These one-dayers and these Twenty20s is where Virat Kohli can really stand up and lead from the front.
I have always enjoyed my time coming to India. It is a country where I have always felt welcome and I don't mind the spices, I can deal with it.
The people who know me know I'm extremely private or try and be as private as I can with my personal life.
I wish I knew myself, when I was playing, with the insight I gained once I found peace and distance from cricket, and fatherhood. I might have enjoyed those last years more.
I would love not to take cricket home but I don't do shades of grey. I need to be 100 per cent committed.
The way I've been brought up to play cricket, the captain has always taken accountability for success and defeat.
I remember my father, when I was a kid, retiring me on 50. He never used to let me bat past 50. He'd say I had to retire to give the other kids an opportunity.
Hublot has always been happy to be different, unique and they want to be the first to do things - and they certainly have done that when it comes to cricket.
I was lucky enough to play with some great batsman - Matthew Hayden, Steve Smith, David Warner, Adam Gilchrist, Damien Martyn who was a genius.
I think I'm extremely lucky to have been able to go through a separation with the mother of my child and us still be great friends.
It would be wrong to plan too much ahead of a match. You've got to go with the flow, go with your instincts.