Tamiya sales and customer service outside of Japan are overseen by a network of local agents.Find your nearest agent

There窶冱 a phrase that circles in my head like a familiar song: zindagi na milegi dobara. It窶冱 a rumination on time窶俳n the stubborn, relentless now窶蚤nd an invitation to live with more courage. This idea, whispered in cinema halls and threaded through late-night conversations, asks simple but urgent questions: How will you spend the life you窶决e given? Who are you when the masks come off? What risks are worth taking?

I don窶冲 mean the movie as an item you stream or download; I mean the impulse it gives us: to set aside safe routines, to travel into unknowns, to face the parts of ourselves we usually avoid. The film窶冱 moments窶杯hree friends on a road trip, each confronting a fear, each learning to listen窶蚤re resonant because they mirror what we all need: a nudge toward radical presence.

So, take that impulse窶配indagi na milegi dobara窶馬ot as a slogan but as a daily practice. Not every risk needs to be dramatic. Mostly it窶冱 tiny, steady choices: picking presence over distraction, authenticity over image, courage over comfort. Do that, and the life you have begins to look like the life you meant to live.