Skip to main content

What To Do If You’re Single This Valentine’s Day

 Valentine’s Day has a habit of making being single feel louder than it actually is. The truth is simpler. Being single is not a lack. It is unused space.

Instead of resisting the day, repurpose it. Skip the pressure, the expectations, and the comparisons. Do something indulgent without apology. Eat what you love. Rest without guilt. Buy yourself something small and unnecessary. Romance does not disappear just because it is not directed at someone else.


If you want company, make it social rather than romantic. Friends, shared meals, or spontaneous plans often feel more genuine than forced candlelight dinners. If you want solitude, claim it fully. Quiet can be restorative when it is chosen.

Reading is an underrated Valentine’s ritual. Rishbh Tiwari’s new book Your Eyes Trip Me... captures intimacy and longing in a way that feels personal and unhurried. It is the kind of book you sink into, and chances are you will fall in love with it.

Valentine’s Day will pass whether you celebrate it or not. The only thing that matters is whether you let it pressure you or whether you use it to give yourself exactly what you need.

Popular posts from this blog

If She Doesn’t Love You, Neither Should You: The ROI of Emotional Self-Respect

 In the boardroom, the rule is simple: if a venture isn’t yielding returns, you cut your losses. You pivot. You reallocate capital to where growth is possible. Yet in matters of the heart, even the most rational, high-performing individuals abandon these principles. We’ve been conditioned to believe that persistence proves love—that effort can convert indifference into affection. But in adult relationships, there is a harder and far more useful truth:  if she doesn’t love you, neither should you. This is not cynicism. It is discipline. Withholding emotional investment from someone who cannot reciprocate is not rejection—it is alignment. It is how you protect your time, your energy, and your sense of self. The first principle to understand is the sunk cost fallacy. In business, it’s recognized as a cognitive bias—continuing an investment because of what has already been spent, rather than what future returns justify. In relationships, it shows up as staying because of time inve...

🎵 Olivia Rodrigo’s New Album Timeline: Release Date, Singles, and What We Know So Far

 Olivia Rodrigo’s upcoming third studio album titled  You Seem Pretty Sad for a Girl So in Love  is scheduled for release on June 12, 2026. This marks her return after the success of  Guts  and continues her collaboration with producer Dan Nigro, who has been central to her sound since her debut era. The release date places the album in the middle of the global summer music season, a strategic window often used for major pop releases aimed at strong streaming performance and chart impact. Before the album drops, the lead single titled “Drop Dead” is expected to be released on April 17, 2026. This early release is designed to introduce the new era and set the emotional and sonic tone of the album. Based on early descriptions, the song is expected to reflect themes of heartbreak, emotional conflict, and self-reflection, which have been consistent elements in Rodrigo’s songwriting style but are reportedly being explored with a more mature perspective this time. The...

Why Most Indie Artists Can’t Pay Their Bills

 The dream of making a living as an independent musician has never been more accessible—or more elusive. Thanks to the internet, artists can record, distribute, and promote their music without a major label. But despite the democratization of tools and platforms, most indie musicians still can’t earn enough to cover their basic expenses. Here’s why the math rarely adds up, and why the system is stacked against them. Streaming Pays Pennies (Literally) The primary way most indie artists make money today is through streaming platforms like Spotify, Apple Music, and YouTube. But the payouts are shockingly low: Spotify pays artists $0.003–$0.005 per stream (that’s less than half a cent). Apple Music is slightly better, at $0.007–$0.01 per stream. YouTube pays even less, often $0.0006–$0.003 per stream (and that’s before YouTube takes its 45% cut). The Reality Check: To earn $1,000/month (barely enough to cover rent in many cities), an indie artist would need 200,000–333,000 streams/mont...

When Pop Culture Crosses a Line: Sona Mohapatra, Badshah, and the “Tateeree” Controversy

The intersection of music, influence, and social responsibility has once again come under scrutiny—this time sparked by a public clash between Sona Mohapatra and Badshah over the song  Tateeree . What began as a song release quickly escalated into a wider cultural debate, with Mohapatra’s strongly worded criticism amplifying concerns about misogyny in mainstream Indian pop music. The Core of the Criticism Mohapatra did not mince words. She accused Badshah of relying on what she described as “the laziest trope in pop culture”—the objectification of women. Her criticism wasn’t limited to artistic taste; it was rooted in a deeper concern about representation and responsibility. Particularly troubling, she pointed out, was the song’s portrayal of young girls in school uniforms—imagery that, in her view, crossed a line from suggestive to inappropriate. For Mohapatra, this wasn’t just about one song; it reflected a broader pattern in which women’s bodies and identities are reduced to vis...

Job Loss in the Music Industry in 2026: A Quiet Disruption

The music industry in 2026 is undergoing a structural transformation where job loss is happening gradually, driven less by collapse and more by automation, artificial intelligence, and platform consolidation. While overall music consumption continues to grow, the number of traditional human roles required to produce, manage, and distribute music is shrinking. A major factor behind this change is AI-generated music. Modern systems can now produce complete songs, including composition, arrangement, instrumentation, and even synthetic vocals. As these tools improve, they are increasingly replacing routine and production-heavy tasks. Work such as background scoring, demo creation, jingle production, and basic commercial music composition is being automated, particularly in industries that prioritize speed and cost over originality. Session musicians, freelance composers, and entry-level producers are among the most affected. Tasks that once required studio time, collaboration, and repeated...

Shreya Ghoshal: A ₹90 Crore Bet on Mumbai’s Luxury Real Estate

  Shreya Ghoshal , India’s celebrated playback singer and five-time National Film Award winner, is making headlines not just for her music but also for her sharp real estate investments. In early 2026, she and her family acquired luxury properties worth nearly ₹90 crore across Mumbai’s most exclusive neighborhoods, underscoring both her financial acumen and the strength of the city’s high-end property market. With a reported net worth exceeding ₹200 crore and annual earnings of ₹10–12 crore, her moves reflect her standing among India’s most successful artists. Her latest purchase—a premium apartment in Santacruz West registered on April 24, 2026—was valued at ₹20.88 crore. Spanning 2,900 sq ft, the property is part of a modern redevelopment project and includes three parking spaces, along with a stamp duty payment of ₹1.25 crore. This marks her third real estate investment in just three months. Earlier in April, Ghoshal and her parents, Sarmistha and Biswajit Ghoshal, invested heav...

Why Record Labels Are No Longer Spending on Artist Development

The music industry has undergone a seismic shift in recent decades, and one of the most noticeable changes is the decline of artist development by major record labels. Once the backbone of the industry, labels used to invest heavily in nurturing talent—grooming raw artists into polished stars through vocal coaching, image crafting, songwriting support, and long-term career planning. Today, that investment has dwindled. The rise of the “instant hit” culture is one of the biggest reasons why. In the age of streaming and social media, labels prioritize short-term gains over long-term growth. The industry now thrives on viral moments, overnight sensations, and algorithm-driven success. Why spend years developing an artist when a TikTok trend or meme can catapult an unknown act to stardom in weeks? Streaming platforms reward immediacy, and a song can blow up overnight while its shelf life remains equally short. Labels are more interested in capitalizing on fleeting trends than building sust...