Three Believers

The celebrity conducting a famed chat show is flummoxed by the same photograph placed in the offices of three of her interviewees.

Could there be a connection?

Anaita, a Parisian model; Sandy, a startup founder in Silicon Valley; and Saraswati, a Professor of Psychology at an international university, conducting classes in India.

The research team is activated to get further details. It reveals a shared childhood and the bond that still fires them despite the physical distance. They dared to dream together on sultry afternoons in Delhi’s Chandni Chowk and reached the desired destinations after an uphill struggle. What remains with them is the unquestioning belief and unstinting support they offered each other.

Saraswati sold her inherited jewels to fund Sandy’s education in the US. Sandy raised cheap capital in the US, built strong networks and helped Anaita enter the fashion world in Paris.

Anaita (born Anita) was derided for her dark complexion in India, but Sandy and Saraswati always maintained that her looks will be considered exotic in the West, only if she continued to walk in the same way she did on the dusty roads in Delhi. There was a spark in her presence.

Though oceans divide them, their childhood connection remains a quiet pulse beneath their lives. When Sandy pitches to investors, she hears Saraswati’s voice urging empathy. When Anaita walks the runway in designer outfits, she imagines Sandy’s applause echoing in the crowd. And when Saraswati explains resilience to her students, she draws strength from Anaita’s confident gait and fearless gaze. Here was someone who emerged victorious from emotional abuse as a child.

They are three women, three worlds apart, yet bound by the invisible thread of shared beginningsβ€”proof that childhood friendships can outlast distance, fame, and time, weaving their stories into one enduring tapestry.


What Do You See #346

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