u/FineStrike8893

How is this plan guys

A brief explanation.
Family living can be extended little bit more back to accommodate stairs and space for rest.
Family living and kitchen is double height with old clay tiles toof so from the kitchen there will visibility to all rooms. Courtyard is open to sky.

u/FineStrike8893 — 2 days ago

What’s the best material for kitchen cabinets

I’m planning to make kitchen cabinets for my house. What’s your suggestions. Suggested me plastic sheets like multi wood, aluminum fabrication, m plywood 710 grade. I feel plywood 710 grade is highly expensive. Expert options please.

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u/FineStrike8893 — 2 days ago

Does anybody here know about this product or brand?

I recently came across it and got interested in trying tufting. I’m into calligraphy design — not professionally, but I’ve done some decent work and thought tufting could be a fun creative extension for my designs.

This kit caught my attention because it looks beginner-friendly and comparatively cheap, but that also makes me a bit suspicious about the quality and durability. Has anyone here actually used it or know someone who has? I’d really appreciate honest feedback before I spend money on it.

u/FineStrike8893 — 3 days ago
▲ 41 r/Kochi

Did anybody know about this healing method

I don’t know exactly what’s going on. But heard some people have results and some don’t. Anybody has personal or know someone has positive results using this healing method.

u/FineStrike8893 — 4 days ago

Property available in middle of palakkad, malappuram, thrissure

23 cent with 3000 sqft brand new house not house warming yet. Just finished painting. And work is going on. Plot with full of fruit trees.

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u/FineStrike8893 — 5 days ago

Does Our Education System Reward Obedience More Than Creativity?

I’ve been thinking about a pattern I often notice in India’s education and career culture.

Why does our system produce so many job-seekers, but comparatively fewer risk-taking entrepreneurs or problem-solvers?

It feels like many highly educated people spend their entire youth optimizing for marks, degrees, and stable salaries, while some of the strongest business instincts often emerge from people with less formal education — perhaps because real-life struggles forced them to think independently, negotiate, adapt, and spot opportunities early.

Our education system seems heavily designed around academic excellence on paper:
\\- memorization,
\\- exam performance,
\\- obedience to structure,
\\- and career security.

But where is the focus on:
\\- creativity,
\\- critical thinking,
\\- risk tolerance,
\\- leadership,
\\- sales,
\\- negotiation,
\\- building systems,
\\- or solving real-world problems?

In many cases, students become extremely skilled at surviving exams, but not necessarily at creating value independently.

I’m not saying education is bad or that all educated people avoid business. India has incredible engineers, scientists, founders, and innovators. But culturally, why do we still treat a “safe job” as the ultimate success metric, even in a country with massive entrepreneurial potential?

Is this because of:
\\- economic insecurity,
\\- colonial-era education models,
\\- middle-class survival psychology,
\\- family pressure,
\\- or an outdated definition of success?

Curious to hear different perspectives — especially from people who experienced both corporate life and entrepreneurship.

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u/FineStrike8893 — 6 days ago