Life Jothe Ondu Selfie (HIGH-QUALITY)

Just then, a stray dog, drenched and shivering, limped under his plastic chair. It had a nasty cut on its paw. It looked up at Aarav with eyes that held no filter, no pretense—just raw, tired existence.

He captioned it: “Life jothe ondu selfie. No filter. No pose. Just real.”

He was 28, a software developer, and utterly exhausted. His life had become a series of sprints: Jira tickets, sprints, burndown charts, and the endless, soul-crushing traffic of the Outer Ring Road. He hadn’t seen his parents in Mysore in eight months. He hadn’t held a paintbrush—his childhood passion—in three years. His “gallery” was now a neglected Instagram page full of stock photos of coffee cups. life jothe ondu selfie

“One more filter, saar?” the chai wala asked, sliding a cutting chai across the wooden counter.

The next morning, he didn’t go to the office. He called his manager, took a sick day—a real one. He took the dog (he named him Bug , because, well, life is full of them) to the vet. He then took a bus to Mysore, the dog curled up in his lap. Just then, a stray dog, drenched and shivering,

The rain was hammering down on the tin roof of the Chai Tapri, drowning out the usual evening chaos of Bengaluru’s IT corridor. Aarav stared at his phone. The screen was cracked—a casualty of last week’s panic attack when he’d thrown it against the wall.

Something shifted. For the first time in months, Aarav wasn’t performing. He wasn’t trying to look okay. He was just… being. He captioned it: “Life jothe ondu selfie

On a whim, Aarav knelt down. He didn’t think about code or deadlines. He tore a strip from his already-torn kurta and gently wrapped the dog’s paw. The dog didn’t wag its tail. It just leaned its wet, heavy head against Aarav’s knee.

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