Wednesday, April 15, 2026

The Dreamer Who Engineered Reality

The Dreamer Who Engineered Reality

He was fired from the very company he had founded. The reasons given—too demanding, stubborn, a perfectionist. They took away his title as CEO, but they could not take away his creativity, his vision, his dream.

He did not give up. He began new ventures, channelling imagination and relentless drive into fresh creations.

And then, one day, wisdom prevailed. The company called him back. With his return came revival—innovation flourished, dreams were engineered into reality, and the company rose again to become a symbol of creativity and progress.

He was Steve Jobs.

The company was Apple.

Steve was the adopted son of Paul and Clara Jobs. Paul, a mechanic who loved working with tools, noticed his son’s unusual curiosity. While other children played, Steve asked questions: “How does this machine work?” In the garage, Paul taught him how to build things, nurturing the spark that would one day ignite revolutions.

When the family moved to California—Silicon Valley—Steve saw his first computer. It was room-sized, immense. He was told it could solve problems. His response was: “What else can it do?”

After schooling, he entered college but left within six months, realising it was not teaching him what he truly wanted to learn. Yet he did not abandon learning. He attended classes that inspired him—one of them was calligraphy. Years later, that art of beautiful writing shaped the elegant fonts of the Macintosh computer.

His journey to India in 1974 brought him spiritual enrichment. When he came back, he was a man of clear vision, resolved to create something that would change the world.

At 21, he founded Apple. His dream was to build a computer so intuitive and beautiful that even a child could use it. Apple’s personal computers, with graphics and a user-friendly design, were revolutionary. At just 23, Jobs became a millionaire. But money did not excite him. He wanted something greater.

“When you use the product, you should feel it, be inspired by it. Computers are not about technology—they are about helping people to be creative.”

With the Macintosh, Jobs introduced the mouse and graphical user interface. It was revolutionary.

Then came the fall. The directors of Apple thought him too demanding, too stubborn, too difficult to work with. He was fired. Later, Jobs would reflect: “Getting fired from Apple was the best thing that could have happened to me. It freed me to enter one of the most creative periods of my life.”

He founded NeXT and also nurtured Pixar, which transformed animation forever.

Meanwhile, Apple, without his vision, declined. Eventually, the company invited him back.

With his return, Apple was reborn. The iMac, iPod, iPhone, and iPad followed—products that changed the way the world lived, worked, and dreamed.

In 2005, Steve Jobs stood before the graduating class at Stanford University. He did not speak as a corporate icon, but as a storyteller. He shared three simple stories—

Jobs said, “You can’t connect the dots looking forward; you can only connect them looking backwards.”

Jobs confessed: “Sometimes life hits you in the head with a brick. Don’t lose faith.”

Jobs reflected: “Your time is limited, so don’t waste it living someone else’s life

His final words became a mantra for generations: “Stay hungry, stay foolish.” It was not just advice—it was a philosophy. Hunger for imagination, foolishness to attempt the impossible, courage to engineer dreams into reality.

Despite poor health in his later years, Jobs worked tirelessly to bring imagination into reality.

Even when he stepped aside as CEO, he continued to guide Apple, remaining its inspiring source.

His dream lived on—not once, but many times, refined and re‑engineered into legacies that continue to shape lives.

Dr. Mahendra Ingale Pune, April 15, 2026

Author of Value‑Based Leadership

#EngineeringDreamsInspiringSouls #ValueBasedLeadership #EngineeringHeartBeats 

Tuesday, April 14, 2026

Dream to Be a Swordsman

 Dream to Be a Swordsman

A youth carried a dream — to become a swordsman. He sought out a Zen master, renowned for wisdom and unmatched skill with the blade. Bowing deeply, the youth requested, “Master, Please train me in this art.”

The master gazed into his eyes. “You must be patient, attentive, and focused. It may take years.” “I am ready. I am determined,” the youth replied.

The master handed him the utensils. “Wash them. Sweep the floor and the surroundings. This will be your duty until further orders.”

The youth obeyed with enthusiasm. Days passed. Weeks turned into months. Then, one day, while cooking, the master struck his back with a stick. It happened again and again. The youth tried to defend himself, but always failed.

One night, while he slept, the master struck him once more. Suddenly, the youth realized: an attack may come from any side, at any time. He became vigilant, attentive, awake.

One day, when the master was asleep, the youth picked up the stick to test his own awareness. But before the blow landed, the master’s hand had already caught it. The youth was astonished.

The attacks continued. Some he managed to avert. Finally, one night, as the master raised the stick to strike, the youth caught it in his sleep.

The master smiled: “Your training is complete.

The true power of the sword lies not in the blade, but in the mind. A swordsman must be so attentive that he senses the strike before it begins.

You have mastered patience, vigilance, and awareness. This is the essence of swordsmanship.

Remember: if you can defend with clarity, you can also strike when required. But let your sword serve first as a shield, not as a weapon of aggression. Attack only when necessity calls, never when impulse tempts.

Take up the sword now, and walk with it.”

Reflection:

Dreams are like swords — powerful, but dangerous if misused. The youth’s journey shows that before one learns to strike, one must learn to endure, to defend, and to remain patient. Defense builds awareness; awareness makes an attack purposeful.

In life, this means:

  • Patience teaches us to wait for the right moment.
  • Hard work strengthens us to carry the weight of responsibility.
  • Awareness allows us to anticipate challenges before they arrive.
  • Action — like the strike of a sword — must come only when it is necessary, guided by clarity, not by impulse.

Every dream requires this balance. To nurture a dream is to defend it against doubt, delay, and distraction. To realise a dream is to act decisively when the right moment arrives.

Dr. Mahendra Ingale Pune, April 14, 2026

Author of Value‑Based Leadership

#EngineeringDreamsInspiringSouls #ValueBasedLeadership #EngineeringHeartBeats

Monday, April 13, 2026

From Silence to Laughter

From Silence to Laughter

He was backstage, watching his mother perform in the theatre, dreaming of one day standing before an audience. And suddenly, she lost her voice. The melody faltered. The crowd grew restless—cups clattered, dirt flew toward the stage. She tried, but her voice would not return.

From backstage, the little boy of five stepped forward. He picked up the microphone. He sang, he danced, he jested. The audience, moments ago angry, now laughed, clapped, and cheered.

The boy was Charlie Chaplin.

His father had abandoned the family when Charlie was still a child. His mother, Hannah, gifted with a voice and talent for acting, struggled to raise two children in extreme poverty. She performed in theatres to earn their bread.

But fate was merciless. Hannah lost her mind. She was taken to a mental asylum. Charlie was left alone.

A small boy, walking the streets of London, searching through trash cans for food. No father. No mother. No one to care for him.

Yet his dream was not buried. It stayed with him. It carried him forward with courage. It gave him the strength to fight.

He joined workplaces where the hours were long, the tasks harsh, and the pay meagre. Life was hard, challenging, merciless. But he endured. No complaint. No surrender.

London’s streets became his home. Workplaces became his classrooms. He swept floors, carried tools, and learned the rhythm of survival. The world was harsh, but he did not bend. His dream walked beside him, whispering courage.

From poverty and pain, from laughter and tears, he carried his dream. And he knew, one day, the dream would come into reality; it would change the world.

He found the stage again—small theatres, music halls, travelling troupes. Every laugh from the crowd was a spark. Every cheer was a promise. Step by step, he carved his path.

From London’s alleys to America, to Hollywood, the boy who once searched trash for food became the man who fed the world with laughter.

Silent films carried his voice without words. His walk, his hat, his cane—symbols of resilience, comedy, and hope.

He turned sorrow into art. He turned poverty into poetry. He turned silence into laughter.

The world bowed to his genius.

Audiences across continents adored him.

Kings and commoners alike knew his name.

And in 1972, at the 44th Academy Awards, the Oscar was placed in his hands— a golden tribute to a man who gave laughter to millions.

Charlie Chaplin’s life was not just comedy.

It was courage.

It was resilience.

It says that dreams, when carried with faith, can survive poverty, pain, and loneliness.

Dr. Mahendra Ingale Pune, April 13, 2026

Author of Value‑Based Leadership

#EngineeringDreamsInspiringSouls #ValueBasedLeadership #EngineeringHeartBeats

 

Sunday, April 12, 2026

The Dream of Liberty, The Triumph of Refusal

The Dream of Liberty, The Triumph of Refusal

First in war,

First in peace,

Forever first,

In the hearts of his people.

When George Washington passed away in December 1799, the United States mourned its founding leader. In the House of Representatives, Henry Lee—“Light-Horse Harry,” famed cavalry officer of the Revolution—rose to honor him. His words became immortal: “First in war, first in peace, and first in the hearts of his countrymen.”

This tribute was not myth but recorded history, spoken as the nation grieved. It captured Washington’s unique place in American life. He was first in war, leading the Continental Army through hardship to victory. He was first in peace, guiding the fragile republic as its first President. And he was first in the hearts of his countrymen, admired not for ambition but for humility.

Washington’s greatness lay in what he refused. He declined kingship, proving that liberty must never be chained to monarchy. He stepped down after two presidential terms, establishing the precedent of peaceful transfer of power. In both war and peace, he showed that true leadership is service, not domination.

Did Washington dream? Yes—his dream was not of personal glory, but of a nation where freedom and self-rule could endure. He nurtured it through sacrifice at Valley Forge, through victories like Trenton, and through his refusal to seize absolute power. His dream came into realization when America stood as a republic, not a monarchy, built on principles rather than crowns.

In history, revolutions often end with one strongman replacing another. Washington broke that cycle. His refusal of kingship and retirement from the presidency were not acts of weakness but of strength. They demonstrated that leadership is sacrifice, not privilege.

Washington’s legacy is not only in the battles he won but in the power he surrendered.

His example continues to inspire:

Dignity is found not in crowns, but in character; not in ruling, but in serving.

His dream was liberty, and in that dream, America found its soul.

Dr. Mahendra Ingale Pune, April 12, 2026

Author of Value‑Based Leadership

#EngineeringDreamsInspiringSouls #ValueBasedLeadership #EngineeringHeartBeats

 

Saturday, April 11, 2026

The Architect of Dream

The Architect of Dream

When Mike Tyson defeated Muhammad Ali and became world champion, a reporter asked him if he was excited to win the medal. Tyson replied calmly: “Not at all. I have seen myself winning this medal a thousand times in my dreams.”

This is the power of visualisation—living the victory in the mind until reality simply follows.

Every achievement is born twice—once in the mind, then in reality.

Olympic coaches use this technique deliberately. Athletes are trained to instill positive images, to rehearse success mentally, and to guard against negative thoughts.

The film Bhag Milkha Bhag illustrates this vividly: Milkha Singh loses a medal when a single distracting thought enters his mind.

One stray image can break the rhythm; one focused visualisation can secure the triumph.

Subconscious Mind:

The subconscious mind is not merely a hidden reservoir of thoughts—it is the silent architect of our destiny.

Books like The Power of Your Subconscious Mind have touched millions, offering living examples of how unseen forces shape the realisation of dreams.

I have read this book repeatedly over three decades, and its impact has unfolded in my own life—some dreams realised exactly as envisioned, some in unexpected ways, and some still waiting to bloom. Even in my sixties, I continue to nurture and refine dreams, guided by this inner power.

Prayer, intuition, and insight are not abstract mysteries; they are practical tools.

Prayer, when harmonised with the subconscious, becomes a force that activates dreams.

Intuition, when integrated with prayer, guides decision-making with clarity beyond logic.

To the common man, these may sound complex, but their essence lies in application.

I am reminded of a famous exchange: once, a lady asked Thomas Edison, “Mr. Edison, what is electricity?” Edison replied, “Madam, electricity is. Use it.”

That simple answer carries wisdom. Let scientists explore theories and uncover complexities; our task is to use the power.

The same applies to the subconscious mind—it is not necessary to understand every mechanism in detail to benefit from it. What matters is how we apply it in daily life, how we harness it to engineer dreams and realise them.

I have written a chapter in my book, My Perspective of Prayer, and a conceptual paper, Decision Making with Intuition Integrated with Prayer. My work is focused on application rather than complex theory.

How to Tap the Potential of the Subconscious Mind:

  1. Be Transparent – Honesty with oneself opens the inner channels.
  2. Be Receptive – Keep the mind open to signals, insights, and guidance.
  3. Believe Deeply – Faith is the bridge between vision and realization.
  4. Visualize Positively – See the dream vividly, as if already achieved.
  5. Cultivate Quality Sleep – Rest allows the subconscious to work unhindered.
  6. Feed Positive Thoughts Before Sleep – The last thought at night seeds tomorrow’s reality.
  7. Protect Against Negativity – Guard the mind from destructive influences.
  8. Offer Prayers – Align your inner self with higher harmony.

Dreams are engineered not only by effort but by the silent work of the subconscious.

To envision, nurture, and refine a dream is to collaborate with this inner architect.

The subconscious mind does not argue—it accepts.

What we sow in it through belief, visualisation, and prayer, it works tirelessly to manifest.

 

Dr. Mahendra Ingale Pune, April 11, 2026

Author of Value‑Based Leadership

#EngineeringDreamsInspiringSouls #ValueBasedLeadership #EngineeringHeartBeats

Friday, April 10, 2026

Rajmata Jijau: Mother of Swarajya

Rajmata Jijau: Mother of Swarajya

Rajmata Jijabai Bhosale, daughter of Lakhuji Jadhav, a powerful Maratha sardar, was trained in martial arts and administration from childhood. She grew up with strong moral values and a deep desire for Swarajya. From her early years, she witnessed both the grandeur of royal courts and the injustices suffered by ordinary people under foreign rule. These experiences shaped her conviction: only self-rule—Swarajya—could restore justice and dignity.

The Engineered Vision:

On February 19, 1630, at Shivneri fort, destiny answered her dream with the birth of Shivaji. Jijabai nurtured him not merely as a child but as the bearer of a mission. She told him inspiring stories from the Ramayana and Mahabharata, instilling values of courage, dharma, and justice. While masters trained him in the arts of war, Jijabai herself guided him in administration, exposing him to the workings of royal courts. Through this deliberate upbringing, she engineered her dream into a vision—preparing Shivaji to lead.

The Shared Dream:

As Shivaji grew, he shared this vision with his companions. At the Raireshwar Mahadev temple, they pledged to establish Swarajya, transforming a mother’s dream into a collective mission. More youths, later known as the Mavale, joined this cause, vowing to fight until their last breath. The dream had now become a shared fire.

At just sixteen, Shivaji captured the fort of Torna—his first triumph, the foundation of Swarajya. Guided by Jijabai’s vision, he adopted guerrilla tactics to challenge the mighty Mughal armies.

Shivaji was a keen judge of human character, a leader who inspired loyalty in his people. His leadership was marked by selflessness, compassion for his associates, and unwavering commitment. With loyal companions like Tanaji Malusare, Baji Prabhu Deshpande, Murarbaji, Yesaji Kank, Prataprao Gurjar, Hambirrao Mohite, and Bahirji Naik, Shivaji steadily advanced toward Swarajya.

The Realization:

Finally, on June 6, 1674, at Raigad fort, the dream became reality. Shivaji was crowned Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj, establishing the Maratha kingdom.

What began as Rajmata Jijabai’s conviction became an engineered plan, a shared mission, and ultimately a realized state—Swarajya!

Tribute to Jijau:

Vasudev Sitaram Bendre, renowned historian who conducted in-depth research on Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj and Maratha history has explained in his writings, the importance of  Rajmata Jijau's role.

'Bendre explained that Shivaji Maharaj received noble values, courage, and the inspiration to fight against injustice directly from Jijabai.

He portrayed Jijabai not only as a mother but also as a steadfast guide who supported Shivaji from childhood through the establishment of Swarajya.

Bendre highlighted her diplomatic skills and administrative abilities, especially during the period of Pune’s jagir, when she took great care of the people.'

Thus, Jijabai was not merely the mother of Shivaji Maharaj—she was the mother of Swarajya itself. Her vision became his mission, her sacrifice became his strength, and her dream became the destiny of a nation.

The story of Swarajya is, at its heart, the story of a mother’s dream engineered into reality.

Dr. Mahendra Ingale Pune, April 10, 2026

Author of Value‑Based Leadership

#EngineeringDreamsInspiringSouls #ValueBasedLeadership #EngineeringHeartBeats

Thursday, April 9, 2026

In the Middle of the Journey… …Engineering Dreams, Inspiring Souls

 In the Middle of the Journey…

                                     Engineering Dreams, Inspiring Souls

I am in the middle of writing Engineering Dreams, Inspiring Souls.

So far, I have said: Every dream comes true.

I have spoken of three types of dreams.

I have written about great people their dreams, and their achievements.

I have blended fact and fiction, prose and poetry.

My conviction is simple:

Words that originate from the soul touch the soul.

When words touch the soul, they inspire. When inspiration awakens, it helps to engineer a dream. When the engineered dream is nurtured with care, and one walks the path with hard work, the soul is inspired more. Thus, it becomes a circle—soul inspires dream, dream inspires soul.

Common Threads of Great Dreamers:

Some succeeded fully, some partially.

Some did not reach the end as they had envisioned.

Yet their efforts are praised.

Why?

Because they imbibed eternal values.

They lived selflessly.

They devoted their lives to the cause.

They remained grateful.

Natural Dreams vs. Engineered Dreams:

Many great authors have written about dreams.

But my book speaks of something different: Engineered Dreams.

Dreams with purpose.

Dreams carefully nurtured.

Dreams that demand discipline, sacrifice, and persistence.

Natural dreams may help, supplement, or inspire engineered dreams—if one develops the art, or with guidance of an expert. The subconscious mind is the bridge. It connects the two. It helps realize the engineered dream.

Engineered Dreams vs. Mission and Vision

In today’s world, organisations define their mission and vision. It is essential for growth.

  • Vision defines long‑term aspiration. It is broader and more subjective in nature.
  • Mission defines current purpose and provides a roadmap to achieve the vision.
  • Goals and objectives break the mission into measurable steps.

An Engineered Dream is not the same as a vision. Vision is aspirational but usually restricted to enterprises, organisations, and institutions. Engineered Dream goes beyond both.

Engineered Dream has  a psychological dimension. It is more subjective than vision, yet more powerful. It is not confined to organisational growth. It embraces:

  • Nation‑building
  • Social transformation
  • Spiritual awakening
  • Movement from self to collective, from individual to shared purpose

Towards a New Concept:

I have not come across this idea in literature before. “Engineering Dream” is a new concept. David McClelland’s work on Need for Achievement is somewhat similar—scientific, psychological. But Engineering Dream, Inspiring Soul is different.

It is a presentation of facts in a poetic way.

A blend of fact and fiction.

A dialogue with the soul.

Legacy:

My earlier works—Engineering Heart Beats and Value-Based Leadership: Engineering Dreams, Inspiring Souls—provide a strong foundation for this book.

Every leader is a dreamer. He envisions a dream, works relentlessly to realize it, faces challenges, and endures struggle in the process.

Engineering is the practical application of science. When the word engineering is used as a gerund, it becomes a noun—referring to the process of creating, designing, and building. Engineering is the manifestation of creativity.

Thus, these three books form a trilogy—bound by a common anthology of values and vision.

Invitation to Readers:

If your soul has been inspired by the words written so far, or if you have suggestions, write to me at mvingale@gmail.com.

This is not just a book.

It is a dialogue with readers.

It is a circle of inspiration.

It is an invitation to engineer your own dream.

Dr. Mahendra Ingale @ Pune, April 9, 2026

Author of Value-Based Leadership

#EngineeringDreamsInspiringSouls #ValueBasedLeadership #EngineeringHeartBeats

The Dreamer Who Engineered Reality

The Dreamer Who Engineered Reality He was fired from the very company he had founded. The reasons given—too demanding, stubborn, a perfect...