Home Actress Richa Gangopadhyay HD Instagram Photos and Wallpapers August 2020 Richa Gangopadhyay Instagram - Is it safe to come out yet? 👀⁣ ⁣ Remembering my trip to Spain a couple years ago and missing exploring new cultures and cuisines in faraway lands. Wondering what social-distancing travel will be like!🧳⁣ ⁣ Although rules have relaxed a bit and it’s tempting to travel abroad for leisure, we need to continue our new normal for a little bit longer. If it’s non-essential, probably not the best idea to travel internationally right now. It’s up to us to cooperate in order to help those who are suffering more than us. Keep wearing your masks! 😷⁣ ⁣ At least there’s no limit to daydreaming! I guess I’ll have to reminisce on past trips, watch travel documentaries and stick to scrolling on Pinterest for a little while longer… and of course, there is plenty to see and explore right within our own borders. ⛰️👍🏼

Richa Gangopadhyay Instagram – Is it safe to come out yet? 👀⁣ ⁣ Remembering my trip to Spain a couple years ago and missing exploring new cultures and cuisines in faraway lands. Wondering what social-distancing travel will be like!🧳⁣ ⁣ Although rules have relaxed a bit and it’s tempting to travel abroad for leisure, we need to continue our new normal for a little bit longer. If it’s non-essential, probably not the best idea to travel internationally right now. It’s up to us to cooperate in order to help those who are suffering more than us. Keep wearing your masks! 😷⁣ ⁣ At least there’s no limit to daydreaming! I guess I’ll have to reminisce on past trips, watch travel documentaries and stick to scrolling on Pinterest for a little while longer… and of course, there is plenty to see and explore right within our own borders. ⛰️👍🏼

Richa Gangopadhyay Instagram - Is it safe to come out yet? 👀⁣ ⁣ Remembering my trip to Spain a couple years ago and missing exploring new cultures and cuisines in faraway lands. Wondering what social-distancing travel will be like!🧳⁣ ⁣ Although rules have relaxed a bit and it’s tempting to travel abroad for leisure, we need to continue our new normal for a little bit longer. If it’s non-essential, probably not the best idea to travel internationally right now. It’s up to us to cooperate in order to help those who are suffering more than us. Keep wearing your masks! 😷⁣ ⁣ At least there’s no limit to daydreaming! I guess I’ll have to reminisce on past trips, watch travel documentaries and stick to scrolling on Pinterest for a little while longer… and of course, there is plenty to see and explore right within our own borders. ⛰️👍🏼

Richa Gangopadhyay Instagram – Is it safe to come out yet? 👀⁣

Remembering my trip to Spain a couple years ago and missing exploring new cultures and cuisines in faraway lands. Wondering what social-distancing travel will be like!🧳⁣

Although rules have relaxed a bit and it’s tempting to travel abroad for leisure, we need to continue our new normal for a little bit longer. If it’s non-essential, probably not the best idea to travel internationally right now. It’s up to us to cooperate in order to help those who are suffering more than us. Keep wearing your masks! 😷⁣

At least there’s no limit to daydreaming! I guess I’ll have to reminisce on past trips, watch travel documentaries and stick to scrolling on Pinterest for a little while longer… and of course, there is plenty to see and explore right within our own borders. ⛰️👍🏼 | Posted on 28/Jun/2020 09:40:56

Richa Gangopadhyay Instagram – The world is messed up. You might be overwhelmed dealing with one negative incident coming to the surface after another. If you’re an empath, like myself, you might be someone who senses and feels emotions as if they are part of your own experience.⁣
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🙏🏼Take time for yourself, friend.⁣
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It’s okay to grieve, be angry, to disconnect. It’s especially hard to keep up with the pressures of the social media world- where you are damned if you do, damned if you don’t address a certain issue. You don’t have to bear the world’s burdens. The constant consumption of social media makes it hard for us to leave…and while there are benefits to social media, it can also become toxic real fast. It’s a slippery slope. Always remember that what you see on social media isn’t the full story and it can get extremely polarizing and isolating if you can’t learn to detach from it. Don’t let it become all consuming.👀
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🙏🏼Take care of your mind, first.⁣
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If you are advocating for change through your involvement in various efforts, great. But if you are not, it doesn’t mean you aren’t passionate, are selfish or don’t care about issues going on in the world. Social media makes it hard to keep up, the constant expectations are exhausting to deal with and can deplete all your emotional, mental and physical energy staring at your screen and scrolling to no end.👀🤳
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Just remember that you can’t fully dedicate your time and energy towards structural change if you don’t focus on investing time in keeping yourself healthy, first.✨⁣
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Take breaks every now and then. Don’t feel guilty for needing to unplug from technology, even if it’s for a few hours. Surround yourself with positive affirmations and remember that amidst all the cruelty in the world right now, there IS good happening too. I’m not saying put blinders on and ignore what is happening around you, but it’s also OKAY to disconnect and reset.⁣
🧘🏻‍♀️🧘🏽‍♂️🧘🏼🧘🏿‍♀️🧘🏻‍♂️🧘🏽🧘🏿‍♂️⁣
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🙏🏼Your mind and soul need it more than you know.⁣
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Here is a picture of a cute succulent (that Joe bought for me bc he’s the best and knows they’re my favorite!) that hopefully brings a litttttle bitty sense of calm to your mind 💕⁣.
Richa Gangopadhyay Instagram – Today marks 31 years since my family immigrated to the United States. At 3 years of age, I had my first overseas trip- and vividly remember telling my parents, in a sing-songy voice, “Amra Amrika jaaachchi!”, which in Bengali means “We’re going to America!”. Of course, I had no idea what “America” was, then. I didn’t even realize I was going over the big Atlantic to get there. I just remember going from living in a flat in Coimbatore, barely speaking Tamil with our neighbors and watching Mahabharat, to a new apartment on the Carnegie Mellon Campus, in the Shadyside neighborhood in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. I thought the name of the apartment building we lived in was, in fact, America 😆.⁣
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After my dad completed his undergrad at IIT Kanpur and worked in Punjab and Tamil Nadu, he made the big decision to take our family abroad, in pursuit of his PhD at CMU. My mom did her Masters from Duquesne University, and I was happily adjusting to my new life, climate, food, friends and kindergarten while being raised with two languages- Bengali and English, and two cultures- Indian and American. Though I didn’t think so at the time, today I know the value of  being lucky enough to have grown up bilingual and raised with a multicultural upbringing. 🌎💟
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We moved to Michigan when I was 7, and it wasn’t till I was 15 years old that we became U.S. citizens. We have evolved so much over the last 31 years…(for me, 5 of those years were spent living in India), but I’m lucky to have been able to grow up Indian American- a unique cultural experience that has allowed me to absorb and reflect the best of both the cultures, and integrate both vs. assimilate to one or the other. I am just as rooted in my Indian culture, traditions and customs as I am with my American ones. I’m able to speak my native tongue with my family back in India with ease, while having the ability to easily code-switch my accent depending on who I’m speaking with. I can be patriotic for both my homeland and my motherland. And I love that my husband loves learning and immersing himself in everything my Indian culture has to offer! ⁣

Happy 31st US immigration anniversary to us 🇮🇳🇺🇲

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