One hand feeds your soul.The OTHER pays the bills.What’s your ignored superpower?

 

Ever wonder why Picasso painted, but also sculpted, printed, and ceramic’d his way to billions (adjusted for inflation)? Or how Elon Musk didn’t just code—he welded rockets, memed Twitter into chaos, and turned Asperger’s edge into empire fuel? They didn’t pick one love. They juggled hands. What about You?

 

What if the thing you’ve been treating as a “hobby” is actually your biggest business idea?

 

And you’ve been politely ignoring it your entire career?

 

Most of us spend the better part of our working lives doing one thing. The thing on the business card. The thing on the LinkedIn profile. The thing we became “known for.” And somewhere along the way, we quietly filed everything else — the painting, the cooking, the ridiculous obsession with vintage motorcycles or behavioural economics or teaching kids to code — under the label: Not A Real Thing.

 

Huge mistake. Possibly the most expensive mistake you’re making right now.

 

Check if this metaphor lands where it should

 

You have two hands. Not one. TWO.

 

But most people walk through life with one hand in their pocket — professionally speaking — while the other hand does all the heavy lifting. They’ve decided that only ONE thing about them is worth monetising. One skill. One identity. One lane.

 

Meanwhile, the other hand? Gathering dust. Occasionally waving at parties when someone asks, Oh, so what else do you do?

 

Trust this will trigger your curiosity

 

What do you do without being asked? What do you read when nobody’s watching? What problem do you solve in your head just for the pleasure of it — not because anyone hired you?

 

THAT. That right there. That’s the other hand.

 

And here’s the thing nobody tells you: the market is starving for people who bring an unusual combination to the table. The world doesn’t need another generic consultant. It needs the consultant who also speaks three languages and has a deep love for jazz — because that combination opens rooms nobody else can walk into.

 

Your “extra” is your edge. Your supposedly unrelated passion is probably the most differentiated thing about you.

 

Your hobby isn’t a distraction from your career. It might actually BE your career. You just haven’t introduced them yet.

 

Passion’s Paradox

You have other skills. Other quirks. Other abilities that your current job description doesn’t capture. Maybe you’re a Chartered Accountant by right hand, but a street photographer by left. Maybe you’re a corporate lawyer by right hand, but a carpenter who speaks to wood by left. Maybe you’re a techie who codes (right hand) and a storyteller who writes scripts for plays that no one produces (left hand).

We are taught to amputate the left hand for the sake of efficiency. We call it “focus.” It is better if we call it “financial suffocation in slow motion.”

 

Saying It As It Is

 

Most of us are one-handed wonders because society’s shoving us into passion silos. “Be a chef!” they yell, ignoring your knack for viral TikTok scripts or urban foraging tours. Wake up. Inventory your hands. Right: The obvious passion (say, writing). Left: The sleeper hits—public speaking that hypnotizes, coding hacks from college, or that weird talent for turning chaos into Pinterest boards. Mash ’em. Monetize the hybrid.

 

The Surgeon Who Picked Up a Camera

 

When Dr Devi Shetty built Narayana Health, he did not merely practice surgery. He studied systems, scale, economics, storytelling, and public trust.

 

Medicine in one hand. Management in the other.

 

The result was not just a hospital. It was a model that redefined affordable cardiac care.

 

Most professionals stay in the lane they were certified for. The rare ones ask: what else do I naturally do well that could amplify this?

 

Your degree is one hand. Your lived curiosity is the other. Use both.

 

The Coder Who Loved Philosophy

 

Steve Jobs audited a calligraphy class. Not because it would make him money. Because it was beautiful.

 

Years later, that aesthetic sensitivity shaped the typography of the Macintosh at Apple Inc..

 

Engineering in one hand. Art in the other.

 

When the world got computers that felt human, it was not an accident. It was integration.

 

Curiosity rarely pays you immediately. But it compounds.

 

Why We Ignore the Other Hand

Because it feels indulgent.

Because society labels it “hobby.”

Because the first hand pays EMI.

But here is what we don’t see coming.

The future economy does not reward narrowness. It rewards combination.

AI can replicate expertise. It struggles to replicate unusual intersections.

When a finance professional also understands storytelling.

When a marketer also understands behavioral psychology.

When an engineer also understands community building.

That intersection is difficult to automate. It becomes your unfair advantage.

Two hands create depth perception.

 

A Small Exercise. Try It

Take a sheet of paper.

Left column: “What I get paid for.”

Right column: “What I do even if nobody pays me.”

Now draw lines between the two columns.

Some connections will look absurd.

Good.

Absurd is often pre-revenue brilliance.

A corporate lawyer who loves stand-up comedy can build legal literacy content that actually engages.

A data analyst obsessed with fitness can create quantified wellness programs.

A school teacher fascinated by gaming can design experiential learning modules.

The money is not in abandoning your first hand.

It is in choreographing both.

 

The Real Risk

The real risk is not failure.

It is arriving at 60 with an overdeveloped dominant hand and a withered creative one.

Balance is not spiritual jargon. It is strategic design.

Your second hand might not replace your first.

But it can diversify your income, your identity, and your joy.

And sometimes, quietly, it becomes the main act.

 

Some Provoke Takeaways, If I May?

  1. Audit your unused strengths. List skills people compliment you on but you dismiss.
  2. Prototype small. Start a newsletter, a weekend workshop, a digital product, a pilot community.
  3. Bridge, do not leap. Let your current profession fund your experimentation.
  4. Look for intersections. Income hides at the crossroads of skills.
  5. Build in public. Visibility converts passion into possibility.

You were not designed to be one dimensional.

You have two hands.

So use them.

One to make a living.

The other to make a life.

And occasionally, let them collaborate to make a legend.

 

Time to unclench the fist. Open both palms. Create.

 

PS: On a completely different note,I am delighted to share that my other blog SOHB(State Of The Heart Branding) Story is now a Podcast as wellYou can access it on these links below:

The Laws That Separate Brands From Movements

 

Below are 25 State of the Heart Branding Laws designed as doctrine-level statements for the SOHB(State Of The Heart Branding) Story movement. They are short, sharp, and philosophical.

 

Think of them less as tips and more as branding physics.

1

Brands built only in the mind compete on price. Brands built in the heart compete on meaning.

2

Authenticity cannot be manufactured. It can only be discovered.

3

The founder’s life is the first chapter of the brand story.

4

People remember emotions long after they forget campaigns.

5

Attention can be bought. Affection must be earned.

6

A brand becomes powerful the moment it starts standing for something.

7

Every unforgettable brand begins as a personal conviction.

8

Brands that try to please everyone eventually mean nothing.

9

The opposite of love in branding is not hate. It is indifference.

10

Brand strategy without emotional truth is just decoration.

11

When a brand finds its moral center, clarity becomes effortless.

12

The most magnetic brands are built around a belief, not a benefit.

13

Brand equity grows fastest when courage exceeds caution.

14

Movements are simply brands with moral energy.

15

People do not follow brands. They follow conviction.

16

The stronger the founder’s belief, the stronger the brand’s gravity.

17

A brand becomes timeless the moment it stops chasing trends.

18

Differentiation begins where imitation ends.

19

A brand without a point of view is just a logo.

20

Meaning is the ultimate competitive advantage.

21

The most powerful brands do not shout. They resonate.

22

Culture amplifies brands that already carry emotional truth.

23

The future belongs to brands that move hearts, not just markets.

24

State of the Heart branding begins where marketing comfort ends.

25

The brands that will own tomorrow are the ones brave enough to feel today.

 

If your brand’s goal is to occupy real estate in people’s hearts, here’s the trifecta that you might want to consider:-

1. Brands That Move Hearts Move Markets

2. Stop Marketing. Start Meaning.

3. Don’t Just Be Seen. Be Felt.

 

PS: On a completely different note, I am delighted to share that SOHB(State Of The Heart Branding) Story is now a Podcast as well. You can access it on these links below:

The Best Things in Your Life Knocked Softly. You Called It Coincidence

 

Stop Waiting for the Neon Sign. It’s Not Coming.

 

Nobody told Ratan Tata that buying a crumbling British car brand called Jaguar would become one of India’s most audacious business pivots. There was no thunderclap. No divine memo. Just a quiet, almost reluctant “let’s see what this could be.”

 

That’s the thing nobody warns you about.

 

The problem with “hell yes or no” — Derek Sivers famously seductive idea — is that it assumes the best things in your life show up on a eight horse carriage, carrying balloons, with a brass band behind them. That clarity is the currency of significance. That your gut will send you a push notification when something matters.

 

It mostly doesn’t.

 

What actually happens is the thing that changes your life looks, at first, suspiciously like nothing.

 

Howard Schultz didn’t walk into a Milan espresso bar and hear angels. He just noticed something warm about how Italians gathered around coffee. The certainty came after the curiosity. Years after. They called it The Third Place. We started calling it Starbucks.

 

Butterflies don’t follow plans. They follow nectar. Maybe we should too

 

Which brings me to butterflies.

 

Butterflies don’t plan routes. They follow nectar — one bloom, then another, then another that wasn’t in any flight plan. What looks like wandering is the navigation. The path emerges through the following, not the knowing.

 

Though, I must add here that we’ve been sold the opposite story. We’re told that decisive people feel decisive before they decide. That the greats knew. We’ve reverse-engineered their confidence from their outcomes and mistaken the ending for the beginning.

 

A.R. Rahman sat with quiet experiments in his head for years before Roja exploded onto the world. Sudha Murthy almost didn’t send that now-legendary postcard to Telco calling out their gender bias. The quiet almost won. Almost.

 

History’s Quiet Beginnings

 

Some of the most transformative ideas in the world started as hesitant “maybes.”

 

When Steve Jobs first visited Xerox PARC and saw the graphical interface, he didn’t experience a thunderbolt. What he saw was a rough prototype that most people at Xerox had already dismissed.

 

But Jobs lingered.

 

That lingering curiosity eventually became the Apple Macintosh.

 

Not a Hell Yes. A slow-burning fascination.

 

The Danger of Binary Thinking

Hell Yes or No” thinking is efficient.

 

But life rarely operates in binaries.

 

Many breakthroughs begin in the third territory.

 

Not yes.
Not no.

 

But interesting.

 

That middle space is where exploration lives.

 

Consider the story of Amitabh Bachchan.

 

When he entered cinema, he was rejected repeatedly. His voice was considered unsuitable for radio.

 

There was no industry consensus shouting “Hell Yes.”

 

Yet his persistence quietly reshaped Indian cinema.

 

Sometimes the world needs time to catch up to an idea.

 

The Hidden Cost of Certainty

 

When leaders demand only “Hell Yes” moments, something subtle dies. Curiosity.

 

Because curiosity rarely arrives with confidence.

 

It arrives with questions.

 

What if?

Why not?

Let’s try.

 

Some of the most interesting ventures in the world began this way.

 

The founders of Airbnb were not convinced they were building a global hospitality revolution.

 

They were just trying to pay rent.

 

But curiosity kept the door open long enough for something remarkable to enter.

 

A Better Decision Filter

Instead of asking only: “Is this a Hell Yes?”

Try three quieter questions:

1. Is there nectar here?
Does this spark curiosity or fascination?

2. What is the smallest experiment I can run?
Butterflies sample flowers. They don’t buy the garden.

3. Would ignoring this make me regretful later?

Regret is often the shadow of unexplored curiosity.

 

So what do you actually do with this?

 

One: Start treating whispers as data. When something keeps returning to your mind uninvited — not screaming, just hovering — that’s signal, not noise. Track it. A week of noticing beats a lifetime of waiting for certainty.

 

Two: Lower the stakes of the first step. The “hell yes or no” framework creates a binary that paralyzes. Replace it with “hell yes, no, or I’ll spend 90 minutes finding out.” Most life-changing decisions were really just slightly curious afternoons that compounded.

 

Three: Audit your “almosts.” The thing you almost signed up for. The person you almost called back. The side project you almost started. Somewhere in that graveyard is your next real thing. Go back. Not all of them deserve resurrection — but one might.

 

The loudest things in your life are usually the least interesting. Notifications. Arguments. Ambitions borrowed from someone else’s highlight reel.

 

The quietest things — a recurring dream, a skill you keep circling, a conversation that somehow keeps finding you — those are writing you a letter. In very small handwriting.

 

You don’t need a hell yes. You need to lean in and actually read it.

 

PS: On a completely different noteI am delighted to share that my other blog SOHB(State Of The Heart Branding) Story is now a Podcast as wellYou can access it on these links below:

Your brand’s most powerful weapon could also be its biggest liability

Fear Is a Feeling Too: The Ethics of UFP

A mother in Chennai watches an insurance commercial. A father in Chicago does the same. Different continents. Same tightening in the chest.

Cut to another screen.

A baby shampoo ad. Foam. Laughter. A promise of “no tears.” Shoulders soften.

Both ads are doing the same thing. They are not selling policies or pH balance. They are selling feelings.

Fifteen or so years ago at ISD Global, we heart crafted this concept and branded it as UFP: Unique Feelings Proposition. While the world obsessed over USP, the rational claim, we focused on the visceral imprint. USP answers “Why you?” UFP answers “How will I feel because of you?”

Insurance frightens you. Baby shampoo reassures you. Both are UFPs.

The uncomfortable question is this: Are both ethical?

The razor-edge ethics of emotional branding

This is where UFPs aren’t just feelings—they’re atomic warheads. Research from neuro-marketing pioneers like Gerald Zaltman (Harvard) shows emotions drive 95% of buying decisions. But here’s the gut-punch: The most potent UFP? Relief from fear. A 2023 Journal of Consumer Psychology study confirms it—fear spikes cortisol, relief floods dopamine. Brands hijacking this? Pure rocket fuel. And pure peril.

The Ethical Bloodbath: Inspiration vs. Manipulation

When does “inspiring” someone to be a better parent become “manipulating” them into buying snake oil?Let’s look at the PolicyBazaar backlash. Their UFP was supposed to be “Responsibility.” But the feeling they broadcast was “Guilt and Shame.” The audience didn’t feel relieved; they felt violated. They felt the manipulation. Because the feeling wasn’t true to the brand’s soul—it was a shortcut to a quick sale .

Contrast that with a masterstroke in ethical UFP: Hyundai during the 2008 financial crisis. While the world was paralyzed by fear of losing their jobs and their cars, Hyundai launched the Assurance Program. They didn’t sell you on horsepower. They sold you on the feeling that if you lost your job, you could return the car without ruining your credit. They met fear with empathy, not just incentives .That is the difference between a transaction and a relationship.

The UFP Litmus Test

So, how do you know if your brand is healing a wound or just picking at the scab? For 15 years, ISD Global has argued that a UFP must be rooted in Brand Truth, not Brand Gimmick. Emotion AI is now sophisticated enough to read our micro-expressions . Marketers can now tweak campaigns in real-time to exploit our deepest insecurities. Just because you can trigger a fear response doesn’t mean you should.

The line is simple: Are you making the consumer feel capable, or are you making them feel broken?

Manipulation says: “You are incomplete without me. Buy this or you will fail.”

Inspiration says: “You are already amazing. Let me give you a tool to feel even better.”

The Relief Economy

Behavioural science gives us a blunt truth. Humans are loss averse. According to Daniel Kahneman’s work on prospect theory, losses loom larger than gains. Fear is neurologically sticky. Relief from fear releases dopamine. That release is powerful. Addictive, even.

This is why the most potent emotional lever in branding is not joy. It is relief.

Look at Life Insurance Corporation of India campaigns in the early 2000s. Stark visuals of uncertainty followed by the comfort of “Zindagi ke saath bhi, zindagi ke baad bhi.” Fear of instability, followed by relief.

Globally, Allianz has often dramatized risk scenarios before positioning itself as the safety net. The architecture is consistent. Trigger vulnerability. Offer sanctuary.

Now contrast that with Johnson & Johnson baby products in India. The UFP is gentleness. The emotional journey is not from fear to relief. It is from care to trust.

Different emotional arcs. Same strategic intent.

The Thin Ethical Line

Fear based branding crosses into manipulation when three things happen:

  1. The fear is exaggerated beyond realistic probability.
  2. The solution is positioned as exclusive salvation.
  3. The consumer is deprived of agency.

Consider certain global cybersecurity ads that imply apocalypse without their software. Or fairness cream ads in India from a decade ago that weaponized social insecurity before regulatory pushback reshaped the narrative. The UFP there was not aspiration. It was inadequacy.

On the other side, there are brands like Tata Trusts that address sanitation or healthcare gaps without sensationalism. The emotion evoked is concern, but also collective responsibility. The viewer is invited to participate, not panic.

Ethical emotional branding informs. It does not intimidate. It empowers. It does not entrap.

The UFP vs USP Divide

USP is transactional. UFP is transformational.

USP says: 2 percent lower premium. UFP says: Sleep better at night.

USP says: Tear free formula. UFP says: You are a good parent.

The danger lies in forgetting that feelings are not decorative. They are directional. They shape belief systems, cultural norms, even public behaviour.

During the pandemic, some brands amplified anxiety to drive urgency. Others like Amul used topical humour to diffuse collective stress. Same crisis. Radically different UFP choices.

Which one strengthened long term trust?

Research from Edelman’s Trust Barometer repeatedly shows that trust is now a primary buying filter across demographics. Trust is cumulative. Fear is combustible. Use too much of it, and the brand may win the quarter but lose the decade.

The ISD Global Ethical Brand Score

At SOHB Story, we believe every brand must audit its emotional footprint. Here is a distilled version of the ISD Global Ethical Brand Score. Ask yourself:

  1. Does our communication amplify fear beyond data?
  2. Is the relief we promise realistic?
  3. Are we presenting choice or cornering emotion?
  4. Would we show this ad to our own family with pride?
  5. Is our UFP aligned to a larger social good?
  6. Are we reinforcing harmful stereotypes?
  7. Does our narrative build long term trust?
  8. Are we transparent about limitations?
  9. Would this emotion still feel appropriate ten years from now?
  10. Are we creating courage or dependency?

Score yourself brutally.

Because the most powerful emotional branding tool is also the sharpest blade in the drawer.

As We Close, A Subtle Provocation

At ISD Global, our work over the past decade and a half has revolved around decoding and designing UFPs that elevate rather than exploit. The conversations we are now having with progressive brands are not about louder claims. They are about cleaner consciences.

Fear is a feeling too. But so are dignity, confidence, belonging and hope.

The future belongs to brands that choose wisely.

And before your next campaign, take the 10 question ISD Global Ethical Brand Score Test shared above 👆.

PS: On a completely different note, I am delighted to share that my other blog SOHB(State Of The Heart Branding) Story is now a Podcast as well. You can access it on these links below:

YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@SOHBStory/videos

Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/episode/3POSy0dixh5r7TjOFgfC4e

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/reel/DT8D70FDWms/?igsh=MWc4enNzaXBhaHQzOA==

Amazon: https://music.amazon.com/podcasts/ab0afb48-e3d2-4cf7-8279-7392d97d1bcd/episodes/509a93a3-6da3-48bb-b812-b34354ce8edf/the-curiosity-flip-why-uncertainty-can-be-your-unfair-advantage-candid-sohb-story-with-raj-kamble

Are You Painting the Possible or Polishing the Predictable?

 

Before you get to work, it’s worth deciding which hat you’re being asked to wear… pursuing the possible or optimizing the certain.

 

Let’s start with a funeral. Not to be morbid, but to make a point.

 

In the summer of 2017, the Indian Railways—that 170-year-old behemoth of British-era engineering—did something unthinkable. They cancelled 500 trains. Not because of a strike, not because of a monsoon fury, but because they were choosing to.

 

For decades, the mandate was simple: Run on time. Optimize the coal, optimize the tracks, optimize the schedules. The Indian Railways wore the “Optimizer’s Hat” so well that it became synonymous with the organization itself. But in 2017, they realized that to make way for the “Possible”—high-speed corridors, dedicated freight lines, a future that didn’t look like 1853—they had to burn the old timetable.

 

They temporarily stopped optimizing the certain to start pursuing the possible.

 

Most of us don’t have the luxury of cancelling 500 trains. But every single morning, when we walk into that office, open that laptop, or take that call, we face the same dilemma. And tragically, 99% of us reach for the wrong hat.

 

Pursuing the possible. Or optimizing the certain?

These are not the same game. Not even close cousins. They are fundamentally different species of thinking — and confusing one for the other is how brilliant people spend six months perfecting something that should never have existed in the first place.

 

Some Food For Torque

 

Most execs are hat-blind, mistaking motion for momentum. You’re in a huddle, handed a “disrupt supply chain” brief. Is it possible pursuit—like Elon Musk’s 2008 Tesla gamble, Starman-ing a roadster into space to mock Detroit’s dinosaurs? Or certain optimization, like Indra Nooyi at PepsiCo, who recalibrated Frito-Lay’s salt grams to dodge obesity lawsuits while juicing margins 20%? Wrong hat, and your “innovation” flops into mediocrity.

 

Rarefied Air: The Global & The Desi

 

Look at Spotify. They don’t just throw engineers into a room. They formalize the madness with their “Squad” model. But more importantly, they have a concept of “Missionaries” (Possibilists) versus “Mercenaries” (Optimizers). Mercenaries build what they’re told; missionaries pursue a vision. When Spotify decides to disrupt the podcast industry, they don’t ask their payment gateway team (Optimizers) to do it. They create a separate tribe of Possibilists. They separate the hats.

 

Closer home, look at Zoho. While the SaaS world was busy optimizing the “growth at all costs” model (chasing valuation certainties), Sridhar Vembu was pursuing the possible in rural Tenkasi. He took off the hat of the “Global CEO” and put on the hat of the “Rural Innovation Evangelist.” He is optimizing for sustainability and talent distribution, not just quarterly profits. It looks inefficient to the Optimizer. It looks like the future to the Possibilist.

 

Before you get to work, it’s worth deciding which hat you’re being asked to wear

 

The Optimizer is a beautiful creature. Precise. Efficient. Ruthlessly good at squeezing the last drop of performance from what already works. Maruti Suzuki did this for decades — not by reinventing the car, but by making the affordable car so absurdly reliable that an entire nation trusted it with their lives and their salaries. Hat: Optimization. Mission accomplished.

 

The Explorer is a different beast entirely. Messy. Comfortable with being wrong. Willing to burn a map that’s no longer useful. Sonam Wangchuk — the real-world inspiration behind 3 Idiots — didn’t optimize education in Ladakh. He blew the premise up. He asked: what if learning wasn’t the problem, but the location of learning was? Result: SECMOL, a school powered by the sun, built by students, and run on radical curiosity. Hat: Possibility. Category created.

 

The catastrophe happens when you hand an Explorer’s brief to an Optimizer — or worse, when nobody tells the room which hat is on the table.

 

The Kodak (Un)moment

 

Eastman Kodak had 140,000 employees and invented the digital camera. They then handed it to optimizers. “How does this help us sell more film?” Wrong hat. Wrong game. Bankruptcy filed: 2012.

 

Meanwhile, out of the IIT Madras incubation cell in Chennai, KLN Sai Prasanth and his co-founders at Muse Wearables weren’t optimizing wearables — they were asking whether Indian bodies, with different health concerns and contexts, needed entirely different biosensors and form factors. Explorer hat. The result: the world’s first payment-enabled hybrid smartwatch, now selling across 70 countries — backed, delightfully, by none other than SS Rajamouli.

 

Offering a Diagnostic

 

If your meeting begins with: “Let’s improve conversion by 2%”
You’re optimizing the certain.

If it begins with: “What if our category didn’t exist?”
You’re pursuing the possible.

One is compound interest. The other is quantum leap.

 

The ‘Provoke’ Framework: The Hat Check

So, how do you decide which hat to wear before the daily grind seduces you into the wrong one? You need a “Hat Check.”

 

  1. The Morning Compass: Before you open your emails (the Optimizer’s favorite drug), ask: “What is the one problem today that, if solved, would make every other decision irrelevant?” If that problem is about efficiency, wear the Optimizer’s cap. If it’s about relevance or reinvention, grab the Possibilist’s fedora.

  2. The 80/20 Flip: Devote 80% of your energy to your job description (Optimizing the certain). But fiercely guard 20% of your time for your “Future Description” (Pursuing the possible). Google famously tried this with 20% time. It failed when they started optimizing that time. Protect it with your life.

3.The Funeral Test: Imagine your role or company died today. Would the obituary read, “It ran perfectly, on time, until the very end”? Or would it read, “It dared to go where nothing was certain”?

 

The Final Act

The Indian Railways tracks are clear again. The optimized trains are running. But they carved out space for the possible. That is the art.

 

You can’t wear both hats at once. They sit differently. One squeezes the brain for dopamine hits of checking boxes. The other expands it with the anxiety of the unknown.

 

Today, before you “get to work,” pause at the door. Look at the rack. Are you being paid to turn the crank, or are you being paid to imagine a new machine? Choose wisely. The world has plenty of optimizers. It’s starving for possibilists.

 

PS: On a completely different note, I am delighted to share that my other blog SOHB(State Of The Heart Branding) Story is now a Podcast as wellYou can access it on these links below:

YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@SOHBStory/videos

Spotifyhttps://open.spotify.com/episode/3POSy0dixh5r7TjOFgfC4e

Instagramhttps://www.instagram.com/reel/DT8D70FDWms/?igsh=MWc4enNzaXBhaHQzOA==

Amazon: https://music.amazon.com/podcasts/ab0afb48-e3d2-4cf7-8279-7392d97d1bcd/episodes/509a93a3-6da3-48bb-b812-b34354ce8edf/the-curiosity-flip-why-uncertainty-can-be-your-unfair-advantage-candid-sohb-story-with-raj-kamble

You rarely get a second chance to make a first impression

 

Will Rogers said it first. But brands — large and small, Indian and global — keep acting like they’ll get unlimited retakes.

 

They won’t.

 

Some science here, seldom articulated by brand marketers. Humans make brand judgments in approximately 50 milliseconds. That’s faster than a camera shutter. Faster than a blink. Faster than your brand strategist can say “holistic omni channel touchpoint ecosystem.” In that sliver of a moment, the brain has already filed your brand under Trust or Trash. The rest is just expensive confirmation.

 

The Japanese Konbini Secret That Brand Guardians Can Learn From

 

Walk into any 7-Eleven in Tokyo — they call them konbini — and notice something peculiar. The floor staff doesn’t just bow. They bow before you’re even at the counter. That pre-emptive act of respect, that micro-gesture of acknowledging your presence before you demand it — that IS the brand. Not the logo. Not the loyalty card. The bow.

 

First impressions aren’t about grand gestures. They’re about the precision of small ones.

 

The Airbnb Lesson They Buried in the Fine Print

 

In 2009, Airbnb was dying. Listings were terrible. Photos were blurry. And the first impression of the platform screamed “amateur hour.” Then Brian Chesky did something radical — he flew to New York, knocked on hosts’ doors, and paid for professional photography himself. Just like that. The listings looked human, warm, trustworthy. Bookings doubled in a week.

 

The product hadn’t changed. The price hadn’t changed. The first impression had.

 

In India, Paper Boat did something similarly brilliant. Before you tasted the drink, the packaging spoke to you in the language of nostalgia — hand-drawn fonts, childhood flavours, lines like “Drink and fly kites.” The first impression was emotional before it was commercial. You didn’t buy a beverage. You bought a memory.

 

That’s Heart Branding. The brand enters through the feeling, not the feature.

 

The Dutch “Un-Sexy” Factory (The Antidote to Bullshit)

 

Everyone is trying to look sexier than they are. Filters. Airbrushing. Fake reviews. But then you have Dutch clothing brand G-Star Raw. When they launched their “Raw for the Oceans” denim line made from recycled ocean plastic, they didn’t show happy models on a pristine beach.They collaborated with Bionic Yarn and Pharrell Williams, but the visual first impression wasn’t a music video. It was a massive, 3D-printed sculpture of a whale made from the actual plastic collected from the ocean, placed in the middle of a city square. The first impression wasn’t “looks good.” It was “Whoa, what the hell is that? Why is that here?” It was confrontational. It was honest about the problem. They walked into the party with a dead whale, and everyone wanted to know why. That’s a first impression with gravity.

 

India’s “Jugaad” Cathedral (The Sacred Restroom)

 

Let’s come home. A lot of us think “First Impression” for a brand means a logo. A billboard. A tagline. We are wrong.I want you to think about the Sikh practice of the Langar. Specifically, the Golden Temple in Amritsar. Before you see the glittering gold, before you hear the kirtan, what’s the first physical touchpoint for a weary traveler? It’s often the massive complex. But the real masterstroke? The sheer scale and pristine cleanliness of the community kitchen and the water. You walk in, and you are served food by a stranger. You see the massive efficiency of the volunteers. The first impression isn’t just the visual beauty; it’s the sensory overload of service and equality.

 

It’s a reminder that for an Indian brand, the first impression might not be your website. It might be how fast your receptionist smiles. It might be the cleanliness of your washroom. Yes. If you want to test the soul of an Indian company, don’t look at their balance sheet. Ask to use their bathroom. If it’s filthy, they don’t respect you. The first impression died at the door handle.

 

The “Invisible” Ink (The Anti-Impression)

 

This is the most dangerous one. The first impression is often not what you do, but what you don’t do.Take the Japanese approach to customer service. Specifically, the Omotenashi culture. When you enter a high-end ryokan (traditional inn), they don’t swarm you. They don’t scream “WELCOME!” in your face. They might bow silently, take your shoes, and let the sound of the wind through the bamboo or the view of the perfectly raked garden hit you first.The first impression is silence. It’s space. In a chaotic, noisy world, walking into a brand that offers a bubble of silence is shocking. It’s a rare first impression.

 

The Most Fascinating First Impression Wars Happening Right Now — And We’re Living Inside Them

We are witnessing, in real time, the most intense first-impression battle in the history of branding. And the combatants aren’t consumer goods companies. They’re not airlines or banks or D2C darlings selling turmeric lattes.

 

They’re AI brands. And they are fighting for the exact same 50 milliseconds Rajan the cobbler has been winning for 40 years.

 

Think about it.

 

ChatGPT arrived like a thunderclap in November 2022 and made its first impression not with a logo or a jingle — but with a blank white text box. That’s it. Just a cursor blinking in the dark, whispering “ask me anything.” The genius of that first impression was its radical absence of instruction. No tutorial. No onboarding carousel. Just you and the void. And the world leaned in. 180 million users in two years. The first impression was: this thing respects your intelligence enough to not explain itself.

 

Claude — full disclosure, that’s the Anthropic model you may be reading this on right now — made a quieter, more considered entrance. The first impression wasn’t awe. It was trust. Thoughtful answers. Nuanced pushback. A brand personality that felt less like a search engine on steroids and more like that brilliant friend who actually reads before they respond. The first impression Claude made was: I’m not trying to impress you. I’m trying to help you. In a category screaming for attention, understatement became the differentiator.

 

DeepSeek exploded onto the scene in early 2025 like a plot twist nobody saw coming — a Chinese AI that outperformed American giants at a fraction of the cost. Its first impression was disruptive by default: the establishment is overcharging you and we just proved it. Wall Street panicked. Silicon Valley sweated. DeepSeek didn’t need a brand campaign. The first impression was the story — and the story was a thunderbolt.

 

Perplexity made its first impression by refusing to be ChatGPT. Where others gave you answers, Perplexity gave you sources. Its opening message to the world was: “Don’t trust us blindly. Here’s where we got this.” In an era of AI hallucinations and misinformation anxiety, that first impression of radical transparency became its brand superpower.

 

Gemini — Google’s offering — had the most complicated first impression of the lot. It carried the weight of the world’s most trusted search brand into a category where trust was still being invented. And then stumbled early with factual errors in its launch demo, reminding the world that first impressions from heritage brands can actually be harder to recover from, because the expectation is higher. When you walk in wearing the Google badge, you’d better be extraordinary. Ordinary is unforgivable.

 

Here’s the SOHB Story insight hiding in plain sight across all these AI brands:

 

Every single one of them — billion-dollar, venture-backed, PhD-powered — lives or dies on the same principle. The first feeling. The first exchange. The first moment of “oh, so THIS is who you are.”

 

The AI category is the most brutally honest stress-test of first impression branding ever conducted — because users switch between these tools in the same afternoon. They’re not loyal. They’re explorers. And whichever AI brand makes them feel something in that first exchange — seen, surprised, respected, delighted — gets the return visit.

 

The brands that think features win the first impression battle are already losing it.

 

Hello Is a Strategy: Why Your First Move Is Your Loudest

There is a moment.

Before the ad. Before the pitch deck. Before the brand film swells into orchestral persuasion.

A moment so small it can hide inside a blink.

And in that blink, the verdict is already signed.

Neuroscientists say we form first impressions in milliseconds. Markets do it faster. A landing page loads 0.3 seconds slower and desire evaporates. A store smells wrong and the brand is quietly sentenced. A founder fumbles the first sentence and confidence leaks out of the room like invisible steam.

 

First impressions are not introductions. They are imprints.

 

Consider Apple. In 2007, the iPhone did not begin with specifications. It began with theatre. A black turtleneck silhouette, a pause calibrated like a heartbeat, and the line: “Today, Apple is going to reinvent the phone.” The first impression was not product. It was prophecy.

 

Or look at Tanishq in India. When it re-entered the market in the 2000s, it did not shout about gold purity alone. It redesigned stores to feel like living rooms of trust, lit with warmth instead of glitter. The first impression was safety in a category clouded by suspicion. Sales followed belief.

 

In Denmark, the toy brand LEGO once faced near bankruptcy. Its comeback began not with new bricks but with rediscovering its first promise: creativity in the hands of a child. Its retail spaces became playgrounds, not product shelves. The first impression shifted from “toy store” to “imagination studio.”

 

First impressions are architecture. Emotional architecture. And sometimes they are rescue ropes.

 

Your brand is being judged long before your narrative begins

 

Your receptionist’s tone. Your email subject line. Your LinkedIn banner. Your packaging’s first crackle. Even the silence before your keynote.

 

In India, Vistara entered a hyper-competitive sky not by screaming discounts, but by choreographing courtesy. Cabin crew greetings felt rehearsed like classical ragas. The first impression was dignity. It attracted a tribe that wanted calm over chaos.

 

Meanwhile, in Japan, Muji stores greet you with quiet minimalism. No aggressive signage. No noise. The first impression whispers competence. And whispering, in a loud world, is a power move.

 

So what do we do with this fragile, ferocious truth? Here are five takeaways most brands might be missing:

 

1. Design the Pre-First Impression. Google yourself. Audit your search results, your Wikipedia void, your Glassdoor murmurs. The first impression often happens before the meeting is confirmed. Reputation now precedes presence.

2. Engineer Sensory Signatures. Singapore Airlines is known for a distinct cabin fragrance. Why? Because memory is scent-sticky. Ask yourself: what does your brand sound like, smell like, feel like in the first 30 seconds?

3. Script the First Sentence. Founders improvise too much. Craft your opening line the way playwrights craft Act One. A single sentence can tilt a room toward curiosity or indifference.

4. Create Micro-Theatre. Unboxing is not logistics. It is performance. D2C brands in India like boAt turned packaging into swagger. The box arrives like a wink, not a carton.

5. Build Trust Before Awe. Awe attracts. Trust converts. The first impression must answer the silent question: “Am I safe here?” Before you dazzle, reassure.

 

You rarely get a second chance to make a first impression

But you always get infinite chances to design it.

Brands obsess over reinvention. Few obsess over arrival.

The world does not wait for your second draft. It reacts to your first breath.

And in that breath lies either hesitation or history.

So the next time you launch, enter a room, unveil a product, publish a thought, or simply say hello, remember this:

The market is not watching your campaign. It is sensing your character.

Blink. Decided. Done.

Make it count.

PS: On a completely different note, I am delighted to share that my other blog SOHB(State Of The Heart Branding) Story is now a Podcast as well. You can access it on these links below:

YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@SOHBStory/videos

Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/episode/3POSy0dixh5r7TjOFgfC4e

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/reel/DT8D70FDWms/?igsh=MWc4enNzaXBhaHQzOA==

Amazon: https://music.amazon.com/podcasts/ab0afb48-e3d2-4cf7-8279-7392d97d1bcd/episodes/509a93a3-6da3-48bb-b812-b34354ce8edf/the-curiosity-flip-why-uncertainty-can-be-your-unfair-advantage-candid-sohb-story-with-raj-kamble

Sunk Costs: When Yesterday Hijacks Tomorrow

 

What if the smartest move on the table… is the one that looks like surrender?

 

Sit with that. Uncomfortably. Good.

 

There’s a Japanese soldier named Hiroo Onoda who kept fighting in the Philippine jungle until 1974. World War II had ended in 1945. Twenty-nine years of ambushes, survival, and fierce loyalty — to a war that nobody else remembered fighting. When his former commanding officer flew in personally to relieve him of duty, Onoda wept.

 

He wasn’t crazy. He was committed. And that’s the terrifying part. Because commitment, without the courage to audit reality, is just a more dignified word for stubbornness wearing a uniform.

 

The Sunk Cost Fallacy

 

Yes, economists have a name for this affliction. Sunk Cost Fallacy. The deeply irrational, deeply human tendency to keep pouring resources — time, money, emotion, identity — into something because of what you’ve already invested, not because of what it can actually deliver.

 

The money is gone. The time is gone. The decision that seemed logical then is costing you now. And yet. And yet. You stay. Because leaving feels like losing. Because someone might call it quitting.

 

The Most Expensive Line Item in Your Life Is Not on Your Balance Sheet

 

There is a ghost that attends every board meeting.

 

It does not speak.
It does not vote.
But it whispers.

 

We’ve already invested so much.

 

That whisper has bankrupted empires, prolonged wars, sunk companies and, more quietly, imprisoned brilliant people in unlived lives.

 

As stated earlier, it’s called the Sunk Cost Fallacy. And it is the most polite saboteur in business. And so too in life.

 

We stay in projects because we’ve spent too much to stop.
We stay in careers because we’ve studied too long to pivot.
We stay in partnerships because we’ve endured too much to walk away.

 

Money gone. Time gone. Energy gone.
And yet we insist on throwing tomorrow into yesterday’s furnace.

 

Let me take you somewhere uncomfortable.

 

Here’s some air-tight lessons from  Concorde, Kingfisher and Swiss Air 

 

Pie in the sky? We have heard that. We have a few here.

 

Concorde undoubtedly was an engineering marvel. Britain and France knew by the mid-1970s that Concorde was commercially unviable. Knew it. Had the numbers. Had the reports. They flew it until 2003. Why? Because they’d already spent the equivalent of billions. Because stopping felt like admitting the whole glorious, expensive dream was a mistake. Prestige was expensive. Pride was more expensive. The aircraft was a marvel. The economics were not.

 

And the admission — delayed by decades — cost them far more than the original error ever would have.

 

Closer home, Vijay Mallya didn’t sink because he dreamed big with Kingfisher Airlines. He sank because he kept funding yesterday’s dream with tomorrow’s money — long after every signal said this story ends badly. The sunk cost of a lifestyle, a legacy, an identity he couldn’t separate from the airline. The plane went down. He kept boarding.

 

Quitting is under-rated. Here comes one more.

 

Globally, we marvel at the “Icarus Syndrome” in tech. In 2001, Swissair was the pride of Europe. When they realized their “Hunter Strategy” of buying up smaller airlines was hemorrhaging cash, did they pivot? No. They poured billions into “Project Hunter” to save face. They flew straight into the ground, taking 26,000 jobs with them. That wasn’t a business failure; that was a refusal to admit that the fuel for the journey was already burned.

 

Not a rosy picture alas

Global giants are not immune. When Kodak invented the digital camera in 1975, it shelved its own invention. Why? Because film was too profitable to disrupt. Billions in infrastructure became invisible handcuffs. The future was postponed to protect the past.

 

History does not punish failure. It punishes attachment.

 

But this is not only about corporations with glossy annual reports.

 

It is about you.

 

The MBA who secretly wants to write.
The founder who knows the product has no pulse but keeps it on life support because investors are watching.
The executive who dreads Monday but clings to the designation because ten years is “too much to waste.”

 

You don’t get tomorrow over again. Our tomorrows are finite inventory.

 

Time is not refundable.
Only re-allocatable.

 

One of the most under-celebrated strategic skills is quitting. Not impulsive quitting. Not petulant quitting.

 

Strategic quitting.

 

The Japanese have a word, “kaizen,” for continuous improvement. We need one for continuous subtraction. For the discipline of walking away from what no longer deserves your future.

 

 

Consider this

In the early 2000s, IBM exited the personal computer business, selling it to Lenovo. For decades, PCs defined IBM’s identity. Yet it chose relevance over nostalgia. It chose the future over familiarity. Today IBM is a different beast altogether.

 

That is not abandonment.
That is evolution.

 

The sunk cost fallacy thrives on three seductions

  1. Ego – “If I quit, I admit I was wrong.”
  2. Fear – “What if walking away proves I failed?”
  3. Optics – “What will people say?”

 

But here is the deeper truth.

 

Quitting is not about escaping effort.
It is about protecting potential.

 

The chance to build something you are proud of, with a team you are eager to work with, is not guaranteed. It is a privilege. And ignoring that privilege because you are loyal to yesterday’s decisions is an act of self-sabotage.

 

We romanticise grit. We worship perseverance. We lionise staying power.

 

Yet sometimes the bravest sentence in business is:
“This no longer deserves my life.”

 

Imagine if we evaluated projects not by what we have invested, but by what they still promise.

 

If this opportunity came to you today, fresh and unburdened, would you choose it again?

 

If the answer is no, your strategy is nostalgia.

 

In closing, let me offer three provocations

Audit your attachments. List the top five commitments in your professional life. Ask: If I were starting today, would I sign up for this again?

Reward intelligent exits. In your organisation, publicly recognise smart shutdowns, not just heroic endurance.

Reclaim your calendar. Your schedule is the clearest evidence of what you refuse to quit.

 

Tomorrow is not an extension of yesterday. It is a negotiation.

 

And sunk costs do not deserve voting rights in that negotiation.

 

You cannot retrieve the money spent.
You cannot reclaim the years invested.
But you can decide what gets your next decade.

 

The world does not run out of opportunity.
It runs out of courage.

 

And sometimes courage looks like this:

 

Closing the door gently.
Thanking the lesson.
Walking forward lighter.

 

Quitting is underrated. You bet! . Don’t let nostalgia run your P&L.

 

PS: On a completely different note, I am delighted to share that my other blog SOHB(State Of The Heart Branding) Story is now a Podcast as wellYou can access it on these links below:

YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@SOHBStory/videos

Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/episode/3POSy0dixh5r7TjOFgfC4e

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/reel/DT8D70FDWms/?igsh=MWc4enNzaXBhaHQzOA==

Amazon: https://music.amazon.com/podcasts/ab0afb48-e3d2-4cf7-8279-7392d97d1bcd/episodes/509a93a3-6da3-48bb-b812-b34354ce8edf/the-curiosity-flip-why-uncertainty-can-be-your-unfair-advantage-candid-sohb-story-with-raj-kamble

 

 

Burnout is what happens when you confuse a symphony for a one-man band

 

You are not what you do. And your career is not your life’s mission. It’s just the fund.

 

We’ve been marinating in the kool-aid of “hustle porn” and “passion economies” for so long, we’ve forgotten a primal, glaring truth. We treat our lives like lean, mean, corporate PowerPoint decks—optimized, metric-driven, relentlessly linear. We speak of “human capital” and “resource allocation” for our own damn days. How tragically, hilariously absurd.

 

If this breaks the myth we have been carrying all along, so be it.

 

We worship the myth of the self-made. The genius in the garage. The warrior who needs no army. It’s seductive, clean, and a complete fabrication. The overlooked truth? Nothing of lasting meaning was ever built in permanent solitude.Not a family, not a masterpiece, not a legacy, not a joy.

 

We’ve optimized for individual efficiency and wondered why we feel like lonely, high-performing robots. It’s because we’ve outsourced our humanity.

 

What if the next breakthrough isn’t in our next solo deep work block, but in the messy, collaborative, beer or wine-spilling conversation we’re avoiding?

 

Work isn’t supposed to complete you. Neither is life.

 

You’re doing it wrong. And so am I. We’ve been chasing the wrong dragon—convinced that balance is the holy grail, that hustle equals worth, that “finding your passion” is the answer.

 

The Completion Myth

 

Oprah Winfrey said something recently that must have made the productivity gurus choke. At a speaking event, she admitted she’s tired of the “have it all” narrative. Not because it’s hard—but because it’s a con. “The idea that you’re supposed to be killing it in every area simultaneously,” she said, “is the fastest route to killing yourself.”

 

Coming from the woman who built an empire on self-improvement, that’s not just refreshing. It’s revolutionary.

 

We’ve been led up the garden path: that the right job, the right relationship, the right morning routine will finally make us whole. Like we are broken IKEA furniture waiting for the missing screw.

 

Reality: You’re not incomplete. You’re just human.

 

Human beings are works in progress that mistakenly think they are the final draft until they turn to the page called living.

 

The Permission We Have Been Waiting For

 

It’s okay to be ordinary. Not everything needs to scale. Not every hobby needs to become a side hustle. Your weekend doesn’t require optimization. Your Tuesdays (or any day for that matter) can be forgettable.

 

The overlooked( under admitted) truth? Most of life happens in the margins we’ve been taught to dismiss.

 

The coffee that’s just okay. The colleague who’s merely pleasant. The Saturday afternoon where absolutely nothing Instagram-worthy occurs. This isn’t the stuff we’re failing at while waiting for real life to begin.

 

This is it.

 

And once you stop waiting for the extraordinary, you notice something peculiar: the ordinary becomes quietly extraordinary. Not because it changed, but because you finally showed up for it.

 

The Much Needed Sucker Punch, Probably

 

The hustle merchants won’t tell you this (bad for business): Your worth isn’t measured in output. Your legacy isn’t your LinkedIn profile. And that nagging feeling that you should be doing more, being more, achieving more?

 

That’s not ambition talking. That’s advertising.

 

We’ve confused activity with aliveness, consumption with contentment, achievement with arrival. We’re so busy becoming that we’ve forgotten how to be.

 

Actionable Alchemy: Rewrite Your Rules

Ditch dogma. Here’s your irreverent playbook:

  1. Whitespace Wednesdays: No screens. Walk barefoot. Journal one “hell no” from last week. Oprah swears by it—her “sacred no’s” built empires.
  2. Sloth Sprint: Work 4 hours deep, 2 hours dumb. Cheetah? Nah. Become the tortoise with turbo—read fiction mid-day. Watch ideas explode.
  3. Enough Audit: Quarterly, ask: “Does this pay my soul’s rent?” Fire clients, hobbies, habits that don’t. Weightage: One rich pause > 100 frantic hours.
  4. Oprah Hack: Daily “whitespace minute”—eyes closed, breathe like life’s not chasing you. Builds gravitas gravity.

 

Implement now. Your future self (less divorced, more alive) thanks you.

 

Might not seem obvious but let us not miss the wood for the trees. Work serves life, not the reverse. Quit hamster-wheeling. Embrace the sloth within. Provoke change—or stay gloriously average.

 

Work is just weather.Life is the climate.

 

The fact that you showed up for life is enough. Not your Q4 deliverables. Not your closed deals. Your presence. Your messy, glorious, un-optimized being. The system needs your output to function. But your soul requires your attention to flourish.

 

On a completely different note, I am pleased to share that my blog SOHB(State Of The Heart Branding) Story is now a Podcast as well. You can access it any of these links below:

You Tube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A69e6hyBJM0

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/reel/DU_GIZBDYdB/?igsh=MXRiNndjamJnY240MQ==

Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/episode/7BRAoK9o42wulO0xeLXFrM?si=sRwGfybhTQao0BnzLzEjag&nd=1&dlsi=f1b585a03fc2475b

Amazon Music : https://music.amazon.com/podcasts/ab0afb48-e3d2-4cf7-8279-7392d97d1bcd/episodes/509a93a3-6da3-48bb-b812-b34354ce8edf/the-curiosity-flip-why-uncertainty-can-be-your-unfair-advantage-candid-sohb-story-with-raj-kamble

 

 

Dear Fellow Traveller of the Uncommon Path

 

Some conversations don’t just inform you — they recalibrate you.

 

My chat with Raj Kamble — founder of Famous Innovations & Director of Miami Ad School India, global creative force, and one of the most genuinely alive thinkers in the branding universe — for SOHB(State Of The Heart Branding) Story is exactly that kind of conversation.

We didn’t do the usual podcast dance. No rehearsed wisdoms. No safe harbour answers. Instead, we wandered — gloriously — into the territory of Why does some work stop you cold while the rest just slides off? Into the story of a kid from Mumbai who chose creativity as a compass when the world was handing out maps. Into what it means to build a brand that people don’t just buy but belong to.

If branding is theatre, this episode walks backstage.If branding is commerce, this episode asks about conscience.If branding is noise, this episode turns up the signal.

 

In our conversation, we journeyed through the looking glass of creativity.

 

We explored:

The secret sauce behind campaigns that don’t just go viral, but go vital.

 

Why the “State Of The Heart” is the only metric that truly matters in a data-saturated world.

 

The courage it takes to craft work that feels like “you” in an industry obsessed with fitting in.

 

This isn’t just a podcast episode; it’s a masterclass in creative rebellion. It’s a reminder that in the business of attention, the heart is the only intelligent target.

 

If you care about creativity that scales without shrinking its soul… If you believe brands must feel before they sell… If you are building something that scares you just enough…If you’re ready to fall in love with branding all over again, the links below are waiting for you.

 

SOHB(State Of The Heart Branding) Story Podcast is available now on YouTube | Spotify | Amazon- links below

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A69e6hyBJM0

https://open.spotify.com/episode/7BRAoK9o42wulO0xeLXFrM?si=sRwGfybhTQao0BnzLzEjag&nd=1&dlsi=f1b585a03fc2475b

https://music.amazon.com/podcasts/ab0afb48-e3d2-4cf7-8279-7392d97d1bcd/episodes/509a93a3-6da3-48bb-b812-b34354ce8edf/the-curiosity-flip-why-uncertainty-can-be-your-unfair-advantage-candid-sohb-story-with-raj-kamble

 

This conversation is your companion.

The SOHB(State of The Heart Branding) Story — where the most important metric is always the one that can’t be measured.

 

Welcome to UFP(Unique Feelings Proposition) territory.

Are We Entertaining Ourselves to Oblivion?

 

It is 2 AM, you’re numb thumbing your phone, drooling over a tiger cub’s yawn remix. Adorable overload, eh? Meanwhile, real tigers are ghosting the planet. We’ve swapped blood-soaked savannas for pixelated pablum, and oblivion’s our dip shit destination.

 

Games, OTT, Social feeds, porn, news( fake and otherwise)- the flywheel of consumption for entertainment is always turning.

 

Our ancestors survived world wars, black outs etc on stale bread, left over idlis and grit. We can’t survive a 30-second ad without reaching for the skip button.

 

Let that sink in.

 

We’ve engineered paradise and called it a feed. We’ve weaponized boredom into a business model worth trillions. And somewhere between the third reel and the seventy-fourth notification, we stopped asking the most dangerous question of all: What if entertainment isn’t entertaining us anymore—what if it’s erasing us?

 

Let us reconcile to the reality that gropes us- We’re not bored; we’re boring ourselves into the grave. Neil Postman’s Amusing Ourselves to Death dropkicked truth in ’85: Huxley’s happy pills trump Orwell’s jackboots every time. And the 2026 update? TikTok’s your sleazy pusher, Netflix your porn-for-the-soul, Insta your ego’s toxic ex. Classic cesspool? Roman Colosseum reboot—sweaty influencers throat-punching for likes, our “thumbs up” the new coliseum cheer. Bread and circuses? Shove it: Try kale smoothies and cancel-culture circle-jerks.

 

Why does that brain-rot clip hijack your soul harder than your own damn life? its a no-brainer- Dopamine —the eternal itch.

 

Our brain’s a rigged casino. Swipe = lever-pull. Ping = payout. Data dumps it: 150 checks a day, dopamine frying our gray matter like bacon in hell. Zuckerberg’s rats, us—chasing ghost highs while life bleeds out: chats ghosted, dreams deep-sixed, crises chuckled off. Barbenheimer 2023? Pink doll bullshit vs. nuke porn—billions buzzed, zero brains bruised. Check our corpse-reflection: zombie stare, soul on snooze.

 

If distraction was a drug, we’d all be overdose headlines. Overdosing on irrelevance mind you. And, not surprisingly—you’re the lead. Hence, you can bleed!

 

Victims? Yeah, that’s us—doom-scrolling drones in this digital coliseum. But inspiration ignites when you flip the script.

 

Remedy 1?: Audit your feeds . Unfollow the noise; curate for ignition. Swap cat videos for creators who provoke you—podcasts dissecting empires, books that bruise egos.

 

Remedy 2?: Hunt analog dopamine. Read a physical book till pages yellow. Walk sans AirPods—let birdsong hijack your neurons. Journal the ugly truths; build something tangible—a side hustle, a garden, a grudge-settling manifesto. Science backs it: Deep work floods you with sustained serotonin, not fleeting hits. The perpetually questing brain? Rewire it for mastery, not memes.

 

What if oblivion’s not the endgame, but your wake-up call?

 

Final provocation: Entertainment’s no sin—it’s the excess that’s euthanizing your edge. Step off the carousel. Dance back to reality: raw, risky, alive. Oblivion’s optional. Choose vivacity.

 

Stating The Obvious

 

Every app on your phone is a slot machine in disguise. Pull down to refresh. Ding. New like. Ding. Someone commented. Ding ding ding.

The average person checks their phone 144 times a day. That’s not behavior. That’s captivity with a data plan.

Instagram stories vanish in 24 hours, training you that everything—including your existence—is disposable content.

The truth that is hard to reconcile to: You’re not the customer. You’re the product. And business is booming.

 

The Oblivion Express: All Aboard?

 

Remember when people had hobbies? When conversations didn’t die the moment someone said, “Let me Google that”? When families ate dinner without six phones forming a electronic séance circle around the butter chicken?

We don’t anymore.

We’ve traded substance for streams, depth for doom-scrolling, genuine connection for comment sections where nuance goes to die. The poet Huxley warned us—we’d drown not in what we hate, but in what we love. He just didn’t know it would come with a subscribe button.

Consider this: The average adult now has an attention span shorter than a goldfish. By now, common knowledge, yes. Eight seconds. That’s less time than it takes to read this sentence twice. We’ve become a civilization of hummingbirds on methamphetamines, flitting from stimulus to stimulus, never landing, never savoring, never being.

 

The Victims Speak(If Anyone Is Listening?)

Walk into any coffee shop. Count the conversations happening versus the heads bent in supplication to glowing rectangles. The ratio will terrify you.

We’re raising a generation that thinks FOMO is a medical condition and viral fame is a career path. Kids who can’t sit through a family dinner but can binge-watch 17 episodes of a series about people pretending to be stranded on an island.

The cruelest irony? We’re more “connected” than ever—and more alone than in human history.

 

The Wake-Up Call (If You’re Still Conscious)

But here’s where the story offers an opportunity to pivot, where the victims reclaim their narrative: You are not your screen time. That number tracking your digital decay? It’s data, not destiny.

Start here—implement “sacred hours” where technology doesn’t exist. No negotiations. Your ancestors managed entire empires without push notifications. You can manage breakfast.

Read a book that doesn’t link to anything. Have a conversation that doesn’t end in someone saying “That reminds me of a meme.” Create something—anything—that doesn’t require an audience or validation or likes.

 

The revolution is analog. It’s messy. It’s slow. It’s uncomfortable. It’s real.

 

In Closing, Some Food For Torque?

Entertainment was supposed to be the dessert of life. We’ve made it the entire meal, and we’re dying of malnutrition while calling it abundance.

Your attention is the last truly scarce resource on Earth. Billionaires are strip-mining it while you watch cat videos.

So here’s your choice: keep scrolling toward oblivion, or look up.

The world is still here. Waiting. Weird. Wonderful. Wholly unfiltered.

But only if you’re brave enough to press pause.

PS: My other blog SOHB(State Of The Heart Branding) Storyis now a Podcast as well. You can access it on these links below:

YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@SOHBStory/videos

Spotifyhttps://open.spotify.com/episode/3POSy0dixh5r7TjOFgfC4e

Instagramhttps://www.instagram.com/reel/DT8D70FDWms/?igsh=MWc4enNzaXBhaHQzOA==