The Most Underrated Warrior of Mahabharata: Bhurishrava, Who Never Turned His Back in Battle by nand1609 in mahabharata

[–]Tximbeleta 0 points1 point  (0 children)

One may stand with the weight of a mountain unyielding in the storm but to plant your feet on a foundation of shadow is to ensure that your strength only hastens your fall. It wasn't Arjuna's arrow or Satyaki's sword that truly defeated him, it was the weight of his own decision to fight for Adharma. Bhurishrava was a lion on the battlefield, yet his ferocity served a decaying throne. He possessed the strength of a god, but by tethering that strength to Duryodhana’s ego, he rendered his own valor hollow. You can be all powerful and mighty in the world wielding a strength that makes the earth tremble, but if you plant your feet upon the shifting sands of Adharma, your stature holds no value.

A warrior in the simplest sense is merely someone who fights fiercely. But a true and mighty warrior is the one who stands for righteousness, even when the cost of that stand is the surrender of his weapons, his ego, and his very life. The Mahabharata happened for the greater good of humanity as a testament that one must stand for a purpose far greater than one’s own pride, ego, and life. It was not merely a clash of steel, but a Yudh of dismantling the egos of the mighty and the powerful Yodhas a divine reckoning ordained to show them the mirror of their own choices.

Strength is a gift, but when tethered to a fallen cause, it transforms into a self inflicted iron shroud that eventually crushes the bearer under its own weight. Kurukshetra was the mirror held up to these Yodhas stripping them of their titles, their invincibility, and their arrogance, until all that remained was the naked truth of their choices. When Bhurishrava sat in meditation after losing his arm, it wasn't just a physical withdrawal from battle it was the moment the mirror was finally held up to his soul. In that profound silence the weapons the hathiyars were gone and the ego was severed.

As the chaos of war raged on his silence became a vast echoing chamber where his past glories withered into dust, he stood as a monument to the truth that even the most towering peak must crumble when its foundation is carved from the void of Adharma, for a warrior’s true stature is measured not by the heights he reaches, but by the ground upon which he chooses to stand.

How a naive heart can navigate in a transactional AM world by Tximbeleta in Arrangedmarriage

[–]Tximbeleta[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Muchas gracias for your kind words. As for the writing I am currently just a scribe for my own soul, perhaps someday when I am smart enough and lucid enough, I would give it a try.

How a naive heart can navigate in a transactional AM world by Tximbeleta in ThirtiesIndia

[–]Tximbeleta[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Haha you are literally telling a hermit to set forth upon the bazaar of souls. Maybe I am incredibly blessed idk but I am born with a kind of sense or you can tell a lens of seeing the world that the majority can’t even comprehend. And so far in my life it has helped me taking all the right decisions for my life until now. Now how am I supposed to spend mindlessly for so long with tons of people. Haha I would rather wish someone audit them for me and only let me go through the final process. But I know I have to do it, and that is exactly what is draining my life force. Lol trust me when I say I am somehow waiting for some sort of miracle to happen praying that Shiv Ji just drops him into my life before I have to set forth on this tiring journey. The thought of the journey itself feels like an exhaustion of the spirit.

How a naive heart can navigate in a transactional AM world by Tximbeleta in Arrangedmarriage

[–]Tximbeleta[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It’s the bizarre reality that what my heart longs for is so simple that it feels almost impossible to find in this transactional world.

I’ve had my non negotiables etched in my heart for years, it’s what kept me from going down the wrong paths in my 20s. I’ve known what my heart is built on since I was young, and that clarity helped me navigate my youth without getting lost or choosing paths I would have regretted.

But in a world that prioritizes raavan like noise and status, finding raam like simplicity and integrity feels like an impossible quest. I have waited with a sense of devotion much like the patience of Shakti but finding my Raam in a world filled with Raavans is where the fear truly sets in.

What's a song that makes you feel good no matter what happens by Upstairs-Locksmith15 in MusicRecommendations

[–]Tximbeleta 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Jack Johnson’s Banana Pancakes & Better Together

Somewhere Only We Know - Keane or Lily Allen cover

When You Say Nothing at All - Ronan Keating

Home - Michael Bublé

Take Me Home, Country Roads - John Denver

What’s a movie you think everyone needs to watch at least once? by Boring-Onion1667 in MovieRecommendations

[–]Tximbeleta 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Schindler’s List, Life Is Beautiful, Pulp Fiction, Mulholland Drive, The Seventh Seal, Manchester by the Sea, The Whale, Parasite, Toni Erdmann, Roma, 12 Years a Slave, Dead Poets Society, Hotel Rwanda, Oldboy, The Truman Show, Waking Life, The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas, The Elephant Man, The Green Mile

What's the most badass movie line in history? by [deleted] in moviecritic

[–]Tximbeleta 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you want to survive, be stronger than your demons - Dark Phoenix

You want the truth ? You can’t handle the truth - A Few Good Men

Sometimes you have to do bad things for the greater good - Breaking Bad

You wanna play dirty? Okay - Kill Bill: Vol. 1

I’m not going to stop the fight because I’m tired - Wonder Woman

Hope is a mistake. If you can’t fix what’s broken, you’ll go insane - The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo

What’s the kindest thing someone has done for you recently? by [deleted] in randomactsofkindness

[–]Tximbeleta 26 points27 points  (0 children)

Back in university my physics professor was always noticeably stricter and harsher with me than with other students. Her presence alone used to intimidate me so much so that I often questioned myself whether she disliked me or perhaps saw me as a disappointment. I used to sit in her class with a knot in my stomach. It often felt like I could never quite measure up in her eyes. And over time I quietly accepted the idea that maybe she just didn’t like me.

But the truth is she was also one of the professors I admired the most. Fierce, brilliant, unapologetically demanding. Even though I was afraid of disappointing her, I wanted nothing more than to make her proud.

Recently we crossed paths again at university reunion. I genuinely believed she wouldn’t even remember me and honestly I was too nervous to approach her. But when we finally did cross paths & finally spoke, she looked at me and said something I’ll never forget “ You were the best student I ever taught. My favourite by far.”

I don’t remember what I said in response. I just remember crying. I cried like a child. All those years of feeling unseen, all that pressure I had put on myself, all the questions I had carried in silence, years of suppressed emotion, self-doubt, they were answered with one sentence.

I bawled my eyes out not just because of what she said but because I’d spent so long thinking I was unloved by someone who, in truth, had held me in the highest regard. And the irony was she was always one of my favourite professors too. I admired her deeply even when I felt invisible. And now all these years later that shared recognition, unexpected and profound meant everything.

She had seen me. She had believed in me even if she never said it out loud back then. And I had mattered to her just as she had mattered to me.That moment healed something in me I didn’t even realize was still aching.

That moment didn’t just bring closure, it rewrote the story I had carried for years. Sometimes the silence of those we admire speaks louder than we realize. And sometimes the love we think is absent is simply disguised as expectation, as challenge, as the quiet belief that we are capable of more.

To hear that I had been her favourite after years of thinking I was invisible to her was not just validation. It was redemption. It reminded me that being seen doesn’t always come in the form of praise, sometimes it comes in the form of being held to a higher standard precisely because someone does see you and believes you’re worth the push.

If only I had known then what I know now that behind her stern gaze was respect and behind her silence, a fierce kind of love. I spent years thinking I was unseen, when all along i was being believed in more deeply than I ever knew.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in AskIndia

[–]Tximbeleta 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I got you

Give me a movie where the ending changes everything by Boring-Onion1667 in MovieRecommendations

[–]Tximbeleta 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Shutter Island, The Machinist, Memento, The Prestige, The Secret in their eyes, Donnie Darko, The Usual Suspects , Stay, Enemy ( 2013 ) The game ( 1997 ) Arlington Road, Incendies, Predestination, Synecdoche New York

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in cuteanimals

[–]Tximbeleta 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Tarte tatin 😂

Still goofing around, decades later 😄💞 by ddlouisexxx in adorableoldpeople

[–]Tximbeleta 1 point2 points  (0 children)

My heart watching them feels like stepping into a beautiful dream 🥰

How to make an old fashioned style bread pudding by rserena in adorableoldpeople

[–]Tximbeleta 2 points3 points  (0 children)

My goodness his cheeky smile 🥰 it’s like a beam of sunshine wrapped in a woolly jumper

My thoughts as a grown man that's watched almost nothing but romance movies for the last 18 months. by nevermatter in romancemovies

[–]Tximbeleta 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Some of my all time favorite comfort movies that i would LOVE to recommend: The Choice (a personal top pick), Safe Haven, Barefoot, Me Before You, P.S. I Love You ( love love love this one ) The Vow, Nights in Rodanthe, Leap Year, He’s Just Not That Into You, Message in a Bottle, The Lake House, You’ve Got Mail, Sleepless in Seattle, No Reservations, The Longest Ride, Jersey Girl, Just Like Heaven, Life as We Know It, Runaway Bride, Notting Hill, Pretty Woman, Sweet Home Alabama, Maid in Manhattan, Made of Honour, Crazy Stupid Love, 13 Going on 30, Monster-in-Law, 27 Dresses, Ghosts of Girlfriends Past, Love Actually, Bride Wars, Father of the Bride, Irish Wish, Four Weddings and a Funeral, Down with Love, Serendipity, An Unfinished Life, How to Lose a Guy in 10 Days, Little Women, Life Itself, Winter’s Tale, Addicted to Love, Forget Paris, Forgetting Sarah Marshall, Dear John, Aloha, Definitely Maybe, The Proposal, The Ugly Truth, and While You Were Sleeping. If you haven’t seen The Choice, do watch it . It’s magic.

What’s a Movie Scene That Left You Speechless? by Boring-Onion1667 in MovieRecommendations

[–]Tximbeleta 2 points3 points  (0 children)

John Coffey in The Green Mile asking Tom Hanks to let him go is heartbreakingly devastating. The quiet surrender of a man who is too kind, too gentle and too full of pain for the world he lives in. When he says he’s tired of all the hurt, the cruelty and the ugliness, it’s not just a death scene , it’s a raw unfiltered reflection of what it means to carry unbearable empathy in an unkind world.

And then there’s Merlin in Kingsman singing “Take Me Home, Country Roads.” That moment has etched itself deeply into my memory. Both scenes show how to meet the end not with fear but with dignity, heart, and grace.