The Fallen Giant: A Lesson from a Wild Mango Tree
![]() |
| A Lesson from a Wild Mango Tree |
It’s the weekend. Finally.
After the late-night grind of a long Friday, I felt a strange kind of relief. My brain was tired, drained, and done for the week. But the mind… the mind was still wandering somewhere, searching for peace.
That week had ended with some good work completed. And while one part of me had already started worrying about Monday, another part wanted to escape. So I got on my bike.
As I’ve said in many of my blogs, a bike ride is where I do my best thinking. That is where many answers come to me. That is where noise becomes a little less noisy.
While riding, I was thinking about my hometown and our farm, where there had been some good news recently. I’m not sure how many of you know about those tiny mangoes we find in and around the Western Ghats. We call them Wild Mangoes. Small fruits… but full of character.
This particular tree was not just another tree in the farm. It was a world by itself. A massive canopy of branches and stems. When you stood near it, you felt like a small ant. It would take at least three people joining hands to circle its trunk.
And that tree had started fruiting heavily again after two long years.
Thousands of mangoes.
As I rode, I was already smiling to myself, planning to call my mother and tell her to prepare the famous pickles we had been missing for years.
The day passed. The next day, I even discussed it with my mother. We planned to make plenty of pickles and share them with relatives and neighbours.
The Boon of the Western Ghats
![]() |
| Boon of the Western Ghats |
Before I get to the heart of the story, let me tell you a little more about this tree.
A Wild Mango tree is a boon to the Western Ghats. Any tree fruiting this heavily is probably a great-grandmother in tree years — maybe 60 or 70 years old, maybe even more. Trees like these are not just trees. They are blessings. They protect the land, hold the soil, give shade, and feed countless birds, insects, and animals.
The taste of the fruit is mouth-watering. The dishes made from them are something else. Once you taste them, you keep waiting for that season again. And the beautiful thing is — even if you find many Wild Mango trees near each other, no two taste exactly the same.
The tree I am talking about stood more than 70 feet tall, rising above almost everything around it. Since our farm is in a hilly region, you could see two giant trees from the entrance itself, standing like guardians and welcoming you with a cool breeze. Out of those two, this one was the tallest — standing there as if it were saluting the Brahmagiri Hills.
Its canopy was like a green empire. It decided who got sunlight and who had to stay in the shade. From its height, it almost looked like it was watching over the smaller plants, the young saplings, the seasonal crops… with a kind of quiet authority.
And I still remember the life under that tree.
There was always sound there.
Birds coming and going. Wings fluttering. Small fights. Sharp calls. Sudden movement between leaves. Even when the farm looked quiet from outside, that tree was never truly silent. It had its own world running above our heads. If you stood under it for a while, you would hear that life before you even noticed it. In many ways, that sound belonged to the farm itself.
Maybe that is why the tree never felt like wood and leaves alone.
It felt alive.
It had survived years of rain, heat, wind, and dry seasons. It had stood through so much that it almost gave the feeling of permanence. Like it would be there forever. Like some things are simply too strong to fall.
The Midnight Call
![]() |
| place that always had shade… now open to the sky |
Later that weekend, I got a call from my neighbour.
He told me there had been heavy summer rain. Strong winds. Several trees had come down.
And one of them… was our Wild Mango tree.
Usually, when you get a late-night call from your hometown, your heart already knows it is not good news. Even before you say hello, your mind starts preparing for something bad.
That is exactly what happened.
The moment I heard it, I felt as though I had lost someone who had been with us for years. Someone who had silently seen generations come and go.
As my neighbour described the scene, I could imagine it clearly.
The sky didn’t just turn grey. It became dark, bruised, and restless. The wind was no longer a light breeze. It turned into a force—heavy and angry. It was the kind of wind that doesn’t move quietly through the land, but comes as if it has something to prove.
That giant mango tree must have fought.
I could almost hear its branches groaning. Its massive limbs thrashing in the storm. For years, it had stood there as the strongest thing around, carrying that image without question. But this time, the ground beneath it had changed. The soil had softened under relentless rain. The roots, the very thing that held all its greatness together, could no longer hold that giant weight against that raging wind.
And then, with one unbearable moment, it gave way.
By dawn, the king was on the ground.
And after hearing that, I could not sleep.
I kept imagining that place in the farm.
A place that always had shade… now open to the sky.
A place that always had the sound of birds… now suddenly still.
A place that always looked permanent… now broken in one night.
A place that always had the sound of birds… now suddenly still.
A place that always looked permanent… now broken in one night.
I imagined branches torn apart. Tiny mangoes scattered in the wet mud. The smell of fresh, broken wood in the air. I even thought of the birds — maybe they came in the morning, circled once, and did not understand where their world had gone.
That thought stayed with me the most.
Because when something that looked eternal disappears overnight, the silence it leaves behind is louder than the fall itself.
When Strength Meets Time
![]() |
| Strength Meet Time |
The next day, my mind kept returning to that fallen tree.
Not just because it had fallen.
But because it felt like something more had fallen with it.
A message.
Because life is also like that.
There are people who stand like that tree. Strong voice. Strong position. Money. influence. Confidence. Support. The kind of people who slowly begin to believe they are untouchable. And sometimes, we also believe it. We look at them and think, this man can never fail. This family will never see bad days. This person is too strong to break.
But life does not check your height before testing you.
Time does not care how powerful you look.
One loss. One health issue. One betrayal. One mistake. One bad season. Sometimes that is enough to bring even the strongest-looking person to the ground.
And then life does the opposite too.
The person nobody noticed yesterday may rise tomorrow. The one people ignored may become the strongest soul in the room. The one who had nothing may one day stand with more courage than the one who had everything.
Hero to zero.
Zero to hero.
Zero to hero.
Life has a strange way of moving people around without asking permission.
The Silent Lesson
![]() |
| Silent Lesson |
That is why life must be lived with balance.
When you have everything, do not behave as if you built the sky. What you have today may not stay with you forever.
And when you do not have much, do not sit in shame as if your story is finished. Even dry land waits for rain. Even broken seasons change.
That fallen mango tree taught me something silently.
Strength is beautiful. Growth is beautiful. Standing tall is beautiful.
But pride is dangerous.
The moment we start believing, “I am the strongest. I need nobody. Nothing can happen to me,” life quietly smiles.
Not to insult us.
Not to humiliate us.
But to remind us.
Not to humiliate us.
But to remind us.
We are all standing only because time is allowing us to stand.
That tree was tall. Maybe the tallest in the farm.
But the day it fell, height had no meaning.
And maybe that is true for human life too.
Do not be arrogant when life is giving you shade.
Do not feel destroyed when life throws you to the ground.
Do not feel destroyed when life throws you to the ground.
Seasons change.
Position changes.
Strength changes.
Fortune changes.
Position changes.
Strength changes.
Fortune changes.
What should remain is humility.
The tree is no longer standing in the farm.
But strangely, after falling, it began standing inside my thoughts.
Even now, when I think of power, success, ego, struggle, and survival, I remember that Wild Mango tree. Not just as a tree that once stood tall — but as a life that taught me something after its fall.
Sometimes, the tallest things fall not to end their story…
but to teach ours.
I’ll park my story here for now.
This incident left me with many more thoughts, many more messages, and maybe I will speak about them in future blogs.
But for now, I leave you with this:
Has life ever shown you that strength alone is not enough?
Has something ever fallen in front of you… only to leave behind a lesson that never left your mind?
Has something ever fallen in front of you… only to leave behind a lesson that never left your mind?
Disclaimer: This story is inspired by real-life events. Any interpretation is personal, and any resemblance to situations is purely coincidental.




