1 min read
This is not a movie.
It is a mind
projected on a screen.
Title: Thinking Brain.
No hero entry.
No background music.
Just neurons
firing without permission.
Scene one —
Overthinking.
A chair.
A ceiling fan.
And a man
arguing with invisible futures.
Cut.
Scene two —
Ambition.
Same man.
Different posture.
Eyes burning
brighter than logic.
The brain
is not silent.
It is a scriptwriter
who never sleeps.
Dialogue after dialogue.
What if?
Why not?
Why me?
Why not me?
Interval never comes.
Because thoughts
don’t respect timelines.
In this film,
fear plays villain.
Doubt plays supporting role.
Discipline appears
late in the second half.
But when it enters —
The screenplay changes.
Chaos gets structure.
Emotion gets direction.
Leadership gets born.
The climax
is not success.
It is clarity.
The hero realizes —
The brain
is not the enemy.
It is raw footage.
Unedited.
Unfiltered.
Powerful.
If I let anxiety direct,
the film becomes tragedy.
If I let ego direct,
it becomes noise.
If awareness directs,
it becomes art.
Every thought
is a scene.
Every habit
is a subplot.
Every decision
is a camera angle.
The audience?
The world.
The critic?
Myself.
Roll credits?
Not yet.
Because this script
rewrites daily.
And the writer —
Pugazheanthi Palani —
Is still thinking.