@sanjaygupta1304 Sir jinki dono pariksha h unhe ayog me avedan dene ke liye kahiye
Upsc ke pre k result ko sanlagn krke
Upsc ka schedule ek saal phle aata h
Ayog nhi chahta ki pradesh ke bacche Dy collector aur collector banne ka sapna ek sath dekhein
Sharam aani chahiye is ayog ko
Her name is Jagriti Awasthi.
She grew up in Bhopal, in a close middle class family. Her father was a homeopathic doctor and her mother was a schoolteacher.
From childhood, she was a brilliant student. She studied electrical engineering at a top national institute, cleared one of the toughest engineering entrance tests in the country, and secured a government job as an engineer at BHEL.
By every ordinary measure, she had already made it.
She had the degree, the salary and the stability that millions of families pray for.
It was not enough for her.
There was an older dream, partly her own and partly her mother’s, of serving the country as an IAS officer. She could feel that her demanding job was quietly killing any chance of getting there.
So in 2019, she did something most people would call reckless.
She resigned from her secure government job and dedicated herself completely to preparing for the Civil Services Examination.
Then her first attempt failed.
She did not even clear the preliminary stage.
Soon after, the pandemic struck and the whole country went into lockdown.
She had left her coaching in Delhi and returned home to Bhopal. Suddenly there were no classes, no library and no outside help, just her books and a closed door.
Her mother stepped in and took on more of the household responsibilities so her daughter could focus entirely on studying.
Jagriti studied for around ten hours a day, month after month.
In 2020, she sat the examination again.
This time she secured an All India Rank of 2.
Out of the lakhs of people who attempt that exam, she was the second highest ranked candidate in the entire country and the highest ranked woman that year.
The engineer who walked away from a safe job, failed once, and studied through a lockdown alone in her room is now exactly what she set out to become.
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@Amanvijay3@sanjaygupta1304 Bhai aap maine ayog me baat kiya tha unhone kaha jinka dono ho wo avedan dein to consider karenge pr sirf unka hi avedan vichar hoga jinka dono h
Unse ayog ko avedan bhijwaiye
I literally cried the day my interview ended.
Not because it had gone badly, but because years of frustration, self-doubt, and relentless effort had culminated in that one moment. A burden I had carried for years suddenly lifted. The tension that had lived within me for so long seemed to melt away in seconds.
For the first time, I truly felt relieved.
I no longer cared about the result. I had done my part, right until the very end.
Ten days later came one of the toughest challenges of my life,my MD final examinations which were then followed closely by PCS 2025. There was no time for contemplation, no space for either hope or fear. Life simply moved on to the next challenge.
And then, when I finally saw the result last week, I felt neither overwhelming joy nor disappointment about the rank.
It felt exactly what it was,an outcome of my efforts.
Nothing more, nothing less.
A fruit borne of years of hard work, discipline, sacrifices, failures, and perseverance.
I accepted it with gratitude, humility, and a quiet sense of peace.
Because sometimes the greatest victory is not the result itself, but becoming the person capable of achieving it.