Availability Isn’t Performance (After Coffee)

“What time works best for you?” And out of habit – or maybe, the way I have been groomed over the years, I said, “Anytime, just tell me when.”

They looked at me and said something simple but surprising:

They looked at me and said something simple but surprising:

“No. We don’t expect you to be available all the time! We care about your work-life balance, your potential and growth, and want you to be at your best when you work for us, and you feel it is convenient.”

This was a conversation that happened recently, and I realised that most of us no longer think in terms of time slots.

We work around the clock responding, replying, attending… without ever asking ourselves when we actually perform our best.

Yet, research tells us that when we work matters far more than we realise.

A 2025 study on productivity rhythms found that less than 30% of people perform their best between 9 AM and 5 PM, i.e., the traditional work window, and that cognitive performance peaks at varied times across individuals.

Some are sharpest early morning. Some in the afternoon. Some even at night.

In classrooms, too, students in early morning sessions are significantly more likely to report lower attention and engagement compared to mid-morning or early afternoon.

By 5 PM, everyone has attention fatigue… not from lack of interest, but from simply being awake for too long.

That doesn’t mean early morning or late evening is “bad.” It means human focus isn’t one-size-fits-all.

It’s the same with professional roles.

A strategist might have their sharpest ideas between 11–2.

A designer may find flow after lunch.

A writer might produce their best lines late night.

Psychologists call this variability chronotypes, the natural cognitive rhythms that influence how our attention, creativity, and decision-making fluctuate throughout the day.

What’s interesting is how workplace thinking is shifting.

Instead of asking someone to be available round the clock, HR managers are now asking “When do you do your best work? We are okay with flexibility and we care for your work life balance.”

Because availability doesn’t equal performance.

How often we keep working without ever examining when we work effectively? Not because we can’t choose, but because no one ever asked us.

If you could schedule your work only when you actually needed to present, meet, teach, or submit some document, and you could choose the day and time (8–11 am, 11–2 pm, 2–5 pm, or 5–8 pm), which window would you pick?

After morning coffee, of course.

This New Year, Be Your Own Little Superhero

January 1 always arrives with a lot of noise. So I am writing this on January 2. In peace.

Peace that happens in small, almost invisible ways.
That lies in the courage to pause.
That focuses on choosing the self without guilt.
That allows unlearning and letting go of what no longer fits.

The past year has probably asked more of us than we planned for.
It taught us patience the hard way.
It showed us who stayed, who valued, who cared, who grew, and who quietly drifted away.
And it reminded us that strength, sometimes, is simply staying kind and humble in a world that keeps rushing.

Last year was a rollercoaster for me as well.
I’m thankful for those who believed in me and walked alongside me.

And also for the situations that tested my trust, consistency, and dedication, and quietly pushed me toward clarity and courage.

So, if 2025 gave you clarity – great.
If it gave you lessons, you’ve handled them.
If it gave you a pause – maybe we all need them once in a while.

Here’s to a year of becoming – not proving anymore, and not waiting anymore.
To progress that feels honest.
To work that matters.
To people who feel like home.

An image of a cute little car in Prague, Czech Republic, captured by me.



Just go vroom and be your own tiny little superhero.
No matter what.
Happy New Year.

This New Year, Listen to Your Heart

If you’ve been doing something for years, you eventually become very good at it. You become known for it. 𝑨𝒏𝒅 𝒕𝒉𝒂𝒕’𝒔 𝒆𝒙𝒂𝒄𝒕𝒍𝒚 𝒘𝒉𝒆𝒓𝒆 𝒕𝒉𝒆 𝒑𝒓𝒐𝒃𝒍𝒆𝒎 𝒃𝒆𝒈𝒊𝒏𝒔.

Because while you continue to grow: take courses, earn more degrees, reskill, upskill, learn entirely new domains: at the workplace, you’re often still seen doing 𝒋𝒖𝒔𝒕 𝒕𝒉𝒂𝒕 𝒐𝒏𝒆 𝒕𝒉𝒊𝒏𝒈.

You could be an accountant who understands strategy.

A finance professional pursuing marketing.

Someone with years of experience and a fresh, trending perspective.

However, within the organisation, the label persists.

Organisations still tend to view people in fixed boxes based on what they 𝒉𝒂𝒗𝒆 𝒅𝒐𝒏𝒆, rather than what they 𝒄𝒂𝒏 𝒃𝒆𝒄𝒐𝒎𝒆.

Experience, ironically, becomes a box instead of a bridge.

In India, we often discuss the demographic dividend, emphasizing the need for opportunities among young professionals.

Yet a large number of experienced professionals in their 30s, 40s, 50s are often under-utilised, not under-qualified.

Over 53% of graduates and 36% of postgraduates are underemployed in jobs below their qualifications.

Only about 4.7% of the workforce has formal skill training, contributing to an underutilised labour force.

Even after retirement, many senior citizens still want to contribute meaningfully.

They have decades of institutional memory, decision-making wisdom, and problem-solving skills.

However, the system mostly asks them to step aside instead of taking a different approach.

When organisations don’t tap into the full potential of experience, they lose twice: once by not leveraging what people already know; and again by ignoring what they are still capable of becoming.

Yes, experience 𝒔𝒉𝒐𝒖𝒍𝒅 be your biggest asset.

But when it becomes the only lens through which you’re seen, it quietly turns into a limitation.

According to LinkedIn’s 2025 Work Change Report, by 2030 as much as 70% of the skills used in most jobs will change, reshaping how organisations view talent, roles and experience in the future.

This means that experience shouldn’t be a label that limits you, it should be a foundation for ongoing evolution: the kind that helps you grow horizontally as well as vertically in your career.

If 2025 offered us a Big Idea for 2026, it is that the future of work won’t be defined by what you’ve always done, but by what you can keep becoming.

Growth sometimes simply means being allowed to evolve within one.

Talent doesn’t expire. It just gets quieter when it’s not heard.

PS: This New Year, listen to your heart.

Design a site like this with WordPress.com
Get started