From & To Sathish #7 - Page 120

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Posted: an hour ago

AN ADVICE FROM A SENIOR CITIZEN CURRENTLY VISITING THE US

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Dear friends,

We have been staying in Seattle, Washington, for the past two months. My wife was suffering from a severe respiratory issue when we left India. Considering her condition, we had brought an adequate supply of medicines with us. After using those medicines here in the US, she had almost recovered.

However, as our supply ran out, I became worried that her respiratory problem might recur during our trip. So, I asked my daughter to schedule an appointment with a pulmonologist (respiratory specialist) in Seattle.

But my daughter was informed that we could not see a specialist directly; we had to consult a general physician first. We were given an appointment for a week later—and that too, only via a video call.

We spoke to the doctor on the phone for about 10 minutes and explained the medications my wife had been using in India. He said he understood the issue and prescribed appropriate medicines, stating that we could pick them up from a pharmacy. However, when we inquired at the pharmacy, we were told the medicines were not immediately available and would take 4–5 days to arrive.

We finally received the medicines on the fifth day. Surprisingly, the medicines were manufactured by 'Cipla' and bore the label 'Made in India'. Even after a 50% discount through US medical insurance, we still had to pay an equivalent of ₹21,000. This means medicines costing just ₹2,500 in India cost a staggering ₹42,000 in the US.

It took us 12 days to obtain medicines here that are readily available at any pharmacy in India. A week later, we received a bill of $283 (approximately ₹23,000) for the doctor's consultation fee.

Consider yourselves to be fortunate to be living in India during your retirement years.

We often look abroad in search of a "good life." But if we pause to think... certain everyday conveniences—unavailable even to billionaires in London or New York—are easily accessible to the middle class in India.

Here are *7 examples* showing that even the life of a common person in our country is a **VIP lifestyle**:

*1 Data Democratization:*

While countries around the world spend over $50 (approx. ₹4,000) a month for basic internet, we enjoy high-speed 5G data for just ₹300. We have the cheapest data in the world! This is what has digitally transformed our economy.

*2 The "10-Minute" doorstep delivery:*

Run out of ginger for your tea or out of milk? Place an order on Blinkit, Zepto, or Swiggy Instamart, and the item is in your hands before the water even boils. In Europe, by contrast, you’d have to put on a coat and walk 15 minutes in the cold to a store—and you wouldn't be surprised to find it already closed.

*3 Instant Healthcare:*

Need to see a specialist? You can go straight to the hospital. Need a blood test? A lab technician comes to your home as early as 6 AM to collect the sample, and the report arrives on your WhatsApp by afternoon. We don't face the three-month waiting lists or the nightmare of "insurance approvals" common elsewhere even for trivial ailments.

*4 Human Support System:*

Having people to help with house cleaning, cooking, and driving isn't a luxury reserved only for the wealthy here; it is the backbone of middle-class life. It offers something incredibly valuable: it saves **TIME**.

*5 The UPI Revolution:*

From a ₹5 roadside tea to a ₹50,000 laptop—everything is just a scan away! No need for wallets, no excuses like "the card machine isn't working," and absolutely no transaction fees. In this regard, the rest of the world lags far behind us.

*6 *"Free" Little Joys:*

No matter which restaurant you visit, you get a glass of drinking water for free (whereas elsewhere, they’d charge you $5). There’s an ironing man / chai wallah right at the end of the street to take care of our instant needs. It is these little things that make life run so smoothly.

*7 Social Bonds (Social Safety Net):*

We don't live in a culture of legal notices and courts; we live in a culture of relationships. If we face a problem, a neighbor won't send a court notice—they’ll lovingly cook and send over some *khichdi*.

*The Bottom Line:*

India is not merely a country; it is a wonderful world filled with conveniences at every turn. While people in Western countries spend half their lives doing everything themselves—from mowing the lawn to plumbing (the DIY struggle)—in India, we have a service oriented lifestyle where we are constantly looked after.

Here, we aren't just surviving... there is a system that takes care of us at every moment!

*“This Indian Luxury"* – a reality that makes the rest of the world envious!

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