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Sameer Gudhate Presents the Book Review of Let the Caterpillar Fly by Yashpal Sharma

  • Writer: Sameer Gudhate
    Sameer Gudhate
  • 6 hours ago
  • 3 min read

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Last week, on one of those restless evenings when scrolling endlessly on my phone wasn’t enough and I craved something more nourishing, I stumbled upon Let the Caterpillar Fly by Yashpal Sharma. The title itself hooked me — I mean, who hasn’t felt like a caterpillar, heavy with unrealized potential, secretly wondering if wings might be hiding somewhere inside? That image alone made me pause, and I decided to dive in. Let’s just say, sleep wasn’t happening that night.

 

The book is exactly what it promises: a guide to transformation through habits. But before you roll your eyes and think, “Oh no, another self-help lecture,” hear me out. Sharma doesn’t preach. He walks beside you. He’s a seasoned coach and marathon runner, and you can feel that lived experience in every chapter — that rhythm of discipline, resilience, and quiet encouragement. It’s less of a textbook and more of a conversation with someone who’s already run the tough miles and wants to show you where the potholes are.

 

Each chapter takes one idea — a habit, a mindset shift, a small action — and unfolds it gently. The beauty lies in its simplicity. Sharma doesn’t drown you in jargon or lofty theories. His prose is clear, almost breezy at times, but with the kind of grounding wisdom that makes you underline sentences. I found myself nodding more than once, as if a friend had just said out loud something I’d always known but never articulated.

 

What makes the book stand out is its structure. It doesn’t overwhelm you with a grand, overwhelming “life overhaul.” Instead, it threads small, doable steps together like beads, so by the end you don’t just understand the philosophy — you feel capable of living it. There’s a certain pacing to it that mirrors transformation itself: steady, deliberate, but with bursts of energy that make you want to get up and actually do something about your life.

 

One of my favourite moments was Sharma’s reminder that habits aren’t just about discipline — they’re about identity. You don’t just do the habit; you become the kind of person who lives it. That idea landed hard for me. It made me think about how often we focus on results — lose weight, save money, meditate more — without asking, “Who do I want to be when the wings finally unfold?”

 

The themes are universal — resilience, self-discovery, growth — but they never feel abstract. Sharma keeps pulling them down to earth with relatable examples and simple practices. At times, it felt like he was gently holding up a mirror, showing me both my excuses and my possibilities. That mix of challenge and compassion is rare in personal development books, and it’s what makes this one shine.

 

Of course, no book is perfect. Some sections, especially where he revisits the importance of consistency, felt a bit repetitive — though, to be fair, maybe repetition is exactly what we need when talking about habits. Think of it less as a flaw and more as a deliberate drumbeat, reinforcing the rhythm until it sticks.

 

Personally, this book arrived at the right time for me. I’ve been trying to reshape my daily routine, often failing by Thursday. Reading Sharma felt like having a coach whisper, “It’s okay. Start again. Small steps.” It reminded me that transformation isn’t a fireworks show; it’s a quiet unfolding, like a caterpillar slowly daring to stretch out its wings.

 

If you’re looking for a book filled with practical steps, encouragement, and a kind of quiet companionship on the messy path of self-growth, this one deserves a spot on your shelf. It’s not flashy, but it’s deeply human. I’d especially recommend it to anyone who feels stuck — in a job, in a rut, in the loop of good intentions and half-kept resolutions.

 

By the time I closed the book, I didn’t just feel inspired — I felt lighter, as if some invisible burden had shifted. And that’s why I think Sharma succeeded. He doesn’t just tell you to fly; he makes you believe that your wings have been waiting all along.

 

If I had to rate it, I’d give it a solid 4.8/5. More importantly, I’d say: read it when you’re ready to stop crawling and start unfolding. Who knows? You might just discover that your wings were never missing, only hidden.

 

 

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