Wednesday, July 8, 2026

The Irrepressible Satish Singh

I first met the irrepressible Satish Singh in August 1989 at the Osmania College of Commerce and Management where we had both enrolled to study MBA. Later I found out that he was my junior at All Saints High School and that he had studied at Nizam College before he joined OUCCBM. What struck me about him was that apart from his film star looks, he was unapologetically himself, in all conditions and situations, with all types of people, the centre of attention and life of the party types. Confident, handsome, charming, talented, intelligent, creative, irreverent, and he fitted so many more adjectives, many of them seemingly paradoxical. Suffice to say that he was someone you could not ignore, or rather, someone you cannot take your eyes off. He had that presence, looks, personality and that energy. I remember watching him curiously in those days because he surely was one of a kind.


For all his seemingly carefree attitude, Satish has a very serious agenda in life - to learn, to excel, to be the best he could be (which he tried to hide under a carefree facade, something which I believe I did too). I saw a glimpse of his competitive attitude by the complete attention he gave to Marketing which he had decided as his career early on (I was telling his son Rahul, he should have been in films, not marketing). But then, the film world's loss was the business world's gain, and Satish decided to be an avid student of Marketing - that was one class he would attend like his life depended on it. He seemed to have a connection with our marketing Professor C Shyam Sundar (CSS) and he had long chats with him on the subject in the corridors - they were both on an IIM level - the guru seemed to have found his perfect student and vice versa. Satish was especially interested in Market Research, and true to his decision, that's what he built his career on - one of the few people I know who was clear about what he wanted to do and did that. The rest of the classes were of no interest to him and he made it amply clear that he was not interested in those. 


So Satish would come to college on his Bajaj Cub scooter (I think), head off for a smoke at Liaquat's Cafe, announced his arrival by singing some song loudly in the corridor as he made his way to class akin to a hero's entry (I remember Starship's 'Sarah' being one of the songs he loved to sing in the corridor). He quickly made friends with everyone, but his thickest pal for the two years was PV - both enjoyed a smoke and a tipple, enjoyed music and careers in marketing. In class we would always be privy to his one liners, jokes, repartee and endless gaalis. Blessed with a heartbreakingly sweet smile, a charming manner, a great sense of humour, finesse, he was perhaps the most popular of the lot for sheer energy. Over time he made friends with seniors like Ramesh and Partha, all of whom loved a drink, a smoke, laughed a lot and sang their hearts out. 


He and I had a good relationship - one based on mutual respect - and somehow we came to address each other as bhidu, the Mumbai term. I think I used that term once and he found it amusing and forever after that he would always call and say 'Kya bhidu'. We would discuss music a lot - he loved the same music that I did - English pop and Kishore Kumar or just anything nice. I think we enjoyed each others sense of humour as well - a bit on the irreverent side it was. With Sunnie, Bijju, Pankaj, Vijay, Sudhir, Shobha, Sanjay and others we would play TT, step out for chai etc. It was not an intense course and we had a lot of time for other activities.


When our Inter collegiate cricket tournament started in our first year in 1989, we all somehow came together a lot more. Vijay, Sunnie, Sanjay, Ramanand, Sridhar and me were part of the team and everyone else from the college came to cheer us, the loudest being Satish and PV. I think they coined some slogan that went like 'Whisky, soda pop, OUCCBM on top's' or something like that. Thanks to all the encouragement and cheering, our rather bits and pieces team made it all the way to the finals and Satish was very much part of the wins and the celebrations after.


The farewell party for the seniors required us to wear some formal kind of attire like a white shirt and a tie etc if I remember right and Satish came dressed in jeans and chappals just to prove a point. I remember how our Principal BGR's face fell when he saw Satish's version of formal attire. Obviously we would not expect any less from him. 

Exams and stuff and we were all planning for our summer internships - only Satish did the internship seriously - he got one with ITC Bhadrachalam and spent a good part of his summer visiting small retail shops in the boondocks in Karnataka and Tamil Nadu and learning the basics of Marketing the hard way. That was one thing he was most serious about. Apart from having a good time in life of course.


Handsome and charming as he was, Satish had a good female following. But he was most respectful of women and treated hem well, was impeccable in his manners and address. I remember the endless verbal bouts he would have with Shobha - both having sharp wit and both quick to retort and both not holding back - and it would be fun just listening to them.  

By this time we had all become good pals and college was much more fun. We were a little more serious about jobs, careers and did some work in that area. Sometime in the second year, Satish, who normally stayed off the sports arena except for perhaps carrom, started taking TT seriously and I could see the competitive streak in him - he was a beginner and was low on skill - but high on competitiveness and desire to win. He would try his hardest, rub the opponents the wrong way, never took a back step even when there were tougher opponents and really enjoyed giving a fight till the end. Many times we would team up for doubles and give a good fight to better opponents. He really enjoyed that. I am sure he would have made a great sportsman if he had picked up sports - wonder why he never did. He was competitive as hell and fought every inch of the way. I would have loved to have him in my team just for that any day.


By the time our two years came to an end we had all become god pals - a trip to Pune to participate in a cultural festival that Symbiosis organised which was a lot of fun, then a trip to NAARM for a 3 day pre-placement course organised by BTV, Balaji and HR which was an in house thing. We stayed over, drank rum over bonfires, listened to Satish sing 'Nadiya de dariya', 'Main Shayar badnaam' and such other songs soulfully and then we knew it was exam time and then into the wide world of jobs and careers.  I got a job with BPCL even before placement season, a few of our pals got into ITW Signode, some made it to Onida and so on and on. Satish, true to his sales and marketing focus, joined ITC if I am not mistaken, perhaps the best placement from our batch.

Jobs and onwards and we kept in touch over phone on birthdays and kept track. I remember calling him from Patna in August  1991, on his birthday and chatting. On odd occasions we would meet in a pub over a drink. At some point he shifted base to Dubai after giving the US a shot. Then he stayed in Dubai for a long time, married the love of his life Mickey, had two wonderful sons Rahul and Nikhil, of whom he was very proud and loved them to bits. He was a complete family man, worked in Market Research and looked like it was the perfect life he wanted. 


Of the many trips he made to India we would meet at my place over a drink and dinner and music certainly. One evening I remember it was raining and after a late night that went on till the wee hours, Satish went walking barefoot in the rain because he said it was rare to see rain in Dubai. It was beautiful - some 4-5 of us just walking in the rain in my colony at 3 am, music in the air. Meetings with Sunnie in pubs and more meetings at my place were the order of the day.

One unforgettable meeting of ours was when he read my first novel 'The Men Within' which was a tale about cricket (a game he did not much like). He read it carefully, caught all the finer points of a champion mindset and how to make a team win, made exhaustive notes and said we would discuss it when he came to India. We found a nice pub near Road no 12, got some beer and started discussing. I was amazed to see how carefully he had read the book, underlined the parts he liked. That discussion we had, about the ideas in the book was perhaps the best discussion I had with anyone about that book. No one got that book and it's ideas as well as he did. I can never forget that. 
I always felt that he understood my state of mind, that leap of faith when I left a secure job in banking and started writing which to most seemed like a crazy decision, and in his own way, encouraged the crazy idea. He would always ask what I was writing, what was happening in my life, and always said, 'Wonderful' to whatever I replied. Never one to say that I should have kept my job etc. Always that supportive vibe. We had several discussions on some of the ideas I had for books etc.

He was always asking after Shobhs and Anjali and would end any conversation with 'give me love to them'. The verbal spars between him and Shobha did not lose their fire, just mellowed slightly, over the years. Now, he smiled more often and let her have the last word. I could see he was changing, more secure, peaceful with himself.


When we had a 25 year reunion of our MBA class he came from Dubai just for that despite some chest congestion. Visa, Sunnie, Radha, Madhu came from the US far as I remember. Sridhar from Bangalore, Nishi from Mumbai. We had great fun and he revealed the love he had for his family, his kids as the greatest joy he had experienced. In a conversation about the most important thing that happened in our 25 years after college He said 'I learned so much from my kids, that I want to write a book about them'. He loved them to bits and was crazily proud and protective of them. 

He had put on weight and he had this cough which slowly became a case of pneumonia after that reunion. He bore that normally and laughed it off though it must have been painful. He never changed is lifestyle though - ate heartily, smoked his cigars and drank his whiskey.


More meetings. He moved back to India, having sold his business in Dubai. We would meet at Pankaj's house where there was music and singing, with him and Shrini on centre stage, at my place sometimes. He started studying a course in Data Analytics - with the same seriousness as a college student and told me that it was the future and he was into it. For some reason he switched from Data Analytics to Law and said he was enjoying studying law and wanted go practice it now. Both Rahul and Nikhil had grown up and were doing well. Once we both went to attend the funeral of our Principal BGR. We caught up after over lunch.

So many more memories. When I was preparing to teach a short course in Marketing and had forgotten a part where Kotler specified how to see the 'need' behind what the customer wants, I called Satish. After a hearty laugh at my vague question, he told me the right answer, checked again and called me to confirm and was chuffed that I called him to ask a question from a book we studied thirty years ago. I told him that he would always be my first go-to person for anything on Marketing. He was pretty amused with that though. Once he gifted me a perfume and gave me some explanation for why. I still have that bottle though it got over. I think he felt I needed some grooming tips. Once he told me to use hair gel - very gently of course. I gifted him all my books. 


For his 50th birthday we made videos. I made one long, convoluted one which was made with the right intent but wasn't executed well. He appreciated the effort and we all had a good time.



A couple of years ago he called me to discuss how to go about a book that Mickey was writing - a cook book. We met for dinner at his place and discussed how to go about it. I gave him whatever info I had and they both put together a beautiful book and launched it well at Akshara Book Store (where I had launched my book as well in 2007). It was a work of love by both of them, and certainly for Satish. One could see that he wanted the best for Mickey. He would surprisingly be very careful not to trouble me too much during that book production phase and I had to tell him that it was no trouble and the least I could do. He could be very sensitive and vulnerable that way, very conscious of not bothering others. He spoke very well at the launch and became the MC.

Last year I asked him to show me his old neighbourhood, Mallepally, and he came and picked me at home. We went to his favorite bakery near JNTU where we ate egg puffs and drank Thums Up. Then to his old house where he showed me the places he would go to. The plot which his grandfather had got as a soldier in the army. He told me how they stayed inside Golconda fort where his grandfather had a house being a soldier with the Nizam's army (need more details of that). His father was a Professor of Chemistry at Nizam College. He loved his father, mother, sister and brother dearly. We drank lassi at some spot, bought a couple of beers and then ended the afternoon with a biryani at Chichas. Of course, with promises of meeting soon etc.


And then some calls here and there, plans to meet and so on. he started to work at a law firm. When Ramana was unwell, we all visited him at KIMS. He insisted on meeting Ramana in the ICU and perhaps gave him some advise which only Ramana will know. Soon after Satish was diagnosed with some heart issue and he was admitted in the same hospital. I went to visit him and he was rather sheepish about it - however he got me coffee and introduced me to his niece Priyanka and her husband who are into media work.
...
I heard he had a fracture of his shoulder bone a few months ago and spoke to him. I told him I would visit and planned one with Vijay as well. But before we could meet, he developed some other issues and passed away rather unexpectedly on July 1, 2026.  
...
I look at his pictures and can see the openness, the love, the compassion, the vulnerability and humour - almost in all pictures. Truly they say that the eyes are the windows to the soul and I could clearly see that with him. That was who he truly was under the surface.

Here's a glimpse into his life, through an av made by his niece and others, Really captured it well.

 I will miss our conversations the most, the sharing of ideas, the humour, the songs and the appreciation and love for life. 

It's been a great ride Satish, and I am just so grateful and happy for that. 

Tuesday, July 7, 2026

Anvita Khammam Aces Makes it to the Playoffs

 In the inaugural TG20 tournament Anvita Khammam Aces made it to the playofffs securing second position in the table with 10 points from 5 wins, three on a trot.


 Hyderabad e-Champions are at top spot with 14 points and Nalgonda is at 8 points. Karimnagar Diamonds and Ranga Reddy Risers are playing a game today with six points each and if both win (or lose) today it will boil down to net run rate. If one wins and the other loses, the winner will make the playoffs by way of more points.

Anvita Khammam Aces had an interesting journey to the playoffs. A brief look at the journey so far.

June 21, 2026

Beat Palamuru Strikers

AKA - 237 for 5 (Wafi Kachchhi 60, GSK Reddy 52, Himateja 59)

Palamuru - 217 for 6 (Vignesh 86, P Reddy 35, Ved Reddy 2-42)

June 24, 2026

Lost to Warangal Warriors

AKA - 202 ao in 19.2 overs (Mayank Gupta 54, Mikhil 54, Abdul Malik 3-35, Abhishek Murugan 3-56)

Warangal Warriors 208 for 5 in 18.5 overs (Harshit Choudary 121 no)

June 26, 2026

Beat Karimnagar Diamonds

June 29, 2026

AKA 213 for 6 (Himateja 56, GSK Reddy 43, Mikhil 64, Harish Thakur 3-40)

Karimnagar Diamonds (Satwik Reddy 63, Chandan Sahani 38, Shubham Sharma 53, CV Milind 4-21, Sahendra Mallu 2-55)

Lost to  Hyderabad e-Champions

Hyderabad eChampions 211/9 (Abhirath 59, Anvith 32, Ganesh 44, Saaketh Dhatrak 2-30, Sahendra 2-35, Ved Reddy 2-24)

AKA 155/9 (Himateja 64, Sriniketh 3-28, Murugan Abhishek 2-36)

July 1, 2026

Beat Anurag Nalgonda Knights

AKA 211/2 (Paras Raj 46, GSK Reddy 56, Himateja 80*)

Nalgonda Knights 177/8 (Gaurav Reddy 54, Ved Reddy 3-26, Kachchhi 3-35)

July 4, 2026

Beat Ranga Reddy Risers

Ranga Reddy Risers 147/9 (Gnana Prakash 36, Aditya Javaji 43, CV Milind 3-34, Harshit 2-18, Ved Reddy 2-18)

AKA 150/5 (Himateja 45, Mikhil 30, CV Milind 29*, T Arun Kumar 3-29)

July 6, 2026

Beat Medak Falcons   

AKA 190/5 (Himateja 103*, Prateek Reddy 32)

Medak Falcons 171/5 (Naman Agarwal 32, Shrunjith Reddy 60, Ishan Sharma 34*, Harshit 2-31, Vidyananda Reddy 2-7, Wafi Kachchhi 2-15)

Thursday, July 2, 2026

Meeting Tilakaratne Dilshan

Gifted Dilshan a copy of 50 Not Out which he graciously accepted. He's a very grounded guy and very helpful. 
Plan to chat with him some more. Will do it and share more insights.

The Interpretation of Dreams - Sigmund Freud

 I am not too much into interpreting dreams but I felt its useful to know when I picked up this classic by Sigmund Freud - it was published in 1899 and brought the theory of the unconscious with respect to dream interpretation (which later became the theory of  the Oedipus Complex). I did not really get a full grip of how to interpret dreams but got an idea of how Freud went about it. 



The book starts with a concise report of scientific literature of dream problems up to 1900. Earlier thoughts aboout dreams were that they were god-sent and were either prophecies or such stuff. Freud tried a psychological technique to interpret dreams with every dream having a structure, assigned to a specific place in the psychic activities  of the waking state. He tried to connect them to the waking state, thus addressing memory and sensation as well.

Many dreams of various people are interpreted and most are Freud's own dreams that have been analysed by himself. The primary dream under analysis is that of 'Irma's Injection' which is a dream about a patient whose treatment went wrong and the dream is about how he seeks to be exonerated from the mistake by blaming it on another doctor. Freud says that dreams have two mental processes 1) unconscious forces that construct a wish expressed by the dream 2)  process of censorship that forcibly distorts the expression of the wish. Somewhere it is said that all dreams re about wish fulfillment. 

One can differentiate between manifest content (remembered narrative) and latent content (underlying meaning of the dream). During sleep the unconscious condenses and displaces and forms representations of the dream content, the latent content of which is not recognisable upon waking.

Every dream, Freud says, has a connection with an experience of the previous day. The dream content can be selected from any part of the dreamer's life. There are four possible sources of dreams 1) mentally significant experiences represented directly 2) general recent experiences consolidated into one 3) one or more experiences represented by contemporary but different experiences 4) an internal experience represented in the dream by a mention of a recent but indifferent impression.

Freud discusses the aspects of wish fulfillment, distortion, censorship in dreams etc. For the material and sources of dreams j=he looks at infantile experiences and somatic sources 1) embarrassment dreams 2) dreams of death and 3) exam dreams. The actual dream work consists of condensation into symbols - hat as a man, little one as a genital 3) being run over as sexual intercourse 4) buildings and stairs represent genitals 5) people represent male organs, landscapes rep female organs etc. The psychology of dream processes includes forgetting of dreams, how our memory falsifies through psychic censorship, regression, suppression etc.

Thought impulses that continue to sleep are 1) those that haven;t been completed such as unsolved problems 2) those left uncompleted due to accident 3) those that have been suppressed 4)indifferent impressions of the day.

It is an interesting book and may warrant a second read to get deeper into this subject. But for now, glad I read it and got some idea into how Freud tried to interpret dreams and how he connected dreams to the waking state and how our wishes are represented as symbols etc.      

Wednesday, June 24, 2026

21 Days to Decode Your Dreams - Leon Nacson

Leon Nacson is a Dream Coach based on Australia, a pioneer in the self-help movement, and the publisher of the Planet Magazine. He had written three books on dreams. The book is about how to decode dreams in 21 Days, decoding them one concept at a time. Some of the key concepts he covers are about the language of dreams, emotions, popular expressions etc. He explains the difference between feelings and emotions - emotions being a state of feeling and feelings being a sensate experience of the emotion. 
A few key ideas
We speak in metaphors, but we dream in symbols
We match dream symbols to popular expressions and metaphors
We wake up with feelings
Dreams are like onions - there are many layers to each symbol
We solve problems in our dreams
We live our worst fears in our dreams
Death in our dreams means new beginnings and regeneration
When you're being chased in a dream, you're running away from yourself
If you're falling in your dream, you're feeling unsupported
If you're flying in your dreams you want your spirits to be uplifted, or, you have a desire to get a bird's eye view of the situation
If you dream about celebrities, we are dreaming of symbols of who we think they are
Always recount your dreams in the first person and in present tense
Consider the relationship between your dreams and a situation that's occurring in your waking life
Emotions create dreams, dreams balance our emotions
When you get erotic dreams - most of the time you discover you are only making love to yourself
...
And so on and so forth. Some nice insights that I can show off next time someone talks of a dream or a nightmare.

Monday, June 22, 2026

Anjali - Happy Father's Day

Yesterday was Father's Day and A sent me flowers, a lovely card with a beautiful message that made my heart tighten. And she sent me some instagram stuff that pretty much made me cry. 

Daughters are the best. Somehow make you feel that they understand you, all that you go through, more than anyone else. 
Love you A.

Sunday, June 21, 2026

Unposted Letter - mahatria Ra

Guptaji shares books that he reads and like with me and this is perhaps the 6th or 7th book he had couriered to me. They are all of a spiritual nature. I remember seeing this book in Ratnadeep Stores, maybe a decade ago, and was intrigued by the novel way of distribution - in a grocery store. It was sealed but it did appear interesting. 
Mahatria Ra is a spiritual leader and the founder of infinitheism path which helps create breakthroughs for people in all aspects of life. Born as TT Rangarajan he became a software trainer in Pune at a young age, started a software company, was impacted by the suicide of a friend and went into teaching life skills through a training organisation called Alma Mater. Later on he started the spiritual organisation Infinitheism, wrote three books, publishes a magazine called Infinithoughts and runs spiritual retreats.

Some of the ideas he presents in the book, in a nutshell are:
Today is his gift to you. 
There's no easy way to the top.
You are the most important thing here.
The 80-20 rule holds good everywhere.
The need to be respected is greater than the need to be guided. 
Don't postpone life
Experiences are our teachers
Let the good people make more noise
Be someone's greatest gift
You are the most precious resource you have
Do anything with devotion
Constant and never ending improvement is the key
The end is beautiful - keep at it
Don't take on any labels - you're more than enough
Acceptance is equal to positive emotion
Quality lies in that invisible detail 
Don't bother about having the last word - let go
When was the last time you did something for the first time
Tell the negative in two sentences and the positive in five sentences
Ask the right questions
Happiness is the way
What you don't use, you lose
When ego goes, everything else comes
Be happily dissatisfied 
Let go of hurt, let in peace
I CAN - motto
You don't get what you desire, you get what you deserve
What you resist, persists.
Every good human has the moral responsibility to be rich
Change when sustained and monitored becomes culture
...
Interesting book with some nice insights. I liked what he says about every good human being having the moral responsibility to be rich. And that good people should make noise. And to be happily dissatisfied. 
Thanks Guptaji.