I had a conversation this past weekend with someone I respect deeply. The kind of person who does not waste words, and never reaches for drama to make a point. He said something simple. The real graveyard is not a place of death. It is a place full of unfinished lives. Ideas that never … [Read more...]
Archives for January 2026
Leadership in the Age of AI Is a Systems Problem, Not a Skills Problem
Most conversations about AI in organizations still begin in the wrong place. They start with tools, platforms, or proficiency. What gets missed is the deeper shift already underway. AI is not simply a capability to acquire. It is a new participant in how decisions are formed, tested, and acted … [Read more...]
The Quiet Discipline of Updating Your Mind
Ottawa is cold today. Really cold. - 25 Celsius, yes you read it right ... minus 25 celcius. The kind of cold that makes you pause before stepping outside, even just for a moment. Mornings like this, settled into a warm chair by the window, have a way of slowing everything down. They create space … [Read more...]
Freedom Is Quiet Until You Lose It
Freedom of thought and action rarely announces itself. It does not arrive with fireworks or declarations. Most days, it sits quietly in the background of our lives, assumed, unexamined, almost invisible. And then one day you notice it has thinned. Not disappeared. Just narrowed. Your choices … [Read more...]
The Price of Carrying Someone Else’s Weight
There is a quiet mistake we make when dealing with bullies, especially the polished ones. The ones who wear confidence well, who speak in the language of strength, decisiveness, even leadership. We tell ourselves that if we cooperate long enough, accommodate skillfully, celebrate loudly enough, the … [Read more...]
Years Don’t Teach. Attention Does.
Age has a way of borrowing authority it did not always earn. In many cultures around the world, especially in the Eastern world, and most definitely in my Punjabi culture, age arrives with an invisible crown. The older you are, the more weight your words are expected to carry. You are listened to … [Read more...]
Emotional Sovereignty: The Quiet Power of Not Letting the World Own You
Most of us think our emotions are reactions. Something happens, we feel something, end of story. It sounds reasonable. It feels intuitive. And it is mostly wrong. What we call a reaction is often a prediction. A fast, automatic guess the brain makes based on old data. Past wounds. Past wins. … [Read more...]
The Quiet Cost of Standing Still
Regret does not come only from what we did. A big chunk of it also comes from what we postponed until it quietly expired. That truth took me longer to learn than I would like to admit. Early in my career, I believed patience was always wisdom. That waiting signaled maturity. That restraint meant … [Read more...]
Say It Like You Mean It
Semantics used to be something we argued about in classrooms and editorial meetings. A word choice here. A phrasing tweak there. Important, yes, but rarely urgent. Today, semantics sit much closer to the center of gravity. Quietly, insistently, they decide how we are understood, trusted, … [Read more...]








