No Regrets: Journey Through Law and Life I spent thirty-five years practicing corporate law across textiles, technology, media, and real estate in India. When I finally sat down to write this memoir, I did not want to produce a professional retrospective. I wanted to write an honest account of what it means to build a life inside a profession that shapes you as much as you shape it. No Regrets begins in Raichur, a small cotton-growing district in Karnataka, where I grew up surrounded by law without quite knowing it. My paternal grandfather was a Public Prosecutor. My maternal grandfather was a Civil Judge. The law was never a career choice for me. It was almost an inheritance. The memoir follows my journey from that small-town beginning through decades of corporate practice, through the negotiations and boardrooms and crises that define a long legal career, and eventually to the question every practitioner asks somewhere along the way: was it worth it? My answer is in the title. This is not a book only for lawyers or legal professionals. It is for anyone who has devoted the better part of a lifetime to a calling and wondered what that devotion has cost them, and what it has given them in return. It is about family, about vocation, about the slow accumulation of a life lived with intention. No Regrets: Journey Through Law and Life is available in ebook, paperback, and hardcover on Amazon and through major online retailers worldwide. I would be glad to hear from fellow readers who have written or read memoirs in this space. What draws you to the genre?
I spent thirty-five years practicing corporate law across textiles, technology, media, and real estate in India. When I finally sat down to write this memoir, I did not want to produce a professional retrospective. I wanted to write an honest account of what it means to build a life inside a profession that shapes you as much as you shape it.
No Regrets begins in Raichur, a small cotton-growing district in Karnataka, where I grew up surrounded by law without quite knowing it. My paternal grandfather was a Public Prosecutor. My maternal grandfather was a Civil Judge. The law was never a career choice for me. It was almost an inheritance.
The memoir follows my journey from that small-town beginning through decades of corporate practice, through the negotiations and boardrooms and crises that define a long legal career, and eventually to the question every practitioner asks somewhere along the way: was it worth it?
My answer is in the title.
This is not a book only for lawyers or legal professionals. It is for anyone who has devoted the better part of a lifetime to a calling and wondered what that devotion has cost them, and what it has given them in return. It is about family, about vocation, about the slow accumulation of a life lived with intention.
No Regrets: Journey Through Law and Life is available in ebook, paperback, and hardcover on Amazon and through major online retailers worldwide.
I would be glad to hear from fellow readers who have written or read memoirs in this space. What draws you to the genre?