Originally posted by: FBIr3port
I hope people read this long post. I loved it and hence sharing
Sharing something here Bringing out true flavor of what India is … a write up on India beautifully scripted by Ajit Sivaram ;
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India isn't a country. It's a beautiful contradiction.
The world looks at us and sees chaos.
We look at the same scene and see home.
They call it noise. We call it life.
They see poverty. We see resilience.
They see crowds. We see community.
This isn't blind patriotism.
It's the complexity of loving something that refuses to be simple.
India breaks every rule of what should work. Our traffic shouldn't move, but it does. Our diversity should divide us, but it doesn't. Our democracy should collapse under its own weight, but it stands. Somehow, impossibly, magnificently - it all works. Not perfectly. Not always efficiently. But it works.
Foreigners arrive with clipboards and theories. They measure our GDP, our sanitation, our systems. They leave confused when they see joy in places their metrics said should have none. They can't understand why the same people who complain about corruption will defend India fiercely to an outsider.
Because they're looking for consistency. And India isn't consistent. It's contradictory.
We worship goddesses but struggle with women's safety. We invented zero but can't fix our potholes. We send rockets to Mars but still have villages without electricity. We touch feet in the morning and party at night. We're ancient and infant, spiritual and material, frustrating and fulfilling - all at once.
The secret that outsiders miss is this: Indians don't love India despite its problems. We love it with its problems. The chaos is part of the charm. The struggle is part of the story. The imperfection is part of the beauty.
This isn't resignation. It's a different kind of hope. Not the Western kind that demands immediate solutions, but the Eastern kind that understands time moves in cycles, not lines. That problems aren't just to be fixed but to be lived through. That joy isn't what happens when suffering ends, but what happens while you're waiting.
We don't need the world to understand India.
We just need them to accept that some things can't be understood, only experienced.
Because India isn't a place you analyze.
It's a place you surrender to.
And in that surrender, somehow, you find yourself.
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