Anyone in Indirapuram exploring spirituality, consciousness, or just questioning life?
I was thinking it’d be interesting to meet a few people who enjoy talking about things beyond the usual small talk.
I was thinking it’d be interesting to meet a few people who enjoy talking about things beyond the usual small talk.
Today I saw a police officer in Ghaziabad riding a motorcycle without a helmet, and the bike also appears to have no standard number plate/IND marking. I clicked this photo because it’s frustrating to see.
Common people are often stopped and fined for traffic violations, but when those enforcing the law don’t appear to follow the same rules, it sends the wrong message.
The law should apply equally to everyone, whether it’s a citizen or a police officer. I hope the concerned authorities look into this and ensure accountability.
Photo attached.
What if 5-10 strangers met for chai and one interesting conversation?
No agenda, no networking, no business pitches, no motivational speeches.
Just a simple topic:
“What’s one thing you believed strongly 5 years ago that you no longer believe today?”
Could be about money, career, relationships, happiness, success, society, anything.
Sometimes a single conversation can make you see life from a slightly different angle.
If a few people are interested, we’ll pick a chai spot and keep it casual
There’s something deeply unfair about what City Forest Ghaziabad has become… not because the land isn’t beautiful, but because of how little we’ve allowed it to be.
This place has everything it needs. Space, trees, water, potential. And yet when you walk through it, you don’t feel pride. You feel something missing. Broken paths, poor maintenance, no real sense of care. It feels like a place that was started… and then forgotten.
Now think about Dehradun.
Same kind of land. Same natural beauty. But the experience? Completely different.
Clean walking trails. Maintained greenery. Spaces where families actually want to spend time. You walk there and feel calm, connected, proud.
So the question is simple
Why not here?
We pay taxes. Every single one of us contributes. Not just for roads and lights, but for spaces like this. Spaces where kids can run freely, where people can breathe, where a city can feel alive.
City Forest Ghaziabad could be that place. It should be that place.
But it won’t change on its own.
Right now, it reflects neglect. But if people come together, it can reflect something else entirely. Care. Ownership. Pride.
This isn’t about complaining. It’s about realizing that this space belongs to us. And if we don’t speak up for it, no one will.
Imagine a clean cycling track.
Imagine proper maintenance.
Imagine a space you’d actually want to visit every week.
That’s not a dream. That’s basic.
We’re starting small. Talking, meeting, building a group of people who care. And then taking it forward together.
Because change doesn’t start with the system.
It starts when people decide enough is enough.
If this place matters to you even a little, don’t stay silent.
Be part of it.
There’s something deeply unfair about what City Forest Ghaziabad has become… not because the land isn’t beautiful, but because of how little we’ve allowed it to be.
This place has everything it needs. Space, trees, water, potential. And yet when you walk through it, you don’t feel pride. You feel something missing. Broken paths, poor maintenance, no real sense of care. It feels like a place that was started… and then forgotten.
Now think about Dehradun City Forest.
Same kind of land. Same natural beauty. But the experience? Completely different.
Clean walking trails. Maintained greenery. Spaces where families actually want to spend time. You walk there and feel calm, connected, proud.
So the question is simple
Why not here?
We pay taxes. Every single one of us contributes. Not just for roads and lights, but for spaces like this. Spaces where kids can run freely, where people can breathe, where a city can feel alive.
City Forest Ghaziabad could be that place. It should be that place.
But it won’t change on its own.
Right now, it reflects neglect. But if people come together, it can reflect something else entirely. Care. Ownership. Pride.
This isn’t about complaining. It’s about realizing that this space belongs to us. And if we don’t speak up for it, no one will.
Imagine a clean cycling track.
Imagine proper maintenance.
Imagine a space you’d actually want to visit every week.
That’s not a dream. That’s basic.
We’re starting small. Talking, meeting, building a group of people who care. And then taking it forward together.
Because change doesn’t start with the system.
It starts when people decide enough is enough.
If this place matters to you even a little, don’t stay silent.
Be part of it.
They said “bicycle track”.
Safe. Clean. Planned.
This is what exists.
Mud.
Broken paths.
Neglect.
This isn’t a track.
This is a failure.
A 150-acre forest…
and this is the condition.
In Ghaziabad.
Who approved this?
Who is responsible?
#Ghaziabad #CityForest #GZB
I went to the 150 acre City Forest in Ghaziabad and honestly it’s not what it should be.
This place was supposed to have clean green space, walking paths, cycling track, water bodies. It could actually help the whole area with better air and a proper public space.
But right now
dirty water
muddy broken paths
garbage in multiple areas
no proper maintenance
It doesn’t make sense. A project this big must have budget and planning. So where is it going
We are forming a small group to raise this properly and start a petition.
If you care about this space or live nearby, join in. Let’s push this together and make it better
Comment or DM 👍