🛹 TBSN #32 — Style guide for Indian girls & boys
Welcome to another new edition of The Bright Student Newsletter! It’s packed with resources, tips, and opportunities to become a better student, as always.
This edition:
⌛ Style guide for Indian girls
🚀 Style guide for Indian boys
🛠️ Tools recommendation: Google Tasks
📘 Book recommendation: Ikigai
🎬 Movie recommendation: I Am Kalam
We find links/topics from multiple sources and go through all of them before including them in the newsletter.
💃🏻 Style guide for Indian girls
Having a style is important!
With that said, OutfitTrends has prepared a detailed style guide for Indian girls that you’ll absolutely love to check out.
Click here to check out the guide
🕺🏻 Style guide for Indian boys
Having a style is important!
With that said, MensXP has prepared a quick wardrobe style guide for Indian boys that you’ll love to explore.
Click here to check out the guide
🛠️ Tools recommendation: Google Tasks
Google Tasks is a task-management app from Google that lets you manage your to-do list, break down goals into actionable items, and set due dates for tasks. It's free to use, simple, and intuitive.
Google Tasks is a great tool for students who need to keep track of their activities throughout the day and week. In the app, you can save your assignment and exam reminders, as well as manage to-do lists for your everyday homework in school.
You can download the Google Tasks app from the Play Store or App Store.
📘 Book recommendation: Ikigai
“Ikigai: The Japanese Secret to a Long and Happy Life” is a book that explores the history of Ikigai and its origins in Japan, as well as introducing readers to the concept of Ikigai, or the “reason for being.”
The book outlines what the authors call the four pillars of Ikigai: starting small, living in the moment, following your passion, and staying active. It also includes traditional Japanese recipes for longevity and exercises for mental health.
The book is co-authored by Hector Garcia and Francesc Miralles.
🎬 Movie recommendation: I Am Kalam
I Am Kalam, a film by Nila Madhab Panda, is a story of hope and inspiration. The movie follows the life of a boy named Chhotu from the slums of Rajasthan. Chhotu works in a small tea stall, serving customers and dreaming of becoming educated. He spends most of his time serving tea to a group of men who are engaged in political discussions about the former president Kalam.
He wants to be like Kalam one day, so he adopts the name as his own. He meets an educated man named Gulshan, who becomes inspired by Chhotu's enthusiasm for education and offers to teach him.
Chhotu's life is full of obstacles—his father, who drinks away all his earnings; his abusive stepmother; and a corrupt landlord who owns the slum where he lives, among others — but he keeps going.
If you missed the older editions of the newsletter: