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Showing posts with the label India to USA

Chapter 1: The Weight of the Suitcases

  The air in my home in India was not merely warm; it was thick, textured with the heavy scent of jasmine that drifted from the courtyard, the sharp, oily tang of industrial diesel from the main road, and the comforting, constant smell of my spouse, Riley, cooking dal in the kitchen. For weeks, this house had been a staging ground for a departure that felt less like a trip and more like a surgical procedure. We were not just packing; we were pruning our lives. Everything had to be justified—is this worth the airfare? Is this worth the physical space in a suitcase? Riley moved through the rooms with a focused, quiet intensity that masked a deep well of anxiety. We were packing my life—not into the simple cardboard boxes of a standard move, but into two massive, industrial-grade suitcases that looked like they belonged on an expedition to the poles. These cases were the vessels of my ambition, the containers for a future I was inventing on the fly. My fingers brushed against the ...

Preface - An Immigrant's Success Story

Immigration stories are often told in a very simple way. Someone leaves one country, travels across an ocean, works hard, and eventually builds a successful life in a new land. The story usually sounds neat and inspirational when told in a few sentences. Real life, of course, is rarely that tidy. Behind every immigration story are years of small struggles, unexpected moments of humor, quiet victories, deep frustrations, cultural confusion, homesickness, and gradual adaptation. There are also moments of profound happiness — the kind that make you realize that the uncertain path you chose years ago slowly turned into something meaningful. This blog is the story of one such journey. In February 1998, my wife Riley and I boarded a flight from Bangalore to the United States with our young daughter Sammy. At that moment, we were simply a young family following an opportunity. We did not think of ourselves as part of a larger historical pattern, although in truth we were joining mil...