100 Blogs — And the Lady Who Taught Me How to Write

100 Blogs — And the Lady Who Taught Me How to Write

Today, I paused.
Not because I ran out of words —
but because I realised I had written 100 blogs.
A hundred thoughts. A hundred emotions.
A hundred moments where I chose to sit with what I felt and turn it into something meaningful.

When I started writing, I didn’t have a goal.
No target.
No audience in mind.
I only had one thing — a gentle nudge from someone who believed I could write,
even before I believed it myself.

Dr. Swati Lodha.
She didn’t teach me writing in the technical sense.

She taught me how to listen.
To my thoughts.
To my silences.

To the emotions I often brushed aside.
She showed me that writing isn’t about sounding perfect.

It’s about being honest.
About staying with a feeling long enough to understand it.
About allowing words to flow without forcing them.

She taught me that some thoughts don’t like being stored inside you.
They ask to be written.
Gently.
Honestly.
Without noise.
And so I wrote.
On days when I felt clear.

And on days when writing was the only way to make sense of the chaos inside.

Some blogs came from joy.
Some from confusion.
Some from silence.
Some from healing.

But every single one came from truth —
because that’s what she taught me to value most.

What surprises me today is not the number 100.

It’s the quiet messages that followed.
“Your words felt like mine.”
“This helped me breathe.”
“I didn’t know someone else felt this way too.”

That’s when I truly understood something she had shown me all along —

Writing isn’t about being a storyteller.
It’s about being a listener.
To life.
To emotions.
To moments that deserve to be acknowledged.
A hundred blogs later, I don’t feel accomplished.
I feel grateful.
Grateful that I stayed.
Grateful that I wrote.
Grateful that I listened.

And deeply grateful to the one who showed me the courage to do so.

Thank you, Dr. Swati Lodha,
for teaching me that words can heal,
that silence can speak,
and that writing, when done with honesty, becomes a form of service.

Here’s to many more thoughts.
Many more stories.

And many more moments of truth —
written with the courage you helped me find. 

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