–
Stories are used to sell important ideas. Even companies selling yogurt have their origin story on the marketing label as a way to connect with potential customers – complete with green pastures, beautiful cows – you get the drift.
Stories help us connect emotionally to the subject in question. They help us visualize how life was lived and how it could be lived. It helps us remember important lessons through its narrative. Stories are a fun way to sneak in entertainment along with important education. They can help create awareness about important topics.
Moreover, everyone and anyone can be a story teller. Because, there’s no one in the world who hasn’t heard a good story and wanted to tell it to someone else.
Story telling is an art form that can be developed and a skill that can be mastered. Its our way to preserve our civilization and propagate our culture. Its our only way to understand the common condition called the human experience.
–
The universe is made of stories, not of atoms. ~ The Speed of Darkness By Muriel Rukeyser
–

Story Telling
– 0 –
About The Article Author:
Hi, I’m Rachana. Its been my dream for years to do something to consciously create a better future where every one of us is excited about our own potential. My challenge to everyone is that they aspire for their personal best and leave a legacy of their work through their contributions to mankind.
One more thing. In December of 2044, I hope to win the Nobel.
Will you join me on this journey of growth and transformation?
Namasté.
On How To Write.
Writing Hacks, Compelling Story Telling And Essays On Life
“To me, a short story is a conversation between writer and reader, since only the writer can speak, she must take care to respect the reader, to avoid telling him what to think, to say as little as possible and imply the rest with metaphor, ellipses, allusive dialogue, pauses.” ~ Edith Pearlman on Writing
My India Travel Diaries: It’s Not a Destination. It’s an Experience.
Travel Around Bharat “Once you have been to India, the rest of the world feels a little less colorful.” ~ Anonymous
AI Slop, Brainrot & Shitposting: Who’s Moderating the Internet Anymore? – Part I
What Is Brain Rot, Anyway? If you want to learn more about brain rot, you're at the right place. If you don't know what it is, even then, you're at the right place. When I visited Rome a few years ago, I realized Italians had given the world fabulous looking...
When AI Becomes Your Therapist: The Hidden Risk of Chatbots Replacing Reality – Part II
When Validation Becomes Distortion In the first article, we talked about what AI psychosis is. Here, we continue the conversation by exploring how AI chatbots may contribute to distorted thinking or delusions, especially in vulnerable users. We’re going to look...
The Dangerous Rise of AI Yes-Men: When ChatGPT Agrees Too Much and Fuels AI Psychosis – Part I
Cats vs. Chatbots Earlier in March 2026, Garry Tan, the President & CEO of Y Combinator, posted something on X: “I am so late to this trend but I finally asked my ChatGPT to make an image of our relationship and this is what it did. What does yours look...
Empowering Women to Lead in AI: Inside the ElevateHER Launch Event in Atlanta
A Keynote On Women Leaders In AI On March 20th, I attended the launch party of ElevateHER, a non-profit dedicated to building an ecosystem for women to lead in AI. It felt like the perfect opportunity to step into the world of AI firsthand and see what...
It Took a Publishing Scandal to Expose a Broken Industry and the Rise of AI Slop Books
Mia Ballard, a woman living in the UK, had self published a book called Shy girl in February 2025. The book is about a desperate young woman who meets a guy online and is now being held hostage as his pet. It became successful until readers started to question if it...
Why the World Is Finally Slowing Down: The Rise of the Slow Thought Revolution
I've been noticing an interesting phenomenon lately. The desire for slowing down and adopting an intentional way of consuming information. For nearly two decades the internet trained us to read faster, scroll faster, react faster. But lately something unexpected is...
Sunset at the Library of the World: Where a World of Words Meets the Mediterranean
I still get goosebumps when I think about the wonderous gigantic library I recently visited in Alexandria, Egypt. This modern library built in 2002, the Bibliotheca Alexandrina, can accommodate 2000 readers in its main reading hall on any given day. It's located on...
The Attachment Economy Is Here: What AI Companions Mean for All of Us – Part I
Parents, Get Ready To Welcome Your AI In-Laws There will be a time in the not so distant future, when your child will introduce you to his girlfriend. And there's a possibility, you will end up locking eyes, if that's even possible, with his AI companion. The...
Finding Your Alignment: An Indian American Woman’s Guide to Living Fully in America
Rooted, Rising, and Reckoning As a life coach and friend to many from the Indian diaspora, I often find myself in the sacred space of listening to Indian American women juggling life and priorities in America as mothers, professionals, and social change...
Stop Hustling, Start Living: Nietzsche, Self-Mastery, and the Courage to Quit
In his work, The Antichrist, Friedrich Nietzsche talks about a certain type of person who has the most tolerance for suffering, because they experience difficulty as meaningful. “The most intelligent men, like the strongest, find their happiness where others would...
Shirin Ebadi’s Fight for Freedom: Lessons from a Nobel Laureate and Iranian Women’s Resistance
Shirin Ebadi is a 2003 Nobel Prize winner known for her political activism and human rights work as a lawyer in Iran. She was also one of the people placed on the state’s execution lists. In 2017, I listened to the audiobook version of her memoir, Until We Are Free:...











