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This brings me back to the meaning of human life. What is it all about? I am no philosopher. I do not have an academic background nor am I deeply rooted in the space of a particular culture or religion. But, based on my personal experiences, I have come to conclude: everything ends. I live with the full realisation of the transience of things, of the impermanence of what we build —all the battles we wage to get through life, to succeed on various fronts, including professional and personal. All our lives, we are in the pursuit of money — creating wealth, building assets. We are ever eager to spread our wings for extraordinary achievements. There is a hunger to leave a legacy that bears our imprint. But one day it all ends. As if all we had been building were a bubble. The saying, that all of us come from the earth and will eventually disappear into it, holds so true.?
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Having immersed my dad’s ashes in the Ganga last year, I have now come back to my normal routine. But I have been wondering about what we actually achieve, build and save because, in the end, they don’t matter. Living in the world, we want to create comforts for ourselves. We also wish to be recognised for our individuality. We are preoccupied with the need to celebrate life. But, somewhere, when we take life too seriously — chasing our unending desires to get ahead and be on the top — the whole exercise becomes self-defeating. It starts taking a toll on the frontiers of our relationships. We get away from the beauty of slowness. We do not have adequate time to exhale. And, then, it is all over before we know it. We must realise that amid the incomprehensible vastness of the universe, we are merely a tiny speck of dust. We should not delude ourselves that we are the chosen ones. And that is the most precious learning my dad has left behind.?