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Feast brings respite from odd routines

  On an important occasion, I had the great opportunity to attend a feast arranged at a posh hotel in our famous city of Kanpur's prominent Jajmau area.  Various delicious items were arranged on the stylish table. The guests were really free to choose what they liked to consume. There was a considerable rush but not in any way uncontrollable when I entered the grand air conditioning space. Soon, the humble host emerged, and we liked to step forward for embracing each other as human decency permits us to do on such occasions. I did not lose much time sharing a light joke. I briefed him that I saw you standing from just outside, but you were out of sight the moment I entered the a bit dark hall.  He, in his usual manner, did not pause to say how a man so fat could not be viewed from quite a short distance. Thus, we laughed to the full heartily. Among various dishes, there was also the regular Biryani. How would be missed due to its wide acceptability? When it was indeed ava...

ROMO & FOMO are hit abbreviations



The two separate popular terms ROMO and FOMO are respectively brought into constant use during this turbulent time of politically charged discourse. Therefore, we seldom find a wide rejection of such varied short forms practised within its arrangement. 

Of course, it i’s not the first time that such abbreviations have been stated as a novel statement. These are brought to spread an important message. Some are found saying that these terms might enter the books in order to increase its wide usage. 

We can freely describe these short formats as a solidly specified abbreviation. Clearly, there is no dearth of dark and grey areas in reverse possibilities. 

Patrick McGinnis, a Harvard Business School student, first used the term FOMO (Fear of Missing Out) in 2004 to denote the anxiety associated with missing out on fulfilling possibilities. This problem is heightened by popular social media. 

During the COVID-19 pandemic, R O M O (Reality of Missing Out) emerged as a way to shift attention from fear to a more present-focused mindset. It expresses acceptance of missing events because they were cancelled or transformed. 

How much enjoyment and a small amount of utter disappointment are present more often in the human attempts that cannot be easily rejected or determined at all. 

Rahul Gandhi, the head of the Congress, may be experiencing FOMO these days after the outcome of the recently concluded vice-presidential elections. In terms of the total number of votes cast, the disparity against his alliance, known as INDIA, remains far more relatively substantial. 

When the results of the concluded vice-presidential elections were announced, it was unclear if he was battling his crippling fear of losing out on ultimate success.

The previous years have seen him replaced by black and grey by the haunting spectre of the saffron party's diplomatic moves in a straight defeat. His alliance, one after another, appears to float in an almost unbearably moving piece of timing. 

There are confabulations about him licking defeat one after another. Sometimes when we see his face, we just feel numb, but he has not been escaping from his attempts repeatedly, even though he may be feeling that he is not doing enough. However, can it be wholly acceptable? 

Human endeavours that are difficult to reject or determine at all are more likely to contain a certain amount of satisfaction and a little quantity of complete disappointment. Usurping both abbreviations is, as far as we can tell, the current trend. Consistency stays crucial during volatile times, and luckily, these abbreviated words don't appear to be heading in any different direction.




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