India of My Dreams: The Dream That Started It All
Hi… I am Ayaan.
And this is a story about a dream I had almost ten years ago.
Not the kind of dream you chase.
The kind you have at night — vivid, detailed, so real that when you wake up you
sit quietly for a while trying to hold on to it before it fades.
This one never faded. In the dream, it was the 15th of August. Independence Day. The Prime Minister was addressing the nation — not with numbers and schemes. With something that felt like the beginning of something real.
Roads.
He started with roads. Not
just repaired roads — properly built roads. Contractors will be legally bound to
maintain them for 10 to 15 years. If the road fails — the contractor pays from
his own sanctioned amount. No excuses. No patching the same pothole every
monsoon for twenty years.
And underneath those roads —
planned channels. Every cable, every wire already accounted for in the design.
No digging up fresh roads three months after they're laid because a telecom
company decided today was a good day to work.
Then traffic. In my dream,
breaking a signal got you a flat tyre. Immediate. Inconvenient. Impossible to
bribe your way around. Consequences that actually landed.
And alongside those roads, trees.
Both sides of every street. Green corridors running through the entire city.
Maintained by agriculture graduates. Students who studied the land and were
given no place to use that knowledge. Suddenly — employed. Purposeful. Two
problems. One solution.
The traffic police, in my dream,
were fit. Not as a vanity measure — as a standard. Grace periods given. Support
offered. But the expectation clear.
Then education. No more lifetime
loans for a degree. Made genuinely affordable. No new international schools
extracting premium fees. Community inspection bodies. Real people visiting real
schools, listening to students, acting on what they heard.
I woke up and sat quietly for a
long time.
None of it was impossible. Every
single thing in that dream has been done somewhere in the world. Roads that
last. Cities that stay green. Education that doesn't bankrupt families.
Accountability that actually works.
It's not a fantasy. It's a choice.
That dream is ten years old now.
And I still remember every detail.
Which is why I named this series
what I named it.
This is not a complaint column
about everything wrong with India.
It's a love letter to the country
this could be.
Every Friday — one dream. One
problem. One honest conversation about what it could look like if we actually
tried.
Welcome to India of My Dreams.
— Ayaan | One Day at a Time 🖤




A dream that will never be fullfilled because the politicians are fulfilling their pockets 🤣
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