A man who has everything one can desire for, says, he is scared of attachments. Yes, not losing his stardom, not failing at the work that he loves. What makes a man who has millions of lovers and die-hard fans, get on a knee and without any guard at this moment? Is this all for a bunch of humans, who all mean the world to him? Can attachment to them become an unbearable pain and fear to the extent that it can't be withstood by a man who has been on top of his world for the past 30 years? It is ' Attachment '. It is 'love '

This man who is already has a family, for him, the attachment might have been the base, yet he says so. Why? Why do we resonate with this? What is this common fear that connects us?
Attachment can be arguably considered as the biggest tragedy in human life bringing the most unexamined, craziest emotions and actions out of people. In most of the interviews of AB Bajpayee, and Ratan Tata, there is a sense of longing visible when asked about their personal life, which went unshaken throughout maybe because of a commitment to a greater cause. But there remains that void, a sense of longing, and that need to be shared and vice versa.
How we fail to see that less messy pictures are not away from the attachments but maybe in balancing what your heart wants and it inherently has always wanted attachments. Yet our experiences teach us to remain safe, away from pain, and we remain motionless when something approaches, in hopes of it to pass away.

Sean Penn’s adaptation of the nonfiction bestseller by Jon Krakauer 'Into the Wild', deals with the volatility attached to these
uncalled-for feelings that tree up from the seeds of longingness.
''The idea of leaving everything behind to pursue a life in the wild, as young Chris McCandless did, appeals to many......''
As the movie 'Into the Wild' ends, it is put out that "Happiness is only real when shared "
but the protagonist, Chris realizes this just before dying and says
What if I were smiling and running into your arms? Would you see then what I see now?"
edited by:- Prashansa Sachan
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