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supriyapaul

Supriya Paul Banga

WEF YGL’26 | Forbes Top 20 Self Made Women India | Co-Founder @joshtalkslive. Championing women to own their stories, their space and their voice ✨

616
posts
994
followers
84.4K
following

Proud to join the Young Global Leaders Class of 2026. I look forward to learning from and contributing to a global community of leaders working to address complex challenges across regions and sectors. Super grateful to be a part of this amazing cohort of people #YGL26 #WEF26


413
59
1 months ago


Proud to join the Young Global Leaders Class of 2026. I look forward to learning from and contributing to a global community of leaders working to address complex challenges across regions and sectors. Super grateful to be a part of this amazing cohort of people #YGL26 #WEF26


413
59
1 months ago

Being a modern woman often feels like running a race where the finish line keeps moving.


45.4K
336
2 months ago

It’s easier to sell you empowerment than to actually give you equality.

A necessary reminder that the struggle for dignity and rights is still ongoing. Let’s make every room a place where women truly belong.


42.2K
342
2 months ago

The saddest thing is that most women don’t lose themselves in one big moment. They lose themselves in tiny moments that look harmless.

Staying quiet when something hurts. Saying yes when the heart wants to say no. Choosing everyone else until there’s barely anything left for themselves.

And the scary part is that it often starts in the name of love.


112
12 hours ago

We often think inequality begins with salaries and ends with pay gaps. But maybe it starts much earlier.

It starts with who is expected to adjust, who is expected to care, who is expected to pause their dreams, and whose work becomes so normal that people stop seeing it.

Some women are carrying full-time responsibilities that never show up on any payslip, promotion letter, or economic report.

And the most dangerous thing about invisible work is that after a while, even the people doing it begin to think it doesn’t count.


63
1
15 hours ago

We often think inequality begins with salaries and ends with pay gaps. But maybe it starts much earlier.

It starts with who is expected to adjust, who is expected to care, who is expected to pause their dreams, and whose work becomes so normal that people stop seeing it.

Some women are carrying full-time responsibilities that never show up on any payslip, promotion letter, or economic report.

And the most dangerous thing about invisible work is that after a while, even the people doing it begin to think it doesn’t count.


63
1
15 hours ago

We often think inequality begins with salaries and ends with pay gaps. But maybe it starts much earlier.

It starts with who is expected to adjust, who is expected to care, who is expected to pause their dreams, and whose work becomes so normal that people stop seeing it.

Some women are carrying full-time responsibilities that never show up on any payslip, promotion letter, or economic report.

And the most dangerous thing about invisible work is that after a while, even the people doing it begin to think it doesn’t count.


63
1
15 hours ago


We often think inequality begins with salaries and ends with pay gaps. But maybe it starts much earlier.

It starts with who is expected to adjust, who is expected to care, who is expected to pause their dreams, and whose work becomes so normal that people stop seeing it.

Some women are carrying full-time responsibilities that never show up on any payslip, promotion letter, or economic report.

And the most dangerous thing about invisible work is that after a while, even the people doing it begin to think it doesn’t count.


63
1
15 hours ago

We often think inequality begins with salaries and ends with pay gaps. But maybe it starts much earlier.

It starts with who is expected to adjust, who is expected to care, who is expected to pause their dreams, and whose work becomes so normal that people stop seeing it.

Some women are carrying full-time responsibilities that never show up on any payslip, promotion letter, or economic report.

And the most dangerous thing about invisible work is that after a while, even the people doing it begin to think it doesn’t count.


63
1
15 hours ago

We often think inequality begins with salaries and ends with pay gaps. But maybe it starts much earlier.

It starts with who is expected to adjust, who is expected to care, who is expected to pause their dreams, and whose work becomes so normal that people stop seeing it.

Some women are carrying full-time responsibilities that never show up on any payslip, promotion letter, or economic report.

And the most dangerous thing about invisible work is that after a while, even the people doing it begin to think it doesn’t count.


63
1
15 hours ago

We often think inequality begins with salaries and ends with pay gaps. But maybe it starts much earlier.

It starts with who is expected to adjust, who is expected to care, who is expected to pause their dreams, and whose work becomes so normal that people stop seeing it.

Some women are carrying full-time responsibilities that never show up on any payslip, promotion letter, or economic report.

And the most dangerous thing about invisible work is that after a while, even the people doing it begin to think it doesn’t count.


63
1
15 hours ago

Can’t believe it’s going to be a month to your wedding @raghavverma1 & @rawatrhea ♥️♥️
Like I said in my toast, you both define what balance looks like and I’m so happy to be a part of your life and watch you grow together ✨ I also hope that you can convince Raghav to restart aate ke biscuits at Chaayos @rawatrhea as the best wedding return gift haha. Love you guysss 🥂🩷


834
13
1 days ago

Can’t believe it’s going to be a month to your wedding @raghavverma1 & @rawatrhea ♥️♥️
Like I said in my toast, you both define what balance looks like and I’m so happy to be a part of your life and watch you grow together ✨ I also hope that you can convince Raghav to restart aate ke biscuits at Chaayos @rawatrhea as the best wedding return gift haha. Love you guysss 🥂🩷


834
13
1 days ago

Can’t believe it’s going to be a month to your wedding @raghavverma1 & @rawatrhea ♥️♥️
Like I said in my toast, you both define what balance looks like and I’m so happy to be a part of your life and watch you grow together ✨ I also hope that you can convince Raghav to restart aate ke biscuits at Chaayos @rawatrhea as the best wedding return gift haha. Love you guysss 🥂🩷


834
13
1 days ago


Can’t believe it’s going to be a month to your wedding @raghavverma1 & @rawatrhea ♥️♥️
Like I said in my toast, you both define what balance looks like and I’m so happy to be a part of your life and watch you grow together ✨ I also hope that you can convince Raghav to restart aate ke biscuits at Chaayos @rawatrhea as the best wedding return gift haha. Love you guysss 🥂🩷


834
13
1 days ago

Can’t believe it’s going to be a month to your wedding @raghavverma1 & @rawatrhea ♥️♥️
Like I said in my toast, you both define what balance looks like and I’m so happy to be a part of your life and watch you grow together ✨ I also hope that you can convince Raghav to restart aate ke biscuits at Chaayos @rawatrhea as the best wedding return gift haha. Love you guysss 🥂🩷


834
13
1 days ago

Can’t believe it’s going to be a month to your wedding @raghavverma1 & @rawatrhea ♥️♥️
Like I said in my toast, you both define what balance looks like and I’m so happy to be a part of your life and watch you grow together ✨ I also hope that you can convince Raghav to restart aate ke biscuits at Chaayos @rawatrhea as the best wedding return gift haha. Love you guysss 🥂🩷


834
13
1 days ago

Can’t believe it’s going to be a month to your wedding @raghavverma1 & @rawatrhea ♥️♥️
Like I said in my toast, you both define what balance looks like and I’m so happy to be a part of your life and watch you grow together ✨ I also hope that you can convince Raghav to restart aate ke biscuits at Chaayos @rawatrhea as the best wedding return gift haha. Love you guysss 🥂🩷


834
13
1 days ago

Can’t believe it’s going to be a month to your wedding @raghavverma1 & @rawatrhea ♥️♥️
Like I said in my toast, you both define what balance looks like and I’m so happy to be a part of your life and watch you grow together ✨ I also hope that you can convince Raghav to restart aate ke biscuits at Chaayos @rawatrhea as the best wedding return gift haha. Love you guysss 🥂🩷


834
13
1 days ago

Can’t believe it’s going to be a month to your wedding @raghavverma1 & @rawatrhea ♥️♥️
Like I said in my toast, you both define what balance looks like and I’m so happy to be a part of your life and watch you grow together ✨ I also hope that you can convince Raghav to restart aate ke biscuits at Chaayos @rawatrhea as the best wedding return gift haha. Love you guysss 🥂🩷


834
13
1 days ago


Can’t believe it’s going to be a month to your wedding @raghavverma1 & @rawatrhea ♥️♥️
Like I said in my toast, you both define what balance looks like and I’m so happy to be a part of your life and watch you grow together ✨ I also hope that you can convince Raghav to restart aate ke biscuits at Chaayos @rawatrhea as the best wedding return gift haha. Love you guysss 🥂🩷


834
13
1 days ago

Can’t believe it’s going to be a month to your wedding @raghavverma1 & @rawatrhea ♥️♥️
Like I said in my toast, you both define what balance looks like and I’m so happy to be a part of your life and watch you grow together ✨ I also hope that you can convince Raghav to restart aate ke biscuits at Chaayos @rawatrhea as the best wedding return gift haha. Love you guysss 🥂🩷


834
13
1 days ago

Can’t believe it’s going to be a month to your wedding @raghavverma1 & @rawatrhea ♥️♥️
Like I said in my toast, you both define what balance looks like and I’m so happy to be a part of your life and watch you grow together ✨ I also hope that you can convince Raghav to restart aate ke biscuits at Chaayos @rawatrhea as the best wedding return gift haha. Love you guysss 🥂🩷


834
13
1 days ago

Can’t believe it’s going to be a month to your wedding @raghavverma1 & @rawatrhea ♥️♥️
Like I said in my toast, you both define what balance looks like and I’m so happy to be a part of your life and watch you grow together ✨ I also hope that you can convince Raghav to restart aate ke biscuits at Chaayos @rawatrhea as the best wedding return gift haha. Love you guysss 🥂🩷


834
13
1 days ago

The scariest part was realizing how often we see women reduced to something to stare at, comment on, joke about, or consume. Because no woman becomes cautious overnight. That feeling is built from thousands of moments that quietly teach her to stay alert.

Maybe the question isn’t “What’s wrong with this man?”

Maybe the question is: What are we teaching the next generation to see when they look at women?


3K
93
2 days ago

Many things we call “basic” today are actually very recent. Someone had to argue for them, protest for them, fight families, systems and entire mindsets for them.

And maybe that’s why progress should never make us comfortable.

Because rights that were fought for can also be taken for granted.


487
6
2 days ago

Many things we call “basic” today are actually very recent. Someone had to argue for them, protest for them, fight families, systems and entire mindsets for them.

And maybe that’s why progress should never make us comfortable.

Because rights that were fought for can also be taken for granted.


487
6
2 days ago

Many things we call “basic” today are actually very recent. Someone had to argue for them, protest for them, fight families, systems and entire mindsets for them.

And maybe that’s why progress should never make us comfortable.

Because rights that were fought for can also be taken for granted.


487
6
2 days ago

Many things we call “basic” today are actually very recent. Someone had to argue for them, protest for them, fight families, systems and entire mindsets for them.

And maybe that’s why progress should never make us comfortable.

Because rights that were fought for can also be taken for granted.


487
6
2 days ago

Many things we call “basic” today are actually very recent. Someone had to argue for them, protest for them, fight families, systems and entire mindsets for them.

And maybe that’s why progress should never make us comfortable.

Because rights that were fought for can also be taken for granted.


487
6
2 days ago

Many things we call “basic” today are actually very recent. Someone had to argue for them, protest for them, fight families, systems and entire mindsets for them.

And maybe that’s why progress should never make us comfortable.

Because rights that were fought for can also be taken for granted.


487
6
2 days ago

Many things we call “basic” today are actually very recent. Someone had to argue for them, protest for them, fight families, systems and entire mindsets for them.

And maybe that’s why progress should never make us comfortable.

Because rights that were fought for can also be taken for granted.


487
6
2 days ago

Many things we call “basic” today are actually very recent. Someone had to argue for them, protest for them, fight families, systems and entire mindsets for them.

And maybe that’s why progress should never make us comfortable.

Because rights that were fought for can also be taken for granted.


487
6
2 days ago

Many things we call “basic” today are actually very recent. Someone had to argue for them, protest for them, fight families, systems and entire mindsets for them.

And maybe that’s why progress should never make us comfortable.

Because rights that were fought for can also be taken for granted.


487
6
2 days ago

The older I get, the more I realize that love isn’t always loud. Sometimes it’s just finding a person with whom you can stop pretending, stop explaining, stop carrying everything alone.

In a world that constantly asks us to be more, stronger, better, faster... emotional safety feels like coming home. 🤍


793
5
2 days ago

For a long time, many women were taught that love meant adjusting, understanding, and keeping everyone else okay. But somewhere in that process, a lot of them quietly learned how to abandon themselves too.

You do not have to disappear to be loved. You do not have to earn your place by carrying everyone else.

Sometimes choosing yourself is not selfish. Sometimes it is the first time you finally come home to yourself. 🤍


305
6
3 days ago

For a long time, many women were taught that love meant adjusting, understanding, and keeping everyone else okay. But somewhere in that process, a lot of them quietly learned how to abandon themselves too.

You do not have to disappear to be loved. You do not have to earn your place by carrying everyone else.

Sometimes choosing yourself is not selfish. Sometimes it is the first time you finally come home to yourself. 🤍


305
6
3 days ago

For a long time, many women were taught that love meant adjusting, understanding, and keeping everyone else okay. But somewhere in that process, a lot of them quietly learned how to abandon themselves too.

You do not have to disappear to be loved. You do not have to earn your place by carrying everyone else.

Sometimes choosing yourself is not selfish. Sometimes it is the first time you finally come home to yourself. 🤍


305
6
3 days ago

For a long time, many women were taught that love meant adjusting, understanding, and keeping everyone else okay. But somewhere in that process, a lot of them quietly learned how to abandon themselves too.

You do not have to disappear to be loved. You do not have to earn your place by carrying everyone else.

Sometimes choosing yourself is not selfish. Sometimes it is the first time you finally come home to yourself. 🤍


305
6
3 days ago

For a long time, many women were taught that love meant adjusting, understanding, and keeping everyone else okay. But somewhere in that process, a lot of them quietly learned how to abandon themselves too.

You do not have to disappear to be loved. You do not have to earn your place by carrying everyone else.

Sometimes choosing yourself is not selfish. Sometimes it is the first time you finally come home to yourself. 🤍


305
6
3 days ago

For a long time, many women were taught that love meant adjusting, understanding, and keeping everyone else okay. But somewhere in that process, a lot of them quietly learned how to abandon themselves too.

You do not have to disappear to be loved. You do not have to earn your place by carrying everyone else.

Sometimes choosing yourself is not selfish. Sometimes it is the first time you finally come home to yourself. 🤍


305
6
3 days ago

For a long time, many women were taught that love meant adjusting, understanding, and keeping everyone else okay. But somewhere in that process, a lot of them quietly learned how to abandon themselves too.

You do not have to disappear to be loved. You do not have to earn your place by carrying everyone else.

Sometimes choosing yourself is not selfish. Sometimes it is the first time you finally come home to yourself. 🤍


305
6
3 days ago

For a long time, many women were taught that love meant adjusting, understanding, and keeping everyone else okay. But somewhere in that process, a lot of them quietly learned how to abandon themselves too.

You do not have to disappear to be loved. You do not have to earn your place by carrying everyone else.

Sometimes choosing yourself is not selfish. Sometimes it is the first time you finally come home to yourself. 🤍


305
6
3 days ago

It’s taken me many weeks to truly process what walking into the headquarters of the World Economic Forum as part of the Young Global Leaders journey really meant.

For two days in Geneva, I found myself in rooms filled with people whose lives and work could not have looked more different on paper - diplomats, entrepreneurs, athletes, policymakers, scientists, artists, activists, investors, technologists, storytellers, public servants and changemakers from across the world.

And yet, beneath all the diversity in backgrounds, cultures and perspectives, there was one thing that united everyone in the room: a genuine desire to leave the world better than we found it. To build, to serve, to question, to solve, and to create impact larger than ourselves.

What stayed with me most wasn’t just the conversations, but the openness behind them. The willingness to learn from one another. The reminder that leadership today is no longer about one sector, one country or one way of thinking - it’s about collaboration across worlds that normally never collide.

I walked away inspired, challenged, hopeful, and deeply grateful to now be part of this incredible community.

Excited for the start of this three-year journey, for the friendships and ideas it will bring, and for many more moments of learning, dialogue and collective ambition in the years ahead. 🤍


563
26
4 days ago

It’s taken me many weeks to truly process what walking into the headquarters of the World Economic Forum as part of the Young Global Leaders journey really meant.

For two days in Geneva, I found myself in rooms filled with people whose lives and work could not have looked more different on paper - diplomats, entrepreneurs, athletes, policymakers, scientists, artists, activists, investors, technologists, storytellers, public servants and changemakers from across the world.

And yet, beneath all the diversity in backgrounds, cultures and perspectives, there was one thing that united everyone in the room: a genuine desire to leave the world better than we found it. To build, to serve, to question, to solve, and to create impact larger than ourselves.

What stayed with me most wasn’t just the conversations, but the openness behind them. The willingness to learn from one another. The reminder that leadership today is no longer about one sector, one country or one way of thinking - it’s about collaboration across worlds that normally never collide.

I walked away inspired, challenged, hopeful, and deeply grateful to now be part of this incredible community.

Excited for the start of this three-year journey, for the friendships and ideas it will bring, and for many more moments of learning, dialogue and collective ambition in the years ahead. 🤍


563
26
4 days ago

It’s taken me many weeks to truly process what walking into the headquarters of the World Economic Forum as part of the Young Global Leaders journey really meant.

For two days in Geneva, I found myself in rooms filled with people whose lives and work could not have looked more different on paper - diplomats, entrepreneurs, athletes, policymakers, scientists, artists, activists, investors, technologists, storytellers, public servants and changemakers from across the world.

And yet, beneath all the diversity in backgrounds, cultures and perspectives, there was one thing that united everyone in the room: a genuine desire to leave the world better than we found it. To build, to serve, to question, to solve, and to create impact larger than ourselves.

What stayed with me most wasn’t just the conversations, but the openness behind them. The willingness to learn from one another. The reminder that leadership today is no longer about one sector, one country or one way of thinking - it’s about collaboration across worlds that normally never collide.

I walked away inspired, challenged, hopeful, and deeply grateful to now be part of this incredible community.

Excited for the start of this three-year journey, for the friendships and ideas it will bring, and for many more moments of learning, dialogue and collective ambition in the years ahead. 🤍


563
26
4 days ago

It’s taken me many weeks to truly process what walking into the headquarters of the World Economic Forum as part of the Young Global Leaders journey really meant.

For two days in Geneva, I found myself in rooms filled with people whose lives and work could not have looked more different on paper - diplomats, entrepreneurs, athletes, policymakers, scientists, artists, activists, investors, technologists, storytellers, public servants and changemakers from across the world.

And yet, beneath all the diversity in backgrounds, cultures and perspectives, there was one thing that united everyone in the room: a genuine desire to leave the world better than we found it. To build, to serve, to question, to solve, and to create impact larger than ourselves.

What stayed with me most wasn’t just the conversations, but the openness behind them. The willingness to learn from one another. The reminder that leadership today is no longer about one sector, one country or one way of thinking - it’s about collaboration across worlds that normally never collide.

I walked away inspired, challenged, hopeful, and deeply grateful to now be part of this incredible community.

Excited for the start of this three-year journey, for the friendships and ideas it will bring, and for many more moments of learning, dialogue and collective ambition in the years ahead. 🤍


563
26
4 days ago

It’s taken me many weeks to truly process what walking into the headquarters of the World Economic Forum as part of the Young Global Leaders journey really meant.

For two days in Geneva, I found myself in rooms filled with people whose lives and work could not have looked more different on paper - diplomats, entrepreneurs, athletes, policymakers, scientists, artists, activists, investors, technologists, storytellers, public servants and changemakers from across the world.

And yet, beneath all the diversity in backgrounds, cultures and perspectives, there was one thing that united everyone in the room: a genuine desire to leave the world better than we found it. To build, to serve, to question, to solve, and to create impact larger than ourselves.

What stayed with me most wasn’t just the conversations, but the openness behind them. The willingness to learn from one another. The reminder that leadership today is no longer about one sector, one country or one way of thinking - it’s about collaboration across worlds that normally never collide.

I walked away inspired, challenged, hopeful, and deeply grateful to now be part of this incredible community.

Excited for the start of this three-year journey, for the friendships and ideas it will bring, and for many more moments of learning, dialogue and collective ambition in the years ahead. 🤍


563
26
4 days ago

It’s taken me many weeks to truly process what walking into the headquarters of the World Economic Forum as part of the Young Global Leaders journey really meant.

For two days in Geneva, I found myself in rooms filled with people whose lives and work could not have looked more different on paper - diplomats, entrepreneurs, athletes, policymakers, scientists, artists, activists, investors, technologists, storytellers, public servants and changemakers from across the world.

And yet, beneath all the diversity in backgrounds, cultures and perspectives, there was one thing that united everyone in the room: a genuine desire to leave the world better than we found it. To build, to serve, to question, to solve, and to create impact larger than ourselves.

What stayed with me most wasn’t just the conversations, but the openness behind them. The willingness to learn from one another. The reminder that leadership today is no longer about one sector, one country or one way of thinking - it’s about collaboration across worlds that normally never collide.

I walked away inspired, challenged, hopeful, and deeply grateful to now be part of this incredible community.

Excited for the start of this three-year journey, for the friendships and ideas it will bring, and for many more moments of learning, dialogue and collective ambition in the years ahead. 🤍


563
26
4 days ago

It’s taken me many weeks to truly process what walking into the headquarters of the World Economic Forum as part of the Young Global Leaders journey really meant.

For two days in Geneva, I found myself in rooms filled with people whose lives and work could not have looked more different on paper - diplomats, entrepreneurs, athletes, policymakers, scientists, artists, activists, investors, technologists, storytellers, public servants and changemakers from across the world.

And yet, beneath all the diversity in backgrounds, cultures and perspectives, there was one thing that united everyone in the room: a genuine desire to leave the world better than we found it. To build, to serve, to question, to solve, and to create impact larger than ourselves.

What stayed with me most wasn’t just the conversations, but the openness behind them. The willingness to learn from one another. The reminder that leadership today is no longer about one sector, one country or one way of thinking - it’s about collaboration across worlds that normally never collide.

I walked away inspired, challenged, hopeful, and deeply grateful to now be part of this incredible community.

Excited for the start of this three-year journey, for the friendships and ideas it will bring, and for many more moments of learning, dialogue and collective ambition in the years ahead. 🤍


563
26
4 days ago

It’s taken me many weeks to truly process what walking into the headquarters of the World Economic Forum as part of the Young Global Leaders journey really meant.

For two days in Geneva, I found myself in rooms filled with people whose lives and work could not have looked more different on paper - diplomats, entrepreneurs, athletes, policymakers, scientists, artists, activists, investors, technologists, storytellers, public servants and changemakers from across the world.

And yet, beneath all the diversity in backgrounds, cultures and perspectives, there was one thing that united everyone in the room: a genuine desire to leave the world better than we found it. To build, to serve, to question, to solve, and to create impact larger than ourselves.

What stayed with me most wasn’t just the conversations, but the openness behind them. The willingness to learn from one another. The reminder that leadership today is no longer about one sector, one country or one way of thinking - it’s about collaboration across worlds that normally never collide.

I walked away inspired, challenged, hopeful, and deeply grateful to now be part of this incredible community.

Excited for the start of this three-year journey, for the friendships and ideas it will bring, and for many more moments of learning, dialogue and collective ambition in the years ahead. 🤍


563
26
4 days ago

It’s taken me many weeks to truly process what walking into the headquarters of the World Economic Forum as part of the Young Global Leaders journey really meant.

For two days in Geneva, I found myself in rooms filled with people whose lives and work could not have looked more different on paper - diplomats, entrepreneurs, athletes, policymakers, scientists, artists, activists, investors, technologists, storytellers, public servants and changemakers from across the world.

And yet, beneath all the diversity in backgrounds, cultures and perspectives, there was one thing that united everyone in the room: a genuine desire to leave the world better than we found it. To build, to serve, to question, to solve, and to create impact larger than ourselves.

What stayed with me most wasn’t just the conversations, but the openness behind them. The willingness to learn from one another. The reminder that leadership today is no longer about one sector, one country or one way of thinking - it’s about collaboration across worlds that normally never collide.

I walked away inspired, challenged, hopeful, and deeply grateful to now be part of this incredible community.

Excited for the start of this three-year journey, for the friendships and ideas it will bring, and for many more moments of learning, dialogue and collective ambition in the years ahead. 🤍


563
26
4 days ago

It’s taken me many weeks to truly process what walking into the headquarters of the World Economic Forum as part of the Young Global Leaders journey really meant.

For two days in Geneva, I found myself in rooms filled with people whose lives and work could not have looked more different on paper - diplomats, entrepreneurs, athletes, policymakers, scientists, artists, activists, investors, technologists, storytellers, public servants and changemakers from across the world.

And yet, beneath all the diversity in backgrounds, cultures and perspectives, there was one thing that united everyone in the room: a genuine desire to leave the world better than we found it. To build, to serve, to question, to solve, and to create impact larger than ourselves.

What stayed with me most wasn’t just the conversations, but the openness behind them. The willingness to learn from one another. The reminder that leadership today is no longer about one sector, one country or one way of thinking - it’s about collaboration across worlds that normally never collide.

I walked away inspired, challenged, hopeful, and deeply grateful to now be part of this incredible community.

Excited for the start of this three-year journey, for the friendships and ideas it will bring, and for many more moments of learning, dialogue and collective ambition in the years ahead. 🤍


563
26
4 days ago

It’s taken me many weeks to truly process what walking into the headquarters of the World Economic Forum as part of the Young Global Leaders journey really meant.

For two days in Geneva, I found myself in rooms filled with people whose lives and work could not have looked more different on paper - diplomats, entrepreneurs, athletes, policymakers, scientists, artists, activists, investors, technologists, storytellers, public servants and changemakers from across the world.

And yet, beneath all the diversity in backgrounds, cultures and perspectives, there was one thing that united everyone in the room: a genuine desire to leave the world better than we found it. To build, to serve, to question, to solve, and to create impact larger than ourselves.

What stayed with me most wasn’t just the conversations, but the openness behind them. The willingness to learn from one another. The reminder that leadership today is no longer about one sector, one country or one way of thinking - it’s about collaboration across worlds that normally never collide.

I walked away inspired, challenged, hopeful, and deeply grateful to now be part of this incredible community.

Excited for the start of this three-year journey, for the friendships and ideas it will bring, and for many more moments of learning, dialogue and collective ambition in the years ahead. 🤍


563
26
4 days ago

Dowry was never just about money. It was always about a mindset that made women feel like they had to earn love, acceptance, and respect.

We changed the words, but somewhere the thinking stayed the same. A woman is not a burden to be compensated for, and marriage should never come with a price tag.


466
7
5 days ago


Story Save - Best free tool for saving Stories, Reels, Photos, Videos, Highlights, IGTV to your phone.

Story-save.com is an intuitive online tool that enables users to download and save a variety of content, including stories, photos, videos, and IGTV materials, directly from Instagram. With Story-Save, you can not only easily download diverse content from Instagram but also view it at your convenience, even without internet access. This tool is perfect for those moments when you come across something interesting on Instagram and want to save it for later viewing. Use Story-Save to ensure you don't miss the chance to take your favorite Instagram moments with you!

Our advantages:

No Need to Register

Avoid app downloads and sign-ups, store stories on the web.

Exclusive High-Quality

Stories Say goodbye to poor-quality content, preserve only high-resolution Stories.

Accessible on All

Devices Download Instagram Stories using any browser, iPhone, Android.

Completely Free to Use

Absolutely no fees. Download any Story at no cost.

Frequently Asked Questions

The Instagram Stories Download feature is designed to provide a secure and high-quality method for downloading Instagram stories. It's user-friendly and doesn't require users to register or sign up. Simply copy the link, paste it, and enjoy the content.
Downloading Instagram stories is a simple process that involves three steps:
  • 1. Go to the Instagram Story Downloader tool.
  • 2. Next, type the username of the Instagram profile into the provided field and click on the Download button.
  • 3. You'll then see all the Stories that are available for the current 24-hour period. Select the ones you want and hit Download.
The selected story will be swiftly saved to your device's local storage.
Unfortunately, it is not possible to download stories from private accounts due to privacy restrictions.
There is no limit to the number of times you can use the Instagram story download service. It's available for unlimited use and is completely free.
Yes, it is legal to download and save Instagram Stories from other users, provided they are not used for commercial purposes. If you intend to use them commercially, you must obtain permission from the original content owner and credit them each time the story is used.
All downloaded stories are typically saved in the Downloads folder on your computer, whether you're using Windows, Mac, or iOS. For mobile devices, the stories are saved in the phone's storage and should also appear in your Gallery app immediately after download.