–3 min Keep single layer for best roast.
Brussels Sprouts 400°F 20–25 min 5–7 min Halve. Broil cut-side up.
KB Pro Tip Before covering, add 2–4 tablespoons water, broth, or extra marinade to create a gentle steam chamber. Then broil at the end for color.

Note: Broil times vary by oven. Always watch closely.

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KB’s Quick Stir-Fried Green Beans with Cashews https://krishnabhaskar.com/quick-green-beans-cashew-stir-fry-krishna-bhaskar/ https://krishnabhaskar.com/quick-green-beans-cashew-stir-fry-krishna-bhaskar/#respond Wed, 03 Dec 2025 16:19:00 +0000 https://krishnabhaskar.com/?p=1873 A simple, colorful, 20-minute veggie side—perfect for busy weekdays. Instructions I always buy the green beans from Costco, but you can probably find fresh green beans at any stores near you. To see more recipes by me, click here.

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A simple, colorful, 20-minute veggie side—perfect for busy weekdays.

  • A handful of green beans
  • ½ bell pepper, sliced
  • ½ onion, sliced
  • A handful of cashews
  • A pinch of turmeric
  • A pinch of chili powder
  • A pinch of cumin powder
  • Salt to taste
  • 1–2 tsp oil

Instructions

  1. Sauté the veggies:
    Heat oil on high. Add the green beans and bell pepper. Sauté for 4–5 minutes until they get a little charred and bright.
  2. Add spices:
    Sprinkle turmeric, chili powder, cumin powder, and salt. Mix well.
  3. Simmer:
    Lower the heat, cover with a lid, and let it cook for 10 minutes until the vegetables soften.
  4. Finish with crunch:
    Add sliced onions and cashews. Turn the heat back to high and sauté for another 5 minutes until the onions get golden and the cashews toast.
  5. Serve:
    Enjoy hot as a side with quinoa, rice, roti, or a bowl of dal.

I always buy the green beans from Costco, but you can probably find fresh green beans at any stores near you. To see more recipes by me, click here.

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That Summer Afternoon https://krishnabhaskar.com/that-summer-afternoon/ https://krishnabhaskar.com/that-summer-afternoon/#respond Tue, 23 Sep 2025 05:19:43 +0000 https://krishnabhaskar.com/?p=1758 A restless summer at 19, a doorbell, a father’s tears — That Summer Afternoon tells a story of struggle and joy. And in many ways, Krishna Bhaskar never left that moment.   It was just another summer afternoon I was 19, turning a little rowdy A halfway goon   They said good kids can change […]

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A restless summer at 19, a doorbell, a father’s tears — That Summer Afternoon tells a story of struggle and joy. And in many ways, Krishna Bhaskar never left that moment.

It was just another summer afternoon

I was 19, turning a little rowdy

A halfway goon

They said good kids can change

When they hit 14

I did alright back when I was 14

But 19 pushed me half-deranged

Fogs of fear and things unknown

The cloudy crowd and being alone

I had the wings, but not the sky

A young pilot ready to fly

There was this subject I was struggling to pass

Every time I jumped

I hit the glass

Oh, that summer afternoon

Ding dong, ding dong

Ding dong — O’ goon

The doorbell rang that summer afternoon

I ran to the door like a lover from far

I almost tripped, but I didn’t care about the scars

The mailman called me by my proper name

I had passed the subject — freedom came

I ran back in the house a little faster this time

Turned the corner, and there he was standing — the father of mine

I said, I passed! with a great joy

That letter in my hand

I looked like a kid with a new toy

To my surprise

Daddy had tears in his eyes

He looked at me and improvised-

I just love to see you smile

He said it had been a while

He said it had been a while

Yes Dad, it had been a while

Yes Dad, it has been a while

Other Songs by Krishna Bhaskar

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Cold

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KB’s Ultimate Movie-List https://krishnabhaskar.com/kbs-ultimate-movie-list/ https://krishnabhaskar.com/kbs-ultimate-movie-list/#respond Wed, 23 Jul 2025 15:35:46 +0000 https://krishnabhaskar.com/?p=1554 KB’s Ultimate Movie List Grouped by category, loaded with posters, cast, and where-to-watch. (Movies + a few elite mini-series.) All categories Loading… Loading posters, cast, and platforms… Data source: TMDB. Providers vary by region (US by default).

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KB’s Ultimate Movie List

Grouped by category, loaded with posters, cast, and where-to-watch. (Movies + a few elite mini-series.)

Loading…
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दोनों घुटनों की रोबोटिक सर्जरी जिसने मेरी माँ की ज़िंदगी लौटा दी – भारत में घुटनों की सर्जरी का एक सीधा-साधा गाइड https://krishnabhaskar.com/robotic-knee-replacement-hindi-guide-krishna-bhaskar/ https://krishnabhaskar.com/robotic-knee-replacement-hindi-guide-krishna-bhaskar/#respond Mon, 30 Jun 2025 17:07:44 +0000 https://krishnabhaskar.com/?p=1414 दोनों घुटनों की रोबोटिक सर्जरी जिसने मेरी माँ की ज़िंदगी लौटा दी – भारत में घुटनों की सर्जरी का एक सीधा-साधा गाइड | Krishna Bhaskar 🦵 असली अनुभव • रोबोटिक Knee Replacement • Hindi दोनों घुटनों की रोबोटिक सर्जरी जिसने मेरी माँ की ज़िंदगी लौटा दी – भारत में घुटनों की सर्जरी का एक सीधा-साधा […]

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दोनों घुटनों की रोबोटिक सर्जरी जिसने मेरी माँ की ज़िंदगी लौटा दी – भारत में घुटनों की सर्जरी का एक सीधा-साधा गाइड | Krishna Bhaskar
🦵 असली अनुभव • रोबोटिक Knee Replacement • Hindi

दोनों घुटनों की रोबोटिक सर्जरी जिसने मेरी माँ की ज़िंदगी लौटा दी – भारत में घुटनों की सर्जरी का एक सीधा-साधा गाइड

यह मेडिकल सलाह नहीं—बस एक बेटे का सीधा-साधा अनुभव: जब घुटने “पूरी तरह बर्बाद” हो जाएँ, तब असली फर्क सही surgeon + रोबोटिक precision + disciplined physio से पड़ता है।

✍️ Krishna Bhaskar 🏥 Fortis MRI, Gurugram 🗓️ अनुभव: 2022 (खर्च/टाइमलाइन संदर्भ)
Surgery के बाद माँ का पहला confident walk
सर्जरी के बाद पहला confident walk—यहीं से उम्मीद लौटती है।

1) मेरी माँ की दर्द भरी हालत

पाँच साल पहले, मेरी माँ की ज़िंदगी बहुत मुश्किल हो गई थी। वो बिना दर्द के एक कदम भी नहीं चल पाती थीं – दोनों घुटनों में तेज़ दर्द रहता था। अमेरिका और इंडिया के डॉक्टरों को दिखाया, हर तरह की जाँच और एक्स-रे कराए।

मैं कोई मेडिकल एक्सपर्ट नहीं हूँ, लेकिन मेरा सीधा-साधा डायग्नोसिस था – उनके घुटने पूरी तरह बर्बाद हो चुके थे।

हड्डियों की हालत ऐसी थी जैसे बाथरूम में एड़ियाँ घिसने वाले स्पॉन्ज होते हैं, पूरे छेद-छेद। घुटनों के कैप घिस चुके थे। हड्डियाँ आपस में ऐसे टकरा रही थीं जैसे दो चाकू भिड़ जाएँ। टाँगों का आकार धनुष जैसा हो गया था। ये कोई रातों-रात नहीं हुआ, लेकिन पिछले चार-पाँच साल उनके लिए ज़हर के समान थे।

ये दुख की बात है – और frankly शर्म की भी – कि हमने इतनी देर कर दी उनकी देखभाल में। लेकिन उस वक्त, पूरा परिवार पापा की गंभीर बीमारी में उलझा हुआ था। किसी के पास दिमाग़ी, भावनात्मक, या शारीरिक ताक़त ही नहीं बची थी कुछ और देखने की। वो कहानी फिर कभी सुनाऊँगा।

Hospital visit और evaluations का दौर
Hospital visit और evaluations—यहीं से “अब क्या करें?” वाला सवाल शुरू होता है।
छोटा सा डिस्क्लेमर यह ब्लॉग मेडिकल सलाह नहीं है। यह एक परिवार का वास्तविक अनुभव है। किसी भी इलाज/सर्जरी से पहले अपने डॉक्टर से सलाह ज़रूर लें।

2) क्या काम नहीं करता

मैं और मेरा छोटा भाई साकेत (जो सिडनी में है और परिवार का होशियार बच्चा है) जल्दी समझ गए कि जब घुटने पूरी तरह ख़राब हो जाएँ तो ये चीज़ें बेकार हैं:

  • एक्सरसाइज़ या चलना – और बिगाड़ देती है
  • आयुर्वेद, होम्योपैथी, जादुई फूड्स – पैसा और वक्त दोनों की बर्बादी
  • टीवी पर बाबाओं के नुस्खे
  • व्हाट्सऐप एक्सपर्ट्स
  • ये सोचना कि आप अच्छे इंसान हैं तो भगवान बिना सर्जरी के घुटने ठीक कर देंगे

क्या थोड़े टाइम के लिए काम करता है (लेकिन लॉन्ग टर्म में बेकार)

  • पेनकिलर
  • मलहम
  • कम चलना ताकि दर्द ना हो (इससे मसल्स और कमज़ोर हो जाती हैं)
क्या सच में काम करता है घुटनों की सर्जरी।
क्या बहुत ही अच्छा काम करता है सही डॉक्टर से knee replacement कराना और उसके बाद छह महीने तक कड़ी फिजियोथेरेपी और चलना।
Recovery में walking और movement की वापसी
Recovery का पहला rule: छोटे कदम—लेकिन रोज़।

3) हमारी फैमिली की चुनौती

साकेत ऑस्ट्रेलिया में और मैं अमेरिका में था। पापा की लंबी बीमारी और फिर उनके जाने के बाद, हमें एक दमदार, नो-ड्रामा समाधान चाहिए था। एक ही बार में सब हो जाए – कोई बार-बार सर्जरी ना करनी पड़े।

लेकिन माँ को हार्ट प्रॉब्लम भी थी – आर्टरी ब्लॉकेज – और हार्ट मेडिकेशन भी चल रही थी। ज़्यादातर डॉक्टरों ने कहा, ऐसे केस में दोनों घुटनों की एकसाथ सर्जरी रिस्की है। ख़ून ज़्यादा बहेगा, हार्ट पर प्रेशर आएगा, जान भी जा सकती है।

यही असली डर होता है “सर्जरी ज़रूरी है” और “सर्जरी risky है”—इन दो वाक्यों के बीच पूरा परिवार फँस जाता है।

4) टर्निंग पॉइंट – डॉ. सुभाष जांगिड

साकेत ने रिसर्च जारी रखी। उसे मिले डॉ. सुभाष जांगिड, Fortis Memorial Research Institute, गुरुग्राम (दिल्ली NCR) में। बढ़िया रिव्यू, मॉडर्न फैसिलिटी, और रोबोटिक नी रिप्लेसमेंट का अच्छा नाम।

अपॉइंटमेंट लिया। जाँचे के बाद डॉक्टर ने कहा:

डॉक्टर का प्लान “दोनों घुटनों की रोबोटिक कंप्यूटर-नैविगेटेड सर्जरी करेंगे। ब्लड लॉस मिनिमल रहेगा। हार्ट को कोई प्रॉब्लम नहीं होगी।”

ये सुनकर जान में जान आई।

Fortis facility / consultation context
सही surgeon और clear plan—यहीं से आधी चिंता खत्म।

5) ट्रेडिशनल vs रोबोटिक नी रिप्लेसमेंट

फीचर ट्रेडिशनल रोबोटिक
एक्यूरेसी डॉक्टर की आँख और अनुभव पर डिपेंड 3D मैपिंग और रोबोट गाइड से अल्ट्रा प्रीसाइज़
फिट जनरल साइजिंग हड्डी के हिसाब से परफेक्ट फिट
टिश्यू कटिंग ज़्यादा कटिंग हो सकती है जो ज़रूरी है वही कटता है
ब्लड लॉस ज़्यादा बहुत कम
हार्ट पेशेंट्स पर असर रिस्की सेफ
रिकवरी स्लो फास्ट
लॉन्ग टर्म ठीक-ठाक बेहतरीन और टिकाऊ
क्यों रोबोटिक सर्जरी बेहतर है कम ब्लड लॉस (हार्ट पेशेंट्स के लिए लाइफसेवर), कम दर्द/कम कॉम्प्लिकेशन/जल्दी वॉकिंग, और परफेक्ट फिट होने से ज्यादा साल चलती है।

जैसे फ्रीहैंड पेंटिंग और स्टैंसिल पेंटिंग में फर्क होता है, वैसा ही फर्क ट्रेडिशनल और रोबोटिक में है।

6) सर्जरी और रिकवरी टाइमलाइन

Day 1: दिल्ली पहुँचना, टेस्ट

जाँच, clearance, planning।

Day 3: सर्जरी (दोनों घुटने), कुल 5 घंटे

Bilateral robotic surgery—एक बार में, एक ही run में।

Day 4: माँ ने वॉकर से 10-15 फीट चलीं

यहीं से confidence वापस आना शुरू होता है।

Day 6: डिस्चार्ज

घर/Airbnb में recovery mode + physio routine।

Week 2: टांके कटे

अब daily discipline—फिजियो और walking।

रिकवरी (हमारे केस में)

  • सर्जरी के 3rd दिन वॉकर से चलना शुरू
  • 10 दिन बाद छड़ी से चलना
  • 2 हफ्ते बाद बिना सहारे चलना
  • 3-4 हफ्ते बाद मंदिर, बाज़ार, घर का काम – सब नॉर्मल

7) फिजियोथेरेपी

डॉक्टर ने कहा – रोज़ 30-45 मिनट, 90 दिन तक। लेकिन हमारे पास पटना में physiotherapist/nursing student रहते हैं, तो माँ ने 6 महीने तक फिजियोथेरेपी की।

साथ में, तीन हफ्ते बाद से रोज़ 2 km चलना भी शुरू किया। आज तक उनका डेली रूटीन है।

कोई परेशानी? बिलकुल नहीं।

टीम एफर्ट

पूरा प्रोसेस – इंडिया पहुँचने से लेकर टांके कटवाने और शुरुआती फिजियो तक – तीन से चार हफ्ते का है। उसके बाद कुछ नहीं बचता।

साकेत पहले आया, प्री-सर्जरी काम संभाला। मैं और मेरी प्यारी पत्नी मोना सर्जरी वाले दिन पहुँचे। बाद की सारी देखभाल, stitches, फिजियो, और सोशल मीडिया पोस्ट मैंने किए।

8) कहाँ रुके? और खर्चा

कहाँ रुके?

हॉस्पिटल के पास Airbnb लिया। साफ़-सुथरा, शांत, अपना किचन। होटल में चाय पीने जाओ तो किडनी बेचनी पड़ जाए, Airbnb में ऐसा कोई डर नहीं।

Airbnb Gurugram: लिंक

खर्चा

  • दोनों घुटने: ₹6 लाख (2022 में ~$7,000)
  • अभी का अनुमान: ₹7-8 लाख (~$10,000 USD)
  • एक घुटना: थोड़ा सा आधे से ज़्यादा
  • फिजियो का खर्च: ₹1,000 (~$12) रोज़

Insurance के बिना। रेट चेक कर लेना।

9) रिजल्ट? 100% सफल।

माँ आज teenager जैसी चलती हैं। पिछले हफ्ते Frisco में वॉक पर गए, जब मैं थक गया तो बोलीं, “आधा मील और चलें।” शायद बहुओं की बुराई करनी थी वॉक पर, लेकिन कुछ बोली नहीं। मज़ाक कर रहा हूँ।

सीढ़ियाँ, ढलान, सब कुछ आराम से। और उनका कॉन्फिडेंस – वापस आ गया है।

अगर कोई बोले—“मेरे जानने वाले की सर्जरी फेल हुई”

तो ये सवाल पूछना:

  • क्या रोबोटिक सर्जरी थी?
  • पोस्ट-ऑप इंस्ट्रक्शन फॉलो किए?
  • फिजियो रेगुलर हुई?
  • वॉक किया?
  • क्या पेशेंट बहुत ओवरवेट था?
सीधी बात ज्यादातर फेलियर patients की लापरवाही से होते हैं। सर्जरी तो routine काम है – जैसे कार की सर्विसिंग। खासकर रोबोटिक में।

सक्सेस के 3 की

  • रोबोटिक कंप्यूटर-नैविगेटेड knee replacement
  • स्किल्ड सर्जन (जैसे डॉ. जांगिड या कोई भी उतना ही अच्छा)
  • अच्छी फिजियोथेरेपी और डेली वॉक

कोई शॉर्टकट नहीं। मदद के लिए कोई रख सकते हो, चलने के लिए नहीं।

10) क्या मैं डॉ. जांगिड को जानता हूँ?

नहीं। और वो भी मुझे नहीं जानते।

कांटेक्ट

डॉक्टर
डॉ. सुभाष जांगिड
पद
Director, Bone & Joint Institute
हॉस्पिटल
Fortis Memorial Research Institute, Gurgaon
ईमेल
subhash.jangid@fortishealthcare.com
फोन
+91-9999245242
वेबसाइट
www.onejointforlife.com

नोट: अपॉइंटमेंट/फीस/उपलब्धता समय के साथ बदल सकती है।

क्यों लिखा ये ब्लॉग?

भारत और विदेश में मेरे दोस्त और परिवार—जिनकी माँ-बाप को या खुद को सर्जरी की ज़रूरत है—उनके लिए। ये मेडिकल सलाह नहीं, असली ज़िंदगी का अनुभव है।

आखिरी बात

अगर आपको या किसी को परेशानी है, Wait na karein। हमने अपनी माँ को almost immobile से energetic और pain-free होते देखा। आप भी देख सकते हैं।

अगर मदद मिली, कॉमेंट करें या सवाल पूछें। शेयर—Facebook, WhatsApp, neighborhood ग्रुप्स—किसी की ज़िंदगी बदल सकती है।

The post दोनों घुटनों की रोबोटिक सर्जरी जिसने मेरी माँ की ज़िंदगी लौटा दी – भारत में घुटनों की सर्जरी का एक सीधा-साधा गाइड appeared first on Krishna Bhaskar.

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The Robotic Bilateral Knee Surgery That Gave My Mom Her Life Back — A Simple Guide for Knee Replacement Surgery in India https://krishnabhaskar.com/best-knee-replacement-india-experience-krishna-bhaskar/ https://krishnabhaskar.com/best-knee-replacement-india-experience-krishna-bhaskar/#comments Sun, 22 Jun 2025 11:52:52 +0000 https://krishnabhaskar.com/?p=1275 Real-life experience • Not medical advice Best Knee Replacement in India (My Experience) This is the story of my mom going from nearly immobile to walking confidently again—through a robotic, computer-navigated bilateral knee replacement at Fortis (Gurugram, Delhi NCR). I’m not a medical expert. I’m just sharing what worked for us. 🩺 Doctor & contact […]

The post The Robotic Bilateral Knee Surgery That Gave My Mom Her Life Back — A Simple Guide for Knee Replacement Surgery in India appeared first on Krishna Bhaskar.

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Real-life experience • Not medical advice

Best Knee Replacement in India (My Experience)

This is the story of my mom going from nearly immobile to walking confidently again—through a robotic, computer-navigated bilateral knee replacement at Fortis (Gurugram, Delhi NCR). I’m not a medical expert. I’m just sharing what worked for us.

Mom after knee replacement surgery
Mom walking again—confidence back in her stride.
Fortis hospital and care team
Fortis (Gurugram) — where we got it done.
Family support after surgery
Family support matters more than you think.
Mona and mom on the way home after surgery
My wife Mona and Mom after surgery on the way home.

My Mom’s Painful Decline

Five years ago, my mom’s life had become incredibly difficult. She couldn’t walk a step without pain—often sharp pain—in both knees. We consulted doctors in the U.S. and India, got all kinds of tests and x-rays done.

I’m not a medical expert, so here’s my simple diagnosis: her knees were a complete mess.

Her bone density was terrible—porous like that sponge they keep in showers to scrub heels. Her kneecaps had worn out after years of wear and tear. Her knees were bone-on-bone, colliding like sharp knives. Her legs had taken a bow shape. And while this wasn’t an overnight development, the last four or five years were sheer torture.

It’s sad—and frankly embarrassing—that we waited this long to get her the care she deserved. But at the time, our family was consumed with our father’s extreme health crisis. No one had bandwidth—emotionally, mentally, or physically—to deal with anything else. That’s another blog for another day.

What Doesn’t Work (When the Knees Are Truly Gone)

Things that don’t work

  1. Exercise or walking – makes it worse
  2. Alternative treatments – Ayurveda, Homeopathy, miracle foods. A complete waste of time and money.
  3. Religious advice from the gurus and babas on TV
  4. WhatsApp experts
  5. Thinking you’re a good person and God will fix your knee without you getting a knee replacement

What works temporarily (not great long term)

  • Painkillers
  • Ointments
  • Reducing activity to avoid pain (leads to worse muscle loss)
What actually works: Knee replacement.
What works really great: A knee replacement done right + disciplined physiotherapy and walking for six months.

Our Family’s Challenge

My brother Saket and I were on opposite sides of the globe. We were also still recovering from our dad’s extended medical struggles and eventually him passing. Emotionally and logistically, we needed a one-shot, no-drama solution. No back-and-forth. No multiple surgeries. Just get it done—and get it done right.

But our mom also had heart problems—artery blockages—and was on heart medication. Most doctors advised against operating on both knees at once due to blood loss and heart risk. They literally told us it could be fatal.

The Turning Point: Dr. Subhash Jangid

Saket continued his research and found Dr. Subhash Jangid at Fortis Memorial Research Institute, Gurugram (Delhi NCR). Great reviews, modern facility, and a reputation for robotic knee replacements.

After a thorough review of her knees and heart condition, Dr. Jangid said:

“We’ll do robotic, computer-navigated surgery on both knees at once. Blood loss will be minimal. Her heart will be fine.”

That was the moment of hope we desperately needed.

Traditional vs. Robotic Knee Replacement

Feature Traditional Knee Replacement Robotic Knee Replacement
Precision Depends on surgeon’s eye and experience Uses 3D mapping + robotic guidance
Fit of Implant General sizing and alignment Customized to bone structure for better fit
Tissue Handling More cutting/adjusting may be needed Minimizes unnecessary cutting
Blood Loss Typically higher Minimal due to controlled precision
Impact on Heart Patients Higher blood loss can be risky Lower blood loss is often safer
Scarring & Recovery Larger incisions, more trauma Smaller incisions, faster recovery
Surgical Accuracy Can vary case-to-case Highly consistent and repeatable
Longevity of Results Good, but alignment issues can wear unevenly Better alignment = more natural movement & longevity

Why Robotic Is Often the Better Choice

  • Minimal blood loss (huge advantage for heart/circulation concerns).
  • Fewer complications, less pain, quicker return to walking and normal life.
  • Better long-term performance with precise implant placement.
Traditional surgery is like painting freehand. Robotic surgery is like using stencils and guides—cleaner lines, fewer mistakes, smoother results.

The Timeline of Surgery & Recovery

Hospital timeline

  • Day 1: Arrived in Delhi, pre-surgery tests
  • Day 3: Surgery day (both knees) — ~5 hours total
  • Day 4: Walked 10–15 feet with a walker
  • Day 5: More walking
  • Day 6: Discharged
  • Week 2: Stitch removal

Recovery milestones

  • Walker: starting the 3rd day after surgery
  • Stick / no walker: after ~10 days
  • No support: after ~2 weeks
  • Back to daily routine: ~3–4 weeks (chores, temple, shopping)

Physiotherapy & Walking

The doctor advised 30–45 minutes daily for 90 days. Since we had in-house support, my mom continued physiotherapy for six months.

In addition to physiotherapy, she walked a minimum of two kilometers daily in a nearby park. She started after three weeks and made it her lifetime routine.

Any discomfort or negative lifestyle impact after surgery? NONE.

Team Effort (and why staying 3–4 weeks matters)

If you’re willing to stay in India to support the patient, the whole process is three to four weeks—scheduling, surgery, initial recovery, stitch removal, and getting the routine in place. There isn’t much “etc.” after that.

Saket flew from Sydney early and handled pre-surgery prep. I joined with my wife Mona on surgery day, and we managed everything after: post-op care, stitches, home physiotherapy—and yes, I made the social media posts.

Where Did We Stay?

We stayed near the hospital in an Airbnb—quiet, clean, and it gave us a private kitchen to cook our meals. Homemade food was cheaper, healthier, and emotionally comforting. Plus, we like multiple rounds of chai.

If you stay at a slightly fancy hotel, you may have to sell a kidney just to pay for chai nowadays. So freaking expensive for no reason.

To get an idea of what Airbnb looks like and costs near Fortis in Gurgaon/Gurugram, click here: airbnb.com/gurugram-india/stays

The Cost

  • Surgery (both knees): ₹6,00,000 (about $7,000 USD in 2022)
  • All-inclusive budget today: ~ $10,000 USD
  • One knee: slightly more than half that cost
  • Physiotherapy in Delhi: ~ ₹1,000 (~$12) per day
Prices may have changed, so please check current rates. All of the above is without using insurance.

Was It a Success?

100%.

My mom walks perfectly. She’s active like a teenager. We went on a long walk in Frisco recently and just when I was ready to wrap up, she said: “Let’s do another half a mile.”

Maybe she wanted to rant about her daughters-in-law on the walk, but nothing came out. Just kidding.

She climbs stairs, handles slopes, and has zero pain. Best of all, she stands and walks with confidence—graceful and strong. That’s her personality again.

If someone tells you “Knee replacement failed for someone I know…” ask this

  • Did they get a robotic, computer-navigated surgery?
  • Did the patient follow post-surgery instructions properly?
  • Was physiotherapy done religiously?
  • Did the patient walk regularly after surgery?
  • Was the patient really overweight? (This matters—somehow you’ll have to ask nicely.)
Surgery results can vary negatively mostly due to the patient’s own lack of effort. Robotic surgeries are templated and precise. The surgery itself going bad—rare. These big institutions do them routinely.

The Keys to a Successful Knee Surgery

  • A robotic, computer-navigated knee replacement
  • A skilled surgeon like Dr. Subhash Jangid (doesn’t have to be him—just reputable)
  • A reputable hospital like Fortis or Max (big-city branches, strong systems)
  • Strict post-op care: physiotherapy + regular walking (no shortcuts)

You can hire someone to help your parent get to the park. You can’t hire someone to walk on their behalf. If they don’t put effort, things can fail.

Do I Know Dr. Jangid Personally?

Nope. And I’m sure he has no clue who I am.

I had to dig through old emails during mom’s surgery just to make sure I spelled his name right. He wouldn’t remember me if he sees this blog. He may remember my brother Saket because he writes fancy corporate-style emails.

But if this blog ever reaches the doc—Dr. Jangid, you owe me a taco or something for spreading the word.

Want to reach him?

Dr. Subhash Jangid
Director, Bone & Joint Institute
Fortis Memorial Research Institute, Gurgaon

Fortis profile: fortishealthcare.com/doctors/dr-subhash-jangid-2853
Email: subhash.jangid@fortishealthcare.com
Appointments: +91-9999245242
Website: onejointforlife.com

Why I’m Writing This

I’m writing this for friends and family in India and abroad—anyone with roots in India, or no roots in India but willing to travel— who may be struggling to make the right decision for their own or a parent’s knee surgery. This is not medical advice. It’s real-life experience.

Final Word

If you or someone you know is struggling, don’t wait. Don’t ignore. We saw our mom go from nearly immobile to energetic and pain-free. You can too.

Feel free to comment below if this helped—or reach out with questions. I’m happy to help.

And please share this article on your Facebook, WhatsApp, and neighborhood text groups. You never know who needs help. Don’t be shy about sharing. That is the least you can do.

My Wife Mona and Mom after surgery on the way home
My Wife Mona and Mom after surgery on the way home
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Was Hanuman a Neanderthal? https://krishnabhaskar.com/was-hanuman-a-neanderthal/ https://krishnabhaskar.com/was-hanuman-a-neanderthal/#comments Wed, 28 May 2025 18:42:39 +0000 https://krishnabhaskar.com/?p=1128 So, a Neanderthal walks into a cave, spots a pebble that looks like a face, dips his finger in red ochre, and leaves a print right where the nose should be. Fast forward 43,000 years, and archaeologists in Spain are losing their minds over what might be the world’s oldest known portrait—complete with a fingerprint. […]

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So, a Neanderthal walks into a cave, spots a pebble that looks like a face, dips his finger in red ochre, and leaves a print right where the nose should be. Fast forward 43,000 years, and archaeologists in Spain are losing their minds over what might be the world’s oldest known portrait—complete with a fingerprint. If you are not familiar with the word Neanderthal; this is species we are finding more and more evidence about nowadays. They were from the monkey family but they looked, acted, and lived like humans. Scientists just found out that they created art work too.

Now, if you’re a Hindu or familiar with Hindu books and thinking, “Wait, didn’t our ancestors already talk about beings who weren’t quite human but were intelligent, communicative, and played pivotal roles in society?” You’re onto something. Let’s take a stroll through the Ramayana and see how ancient texts might have been dropping truth bombs long before modern science caught up.

I have always been intrigued about Neanderthals and the connection with Ramayana.


More Than Monkey Business

In the epic Ramayana, we meet the Vanaras—beings like Hanuman, Sugreev, and Bali. Often depicted as monkey-like, these characters showed intelligence, emotion, and a sense of duty that rivals any human hero.

  • Hanuman: Not just a devotee of Lord Rama, but a scholar of the Vedas, a master strategist, and a warrior with unmatched strength and humility.
  • Sugreev: The exiled brother seeking justice, whose alliance with Rama turns the tide in the battle against Ravana.
  • Bali: A complex figure whose strength was legendary, but whose pride led to his downfall.

These aren’t just tales of talking animals; they’re narratives of beings with advanced cognition, societal roles, and moral dilemmas.


Connecting the Dots: Ancient Texts and Modern Discoveries

The recent Neanderthal find in Spain isn’t an isolated incident. Over the years, discoveries have shown that Neanderthals used pigments, created jewelry, and had burial rituals—behaviors once thought exclusive to Homo sapiens.

Similarly, ancient Hindu scriptures have long spoken of:

  • Multiple Lokas (worlds): Descriptions of various realms of existence, some inhabited by beings with different forms and abilities. And there are exact manufacturar manuals for aircrafts/space crafts in these thousands of years old books. These aircrafts were called Vimanas.
  • Advanced Cosmology: Texts in old Hindu scriptures detail astronomical calculations, planetary distances, and time cycles with astonishing precision. Crazy stuff.
  • Inter-species Communication: Stories abound of humans interacting with Devas, Asuras, Nagas, and Vanaras—beings with distinct characteristics and wisdom. Not too long ago, scientists modified something in a mouse’s DNA to experiment if a mouse can speak like humans. The results of the first test- the mouse could make the M sound. One little change, and boom. What makes us think, that species with vocal capabilities like humans didn’t exist?

It’s almost as if our ancestors were documenting their observations, while we, in our modern arrogance, dismissed them as mere mythology.


Ancient Wisdom Meets Modern Validation

  • Neanderthal Artistry: The 43,000-year-old fingerprint suggests symbolic thinking and artistic expression.
  • Vanara Intelligence: Hanuman’s knowledge of the Vedas indicates a high level of scholarly aptitude.
  • Cosmic Understanding: Ancient texts describe planetary movements and cosmic cycles with remarkable accuracy.
  • Inter-species Societies: Narratives of humans coexisting and collaborating with other intelligent beings.

Embracing the Wisdom of the Ages

As science peels back the layers of time, it’s beginning to validate what ancient scriptures have conveyed for millennia. Perhaps it’s time we approach these texts not just as religious or cultural artifacts, but as repositories of knowledge waiting to be rediscovered.

So, the next time someone scoffs at the idea of talking monkeys or ancient cosmology, remind them: sometimes, the oldest stories hold the newest truths.

I know I am not wrong here. I truly believe that Hindu old scriptures have captured the stories of Neanderthals and other species coexisting and communicating with humans.

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Hanuman fought for his human role model Rama
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Tirupati Balaji Trip Planning – All You Need to Know https://krishnabhaskar.com/tirupati-balaji-trip-information/ https://krishnabhaskar.com/tirupati-balaji-trip-information/#comments Tue, 22 Apr 2025 13:12:01 +0000 https://krishnabhaskar.com/?p=727 TIRUPATI BALAJI VISIT GUIDE (FOR NRIs) Srivani Darshan: The No-Nonsense Plan Let’s get this straight — planning a Tirupati Balaji darshan sounds like a spiritual experience, but the planning part? Not so much. Here’s the simple, complete, and NRI-friendly guide I wish existed when I started. Close darshan Peaceful process Done by noon Real-world tips […]

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TIRUPATI BALAJI VISIT GUIDE (FOR NRIs)

Srivani Darshan: The No-Nonsense Plan

Let’s get this straight — planning a Tirupati Balaji darshan sounds like a spiritual experience, but the planning part? Not so much. Here’s the simple, complete, and NRI-friendly guide I wish existed when I started.

Close darshan Peaceful process Done by noon Real-world tips
Donation (Srivani Trust)
₹10,500 / person
Darshan Ticket
₹500 / person
Best slot vibe
4:00 PM → ~6:00 PM
NRI Tip
Passport is the easiest ID

When I started looking into Tirupati, I realized there’s no single place that gives you clear, complete, and simple information — especially if you’re living abroad and used to smoother systems.

So I wrote the blog I needed. I’m going to talk specifically about Srivani Darshan, because that’s the one I did — and let me just say upfront: it’s totally worth it.

What is Srivani Darshan?

Srivani Darshan is like the first-class ticket of Tirupati. You donate ₹10,500 per person to the Srivani Trust, and pay an additional ₹500 per person for the darshan ticket.

The trust funds free food and services for devotees — so your money supports a good cause too.

Why I say this is the best darshan

  • You get super close to Balaji — within about 6 feet. You can actually pause and pray for a few seconds.
  • Calm and organized. Lower crowd. No pushing. No yelling. It’s peaceful.
  • Free accommodation in guesthouses near the temple if two+ people are booked together.
  • Free laddu Yes, everyone gets one. .
Quick mindset

If you’re traveling from abroad, time + peace + certainty matters more than saving a few thousand rupees. Srivani gives you all three.

Why Not NRI Darshan?

A lot of folks ask this. My answer is simple: NRI status doesn’t mean what it used to. Every other person and their cousin is an NRI nowadays, and the system is crowded.

The NRI darshan ticket is ₹300 — and let’s just say, the experience reflects the price. I was told you don’t even get close to Balaji — forget the peacefulness of Srivani.

My take

Thanks, but no thanks. If you’re going to travel for this, do it properly.

How to Buy Srivani Darshan Tickets

There are three ways to get these tickets. You must carry identification. For NRIs, passport is best.

1

Online (Advance OR Same-Day!)

Go to the official website months in advance, OR for same-day darshan (9 AM to 2 PM window, for 4 PM darshan — but these sell out fast!). You can book 3–4 months in advance. But here’s the catch — you need an Indian mobile number to register. The country code gets stuck at +91, and OTPs go only to Indian numbers. This is why I didn’t book online.

2

At the Tirupati Airport

The Srivani Trust operates a counter right at the Tirupati airport. You can donate ₹10,500 per person and receive same-day darshan tickets for 4 PM. I landed at 1:30 PM and got tickets at the counter the same day. They sell

Hyderabad and Bengaluru airports sell regular darshan tickets but not Srivani.

Important: They keep changing rules and protocols of these ticket sales. Always check online before planning for the latest information. This blog may not have the most recent information when you are reading it.

How to Get Free Accommodation

Ask at the time of donation. They don't advertise this much. You’ll get this only if more than one person is listed on the booking, and all of you are present with ID.

They verify your ID, donation, and stamp your ticket.

Where to Stay (If You’re Going Solo)

Tirupati has tons of hotels. I personally loved staying at Ekante Bliss.

Pro tip: you often get a better deal when you call the hotel directly versus booking platforms.

Also had a great meal at A2B — you can eat well for ₹150–200. Restaurants outside hotels are usually cheaper and tastier.

The Day of Darshan

Get to the temple one hour before your appointment time. Ask any volunteer for the Srivani line. People wait somewhat scattered until someone calls out to form the queue about 15 minutes before the slot.

You’ll need

  • Your ID
  • Your tickets
  • No phones allowed (leave at guesthouse or deposit inside)

Once you enter, volunteers keep shouting “Govinda!” and everyone repeats — it feels powerful. You walk through winding paths for 15–20 minutes before reaching holding rooms (think mini theaters). They divide the crowd into batches of ~200. Restrooms are right across.

The cool part

They feed you. Hot Pongal, coffee, milk — unlimited, and absolutely divine.

After 30–40 minutes, your group is released to the final line. A few turns later, suddenly you’re face-to-face with Balaji. People cry. You might too. I couldn’t even say what I planned to say. It just felt… otherworldly.

🍬 How Many Laddoos to Buy?

Here’s the big question everyone asks. Two sizes:

Small laddoo
₹50 each
Large laddoo
₹200 each

My recommendation: skip the large. The small ones are plenty big — about the size of a cricket ball and close to half a kilo. I bought 10 small ones and that was perfect.

I went with one laddoo per family. It felt generous. These aren’t normal sweets — rich, divine portions with pure ghee and dry fruits. Also, their life isn’t more than a couple of days at room temperature. Keep that in mind.

Half a laddoo is enough if you’re sharing with many people.

Taxi Recommendation

I lucked out with my driver — Chaitanya. One of the nicest humans I’ve met. He took me around both days, waited, helped with errands, and dropped me to the airport — a solid 6–8 hours of service — for ₹2500 each day.

Call him ahead

+91 9701991749 — tell him I sent you. He’ll treat you like family.

What to Wear

  • Women: Saree.
  • Men: Dhoti and shirt.

I got a good Velcro dhoti for ₹700 — comfy and traditional South Indian style. Chaitanya took me to a shop, helped me negotiate, pick good quality clothing, and even guided me to the trial room.

Things That Might Confuse You

Indian mobile number required online

Yes — this is frustrating, especially when Indian engineers power half the tech in the world.

Terminology confusion

Don’t get misled by “VIP Darshan.” It’s not Srivani. Always use the term Srivani Darshan specifically.

Final Thoughts

Tirupati Balaji Darshan — especially Srivani — is one of the most soul-stirring experiences you can have. If you open your heart and surrender your deepest worries, Balaji listens. I’ve experienced it.

So go. Plan well. Show up early. And let the magic happen.

— Krishna Bhaskar
The Day of Darshan - by Krishna Bhaskar

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Bihari / UP Sayings – Kahawatein https://krishnabhaskar.com/bihari-up-sayings-kahawatein/ https://krishnabhaskar.com/bihari-up-sayings-kahawatein/#respond Tue, 01 Apr 2025 16:06:44 +0000 https://krishnabhaskar.com/?p=526 125 Bihar aur UP ki Kahawatein with Meanings – बिहार और यूपी की कहावतें अर्थ सहित (Collected, translated, and explained by Krishna Bhaskar) Krishna Bhaskar Bihar • UP • Dehati Wisdom Kahawatein • Meanings बचपन की गलियों, मिट्टी की खुशबू और आँगन में बिछी चारपाई… याद है न, जब गर्मी की दोपहर में दादी-नानी या […]

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125 Bihar aur UP ki Kahawatein with Meanings – बिहार और यूपी की कहावतें अर्थ सहित

(Collected, translated, and explained by Krishna Bhaskar)

Krishna Bhaskar Bihar • UP • Dehati Wisdom Kahawatein • Meanings

बचपन की गलियों, मिट्टी की खुशबू और आँगन में बिछी चारपाई…
याद है न, जब गर्मी की दोपहर में दादी-नानी या गाँव के बुज़ुर्ग हुक्का गुड़गुड़ाते हुए कहानियों के साथ-साथ ऐसी कहावतें सुनाया करते थे, जिनमें ज़िंदगी का पूरा अनुभव छुपा होता था?
ये वो बातें थीं जो किताबों में नहीं मिलतीं, लेकिन एक बार सुन लो तो ज़िंदगी भर याद रहती हैं।

बिहार और यूपी की कहावतें सिर्फ़ मज़ेदार शब्द नहीं, बल्कि गाँव की हँसी, रिश्तों की मिठास, और हालात पर तंज कसने की देसी बुद्धि हैं। कभी ये चेतावनी देती हैं, कभी हँसी में सिखा जाती हैं, और कभी सीधा दिल को छू जाती हैं।

तो आइए, लौट चलते हैं उस देसी दुनिया में — जहाँ हर कहावत में छुपा है एक किस्सा, एक सीख, और बचपन की वो सोंधी महक।

How to use this list Read the Hindi line first, then the Romanized line, then the meaning. Pick your favorites and steal them responsibly.
# Kahawat (Hindi + Roman + Meaning)
1.
सास के ओढ़ना, पतोह के गोड़ पोंछना।
Saas ke odhna, patoh ke god ponchna
Mother-in-law’s shawl used by daughter-in-law to wipe feet.
(Disrespect for others’ belongings.)
2.
आपन भूख ता चुलहिअा फूक, पिया के भूख ता कपरे दुख
Aapan bhookh ta chulhia phook, piya ke bhookh ta kapre dukh
If you’re hungry, you light the stove; if husband’s hungry, you complain about headache.
(Self first, others later.)
3.
मोरि भुखिया मोरि माई जानै, कठउत भर पिसान सानै
Mori bhukhiya mori maai janai, kathaut bhar pisan sanai
Only my mother knows my hunger and grinds enough flour for my bowl.
(Only close ones truly understand your needs.)
4.
नरको चलली डूबे त गडहियो चलल पराई।।
Narko challi doobe ta gadhiya challal parai
If drowning in hell, will drag someone else into a pit too.
(Some people want others to suffer with them.)
5.
सास बाड़ी चुपी तो बहु बाड़ी मिठी।
Saas badi chupi to bahu badi mithi
When the mother-in-law is quiet, the daughter-in-law is sweet.
(Peace from elders brings harmony.)
6.
धरे के कान ना उखाड़े चुरूकी
Dhare ke kaan na ukhaade churuki
You had to grab the ears, not the ponytail.
(Distracting by doing something else because you couldn’t do the primary thing.)
7.
उधियाइल सतुआ पितर के दान
Udhiyail sattu pitar ke daan
Soaked sattu offered to ancestors.
(Showing off a good deed but hiding a mistake.)
8.
हम सुनरी, हमार पिया सुनर, गांव के लोग बनरा बनरी।
Ham sunri, hamar piya sunar, gaon ke log banra banri
I’m beautiful, my husband’s handsome, the rest of the village are monkeys.
(Over-the-top self-praise.)
9.
अहकल कनिया, बहकल बर, ई मुअल त दोसर कर।
Ahkal kaniya, bahkal bar, ee mual ta dosar kar
A foolish bride, an arrogant groom — replace if one dies.
(Some people are meant to be replaceable.)
10.
गरीब के मेहरारू, गांव के भौजाई।
Gareeb ke mehararu, gaon ke bhaujai
A poor man’s wife is everyone’s sister-in-law.
(The poor are taken casually by all.)
11.
बाकी त सब रामचरितमानस में बा।
Baaki ta sab Ramcharitmanas me ba
The rest is in the Ramcharitmanas.
(No need to elaborate; the story is known.)
12.
भइ गति सांप छुछुन्दर केरी
Bhai gati saap chhuchunder keri
Like the fate of snake and mongoose — neither survives.
(A lose-lose situation.)
13.
का वरखा जब कृषि सुखाने, समय चूकि पुनि का पछिताने।
Ka barkha jab krishi sukhane, samay chooki puni ka pachhitane
What’s the use of rain after crops dry? Regret after time passes is useless.
(Help delayed solves no purpose.)
14.
सास के खोखी पूतोह के दम्मा
Saas ke khokhi putoh ke damma
The mother-in-law’s has cough, the daughter-in-law has asthma.
(Sometimes, everyone looks weak.)
15.
अपनी मड़ैया सब रसभरी, पराई मड़ैया अपयश भरी
Apni madhiya sab rasbhari, parai madhiya apyash bhari
Your own hut is sweet; others’ hut is shameful.
(We favor our own, judge others.)
16.
अइली ना गइली फलाना बो कहइली।
Aili na gaili falana bo kaheili
Neither came nor went, yet claims she did.
(Taking false credit.)
17.
सासु से बैर, पतोहू से नाता
Saasu se bair, patohu se naata
Enemy with mother-in-law, friendly with daughter-in-law.
(Selective relations in family feuds.)
18.
नया लूगा नव दिन लुगरी सरब दिन
Naya luga nav din lugari sarab din
New clothes are new for nine days; old ones worn daily.
(Charm fades quickly.)
19.
नई धोबनिया आवेली लुगरिये साबुन लगवेळी।
Nai dhobaniya aaveli lugariye sabun lagaveli
New washerwoman uses extra soap.
(New workers overdo to impress.)
20.
एक त बबुआ अपने गोर दोसर काली कमरी ओढ़।
Ek ta babua apne gor, dosar kaali kamari oadh
Fair boy wears a black shawl.
(Natural advantages are bonus.)
21.
माई निहारे पोटरी(पेट) मेहरी निहारे मोटरी(मनी)
Maai nihare potri (pet), mehri nihare motri (money)
Mother looks at belly (feeding), maid looks at purse (payment).
(Everyone focuses on their own interest.)
22.
धिया के माई रानी बुड्ढारी भरस पानी
Dhiya ke maai rani, budhdhari bharas paani
Daughter’s mother is queen in youth, tears in old age.
(One with a daughter enjoys the old age.)
23.
गवने कनियाँ हँसत जाली दोंगे कनियाँ रोवत जास।
Gawane kaniya hansat jaali, donge kaniya rowat jaas
Bride laughs going to husband’s house, cries returning.
(Marriage begins in joy but has struggles.)
24.
एक दिन पहुना दोसर दिन ठेहुना तीसर दिन केहुना।
Ek din pahuna, dosar din thehuna, teesra din kehuna
First day guest, second day tolerated, third day just someone.
(Hospitality fades.)
25.
आन्हरा आगे रोवनी आपनो दीदा खोवनी
Aanhra aage rowni, aapno deeda khowni
Cry before a blind man, lose your own eyesight.
(Helping the wrong person harms you too.)
26.
भइल बेटी छोड़ा सिंगार आइल सवत करअ सिंगार
Bhail beti chhoda singaar, aail sawat kara singaar
Daughter leaves, stop dressing up; co-wife comes, start again.
(Circumstances change behavior.)
27.
पानी पिह छान के बेटी बियाहीह जान के
Pani pih chhaan ke, beti biyahih jaan ke
Strain water before drinking; check well before marrying daughter.
(Important matters need care.)
28.
चार दिन में गइले सुग्गा मोर बन आइले
Chaar din me gaile sugga, mor ban aaile
Parrot left, came back a peacock.
(New money people show off more.)
29.
अइली ना गइली दु कउन बहु कहइली
Aili na gaili, du kaun bahu kaheili
Didn’t visit, still called herself a great daughter-in-law.
(Claiming status without effort.)
30.
नरको में ठेलाठेली
Narko me thelathali
Pushing in hell.
(Fighting over worthless things.)
31.
सास न ननद घरे अपने आनंद
Saas na nanad ghare apne aanand
No mother-in-law or sister-in-law — peace at home.
(No interference = happy home.)
32.
जेकरे खातिर चोरी कईनी, ऊहे कहे चोर।
Jekre khatir chori kaileeni, oohe kahe chor
The one you stole for calls you a thief.
(Good deeds unappreciated.)
33.
बाप के नाव साग पात बेटा के नाव परोरा
Baap ke naav saag paat, beta ke naav porora
Father known for greens, son for weeds.
(Reputation declines in next generation.)
34.
नया नौ दिन आ पुराना सौ दिन
Naya nau din, purana sau din
New lasts nine days, old lasts hundred.
(Old ties last longer.)
35.
साधु के नेवान ना, चोर के दवरी।
Sadhu ke newan na, chor ke dawri
Saint gets no food, thief gets feast.
(Wrong people rewarded.)
36.
सोला लुग्गा झांपी बा मुनिया उघारी बा
Sola lugga jhampi ba, munia ughari ba
Sixteen clothes cover everything, but the little girl is still exposed.
(Missing the real priority.)
37.
एक हाथ के गाजी मिया, नौ हाथ के पोंछ
Ek haath ke gaji miya, nau haath ke ponch
One-hand hero, nine-hand towel.
(Showing off beyond actual ability.)
38.
अईसन पढ़ाई पढ़ले बबुआ अपने सिर बितानी
Aisan padhai padhle babua, apne sir bitani
Studied so much, sold his own head.
(Education used foolishly.)
39.
आ वाटर वाटर कह के मरले खटिये तर हल पानी
Aa water water keh ke marle, khatiye tar hal paani
Died shouting “water” with water under the bed.
(Solution nearby but unseen.)
40.
आन्हर देखलीं गोह , कहें मौसी पांव लगी
Aanhra dekhlin goh, kahen mausi paav lagi
The blind man greets a lizard as “aunt.”
(Mistaking danger for a friend.)
41.
आपन खा के केतना सिखाई
Aapan kha ke ketna sikhai
How much can you learn eating alone?
(Sharing teaches more.)
42.
एक त करैला अपने तीत ऊपर से नीम चढ़ल
Ek ta karela apne teet, upar se neem chadhal
Like a bitter gourd climbing a neem tree.
(Something bad made even worse.)
43.
धिया ससुरा ना जाली मने मने गाजेली
Dhiya sasura na jaali, mane mane gajeli
The daughter didn’t go to her in-laws, but she still sulks inside.
(Resentment without cause.)
44.
चिन्ह ना पहचान मउसी पाँव लागिला
Chinh na pahichan, mausi paav lagila
Without recognizing, you touch someone’s feet calling them “aunt.”
(Respect without knowing the person.)
45.
जहाँ गैलि खेहो रानी उहा परे पाथर पानी
Jahan gail kheho rani, uha pare pathar paani
Wherever the queen goes, stones rain down.
(Some people always attract trouble.)
46.
कइली ससुरे के तैयारी , गुनवा एकहू ना सिखली
Kaili sasure ke taiyari, gunwa ekahu na sikhli
Prepared for the father-in-law’s arrival but learned no skills.
(All show, no substance.)
47.
गाल देबो बजाए सास जइहैं लजाय
Gaal debo bajaye saas, jaihain lajaay
Curse, and the mother-in-law claps while pretending to be shy.
(Fake modesty while enjoying drama.)
48.
सास ननद आन के , देवरान जेठान आपन
Saas nanad aan ke, devaran jethan aapan
Mother-in-law and sister-in-law are outsiders; brothers-in-law are one’s own.
(Partiality in extended families.)
49.
कोख मांगे गइनी आ मांग गवां के अइनी
Kokh maange gaili, aa maang gawa ke aini
Went to ask for a child, came back losing the womb.
(Losing more than you sought.)
50.
हमरे घरे अइबा त का का लिइयबा, तोहरे घरे आइब त का का खिइयबा
Hamre ghare aiba ta ka ka liyiaba, tohre ghare aib ta ka ka khiyiaba
When you visit my home, what will you take? When I visit yours, what will you feed me?
(Relationships are give-and-take.)
51.
गज ना हारेम आ थान हार जाएम
Gaj na harem, aa thaan haar jaem
Won’t lose the elephant, but will lose the rope.
(Saving the big thing but losing the small essential.)
52.
घर के मुरगी दाल बरोबर
Ghar ke murgi daal barobar
The home chicken is equal to lentils.
(Common things are undervalued.)
53.
जइसन उदई ओइसन भान, इनका पोछ ना उनका कान
Jaisan udai oisan bhaan, inka poch na unka kaan
As the sunrise, so the sunset — neither wipes the other’s tail nor ears.
(No help from either side.)
54.
आन्हर कुकुर बतासे भोंके
Aanhra kukur batase bhonke
A blind dog barks at the wind.
(Acting without knowing the cause.)
55.
जेतना के बाबू ना ओतना के झूनझूना
Jetna ke babu na, otna ke jhunjhuna
No baby, but has a rattle.
(Have the accessory without the need.)
56.
भूल गएन गीत रंग भूल गएन किंगरी तीन चीज़ याद रहा नोन तेल लकड़ी
Bhool gayen geet rang, bhool gayen kingri, teen cheez yaad raha non tel lakdi
Forgot the song and instrument, but remembered salt, oil, and firewood.
(Forgot the main thing, remembered the side things.)
57.
नाम बा समंदर सिंह पानी एक बूंदों ना
Naam ba Samandar Singh, paani ek boondon na
Name is “Ocean Lion” but not a drop of water.
(Big name, no substance.)
58.
खात रहेन दूध भात चरावत रहेन गइया नौकरी कै साध लाग भीख देव मइया
Khaat rahein doodh bhaat, charawat rahein gaiya, naukri ke saadh laag, bhikh dev Maiya
Ate milk and rice, tended cows, wanted a job, prayed for alms.
(From comfort to desperation.)
59.
देवर कै देवरानी जौ भली होयँ जेठानी तौ जोगवें आपन पानी
Devar ke devarani, jo bhali hoy jethani, tau jogwein aapan paani
If the younger brother’s wife is good to the elder sister-in-law, her honor is saved.
(Good relations protect dignity.)
60.
हंसुआ के विआह और खुरपी के गीत
Hansua ke vyah aur khurpi ke geet
Marriage of the sickle, songs of the hoe.
(Wrong pairing of things.)
61.
जेकर ईसर अइसन अोकर दलीदर कइसन
Jekar isar aisan, okar dalidar kaisan
If God is like this, what will poverty be like?
(If the higher power is flawed, worse is expected below.)
62.
माँ गुन बछड़ा पिता गुन घोड़। ढेर नही तो थोरे थोर
Maa gun bachhra, pita gun ghod. Dher nahi to thore thor
The calf has mother’s traits, the horse has father’s — if not much, at least a little.
(Children inherit from parents.)
63.
चाचा चोर, भतीजा पाजी। चाचा के सर पे, जूता बाजी
Chacha chor, bhanija paaji. Chacha ke sir pe, joota baaji
Uncle is a thief, nephew is a scoundrel; uncle gets the shoes thrown.
(Elder takes the blame for younger’s deeds.)
64.
सुप तो सुप चलनियो बोले ,जामे बहत्तर छेद
Sup to sup, chalniyo bole, jaame bahattar chhed
The sieve mocks the winnowing basket, though it has seventy-two holes.
(Hypocrite criticizing others.)
65.
रस्सी जर गईल ऐंठन ना गईल
Rassi jar gail, ainthan na gail
The rope burnt, but the twist remained.
(Nature doesn’t change easily.)
66.
थोथा चना बाजे घना।
Thotha chana baje ghana
Empty gram rattles loudly.
(Empty vessels make the most noise.)
67.
सुपवा हँसे चलनिया, पर जेकरा मे सत्तर गो छेद
Supwa hanse chalaniya, par jekara me sattar go chhed
The winnow laughs at the sieve, though it has seventy holes.
(Finding faults while having your own.)
68.
बइठल बनिया का करे, ए कोठी के धान ऊ कोठि धरे
Baithal baniya ka kare, e kothi ke dhaan, oo kothi dhare
What does the idle merchant do? Moves grain from one bin to another.
(Pointless busywork.)
69.
केहू हीरा चोर, केहू खीरा चोर
Kehu heera chor, kehu kheera chor
Some steal diamonds, some cucumbers.
(Theft is theft, big or small.)
70.
ओढे के मिले ना, आ दरी बिछौना
Odhe ke mile na, aa dari bichhaona
No quilt to cover, but spreads a mat.
(Wrong priorities.)
71.
काम के ना काज के दुश्मन अनाज के
Kaam ke na, kaaj ke dushman anaaj ke
Good for no work, enemy of the food.
(Useless but still harmful.)
72.
खाए के हययै नाए नाहे के तड़के
Khaaye ke hayye, naaye naah ke tadke
Eats heartily, but avoids bathing.
(Loves comfort, avoids effort.)
73.
दुधारू गाय के लातो भला।
Dudhaaru gaay ke laato bhala
A milking cow kicks is worth it.
(Useful people can still be troublesome.)
74.
बाढै पूत पिता के कर्ममे खेती उपजे‌ अपने करमे
Badhai poot pita ke karme, kheti upje apne karme
A son grows by father’s deeds; crops grow by farmer’s work.
(Both heritage and self-effort matter.)
75.
आगे खेती आगे आगे, पाछे खेती भागे जोगे।
Aage kheti aage aage, pichhe kheti bhaage joge
If the front field grows, the back prospers too.
(One success can lead to another.)
76.
लजाईल लइका डोढी टोए
Lajail laika dodhi toe
A shy boy touches his beard.
(People have nervous habits when shy.)
77.
मुह नियन मुह ना, आ घर डुमराँव
Muh niyan muh na, aa ghar Dumraon
A face that’s not like a face, and a house like Dumraon.
(Ugly face but showing off wealth.)
78.
जग जितलु ए कानी, बर उठस त जानीं
Jag jitlu e kaani, bar uthas ta jani
The one-eyed man claims to conquer the world; let him stand and we’ll see.
(Boasting without proof.)
79.
आँख के अंधा नाम नयन सुख
Aankh ke andha, naam Nayan Sukh
Blind man named “Eye Comfort.”
(Name opposite to reality.)
80.
पूत कपूत त का धन संचय पूत सपुत त का धन संचय
Poot kapoot ta ka dhan sanchay, poot sapoot ta ka dhan sanchay
If the son is bad, why save wealth; if he’s good, why save wealth?
(Wealth has no use in either case.)
81.
सरल गाय बाभन् के दान
Sarl gaay babhan ke daan
A gentle cow is given to the Brahmin.
(Good things often go to others.)
82.
जवन बांस के बांसबसौरा उहे बांस के कलसुप दउरा।
Jawan baans ke baansbasora, uhe baans ke kalsup daura
From the same bamboo comes the basket and the fan.
(Same source can produce different things.)
83.
ई कूकुर दूबर काहे? दू गो घर के आवाजाही
Ee kukur doobar kahe? Do go ghar ke aawajahi
Why is the dog thin? It goes to two houses.
(Divided loyalty weakens you.)
84.
बेटी के माइये रानी और बूढ़े समय भरे पानी
Beti ke maaiye rani, aur boodhe samay bhare paani
Daughter’s mother is queen in youth, tears in old age.
(Affection changes with circumstances.)
85.
पइसा ना कउड़ी बीच बाजार में दौड़ा–दौड़ी
Paisa na kaudi, beech bazaar me dauda-daudi
No money, but running around in the market.
(Showing off without means.)
86.
खाए के ठेकान ना, नहाये के तड़के
Khaye ke thekaan na, nahaaye ke tadke
No fixed place to eat, but insists on a morning bath.
(Wrong priorities.)
87.
राम मिलावे जोड़ी एगो आन्हर एगो कोढ़ी
Ram milave jodi, ego aanhra ego kodhi
God matched a blind person with a leper.
(Sometimes fate pairs two equally unfortunate people.)
88.
सब धन बाईसे पसेरी
Sab dhan baisay paseri
All wealth measured as twenty-two seers.
(Overstating value beyond the norm.)
89.
अबरा के मउगी, भर घर के भउजी
Abra ke maugi, bhar ghar ke bhauji
Widow’s wife is everyone’s sister-in-law.
(Vulnerable women are taken lightly by all.)
90.
चिरईं के जान जाए, लईका के खेलवना
Chirai ke jaan jaaye, laika ke khelwana
Bird dies while a child plays with it.
(Someone’s loss is another’s gain.)
91.
जेकर बनरी उहे नचावे, दोसर नचावे त काटे धावे
Jekar banri uhe nachawe, dosar nachawe ta kaate dhawe
The owner’s monkey dances; if another makes it dance, it bites.
(People accept control only from their own.)
92.
बिना मन के बियाह, कनपटिए सेनुर
Bina man ke biyah, kanpatiye senur
Unwilling marriage, vermilion slapped on temple.
(Forced situation shows in attitude.)
93.
हंसले घर बसेला
Hansle ghar basela
A laughing home is a happy home.
(Joy keeps a family together.)
94.
पूत भतार अक्षइत ,डग देना हेन बेना
Poot bhatar akshat, dag dena hen bena
Son and husband safe, yet wife wails.
(Complains even when all is well.)
95.
फूल लेखा फूला, आ पूरइन लेखा पसर
Phool lekha phoola, aa poorin lekha pasar
Bloom like a flower, spread like a lotus.
(Be beautiful and widely loved.)
96.
सरल सास अंगरल पतोह, बिन कड़िहर के ननद मोर
Sarl saas angarl patoh, bin kadihar ke nanad mor
Gentle mother-in-law with fiery daughter-in-law; sister-in-law without bangles is mine.
(Family roles often have irony.)
97.
खाये के बेटी लुटे के दामाद आ हाड़ गोड़ पड़ले त बेटा के बोलाव
Khaye ke beti, luttke damad, aa haad god padle ta beta ke bolaav
Feed the daughter, let the son-in-law loot, but in trouble, call the son.
(In crisis, only your own will help.)
98.
बकरी के भुख लागी पतई चबाई आदमी के भुख लागी अपने से खाई
Bakri ke bhukh lagi, patai chabai; aadmi ke bhukh lagi, apne se khai
When a goat is hungry, it eats leaves; when a man is hungry, he eats his own.
(Humans can turn on each other in desperation.)
99.
साध लागल लंगड़ो ,देवाल फानेली
Saadh lagal langdo, dewal phaneli
Lame man gets inspired and tries to climb the wall.
(Overestimating one’s ability.)
100.
उठ सासू सांस ल ढेंका छोड़ जात ल
Uth saasu saans le, dhenka chhod jaat le
Mother-in-law gets up for a breath, leaves the grain pounder behind.
(Quit in the middle of work.)
101.
केकरा प करीं हम सिंगार, पिया मोरे आन्हर।
Kekra pe karein ham singar, piya more aanhra
Whom should I dress up for when my husband is blind?
(No point in impressing the one who can’t see it.)
102.
छछुनर के सिर प चमेली के तेल।
Chhachhunar ke sir pe chameli ke tel
Jasmine oil on a mole’s head.
(Wasting luxury on the undeserving.)
103.
मुअला पुत के बड़ बड़ आंख।
Muala put ke bad bad aankh
A dead son’s big eyes.
(Praising something when it’s useless.)
104.
लंगटा नचले तीन कोना
Langta nachle teen kona
A naked man dances in three corners.
(The shameless will show off anywhere.)
105.
बरसात में छत बदलल, जाड़ा में लुग्गा बेचल।
Barsaat me chhat badalal, jaada me lugga bechal
Changed the roof in the rains, sold the blanket in winter.
(Doing important things at the worst time.)
106.
चूल्हा ठंडा, मुंह गरम।
Chulha thanda, muh garam
Stove is cold, mouth is hot.
(All talk, no action.)
107.
खेत खाली, गप्प भारी।
Khet khaali, gapp bhaari
Field is empty, but gossip is full.
(People with no work talk the most.)
108.
बकरी के गला में घंटी, बिल्ली के मन में दावत।
Bakri ke gala me ghanti, billi ke man me daawat
Bell on goat’s neck, feast in cat’s mind.
(The victim is marked before the attack.)
109.
जेकर घर में दीया ना, ऊ चलल चाँद खरीदले।
Jekar ghar me diya na, oo challal chaand kharidle
Doesn’t have a lamp at home, goes to buy the moon.
(Aiming for the impossible while neglecting basics.)
110.
बरतन चमकल, पेट घुटकल।
Bartan chamkal, pet ghutkal
Utensils shine, stomach stays empty.
(Show-off while in need.)
111.
नून ना तेल, लेकिन नाच देखल जरूरी।
Noon na tel, lekin naach dekhal jaruri
No salt, no oil, but must watch the dance.
(Priorities gone wrong.)
112.
खेत पटा, मन कटा।
Khet pata, man kata
Field is sown, heart is broken.
(Having progress in one area while suffering in another.)
113.
कुत्ता भौंके, हाथी चले।
Kutta bhonke, haathi chale
Dog barks, elephant walks.
(The great don’t get disturbed by petty noise.)
114.
नाव किनारे, पतवार मंहगे।
Naav kinaare, patwaar mahange
Boat is at shore, but oars are costly.
(Something essential is too expensive to use.)
115.
माछी के हाथ में मछली, फिरो सोच में पड़ी।
Machhi ke haath me machhli, phirau soch me padi
Fish in fisherman’s hand, still wondering what to do.
(Hesitating even when you have the opportunity.)
116.
बड़का टोपी, छोटका सर।
Barka topi, chhotka sar
Big hat, small head.
(Trying to take on more than you can handle.)
117.
काग के मुंह में गुड़।
Kaag ke muh me gud
Jaggery in a crow’s beak.
(Tempting someone untrustworthy.)
118.
भैंस पोखर में, मालिक शहर में।
Bhains pokhar me, maalik shahar me
Buffalo in the pond, owner in the city.
(Not looking after what’s yours.)
119.
बरगद के छाँव में तुलसी के पौधा।
Bargad ke chhaav me tulsi ke paudha
Tulsi plant under banyan’s shade.
(Something good growing in the wrong place.)
120.
धोबी का गधा, घर का ना घाट का।
Dhobi ka gadha, ghar ka na ghat ka
The washerman’s donkey — belongs neither at home nor at the riverbank.
(Not belonging anywhere.)
121.
खाली मटकी, दूर से बजे।
Khaali matki, door se baje
Empty pot makes noise from afar.
(People with little substance make the most noise.)
122.
गेहूं के साथ घुन पीसाई।
Gehu ke saath ghun pisai
Along with the wheat, the weevil gets ground too.
(The innocent suffer with the guilty.)
123.
बकरा भी जिंदा, छुरी भी तेज।
Bakra bhi zinda, chhuri bhi tez
Goat is alive, knife is sharp.
(A tense situation where trouble is inevitable.)
124.
आधा तीतर, आधा बटेर।
Aadha teetar, aadha bater
Half partridge, half quail.
(A mix that’s neither here nor there.)
125.
पंछी के पर, लेकिन पिंजरे में।
Panchhi ke par, lekin pinjre me
Bird has wings, but is in a cage.
(Having potential but no freedom.)

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They Said I Couldn’t https://krishnabhaskar.com/they-said-i-couldnt/ https://krishnabhaskar.com/they-said-i-couldnt/#respond Tue, 01 Apr 2025 15:56:02 +0000 https://krishnabhaskar.com/?p=524 “They Said I Couldn’t” by Krishna Bhaskar is a triumphant little fable where a lemon-lime color toad throws shade at doubt and naps through adversity. It’s quirky, bold, and beautifully defiant—a rainy-day anthem for anyone who’s ever proved the world wrong with a grin.   The leaving last shower Taunted the happy toad Your happiness […]

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“They Said I Couldn’t” by Krishna Bhaskar is a triumphant little fable where a lemon-lime color toad throws shade at doubt and naps through adversity. It’s quirky, bold, and beautifully defiant—a rainy-day anthem for anyone who’s ever proved the world wrong with a grin.

The leaving last shower

Taunted the happy toad

Your happiness depends on me

I am taking the outbound road

You foolish toad!

The lemon-lime colored toad

laughs and screams

go away you rain

I will take a nap and dream

of the water lilies and the flies

soon you will bring

That outbound road

is also inbound

I’ve been told

As long as I hold tight

And fight when I have to fight

I will pass the dry days

to see it rain again

They always said

I couldn’t do it

They always said

I couldn’t do it

But I did it, again

and again

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Bomb Dot Com Egg Curry https://krishnabhaskar.com/bomb-dot-com-egg-curry/ https://krishnabhaskar.com/bomb-dot-com-egg-curry/#respond Tue, 01 Apr 2025 15:15:18 +0000 https://krishnabhaskar.com/?p=500 A soulful, spicy egg curry that hugs your heart and fills your belly. Perfect with rice or roti. Quick to make, hard to forget. 🥚 Ingredients (Serves 3–4): For the Eggs: 6–8 boiled eggs 1 tbsp vegetable or mustard oil A pinch of turmeric (haldi) A couple drops of red food color (optional, but gives […]

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A soulful, spicy egg curry that hugs your heart and fills your belly. Perfect with rice or roti. Quick to make, hard to forget.


🥚 Ingredients (Serves 3–4):

For the Eggs:

  • 6–8 boiled eggs
  • 1 tbsp vegetable or mustard oil
  • A pinch of turmeric (haldi)
  • A couple drops of red food color (optional, but gives that restaurant-style look)

For the Masala Paste:

  • 2 medium onions
  • 1 pinch turmeric powder
  • 1 tsp red chili powder (adjust to heat preference)
  • 3 tbsp coriander powder
  • 2 green chilies
  • 8 cloves garlic
  • 5–10 black peppercorns
  • 1 cup water (for grinding)

For the Curry Base:

  • 3 tbsp mustard oil
  • 1 pinch cumin seeds
  • 1 bay leaf
  • 2 whole dry red chilies
  • 1 finely chopped onion
  • 5 additional garlic cloves (sliced or crushed)
  • 1 chopped tomato
  • Salt to taste
  • 2 pinches poppy seeds (optional, for thickness)
  • 1 cup hot boiling water
  • 1 tbsp ghee (for finishing)
  • Fresh cilantro, chopped (for garnish)

👨‍🍳 Instructions:

1. Spice the Eggs:
Heat oil in a pan and toss in the boiled eggs. Add a pinch of turmeric and a few drops of red food color. Sauté until the eggs develop a golden, crispy layer. Set them aside—they’ve got a big role to play later.


2. Make the Masala Magic:
Grind the onions, turmeric, red chili powder, coriander powder, green chilies, garlic, and peppercorns with a cup of water to make a thick, smooth paste. Keep it ready to sizzle.


3. Build the Base:
In a wide, heated pan or wok, add mustard oil. Throw in cumin seeds, a bay leaf, and whole red chilies. Let them crackle. Add chopped onion and garlic and sauté until golden brown.

Now, pour in the masala paste and sauté on medium heat for about 15 minutes—until the oil starts to separate. This is when the magic begins.

Add poppy seeds if you’ve got them—they elevate the richness to restaurant-level.


4. The Final Touch:
Add salt and chopped tomato. Cook for another 5 minutes. Now bring the eggs back into the mix. Pour in a cup of hot, boiling water to give the curry body. Let it all simmer together for 5 more minutes.

Finally, stir in a spoonful of ghee and sprinkle freshly chopped cilantro.


🌶️ And there it is.

Your Bomb Dot Com Egg Curry—fiery, bold, comforting. A dish that says, you’re home.

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