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Lessons learnt from my 52-week workout streak

Today, I have hit a personal milestone: cult.fit app [https://www.cult.fit/] informs me I was regular with my workouts for 52 weeks in a row — meaning, over the last year, I exercised every single week without exception. From being a high school student who bunked the sports

Lessons learnt from my 52-week workout streak
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Why I am relearning statistics

I have finally started what I had been thinking of doing for at least two years now: relearning statistics. I am a freelance journalist/programmer, and I control the volume of work I want to hold at any point. To make time for this academic pursuit, I consciously reduced my

Why I am relearning statistics
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I don’t know how to resolve the tension between the desire to enjoy the world, the curiosity to understand it and the rage to change it

I wrote this note in my journal on the morning of 16, February 2021, recalling the events of the previous day. A young environmental activist was arrested, and it triggered a series of thoughts laying bare the inner conflicts I often deal with. I don’t have any meaningful way

I don’t know how to resolve the tension between the desire to enjoy the world, the curiosity to understand it and the rage to change it
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How I cope when it seems like the world is falling apart

Totally lost my cool yesterday evening. The trigger: a story published in the Washington Post [https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/asia_pacific/india-bhima-koregaon-activists-jailed/2021/02/10/8087f172-61e0-11eb-a177-7765f29a9524_story.html] . I posted an impulsive update on Instagram. This morning: I could not sleep well. One of those days when I woke

How I cope when it seems like the world is falling apart
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Turning politics into theatre

Tweets by an international pop star [https://twitter.com/rihanna/status/1356625889602199552]—five words, one hashtag, a linked article—and a teenage climate activist [https://twitter.com/GretaThunberg/status/1356694884615340037] on India's farmer protests have rattled thin-skinned Indians. What an irony: A citizenry perennially subjected to state-sponsored propaganda

Turning politics into theatre
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Journalists refer to themselves as storytellers. Is that a mistake?

"Facts come in the way of beautiful prose," a colleague at the Wall Street Journal told me during my 2018 fellowship at the newspaper. It stayed with me. Every time I ponder over the limitations of journalistic methods to understand the world, I think about it. Especially in

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How I approach and manage my freelance journalism career

"There is a lot of uncertainty in figuring out how this will work out," reads the seventh point in my journal entry titled "On Quitting", dated 13th January 2019—the day I resigned from my full-time job at the Hindustan Times. After two excellent years at

How I approach and manage my freelance journalism career
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Thoughts and observations on data journalism in India

Today, I complete five years in journalism: one year at The Hindu (my first job, straight out of university), two years at the Hindustan Times—which overlapped with a five-month fellowship at the Wall Street Journal—and two years as a freelancer. 'Data journalist' was my official job

Thoughts and observations on data journalism in India
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Why the event-oriented structure of news doesn't help in understanding how the world works

In 2020, I significantly reduced the proportion of daily news consumption in my information diet. And I strongly recommend the same to others: less of news and more of books. There are many reasons why, and I will list them in a future post. Here is one compelling argument from

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How interlinked economic and political forces create self-censorship in Indian media

Most contemporary discussions on press freedom begin with some sort of rankings: X country slipped Y positions on Z index—that’s evidence something wrong is happening. This makes headlines every year in India, as we continue to slip down in these indices. Criminal defamation cases are filed against journalists

How interlinked economic and political forces create self-censorship in Indian media