- The first meet over years after they born.
- I seek you my husband!
- Summer time memory
- This is me
- My ribbon 🎀
- My garden of memories
- The weight of forgiveness
- Our genes
- My hardwork
- Take pause.. and look at back
- I keep myself loving him
- A pen is a weapon
- Human life
- Purana dilly – delhi old city
- Leadership qualities
- Love gives life to live
- India and USA
- Mystic eye!
- Me and in me!
- Corporate lawyer
- Romance
- We want in india
- His milky white!
- “Nilavarakundu”
- Stand Still!
- My mother!
- Chasing my silent strength
- Buildings with paint peel off…….
- My result in LAWCET
- Entrepreneur
- What we think !
There was a time when I believed life could be understood the way businesses are classified �” small scale, medium scale, and large scale. I compared it to careers too, where years of experience slowly increase one’s worth, bringing stability, growth, and a better income over time.
I always carried a quiet belief within me: if a business begins small and grows steadily through reinvestment, then one does not need great wealth to begin. Time, patience, and persistence could build something meaningful. In the same way, I looked at people with fifteen or twenty years of experience and thought of how their earnings had multiplied, almost as if they had nurtured a small business into something far greater.
For a long time, I held onto the dream of becoming an entrepreneur. But somewhere along the journey, reality began to speak louder than dreams. At this point in my life, a job feels safer and more practical than starting a business. My family believes the same. They see security in a stable career, and perhaps they are not wrong. Yet the dream inside me has never truly disappeared. It continues to ask me what I can still create, what I can still become.
Sometimes I wonder if I have reached an age where starting from scratch is no longer wise. If I were to begin now, I would not want to build something tiny; I would want to begin at a level that matches the life I already live and the income I already earn. Only then could I devote myself fully, with heart and soul. But my parents look at me with concern and say, “Why work so hard now? You have earned enough. Rest a little. Live peacefully.”
Those words, though spoken with love, slowly weakened my confidence. The idea of building a business began to feel crushed beneath thoughts of age and exhaustion. Yet deep inside, I know I am not old. I may be approaching the later middle years of life, but I still carry energy, ideas, and determination. I can seek help when needed. I think more clearly now than before. Technology has made many things easier, and experience has made me wiser.
Still, I struggle to find encouragement. I dream of creating something meaningful �” a business with good profit, balance, and purpose, not endless struggle. Sometimes I ask myself if this desire itself is where I am going wrong.
But perhaps life is also teaching me another kind of success. Maybe the best thing I can do now is to strengthen the confidence of my family, support them in their work, and help them grow in the ways I once dreamed for myself. So I choose to focus on my career with sincerity, and I will find joy in the growth of my husband as well. Through that, I hope to give peace to my parents and free them from worry.
And even then, somewhere quietly within me, the spirit of an entrepreneur still lives �” waiting, believing, and refusing to fade completely.
Jessy Jacob








