The Rooms We Carry: Where Memory Meets the Beginning

There are places within us we rarely visit with awareness. Not because they are hidden, but because they are familiar. We call them memories.

But memories are not just fragments of the past.
They are rooms quiet, sealed spaces within the architecture of our being. Rooms we have entered, lived in, and then gently or sometimes abruptly closed behind us.

Each memory is a doorway.

And when we open one, we don’t just revisit what happened. We step into who we were.
The emotions, the perceptions, the meanings we gave to that moment they are all still there, waiting.

Unchanged.

What if these rooms are not simply archives of yesterday, but gateways?

Gateways not only to the past,
but to the origin of how we began to see, feel, and understand life.

Because somewhere in those early rooms
in the first experiences of love, pain, rejection, belonging we began writing the story of who we are.

And that story didn’t just stay in the past.
It became the lens through which we experience the present.

We often believe we are reacting to now.
But in truth, we are often responding from a room we entered long ago.

A tone of voice reminds us of something.
A silence feels familiar.
A fear rises without explanation.

And suddenly, without realizing it,
we are no longer here. We are there.

But here’s the quiet truth most of us overlook:

You are not trapped in those rooms.

You are the one who holds the key.

When you revisit a memory with awareness not judgment, not resistance you begin to see something new.

You see the child who felt unheard.
The version of you who did the best they could.
The moment where meaning was created  not necessarily truth.

And in that moment of awareness, something shifts. The room is no longer locked.

Maybe this is what healing really is.

Not erasing the past.
Not forcing ourselves to move on.

But gently walking back into those rooms, turning on the light  and realizing we are no longer the same person who first entered them.
And then something even deeper unfolds.

You begin to understand that the “beginning” you are searching for is not somewhere behind you.

It is happening now.

Because every time you look at a memory differently, you rewrite its meaning.

And every time you rewrite its meaning,
you change your present.

And when your present changes,  your future follows.

So maybe now is the beginning.

Not because the past disappears,
but because you are no longer bound by the way you once understood it.

The rooms are still there.

But they no longer define you.

They simply become part of the path that led you back to yourself.

Believe in Miracles: The Step That Changes Everything

There was a time I believed life was something to be controlled, managed, and carefully planned.
That if I just made the “right” decisions, I could avoid pain, avoid uncertainty, avoid breaking.

But life doesn’t work that way.

Somewhere along the journey, I began to understand something deeper that maybe life is not asking us to control it but to trust it.

To believe in miracles.

Not the kind we wait for outside of us,
but the kind that quietly unfold within us
when we choose to take one honest step forward.

Just one step.

Because that’s all it takes.

The moment you stop resisting your own heart,
the moment you soften instead of fight,
the moment you surrender not in defeat, but in trust, something shifts.

What once felt like unbearable pain begins to reveal itself differently.

Not as punishment.
Not as something to escape.
But as a doorway.

We spend so much of our lives trying to run from pain, trying to fix it, silence it, outrun it.

But what if the very step you take to escape it
leads you somewhere unexpected?

To an edge.
A threshold.
A space between who you were
and who you are becoming.

And standing at that edge feels terrifying.

Because it asks you to let go.
Of certainty.
Of control.
Of the familiar version of yourself.

But it is also where transformation begins.

Where you realise that the pain you feared
was not there to break you,  it was there to open you.

To strip away what was never truly you.
To guide you back to yourself.

This is the miracle we rarely talk about.

That healing doesn’t always look gentle.
Growth doesn’t always feel comfortable.
And the path forward is not always clear.

But if you can take that one step,  even while trembling, even while unsure life meets you there.

And slowly, what once felt like an ending
begins to feel like a beginning.

So maybe believing in miracles
is not about waiting for something extraordinary to happen.

Maybe it’s about trusting that
every painful moment, every breaking point, every edge holds within it the possibility of becoming.

And all you have to do is take that step.


The Battlefield Within: Krishna’s Wisdom on Fighting What Lives Inside Us


There is a moment in the Mahabharata that feels timeless. A moment where the battlefield of Kurukshetra pauses not because the war has ended, but because a deeper war is about to begin.

Arjuna, the greatest warrior, stands in the middle of the battlefield, his bow slipping from his hands. His body trembles. His mind clouds. His heart collapses under the weight of what he is about to face.

And then, beside him, is Krishna—not just as a charioteer, but as a guide, a mirror, a voice of truth.

Krishna does not begin by teaching Arjuna how to defeat his enemies.

He begins by showing him something far more confronting:

“Your real battle is not out there… it is within you.”

The War Beneath the War:  What overwhelmed Arjuna was not the army in front of him.
It was what was rising inside him:

Doubt: “What if I am wrong?”

Attachment: “These are my people  how can I fight them?”

Ego: “What will this make me?”

Fear: “What if I lose everything?”


This is the war most of us are silently fighting.

Not with weapons.
But with thoughts.
Not on a battlefield.
But within our own minds.

The Enemies That Live Within:

Krishna’s teaching cuts through illusion with clarity: The real enemies are internal. Doubt weakens your ability to act. It keeps you standing still when life is asking you to move forward.

Attachment binds you not just to people, but to expectations, identities, and outcomes. It makes you hold on even when something has already ended.

Ego distorts your perception. It convinces you that everything is personal every rejection, every loss, every failure.

And fear: Fear magnifies all of them.
It convinces you that you are not ready, not capable, not enough.

Krishna is not asking Arjuna to suppress these.
He is asking him to see them clearly. Because what you can see, you can rise above.


The Shift: From Reaction to Awareness:

The most powerful transformation in the Bhagavad Gita is not external victory.
It is inner clarity.

Krishna invites Arjuna into awareness:

To act without being paralysed by outcomes

To detach without disconnecting from love

To move forward without needing certainty


This is not about becoming emotionless.
It is about becoming anchored.

Because when you are anchored within,
the chaos outside loses its power over you.


Your Kurukshetra: You may not be standing in a war field, but life has its own Kurukshetra for you: The moment you choose yourself over approval. The moment you walk away from what no longer aligns.  The moment you stop shrinking to fit into someone else’s expectations.  The moment you face your truth, even when it is uncomfortable.  These are your battles.

And just like Arjuna, you may feel overwhelmed.

You may question yourself.
You may hesitate.
You may want to walk away.


Krishna’s message is not about avoiding the battle. It is about understanding it. You are not here to defeat the world. You are here to transcend what holds you back within yourself.

When you face your doubt,
when you loosen your attachment,
when you soften your ego,
when you move through your fear
you don’t just fight the battle,  you evolve through it.

Closing Reflection:

The battlefield was never just Kurukshetra.
It is your mind.
Your heart.
Your inner world.

And perhaps the real question is not:

“What am I fighting out there?”

But

“What inside me is asking to be seen, understood, and released?”

Because the moment you win that battle,
everything outside begins to shift.

Clarity Is Power: Preparing Your Mind for Life’s Unfolding

There comes a point in life when we realise that it’s not the chaos outside that overwhelms us,
it’s the noise within.

For the longest time, many of us move through life reacting  to people, to situations, to emotions we don’t fully understand. We rush into decisions, speak from hurt, act from fear
and later wonder why life feels so heavy.

But what if the real shift is not outside us
but in learning how to hold ourselves differently within?

A Clear Head Is Not an Empty Mind: Having a clear head doesn’t mean having no thoughts,
It means not being controlled by every thought that arises.

It means learning to pause to observe to create a little space between what happens and how you respond.

Because in that space, lies your power.

When your mind is cluttered with past wounds, fears of the future, or the need to prove something,  your decisions become reactions.

But when your mind is clear, your decisions become intentional. And intention changes everything.

Preparation Is Not Control: It’s Awareness

Life will always be unpredictable.
No amount of planning can prevent every challenge, every disappointment, every unexpected turn. But preparation is not about controlling life. It is about strengthening yourself to meet life.

Preparing yourself means:

Understanding your emotional patterns

Recognising your triggers

Building inner stability

Knowing what truly matters to you


So when life presents you with choices,  you are not choosing from fear or confusion but  you are choosing from awareness.


Thoughtful Decisions Create Aligned Lives:

Every decision you make either brings you closer to yourself or further away.
When your head is unclear, you may choose what feels urgent.
When your mind is grounded, you choose what feels right.
Thoughtful decisions are not always the easiest ones.
They may require patience, discomfort, even letting go. But they carry a different energy
one of alignment, rather than impulse.

And over time, these decisions shape a life
that feels less like survival and more like truth.

The Practice of Inner Clarity: Clarity is not something you achieve once and keep forever.
It is something you practice.

Some gentle ways to return to clarity:

Sitting in silence, even if just for a few minutes

Journaling your thoughts instead of carrying them

Asking yourself: “What am I really feeling right now?”

Slowing down before making decisions

Letting go of the need to react immediately

Clarity grows in stillness.

And in today’s world, stillness is a choice.

Coming Back to Yourself: At the heart of it all,
a clear mind is simply a mind that has come back home to the present moment.
Not lost in yesterday.
Not anxious about tomorrow.

Just here.

Because when you are here,
you can see clearly.
And when you can see clearly,
you can choose wisely.
And when you choose wisely
you begin to create a life
that is not driven by circumstances
but guided by consciousness.

Maybe life isn’t asking you to have all the answers.
Maybe it’s simply asking you to meet it
with clarity, awareness, and presence.

Because from there,  everything changes.

You Are Not Stuck, You Are Patterned

There was a time in my life when I believed being strong meant holding everything together,
not breaking, not stopping, just moving forward no matter what.

But deep inside, there were beliefs I wasn’t even aware of,
Beliefs about not being enough.
About having to prove myself.
About carrying more than I ever needed to.

And life, in its own quiet way, brought me to a pause.
Not to break me,  but to show me.

To show me that I didn’t need to fight myself anymore,  I needed to understand myself.

That healing is not about becoming someone new, it’s about gently letting go of who we thought we had to be.

And step by step breath by breath
I began to unlearn, to release, and to return to myself.

And if there’s one thing I’ve learned, it’s this:

You are not stuck.
You are patterned.
And patterns,  can be changed.


Closing Reflectio: What patterns are you ready to release?



Doing vs Being: The Moment I Stopped Fixing Life and Started Living It

When Life Stops Being a Task and Becomes an Experience. For most of my life, I believed that love, relationships, and even peace could be achieved through effort. If something was broken, I believed it could be fixed. If someone was unhappy, I believed I could do more to make things right. If life became difficult, I believed I simply needed to try harder.


I lived in what psychology calls the “doing mode.”
In this mode, the mind is constantly trying to solve problems, close gaps, improve situations, and control outcomes. It is the mode that helps us build careers, manage responsibilities, and achieve goals. It pushes us to act, to plan, and to change what is not working.


But the mind has a hidden trap in this mode.
When we live only in doing mode, life becomes a constant project that needs fixing. The mind keeps searching for what is wrong, what is missing, and what needs to be corrected.


Instead of living life, we start managing life.
Psychologists explain that the brain is naturally wired for problem-solving. It scans for threats, mistakes, and unfinished business. While this ability helps us survive, it can also keep us stuck in cycles of worry, rumination, and emotional exhaustion.


And that is exactly what happened to me. There came a time in my life when no amount of effort could fix what had already broken. No amount of explanation could change someone’s perception. No amount of love could repair what another person had already decided to destroy.


For a long time, I kept trying.Trying to save what was slipping away. Trying to correct misunderstandings. Trying to hold together something that was already falling apart.
The more I tried to do, the more I felt drained, confused, and lost.


It took deep pain for me to understand a profound truth, not everything in life can be solved through doing. Some wounds require something entirely different. They require being.


In psychology and mindfulness practices, there is another state of mind called “being mode.” Unlike doing mode, being mode is not about fixing, controlling, or achieving. It is about simply experiencing the present moment as it is.


Being mode invites us to pause. To observe our thoughts without fighting them. To feel our emotions without trying to suppress them.
To sit with life instead of constantly trying to change it.


Spiritually, many ancient traditions have spoken about this state for centuries. They teach that the deepest peace does not come from constant striving, but from presence and awareness.
A flower does not struggle to bloom.
A river does not force its flow.
The sun does not try to shine.
They simply are.


Human beings, however, often forget this natural rhythm. We become so busy doing life that we forget how to be in life. For me, the shift did not happen overnight. It happened slowly, through reflection, silence, and healing. I began learning to sit with my pain instead of fighting it. I started accepting that some answers would never come.
I allowed life to unfold without constantly trying to control it. And in that space of being, something unexpected happened.
Peace started returning.


Not because life suddenly became perfect, but because I stopped exhausting myself trying to control every outcome. I began to understand that life needs both modes. We need doing mode to act, create, and move forward. But we need being mode to stay connected to ourselves.


Without being, doing becomes endless struggle.
Without doing, being can become passivity.
The wisdom lies in knowing when to act and when to simply sit with life. Sometimes the most powerful step forward is not another action.
Sometimes the most powerful step forward is a moment of stillness. Because in that quiet space, when the mind finally stops trying to fix everything, we rediscover something we had forgotten along the way.


We rediscover ourselves.

From Reaction to Awareness: Understanding and Healing Emotional Triggers

There are moments in life when something small happens,  a tone, a word, a silence,  and suddenly, the reaction within us feels too big for the situation.

We tell ourselves, “Why am I reacting like this?”
But the truth is,  we are not reacting to the present alone. We are responding to a memory.

What Is an Emotional Trigger?

An emotional trigger is not just an event.
It is an activation of something unfinished within us.

A look that feels like rejection.
A silence that feels like abandonment.
A disagreement that feels like betrayal.

The moment is current, but the emotion is historical.

The Mind Remembers, But the Body Feels:  Our mind may forget details, but our body remembers feelings. Somewhere within us,
experiences from the past are stored not as stories, but as sensations, emotions, and meanings. And when something in the present resembles that past, the emotional brain, especially the amygdala reacts instantly.

It does not ask: “Is this safe now?”
It assumes: “This feels familiar. This must be danger.” And just like that, we are no longer here. We are there.

We Are Not Overreacting, We Are Remembering:

What looks like an overreaction is often an unprocessed emotional memory resurfacing.

The anger may belong to a time we felt unheard.
The fear may belong to a time we felt unsafe.
The hurt may belong to a time we felt unseen.

And in that moment, we are not just adults responding, we are also the younger versions of ourselves still carrying what was never resolved.


The Parts of Us That Speak Through Triggers:

Within us live many “parts” the confident one, the wounded one, the protector, the pleaser.

In moments of triggering, it is often the wounded part that rises. A part that once felt:

dismissed

misunderstood

silenced

This perspective is beautifully explored in approaches like Internal Family Systems,
where every reaction is seen as a voice within us asking to be heard. Not to control us, but to protect us.


What If Triggers Are Not the Enemy?

We often try to:

suppress our reactions

judge our emotions

“fix” ourselves quickly

But what if triggers are not problems to eliminate, but messages to understand?

They point to:

wounds that still need compassion

needs that were never met

truths that were never spoken


A trigger is not here to break you. It is here to show you something that still lives within you.

From Reaction to Awareness:

Healing does not begin by stopping the trigger.
It begins by pausing within it.

In that moment, instead of asking:
“What is wrong with me?”

Try asking:

“What is this feeling?”

“When have I felt this before?”

“What part of me is asking for attention right now?”

And slowly, something shifts.

You move from:

reaction → reflection

overwhelm → awareness

pain → understanding


The Gentle Work of Healing;

Healing is not about becoming someone who is never triggered. It is about becoming someone who: understands their triggers,  responds with awareness,  holds their own emotions with compassion. 

It is about reminding yourself: “This feeling is real,  but it is not all from now.”

A Closing Reflection:  Every trigger carries two stories: the one happening in the present, and the one echoing from the past

When we learn to tell the difference, we reclaim our power. Because then, we are no longer controlled by our reactions,  we are guided by our awareness. And in that awareness, healing quietly begins.

Between Two Names, I Found Myself

The day I chose my name was the day I began choosing myself:

There was a time when I believed a name was just something given to you, something you carry without question, like an inheritance you never chose.

Sunita was that name for me.
It held my childhood, my family, my fears, my conditioning, my roles. It carried the echoes of expectations, the weight of being seen a certain way, and the silent stories I lived through.

Sunita knew how to survive.
She learned to adjust, to hold, to endure.

And then came a moment that changed something quietly, yet deeply.

The day I got married.

A day where the world expects you to take on new roles, new responsibilities, sometimes even a new identity.But in that moment, I made a choice, one that seemed small on the outside, yet profound within.

I chose to be addressed as Saira.

I didn’t fully understand it then.
There were no deep explanations, no long reflections.

Just a feeling.

A knowing.

Saira didn’t come from the outside.
She wasn’t given, she was felt.
She felt like breath after being held too long.
Like softness where there was once rigidity.
Like a quiet courage that didn’t need permission.

Looking back now, I see it clearly.

At a time when identities are often handed over,
I claimed mine.

Saira is not separate from Sunita.
She is not an escape.
She is not a replacement.

She is an emergence.

For a long time, I wondered if becoming meant leaving something behind. If growth required rejecting who I once was. But healing doesn’t work that way.

True healing is not about abandoning who you were, it is about making space for who you are becoming, without erasing where you came from.

Today, I don’t stand as one or the other.

I stand as Saira-Sunita Jethnani.

A name that holds both the one who survived and the one who awakened. The one who learned through pain and the one who now chooses with awareness. The one shaped by the world and the one reshaping her inner world.

Sunita is my roots.
Saira is my wings.

And I no longer have to choose between grounding and flight.

Because I have learned,
I can be both.

And in being both,
I have finally come home to myself.


My Life, In This Moment

We often tell our life story as a sequence of past events what happened, who hurt us, what we lost, and what changed us. It becomes a timeline of pain, love, betrayal, and survival.

But what if our story is not in the past at all?
What if our story only exists in this moment,  in how we hold it?

My mother passed away  in 2018.
For a long time, this sentence felt like an ending heavy, final, and filled with absence.
But in this moment, when I sit with awareness, I notice something else.
I notice that her love did not leave. It lives quietly within me in the way I care, the way I feel, the way I soften.

My father passed away in 2022.
There was fear, distance, and also admiration.
And today, in this moment, I become aware that both the fear and the strength are still alive in me. Not as wounds alone, but as imprints shaping who I am becoming.

My husband betrayed me six years ago.
This was not just an event. It was a breaking of trust, identity, and the life I thought I had.
For years, I carried that story as pain.
But in this moment, I see something deeper,
I see the part of me that endured, the part that did not collapse, the part that is still here  breathing, aware.

There were moments I felt abandoned.
Moments I questioned my worth.
Moments I carried grief so heavy it felt like it would never lift.

But awareness changes the relationship with these moments.

In awareness, I am not the abandonment, I am the one noticing it.
I am not the unworthiness, I am the one observing the thought.
I am not the grief, I am the one holding it with gentleness.

And something shifts.

Life stops being a story of “what happened to me”
and becomes a living experience of
“what is moving through me right now.”

I see how I tried to stay strong for everyone.
How I held everything together, even when I was breaking inside.
And in this moment, I allow myself something new, the permission to rest, to feel, to not have to carry it all alone.

There were parts of me I lost along the way.
Or at least, it felt that way.
But maybe they were never truly lost,
maybe they were waiting for me to come back with awareness.

Because healing is not about fixing the past.
It is about changing how we meet it in the present.

Today, my story is not:
“I lost, I was hurt, I was broken.”

Today, my story is:
“I am here. I am aware. I am becoming.”

And in this moment, that is enough.

You Are Not Alone: The Power of Ancestral Strength Within You

We have been taught to believe that we are entirely self-made that life is shaped solely by our personal will, our focus, and our effort. That if we just try hard enough, stay disciplined enough, and remain committed to our goals, success will inevitably follow.

And when it doesn’t?

We begin looking for reasons.
We blame circumstances.
We blame people.
We blame the world.

And eventually, we turn that blame inward.

We question ourselves.
We doubt our worth.
We fall into a quiet cycle of frustration, despair, and hopelessness.

But what if this belief, that we are meant to do it all alone is incomplete?

Because the truth is: we are not isolated beings trying to carve a path from nothing. We are the continuation of a story.

Within us lives more than just our individual experiences. We carry our learnings, yes but also something far deeper. We carry the strength, the resilience, the struggles, and the survival of those who came before us.

We are not just like our parents.
In many ways, we are them extended through time.

We are our ancestors their courage, their endurance, their unspoken stories encoded within us, not just psychologically, but biologically. Their lives have shaped our responses, our instincts, our capacities to endure and to rise again.

And yet, in our pursuit of independence, many of us unknowingly disconnect from this immense source of support. We forget that we were never meant to stand alone.

When we reject our roots consciously or unconsciously we also distance ourselves from the very resources that can sustain us. Our strength becomes limited, our resilience fragmented.

But when we begin to acknowledge where we come from, When we allow ourselves to receive not just from life, but from those who gave us life something shifts.

We feel supported
We feel grounded
We feel stronger not because we are doing more, but because we are no longer doing it alone.

Stepping into our full power is not about becoming someone new. It is about remembering who and how many we truly are.