
Fragrances That Speak Confidence: Must-Have Men's Perfumes
Jul 18, 2025
A bold, fresh blend of red apple, sage, and tobacco, capturing rebellious energy with Valentino's iconic Roman spirit. Shop Now
A sensual fusion of lavender, vanilla, and cardamom, this classic fragrance offers bold masculinity with a modern edge. Shop Now
Crafted in Dubai, this luxurious woody scent blends floral, spicy, and musky notes for a sophisticated Arabian aroma. Shop Now
Intense and addictive, this daring fragrance combines cardamom, toffee, and amberwood for a magnetic masculine appeal. Shop Now
Disclaimer: At IDPL, we help you stay up-to-date with the latest trends and products. It should not be construed as an endorsement to buy. IDPL may make a very small commission from its sale if one chooses to buy the product from any of the links in this Web Story. Read Next Story

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New Indian Express
11 hours ago
- New Indian Express
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How many of you have played rock, paper, scissors? We played it all the time in school — sometimes just as a game, sometimes to decide who would play first in a game, and sometimes to break a tie. I remember, a few years ago, watching an episode of the popular TV show The Big Bang Theory, where Sheldon comes up with a new version of rock, paper, scissors called 'rock, paper, scissors, lizard, Spock.' I was amused that someone could complicate such a simple game. However, this perspective changed when I attended a conference on traditional games in Spain. One of the delegates demonstrated on stage the game of Morra. It is a more sophisticated version of rock, paper, scissors, and is played in various versions across Europe. It is a hand game, that I understand, dates back thousands of years to ancient Roman and Greek times. While there are many variations of Morra, most forms can be played with a minimum of two players. In the most popular version, the players throw out a single hand, each showing zero to five fingers, and call out their guess as to the sum of all fingers.


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2 days ago
- News18
Mona Patel Stuns In Velvet And Tulle At Dolce & Gabbana's Alta Moda Show
For her appearance at Dolce & Gabbana's Alta Moda show in Rome, Mona Patel turned heads in a black velvet bustier and a voluminous skirt that paid homage to Roman imperial motifs. Fashion visionary and tech entrepreneur Mona Patel made a striking appearance in Rome this week, attending Dolce & Gabbana's prestigious Alta Moda presentation. She recently took to Instagram to share a series of images from the event, captioned cheekily, 'The Roman Gods may look down with envy! Alta Mona in Alta Moda @dolcegabbana in the Eternal City." Her ensemble, drawn from the label's latest couture line, embodied a seamless blend of regal European glamour and her signature boldness. Known for consistently delivering high-octane fashion moments, Mona Patel turned heads once again in a Dolce & Gabbana creation that cleverly bridged the gap between Western couture and Indian traditional wear. Her look featured a sculpted velvet bustier with thick shoulder straps, a plunging sweetheart neckline, and a midriff-baring cropped fit that exuded fierce femininity. Paired with the bustier was a voluminous printed skirt, designed with a silk panel in front that paid homage to Roman imperial motifs. Beneath it, a nude-hued tulle underskirt added volume and architectural grace. Cinching it all together was a signature Dolce & Gabbana belt, adding structure and sophistication. The Glam Details For accessories, Mona opted for restraint and impact, sporting a single diamond statement ring. Her hair flowed in soft blowout waves, parted to the side, while her makeup played up classic glamour: berry-tinted lips, defined brows, soft brown shadow, flushed cheeks, and a radiant highlighter sculpting her features with subtle drama. India at the Heart of Haute Couture Patel's appearance wasn't just about fashion – it marked a meaningful moment for representation. Wearing next season's runway look in the historic Roman Forum itself, she stood out among an ultra-exclusive guest list that included names like Cher, Christian Bale, Anna Wintour, and Isabella Rossellini. Her presence and her growing relationship with Dolce & Gabbana signal the evolving landscape of European couture – one where Indian voices are no longer at the periphery but moving confidently into the spotlight. Who Is Mona Patel? Mona Patel is a serial entrepreneur, investor, and philanthropist with a portfolio spanning healthcare, technology, and real estate. She has founded multiple successful businesses over the last two decades across global markets. Educated at Harvard, Stanford, and MIT, Patel brings a multidisciplinary approach to business and social impact. In parallel with her business interests, Patel is a dedicated collector of haute couture, with a collection that reflects a lifelong engagement with craftsmanship and cultural heritage. Through her philanthropic organisation, Couture for Cause, she directs resources toward girls' education and women's entrepreneurship, with a focus on sustainable, long-term outcomes. view comments First Published: Disclaimer: Comments reflect users' views, not News18's. Please keep discussions respectful and constructive. Abusive, defamatory, or illegal comments will be removed. News18 may disable any comment at its discretion. By posting, you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.


Mint
3 days ago
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Lessons from history's most notorious procrastinators: How delay became genius
Samiran Ghosh From Mozart, Darwin and Victor Hugo to Douglas Adams, Kafka and Einstein, the great procrastination stories of history reveal that working with our tendencies often proves more effective than fighting them. Procrastination and genius often go hand in hand. Gift this article On 28 October 1787, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart sat drinking with friends when someone reminded him about a missing overture. The premiere of Don Giovanni was hours away. Mozart calmly sat down at midnight and composed the entire piece in three hours while his wife kept him awake with stories. The orchestra played it brilliantly, and the audiences loved it, never knowing how close they came to having no overture at all. On 28 October 1787, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart sat drinking with friends when someone reminded him about a missing overture. The premiere of Don Giovanni was hours away. Mozart calmly sat down at midnight and composed the entire piece in three hours while his wife kept him awake with stories. The orchestra played it brilliantly, and the audiences loved it, never knowing how close they came to having no overture at all. This midnight miracle captures a simple truth: procrastination and genius often go hand in hand. Throughout history, humanity's greatest minds have turned delay into creative strategy, producing masterpieces under extreme pressure or using strategic postponement to enhance their work. Far from being a character flaw, procrastination, when properly channelled, can fuel extraordinary achievement. Procrastination as strategic patience: The Roman general Quintus Fabius Maximus earned immortality through calculated delay. Facing Hannibal's seemingly invincible forces, Fabius refused direct engagement, instead retreating and harassing, earning the nickname Cunctator (The Delayer). His apparent cowardice saved Rome, giving rise to the 'Fabian strategy' that is studied and quoted throughout military history. This art of purposeful delay reached its zenith during Napoleon's 1812 invasion of Russia. General Mikhail Kutuzov's refusal to give Napoleon the decisive battle he craved cost the French 500,000 casualties. By transforming Russia's winter and vast distances into a weapon via strategic retreats and delaying tactics, Kutuzov destroyed the Grande Armée without significant engagement. Charles Darwin elevated scientific procrastination to similar strategic heights. After developing his theory of evolution in the late 1830s, Darwin spent two decades studying barnacles so thoroughly that his children assumed every household kept pickled specimens. Only when Alfred Wallace threatened to publish a similar theory did Darwin rush On the Origin of Species to print. He later claimed he "gained much by my delay" – the extended timeline had allowed him to gather evidence that made his arguments unassailable. Also Read: Confidently wrong: Why AI is so exasperatingly human-like Deadline pressure as creative fuel: While some procrastinators benefit from patience, others transform last-minute panic into creative lightning. Frank Lloyd Wright's legendary procrastination produced architecture's most celebrated moment. After assuring client Edgar Kaufmann for months that Fallingwater's designs were progressing, Wright had drawn nothing when Kaufmann announced a visit. As the client drove 140 miles from Pittsburgh, Wright calmly finished breakfast, then designed the complete house in two hours. The resulting masterpiece became one of the 20th century's most celebrated buildings. Victor Hugo weaponized deadline pressure through extreme measures. Facing penalties for The Hunchback of Notre-Dame, Hugo locked away all his clothes and purchased only a grey shawl, effectively imprisoning himself at home. His wife noted he "entered his novel as if it were a prison," working from dusk till dawn. The method succeeded. Hugo finished two weeks before the deadline. Douglas Adams, patron saint of procrastinating writers, became so notorious that his editor locked him in a hotel suite for three weeks to force completion of So Long, and Thanks for All the Fish. Adams loved deadlines for "the whooshing noise they make as they go by," yet this pressure-cooker method produced beloved works that might never have existed under comfortable conditions. Systematic procrastination as process: Some geniuses transformed procrastination into sophisticated creative systems. Franz Kafka's elaborate daily routine appeared inefficient—he would finish work at 2:30pm, then eat, nap for four hours, exercise naked at an open window, walk, dine with his family, and begin writing only around 11:30pm. A significant amount of 'writing time' was devoted to letters rather than creative work. Yet this seemingly wasteful process produced literature's most influential works. Leonardo da Vinci justified his legendary delays philosophically, telling patrons that "men of lofty genius sometimes accomplish the most when they work least." The Mona Lisa took 16 years; he abandoned The Adoration of the Magi entirely; his bronze horse monument never materialised after 12 years of promises. Yet his procrastination allowed cross-pollination between disciplines—engineering insights informing art, artistic observation enhancing scientific study. In Bengal, procrastination became a cultural practice through 'adda'—lengthy, meandering conversations over tea that outsiders dismiss as idle gossip. These sessions sparked the Bengal Renaissance, literary movements and independence struggles. What appears as collective procrastination often masks deep intellectual work, proving that apparent idleness can conceal the mind's most profound labour. Albert Einstein's transformation from a procrastinating patent clerk to revolutionary physicist demonstrates how systematic approaches can harness delay productively. Unable to secure academic positions due to his reputation for laziness, Einstein found that the routine patent work provided ideal conditions for deep thinking. His 1905 'miracle year' demonstrated that chronic procrastinators can transform their habits without altering their nature. Modern evolution: Today's creative professionals have reframed procrastination from a shameful secret to an acknowledged process. Tim Urban's TED talk on the 'Instant Gratification Monkey' drew 70 million views by normalising procrastination as a universal human experience. Steve Jobs demonstrated 'strategic procrastination,' deliberately delaying decisions while taking long walks to let ideas percolate. Research by organisational psychologist Adam Grant reveals that moderate procrastinators often produce the most creative work, occupying a sweet spot between impulsive action and chaotic delay. History's procrastinators reveal that working with our tendencies often proves more effective than fighting them. Whether it's a general refusing to go to battle until conditions favour victory, an architect designing masterpieces in two hours, or a culture institutionalising contemplative delay, procrastination becomes powerful when transformed from weakness into strategy. The key is not to eliminate procrastination, but to understand it and create systems that channel delay into genius. The author is a technology advisor and podcast host. Topics You May Be Interested In