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Content Samples.

8 posts across niches, formats, and voices. Featuring original content and anonymized ghostwritten client work.

Money Psychology Long-form thought leadership

Client: A***** S******

W***** M********* (P******* F******)

Reading about biases does not make you less biased.

You read about loss aversion and thought: I am rational about losses.

You read about herd behaviour and thought: I make my own decisions.

You read about sunk cost and thought: I know when to quit.

You nodded at every post. And applied it to someone else.

This is the bias blind spot.

The belief that you can see biases in others but not in yourself.

Research shows learning about biases increases your ability to spot them in others.

It does not increase your ability to spot them in yourself.

In fact, knowing about biases can make you more confident you are unbiased.

Which makes the problem worse, not better.

Ye sabse khatarnaak bias hai. Because it protects all the other biases.

If you believe you are not affected, you will never build defences.

No checklist. No cooling period. No second opinion.

You will trust your gut because you believe your gut is unbiased.

It is not. Nobody's is.

The goal was never to eliminate biases. That is not possible for any human brain.

The goal is to build systems that work despite them.

Automatic SIPs work because they bypass your monthly mood.

Diversification works because it admits you do not know which asset will win.

Emergency funds work because they prepare for the bias you cannot see coming.

Smart money management is not about being smarter than your biases.

It is about building a system so good that your biases cannot break it.

That is the only real edge in personal finance.

Money Psychology Contradiction hook, emotional close

Client: V**** P****

F******** A******* (I********* S*******)

Fear of regret stops more investments than actual losses.

You know you should start a SIP. You have known for months.

But what if the market drops right after you invest?

What if you pick the wrong fund? What if you could have waited?

These are not real risks. They are imagined regrets.

This is regret aversion.

Your brain avoids actions that could lead to future regret.

The pain of "I should not have done that" feels worse than "I did nothing."

So you do nothing. And nothing feels safe.

Kuch nahi karna bhi ek decision hai. Bas uska regret baad mein aata hai.

The person who invested and lost 10% feels regret today.

The person who never invested and missed 200% over a decade feels it later.

One regret is loud and immediate. The other is silent and permanent.

Inaction is not the absence of a decision.

It is the decision to stay exactly where you are. And that has a cost too.

The regret of doing is sharp but short.

The regret of not doing is dull but endless.

Attention Economy Long-form cultural critique

Client: K**** J****

D****** W******* (T*** M*********)

Nobody asked you before they redesigned your brain.

No terms of service page warned you that the app would restructure your attention span.

No pop-up notification said your self-worth would become dependent on a like counter.

No onboarding screen disclosed that your memory would be outsourced to a search engine.

You signed up for a free social media account when you were fourteen years old.

What you actually signed was an invisible contract trading your cognitive sovereignty for entertainment.

The other party spent billions of dollars on engineering teams to hold up their end.

You did not even know the contract existed until the damage was already done.

Your attention span shortened. Your patience evaporated. Your anxiety found a permanent home.

Your ability to be alone with your thoughts without a screen became nearly impossible.

Aapne apna sabse valuable asset bina soche samjhe ek corporation ko de diya.

This is not a moral failure. This is an asymmetric war you were never equipped to fight.

A 14-year-old with a smartphone versus a trillion-dollar company with a thousand PhD psychologists.

The outcome was never in doubt. The design was too sophisticated. The brain too predictable.

But awareness is the first crack in the wall of any system built on ignorance.

Now you know that infinite scroll exists to prevent you from stopping voluntarily.

Now you know that red badges exploit your evolutionary threat detection circuits.

Now you know that autoplay removes your moment of conscious choice between videos.

Now you know that the outrage algorithm profits from your emotional dysregulation.

You cannot uninstall the internet. It is woven into every part of modern existence.

But you can renegotiate the terms of engagement now that you understand the contract.

Set boundaries. Enforce time limits. Turn off notifications. Reclaim your mornings.

Not because technology is evil. Because your attention is the last thing that is truly yours.

And anything that is truly yours is worth defending with everything you have.

Business & Investing Data-driven myth destruction

Client: S******** M****

E***** R******* (W***** P***********)

Your parents' house doubled in value. Yours has not moved in seven years.

Indian real estate has a mythology built on the 1980s and 1990s.

Land was genuinely scarce. Cities were genuinely growing. Prices genuinely multiplied.

Your father bought a flat in Pune in 1992 for ₹8 lakhs. Worth ₹1.2 crore today.

That sounds incredible. Until you run the actual numbers.

₹8 lakhs in 1992, growing to ₹1.2 crore over 32 years, is an annualised return of 9.3%.

The Sensex over the same period returned over 15% annualised.

The same ₹8 lakhs in a Sensex index fund would be worth over ₹5 crore today.

Real estate felt safer. Equity was actually better.

But real estate came with registration fees, stamp duty, maintenance costs, and property tax.

Every year. For 32 years. The actual net return was likely below 8%.

Real estate mein paisa dikhta hai. Loss nahi dikhta.

A stock portfolio down 15% shows up immediately. You feel the pain.

A flat that has not appreciated in five years still looks like an asset.

No mark-to-market. No daily price update. The denial is built into the format.

Real estate is not a bad investment. But it is not automatically the best one.

The emotional attachment to land and bricks makes it feel more stable than it is.

For most middle-class Indians, real estate is 80% of their net worth.

That is not a portfolio. That is concentration masquerading as safety.

The safest investment is never the one that feels safest. It is the one that performs.

Business & Consumer Behaviour Mechanism reveal

Client: E**** W******

C******* I******* (E-******** S*******)

"Only 2 left in stock!" There were 200 this morning.

The countdown timer on the checkout page resets every time you reload.

The unsubscribe button is grey on a white background. You almost missed it.

These are dark patterns. Design choices engineered to override your judgment.

Not bugs. Not accidents. Deliberate decisions made by real designers in real offices.

The fake urgency timer nudges you to buy before you think.

The pre-ticked "add insurance" checkbox extracts money you did not choose to spend.

The "confirm shaming" button asks: "No thanks, I prefer paying more."

Ye sab aapko manipulate karne ke liye design kiya gaya hai. Systematically.

Amazon, Booking.com, Swiggy: all have used dark patterns at some point.

They work because your brain processes design before it processes language.

The button color and placement bypass rational thought.

By the time you read the text, the visual cue has already made a suggestion.

Dark patterns cost Indian consumers thousands of crores annually.

Not through fraud. Through design.

The most effective theft leaves the victim feeling like they made a free choice.

SEBI and the EU have started regulating dark patterns. India is catching up.

Until then: slow down on every checkout page. The urgency is manufactured.

Money Psychology Short-form relatable

Client: N*** A********

F****** T*** (B******** A**)

You check your bank balance with one eye closed like it is a horror movie scene.

The salary came on the 1st. It is now the 11th. The balance does not make any sense.

Rent: gone. EMI: gone. Electricity: gone. Groceries: gone.

A Zomato charge you do not remember. A subscription you definitely forgot to cancel.

Where did it go? You earned decently. You did not buy anything extravagant this month.

Bank balance dekhna ek jump scare hai jo mahine mein 10 baar lagta hai.

The money did not disappear. It bled out in ₹200 and ₹500 cuts that felt invisible.

Nobody ever goes broke in one big purchase. They go broke in a thousand small ones.

You are not bad with money. You are just unaware of where the small cuts happen.

Client Strategy Authority-led narrative

Client: A**** K*******

M** K* S***** (A******** M******* W*******)

Most Indian hospitals track a newborn's weight daily for the first week.

Nobody tracks what the mother lost.

Not her iron. Not her calcium. Not her sleep architecture.

Not the fact that her uterus is contracting back to its original size over six weeks and that process has a name in Ayurveda that no discharge form mentions.

Sutika Kala.

It is not a phase. It is a physiological rebuilding window.

Your grandmother's generation knew it lasted 40 to 45 days.

They did not call it rest. They called it recovery.

They had specific oils, specific grains, specific restrictions.

Not superstition. Structure.

Modern medicine arrived at the same recovery window through uterine involution research.

It just never built a care protocol around it.

So the mother walks out of the hospital with a healthy baby and a prescription for iron tablets.

And the family asks why she seems different.

Before your next visit to a new mother, ask her this: when was the last time someone checked on her body, not her baby.

The postpartum body does not need positivity. It needs the 40-day protocol that Ayurveda designed for it and modern India decided to forget.

Client Strategy Story-led case study

Client: R**** D********

J********** (F******** A******** & C******** V****)

The CEO's desk was facing southwest for 14 months.

His division missed targets every single quarter.

The board blamed market conditions.

His direct reports blamed unclear strategy.

He blamed both and considered stepping down.

We moved the desk to face northeast.

He thought it was a furniture rearrangement.

His EA thought it was feng shui.

His board noticed the decision quality shift inside 60 days.

Three consecutive quarters of target achievement followed.

Nothing else changed.

Not the team. Not the strategy. Not the market.

The direction changed.

In Vastu, the southwest is the seat of stability and grounding.

It is powerful for someone who needs to hold ground.

It is catastrophic for someone whose role requires forward momentum and initiative.

Before your next leadership review, check where your top performers sit relative to their role mandate.

A leader in a growth role facing a stability direction is fighting spatial resistance every single day.

The northwest quadrant of your boardroom is not decoration.

In Vastu, it is where your alliances either hold or fracture.