From My Corner of the World

This is my personal diary — a space where I try to make sense of the world around me. You'll find short prose on contemporary topics that catch my interest. What can you expect? The best adjectives? … maybe, once in a while. Flowery verbs? … not really my thing. Haiku-like brevity? … I try. Thanks for stopping by — hope you’ll visit again.

July 5, 2026

Thar-mageddon: Why Every Traffic Light is Now a Bollywood Stunt Set

From Ladakh's lakes to tiger reserves, discover why some Thar owners drive like main characters. A look at the 'bold' Thar car phenomenon from a very calm, very sober XUV 500 driver's perspective.

Ladakh admin levying fees on Thar car owners news clip

The Thar Car Effect: Why Every Traffic Signal is Now a Movie Set

Welcome back to the blog! Today, I’m putting down the coffee and picking up the keys to a mystery that’s been hiding among the news in my morning schedule.

We’ve all seen them. The vehicle that doesn’t just arrive on the road - it invades it. I’m talking about the Mahindra Thar. And I’m starting to wonder: what exactly is the secret ingredient in the Thar owner’s morning tea that makes them act like Jaykant Shikre from Singham the moment they hit the driver’s seat?

Crafted for the Bold" (Or Just Crafted for Chaos?)


Thar Car Ads with punch lines


You’ve seen the ads. Mahindra tells us the Thar is "crafted for the bold." It’s a nice sentiment, really. But somewhere along the line, "bold" seems to have been translated into "I am the main character of this universe and you are merely an NPC blocking my lane."

Take the other slogan: “Weekend ends, adventure doesn’t.”

Most people interpret "adventure" as a nice drive through the hills. For the modern Thar enthusiast, however, the adventure begins when the tarmac ends - or, more accurately, when the law ends. As seen in the attached news snippet,  four tourists recently found out that the Ladakh administration doesn't share their enthusiasm for "off-roading" in the pristine, ecologically fragile Pangong Lake. A hefty ₹2 lakh fine was the punchline to that particular adventure.

And let’s not forget the Ranthambhore escapade, where an entire troupe of Thar and Scorpio owners decided that a tiger reserve’s core zone was the perfect place for a private rally, leading to 19 seized vehicles and some very bewildered forest rangers. Apparently, when you own a Thar, a "Prohibited Area" sign is just a suggestion, like "please don't feed the pigeons."

The "Thartard" Mentality: A New Epidemic

Why does the Thar owner mentality seem to run riot like an English football fan on a rainy night, but on our local highways instead?

We’ve seen the viral videos - people driving on the wrong side of the road, literally bragging that their vehicle acts as a "get out of jail free" card. It’s as if the moment they sit behind that wheel, a psychological switch flips. Common sense hits the eject button, and in its place is a burning desire to bully rickshaw drivers and treat the rules of the road as optional DLC. It’s a chaotic energy that makes me miss the days when road rage was just someone honking twice at a red light.

The XUV 500: The Poor Country Cousin

Now, I drive an XUV 500. I look at my own car, and honestly, it feels like the poor country cousin in comparison. Sure, we share the same engine DNA - that beautiful, powerful heart - but the similarity ends there.

My XUV is a "sober" vehicle. It takes me from point A to point B without needing to perform a stunt or invade a national park. If the Thar is the loud, impulsive, leather-jacket-wearing bad boy of the family, the XUV 500 is the accountant brother who just wants to make sure everyone wears their seatbelts and gets home on time.

Maybe it’s time we reminded ourselves that being "bold" doesn't have to mean being a public nuisance. Until then, I’ll keep driving my XUV, staying safely in my lane, and watching the "adventures" from a safe, law-abiding distance.

What’s the most "main character" behavior you’ve witnessed on the road lately? Let me know in the comments!

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