🕊 A Personal Note from Lady in Techverse: Why I’ve Been Quiet Lately
I’ve always believed in showing up with clarity, care, and consistency. But life, in all its unpredictable rhythms, sometimes leads us through seasons that can’t be planned or scheduled, but only felt.
For the past two months, I stepped away from the blog. Not because I lost passion. But because I lost someone who meant the world to me.
My beloved mother passed away recently.
It still feels surreal to put those words together.
Before her passing, I had been spending every day, and many nights by her side. Hospital visits became my routine. Monitoring her needs in the high-dependency ward became a quiet act of love. I dropped everything because I knew there was nothing more important than being there. Being fully present and unconditionally.
My mom was a fighter. A radiant spirit in a fragile body, clinging on with strength that shook us all. For more than a month, she held on, inspiring some nurses and doctors, and every family member who walked into that room. Her courage wasn’t loud. It was calm and grounded. Fierce in the most dignified way.
She was more than just my mom.
She was the glue of our family — a brilliant sister, a thoughtful friend, a loyal daughter, and a guiding light to everyone she touched. From her siblings, relatives and to her friends in Singapore, Malaysia, Indonesia, Australia, and the UK, who called in or occasionally checked in with her — she was deeply loved. And she gave that love freely.
To be honest, I didn’t know how to write this.
I’ve sat in front of my laptop several times over the past week, trying to string together words. Trying to find the balance between vulnerability and strength. Between grief and gratitude. Between a storyteller and a daughter who still whispers “good morning” to the sky, hoping she hears it.
Our family is still processing everything — the pain of letting go, and the peace of knowing she’s now resting. We are heartbroken and yet quietly relieved. Because she is no longer suffering. She is finally free.
This season of loss has taught me so much.
About resilience. About love. About what really matters when the world stops spinning for a while.
It reminded me that even the most digital of us — those who live in code, pixels, and strategies are still deeply human. We bleed. We ache. We pause. And then, we gather ourselves, carry their memory forward, and try to make sense of it all in our own time.
In truth, I haven’t felt ready to return to writing until now. But I also know that my mom would have wanted me to keep going.
She believed in me long before I believed in myself.
She was my first subscriber, my biggest fan, my quiet supporter in every crazy idea I had about tech, storytelling, and building a “digital sanctuary” that wasn’t just about algorithms but about people. When I showed her this blog on her mobile phone, she gave me an approval nod.
If you’ve been visiting this blog and wondering why things have been silent, thank you for your patience. Thank you for still being here. I know some of you come here for insights, ideas, and strategy but sometimes, we also need space for real life. The raw parts. The sacred human pauses between posts.
I’ll be slowly returning to writing again — not with the pressure of perfection, but with the warmth and honesty my mom always encouraged me to carry on.
This blog has always been about more than just digital transformation or AI trends.
It’s been about finding meaning in a noisy world. About leading with empathy. About building something that matters.
So I’ll honour her with each word. With every story. With every person I help through this platform.
This next season of Lady in Techverse will be a little more human, a little more personal because I now carry her lessons, her love, and her light with me in almost everything I do.
If you’ve lost someone recently, or if you’re just feeling the weight of the world — I see you. I feel you. And I hope this small story reminds you that it’s okay to step away. It’s okay to pause. And it’s always okay to come back, gently.
Thank you for walking with me on this journey.
With heartfelt gratitude,
Lady in Techverse 🖤



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