Hi Rishabh,

What a coincidence that I read about you and your book on Medium in a post 
published by Shruti Pushkarna, our very own disability journalist in this group 
and beyond.


Since the popular opinion of this group is that I am negative, cynical, and 
dismissive, I certainly won't indulge in expressing any joy in congratulating 
you on this wonderful piece of work and writing style. You claim to be an 
"accidental author"—well, most great inventions happened that way, so I suppose 
you have that in common with such inventors.
But let’s not get delusional or stray from the character I have been boxed 
into. I shall continue to be the cynical person I am and insist that this is a 
truly horrible book. No one should read it, especially if they don’t possess a 
sense of humor.

Warm regards,

Mister Kayne
Author: The Somebody, Nobody, Anybody & Everybody 
Blog!<https://www.mister-kayne.com/>
Mail: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Sent from Outlook® for Windows 11


From: [email protected] <[email protected]> On Behalf 
Of Rishabh Gupta
Sent: Wednesday, June 10, 2026 4:16 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [AI] Something happened that wasn't part of the plan


Hi everyone,

A few weeks ago, my brother sat down with my mother and started reading my book 
to her.

Well — sort of.

The book is in English. My mother is more comfortable in Hindi. So my brother 
became an unofficial audiobook, translator, and emotional support system all at 
once.

Every few pages, somebody would laugh.

A few pages later, somebody would go suspiciously quiet.

Then someone would remember a story from years ago.

Then somebody would pretend they weren't crying.

At one point, I stopped caring about the book entirely. I just sat there 
watching the scene unfold.

That's when something clicked for me.

________________________________

People assume I wrote a book about low vision.

I didn't.

I wrote a book about awkward conversations, terrible decisions, confidence that 
disappears at the worst possible moments, overthinking, family, friendships, 
loneliness, hope, and all the strange little things that make us human.

Low vision just happens to be the lens through which many of those stories were 
experienced.

The strangest part? Some of the people connecting with the book most deeply 
have never experienced vision loss at all. One friend told me recently they're 
gifting it to family members — because they think it might help them understand 
each other a little better.

I'm still processing that.

________________________________

If you've ever laughed at the wrong moment, overthought a conversation for 
three days, felt different, felt lost, felt hopeful — or simply tried to figure 
out life like the rest of us — you might find a piece of yourself in these 
pages.

What I See Now is now available on Kindle:

👉 
https://www.amazon.in/dp/B0H418QXHR?ref_=quick_view_ref_tag<https://www.google.com/url?q=https://www.amazon.in/dp/B0H418QXHR?ref_%3Dquick_view_ref_tag&source=gmail&ust=1781174644183000&sa=E>

And if you do read it — don't tell me whether you liked it.

Tell me which chapter felt a little too personal. 🙂

Warmly,
Rishabh Gupta
Author | Raipur, Chhattisgarh, India

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