For years, my name came with a prefix.
“Oh, you’re Nivedita from Balaji?”
Yes, I was. And proudly so.
Those were the years of long shoots, dramatic TRPs, the infamous ‘K’ serials — shows that defined an entire generation of Indian television.
Kyunki, Kasautii, Kahaani… and so many more.
I was young. Hungry. Restless. And I loved building stories from the ground up.
But here’s the part no one talks about —
What happens when you’ve been “someone” for too long… and then you’re not?
Leaving a legacy is easy to say. Living after it? Not so much.
Once I stepped away from Balaji, people assumed I had it all figured out.
“You’ll be running another channel soon, right?”
“Which platform have you joined now?”
“Must be easy with your experience.”
Spoiler alert: It wasn’t.
I felt invisible in rooms I used to command.
Suddenly, I was the one waiting on emails. The one figuring out what the next move even looked like.
No backing. No title. No big boss behind me.
And that’s when I realised something powerful:
Your identity is not your last job. Your worth is not your previous success.
So I started again. This time, on my own terms.
I launched Miller House — not just a bar, but a cultural space that blends storytelling, food, and art.
I built What’s Your Calling? — a platform born from my own second act, to help others explore theirs.
I stopped waiting to be chosen. I started creating.
This wasn’t the reinvention I planned. It was the one I needed.
To anyone starting their ‘second innings’ — hear me out.
Even if you’ve had a great run, the second act still comes with self-doubt.
It’s tempting to live off past glory. But real growth happens when you walk into a new room where no one knows your name — and you earn your way in again.
There’s humility in that. But also immense power.
You’re not a has-been. You’re a becoming.
I’m not “just from Balaji” anymore.
I’m from a story that’s still being written — across industries, across formats, across callings.
And so are you.