Ravi Saripalle
Inspire to Innovate Storytelling Movement
(Mission किशोर संदेश : विज्ञान -विकास -विनोद (Educate-Engage-Entertain)
Saturday, 4 April 2026
When the Mind Becomes the Battlefield: The Real Crisis Is Within
Ravi Saripalle
Saturday, 28 March 2026
What I Thought Was Joy… Was Actually Survival: Stories We Don’t See
Dear Friends,
Ravi Saripalle
Friday, 20 March 2026
Multi-Calendar Living: India’s Hidden Superpower
Dear Friends,
Ravi Saripalle
Saturday, 14 March 2026
Not Even One Minute Is in Our Hands:The Illusion of Control in Our Carefully Planned Lives
Dear Friends,
Ten years back, we were heading to Shamshabad Airport. We were almost at the airport when our taxi rammed into a suddenly stopped lorry. The impact was huge. The bones in my right hand were shattered and I suffered multiple fractures. Having said that, miraculously, neither the driver nor my wife, who was sitting to my left, had a single scratch.
The driver had a seatbelt on. The seat in front of my wife bent down due to the heavy impact. It bent because of a seat malfunction, which surprisingly helped absorb the shock. I was admitted to the nearest hospital, but I requested the doctor to provide temporary support for my hand and give me a letter allowing me to board the flight. I did not want to remain stranded in a hospital in an unknown place without any support system. Despite the pain, I managed to return to my hometown and got admitted to a hospital there.
The point I am trying to make is that we never know how miracles happen in our lives, or how certain malfunctions may actually help us. We make big plans in our lives, but a simple mistake or moment can wipe out our money, position, status, relationships, health, or even our lives.
Let me share another interesting incident that was reported in The Times of India. Usually, a pothole on the road causes accidents or even deaths. However, a miracle happened in Uttar Pradesh. A pothole on the Bareilly-Haridwar National Highway turned out to be a blessing for a 50-year-old woman. She had been declared brain dead and discharged from the hospital with no hope of survival. While being taken home, the ambulance struck a pothole, causing a sudden violent jerk. Immediately, the patient started breathing normally. The family members were asked to stop the funeral preparations. They rushed her back to the hospital, and she is now able to talk as well. Is this not a miracle?
Similarly, Viswashkumar Ramesh walked away from the wreckage of the London-bound flight in Ahmedabad in extraordinary scenes that amazed the world. The sole survivor of the Air India plane crash, which killed 241 people on board, is being called the “luckiest man alive”. Many consider this a miracle.
Can we really plan everything in this world? Perhaps the best we can do is believe in God and make our best effort.
In life, sometimes we receive appreciation for things we may not fully deserve. At other times, we get blamed or even victimized for someone else’s mistake or for completely unrelated events. We often believe that we can control everything in this world, but that is an absolute myth.
Let me share another example. There was a case where an accident occurred at 2:15 PM on April 11, 2017. The insurance policy was officially issued at 3:54 PM on the same day, although the premium had been paid earlier. Initially, the insurer rejected the claim. However, after a long legal battle, the court directed the insurer to honor the claim. We often say casually that “not even a minute is in our hands.” This case proved exactly that.
Having said that, simply sitting idle is absolutely wrong. We must continue to make our best effort, but without becoming overly attached to the results.
Ten-minute deliveries may increase our comfort in life, but some of the deepest lessons of life are learned by spending ten minutes in a burial ground.
Do you agree?
Ravi Saripalle
Saturday, 7 March 2026
Energy Security Is Not Just Policy — It Is Design
Dear Friends,
Ravi Saripalle
Saturday, 28 February 2026
Are we getting smarter - or Just Faster? Intelligence in Transition
Dear Friends,
My paternal grandfather and the previous two generations before him were Ghanapatis in the Yajurveda. However, my father was introduced to it to some extent but was not able to master it. Of course, I am a totally lost kid in our generation. I realized that I am absolutely unfit in both recitation and memory!I did a little research on how much memory and dedication are required to become a Ghanapati. Among the four Vedas (Rigveda, Yajurveda, Samaveda, Atharvaveda), the Yajurveda contains approximately 1,97,000 words, whereas Rigveda has ~153,000 words, Samaveda (~1,875 verses), and Atharvaveda (~120,000 words).
How big is the Yajurveda for comparison? It is approximately 650 pages of recitation. If I roughly calculate, it amounts to 22 hours of nonstop speaking (at an average speaking speed of 150 words per minute). Having said that, it is not just memorization — Ghana Patha is the highest and most complex method of chanting. It is a verbal permutation algorithm. They should be able to pick up from anywhere and recite in any combination!
It is unimaginable and inconceivable for me! I don’t even remember the names of 60 students in my class after teaching them for a full semester!! This is my current state of remembrance! You must be wondering why I am referring to my memory degradation here.
In 1984, political scientist James R. Flynn analyzed historical IQ data and discovered something surprising. Between 1932 and 1978, average IQ scores had increased by about 13–14 points, roughly 3 points per decade in many countries. On a lighter note, of course, I am an exception, as my IQ seems to have decreased! Or perhaps the test process covers different aspects that I am not aware of. I don’t have sufficient process knowledge; hence, I cannot comment further.
However, recently, Kiran Shah (Founder – Market Fit) posted an interesting note. The post argues that Gen Z is the first generation in over 100 years to show declining IQ, memory, attention, literacy, and numeracy scores compared to their parents, reversing the long-standing Flynn Effect.
It links this shift to the widespread adoption of smartphones around 2010 and increased screen time dominated by short-form, fast-scrolling content. The claim is that constant digital stimulation has weakened sustained attention and deep processing, leading to reduced cognitive endurance despite high confidence levels among Gen Z. That said, this trend could have serious implications for workplaces and future decision-making.
I am also experiencing this phenomenon among Gen Z students. As teachers, if we seize mobiles or ask students to stay away from them for a while, we experience different reactions. They are unable to sit for long hours. I still remember that during my college days, I used to prepare physical notes for myself and my friends. Sometimes, to make notes for one subject on A4 paper, I used to sit for 10–12 hours at a stretch. It was a strenuous process! We had to understand the textbook, translate it into our own notes, and write them on paper. Today, I do not see many students giving such deep attention to thinking and writing, especially in note-making.
Finally, whether IQ levels increased or decreased, the rate of behavioral change and decision-making has been hugely impacted between two technological transitions — Radio to Television vs. Television to Smartphone.
Now we are entering a new phase — intelligence supplied to smartphones by humans vs. smartphones driven by machine intelligence. Let us wait and witness the consequences.
Ravi Saripalle
Saturday, 21 February 2026
Living Below Your Means is Living Above Your Risk: A Behavioural and Economic Inquiry
Dear Friends,
Ravi Saripalle