PV Raji Ashok
"I believes that whatever job one does, they must be completely satisfied with it."
PV Raji Ashok
"I believes that whatever job one does, they must be completely satisfied with it."
Shenaz Haveliwala
A 22-year-old Pradeep Singh is the son of a petrol pump worker who overcame a lot of hardship and limited resources and cracked the IAS exam. Pradeep who hails from Indore was one of the youngest candidates to appear in UPSC 2018 exams and crack it. His father Manoj Singh originally from the town of Gopalganj in Bihar. Manoj Singh worked as a petrol pump worker and his mother is a housewife.
Pradeep born in 1996 studied in a CBSE school in Indore and then completed his graduation in B.Com (Hons) from IIPS DAVV. Since a very young age, Pradeep was confident that he wanted to be in administrative service. While speaking to The Better India, Pradeep said, “Growing up, I didn’t know what UPSC or an IAS officer was. But my parents often spoke with delight about the success stories of aspirants who had cracked the exams to become ‘afsars’ (officers). I would look on in awe at the joy on their faces as they tried to fathom how proud the parents of these achievers would have felt to see their children crack one of the toughest exams in the country and serve the nation.”
He started his UPSC Civil Services preparation and moved to Delhi. To afford his coaching and accommodation, his father had to sell their home and move into rented accommodation. Determined to make the most of his father's sacrifices and efforts, he focussed on cracking the civil services examination. Hard work paid off and he cracked the examination in 2018 and was offered a position in the Indian Revenue Services.
Determined still, he did not give up and continued to strive for a better rank. In the recently released UPSC CIvil Services 2019 results, Pradeep shined again, finding a spot at the AIR 26 rank. Pradeep preparation strategy involved getting up early, take a shower, eat, and then sit for study. He studied for the whole day and his distractions were rare. He believed that coaching alone cannot help you crack the exam.
Coaching will contribute about 8-10 percent to the results. But 90 percent depends on your hard work is what he followed to qualify the exam. Presently he is working as an IRS officer.Pradeep Singh is one the IAS Toppers who through his hard work and dedication topped the exam. Know his journey of cracking the exam amid lot of hardship and limited resources.
"What seems impossible is only possible when dedication, hard work, and determination is built together"
Dhritiman Bohra
“Everything is theoretically impossible, until it is done.”
Nidhi Goyal
From the age of four, Nidhi Goyal loved to paint, and by the time she was a teenager, she knew she wanted to be a portrait artist. When Nidhi was diagnosed with a degenerative eye disorder, at age 15, the loss of this dream was the biggest blow.
“I’m not sure, looking back now, that I would have had the temperament the patience for it,” Nidhi tells us over a lime soda at a beachfront coffee shop in Malad. Articulate, chatty, and quick to laugh, this through-and-through Bombay girl eventually found a different creative outlet to suit her personality. A few years ago, she turned to stand-up comedy, both as a form of self-expression and as a way to extend the advocacy work she was already doing for disability and gender rights.
“After the first couple of years, when I acquired my disability, I think everything else became laughable,” Nidhi says. With two visually impaired children and one sighted one, the Nidhi family developed its own brand of humour, which treated prejudice not disability as something to be pitied or mocked. “To do comedy,” “you need to be strong enough to point to that elephant in the room, which everyone is pretending is not there. And that’s something I’ve done since childhood.”