There are some things that instantly transport you to another time. An old song. The smell of your grandmother's kitchen. And for many Indians, that unmistakable fragrance that rises from the ground when the first drops of rain hit dry earth.It's a smell that signals the end of a brutal summer and the beginning of something better.Recently, Anand Mahindra got the internet talking after sharing an interesting discovery about this familiar scent. Like many people, he had always enjoyed it. What he didn't know was that it has an official name: petrichor.Intrigued, Mahindra dug a little deeper and found out where the word comes from. It is derived from two Greek words - petra, meaning stone, and ichor, the mythical fluid said to flow through the veins of gods.A fascinating origin story, no doubt. But Mahindra felt the word still missed something.After all, for Indians, the smell of the first rain isn't just a scientific phenomenon or a dictionary term. It's an emotion.Think about it. After weeks of sweating through power cuts, checking weather forecasts every day and complaining about the heat to literally everyone you meet, those first raindrops arrive like a blessing. Then comes that smell from the earth, and suddenly the mood changes.You pause.You smile.You instinctively walk to the balcony.That's why Mahindra suggested that perhaps Indians need their own name for it. His choice? "Dil ka Chor" - the thief of the heart.And honestly, the internet seemed to love it.The post quickly filled with comments from people who felt the nickname captured the feeling far better than petrichor ever could.One user wrote that while petrichor sounds beautiful, "Dil ka Chor" perfectly describes what happens when that smell hits you out of nowhere and instantly lifts your mood.Another pointed out that India has been celebrating the fragrance of wet earth long before social media discussions about petrichor became popular. They mentioned Kannauj's famous mitti attar, a traditional perfume made from baked clay that is often said to capture the scent of rain-soaked soil.Others became nostalgic. People spoke about childhood memories of standing in the rain, making paper boats, sipping hot chai by the window, and waiting for schools to announce a rain holiday that almost never came.Of course, this being the internet, some users added their own comic touch.One joked that if petrichor is supposedly connected to the gods, then every monsoon shower is basically nature's version of luxury perfume.What made the conversation special wasn't the word itself. It was how many people connected with it.Because the smell of the first rain isn't really about science. It's about memories. It's about relief after a long summer. It's about that tiny moment when the entire world feels cooler, calmer and somehow more hopeful.Call it petrichor if you like.But judging by the reactions online, "Dil ka Chor" might just be the name that sticks.