
Hridya Sharma
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Why Urgency Culture Steals Your Time: Recognize the Signs
Urgency culture makes it difficult to distinguish between what is and is not important in a world that is becoming more fast-paced and hyperconnected and rewards immediacy. Dealing with many last-minute requests, unreasonable workloads or deadlines, and the need to be reachable even after hours are all examples of this at work. Overextending in relationships, constantly checking social media for updates out of a fear of missing out, and answering calls and texts right away—even when it's inconvenient—are examples of urgency culture in the personal sphere. We can better understand why so many people report having anxiety and worry issues if we consider the idea that we live in a culture of urgency.
By Hridya Sharma12 months ago in Journal
A Love Letter To All My Fellow Elder Daughters
It has been a deep appreciation for the colour black as I have grown into my early twenties, a time where I am working to look put together and put together. Something is appealing about the mysterious nature it carries, the unpredictability it exudes, and the elegance it commands. Sometimes I wish I could be black, to have both its allure and strength. But then I wrestle with this inner question: am I a solitary black cat or a friendly golden retriever? And so, that is the dilemma I face: which of the many selves am I when with whom? It's a hard fight, for hyper-independence and perfectionism seem deeply a part of who I am.
By Hridya Sharma12 months ago in Writers
The Art of Surrender- My Quest To Finally Let Go
People arrive and depart as they see fit. Learned this phrase when? I didn't completely understand at the time how someone could mean so much and then disappear the next second. When I went through it myself, it was a concept I found difficult to understand or accept because I had formed strong attachments to some people. I had the mental impression that I needed to take action to change the current situation. Anything that would allow them to stay, even if it meant causing me inconvenience. I was unaware that I had fallen into this trap. I put myself in a trap that made me vacillate back and forth.
By Hridya Sharmaabout a year ago in Writers
The Need for Safeguarding Free Press Rights- Through The Lens Of a Brave Voice That Got Silenced
Mukesh Chandrakar was born in Basaguda, Chhattisgarh, and spent his formative years navigating the challenges of the local state-Maoist conflict. Growing up in such a tumultuous environment must have shaped his perspective and experiences in profound ways. Following the Salwa Judum violence, his family was relocated to a government shelter. A close friend claims that to support himself, Mukesh worked at a variety of jobs, such as selling mahua liquor and fixing bikes. Mukesh was a freelance journalist who worked with local media outlets and reported from the ground for well-known organizations like NDTV, News18, and Sahara before starting his YouTube channel Bastar Junction.
By Hridya Sharmaabout a year ago in Humans
My Hardest Moments: Letting Go and Finding Peace
People arrive and depart as they see fit. Learned this phrase when? I didn't completely understand at the time how someone could mean so much and then disappear the next second. When I went through it myself, it was a concept I found difficult to understand or accept because I had formed strong attachments to some people. I had the mental impression that I needed to take action to change the current situation. Anything that would allow them to stay, even if it meant causing me inconvenience. I was unaware that I had fallen into this trap. I put myself in a trap that made me vacillate back and forth.
By Hridya Sharmaabout a year ago in Confessions
Why Do We Find The Convoluted Intricacy So Interesting?
In films and television series, do you ever find yourself supporting the antagonist? You know, the morally ambiguous characters who are neither entirely good nor entirely bad? They are extremely fascinating because they are the ones who fall in the middle. We all have a soft spot for them, let's face it. You're sick of categorizing characters as heroes or villains. That's precisely why grey characters were created, and their popularity has skyrocketed. But have you ever wondered why we find these fictional characters so appealing? We will examine these grey characters' specifics as well as the psychology of why people like them in this article.
By Hridya Sharmaabout a year ago in Geeks
Vriyana - The yarn of eternal beauty that in its light found its strength
To all the dreamers, this one's for you. To the ones who cry under the tap, to the ones who wish upon the stars, keep hoping. You never know when the universe will listen to your whispers.
By Hridya Sharmaabout a year ago in Fiction
The socioeconomics of humanness
The socioeconomics of humanness lies in the beauty of balancing the aspects of togetherness and isolation. In a world where life coincides with the duality of forces, oscillating between the forces of light and dark, beauty and hate, love and hatred, birth and death, humans are the most endearing and detrimental beings ever to exist. The prowess of intellect and communication, with the stellar mind that created the strides of evolution and lapses of civilization, is undeniably the most striking aspect of what makes humans the most resilient beings of them all. Yet we fall into the pits of downfall, where we forget the radiance of hope, the enclasp of a mother’s warmth, the depth of kindness, the trance that we fall into from time to time although harrowing, is what makes us human. We have to go through a phase of failure and aloofness to fully embrace the goodness of bliss and the peonies of gratitude that embellish the strides of our existential realm.
By Hridya Sharmaabout a year ago in Humans











