6.00 PM - Project meetings begin. I down two cups of strong double coffee in an attempt to gather my senses. As my group pores over research journals, my mind cannot help but wander back to the dreamy days of undergrad college, where projects were a matter of Wikipedia and copy-paste. And I realize I have leveled up. Maybe two or three levels at once.
11.00 PM - My phone lights up with a barrage of WhatsApp messages. I realize I have another report due at 11.59.59 PM and everyone in my group is caught up in some meeting or the other. With no time for dilly-dallying, we assemble to delegate work. Fifty minutes of furious checking, formatting and rechecking later, the submission is mailed.
12.00 AM - The section gathers for a birthday hooshing. A bunch of frustrated adults encircle the birthday boy and vent their exasperation, while the meek stand back and clap gleefully. The pains are forgotten in that brief moment of merriment and free chocolate truffle cake. But there’s no time to pause. I return to work wondering about the feasibility of intravenous coffee injections.
1.30 AM - My inbox is flooded with mails from my club’s Senior Coordinators. They are appalled by the perceived indolence of junior coordinators. I know there’s no point trying to excuse myself. Tomorrow will be worse. Instead, I excuse myself from my project group to get this work done.
2.30 AM - For my latest event idea, I cook up a mishmash of previous event formats, hoping it will pass. One ominous look of disapproval from the club head and I know this is not how stuff works here. I brace myself for a long night ahead.
4.00 AM - I return to my project group to find they disbanded for the day. An overpowering feeling of guilt washes over me and I vow to participate more meaningfully the next day. If there’s anything more ignominious than failing a subject in a b-school, it is free-riding. Weary with toil, I haste to my room.
4.15 AM - It’s not over. Not yet. I prepare for next morning’s case, convincing myself that I can absolutely not forgo any more class participation marks.
5.30 AM - As I hit the unkempt mass of towels and clothes that is my bed, my body discovers new realms of pleasure. But my brain invariably replays the day’s proceedings, and I smile at the work I got done and rue the time I wasted ruminating. I think about my abysmal grades and console myself that it’s okay to be average sometimes. I study with some of the smartest people in the country, and the competition is brutal. I find solace in Ayn Rand’s words: ‘Genius is an exaggeration of dimension. So is elephantiasis. Both may only be a disease.’
So if the purpose is not to top my class, why am I here? I’m not a genius in any sense of the word, surely I don’t belong here.
One day I decided to break this ruthless cycle and talk to my friends about this. Funnily enough, they all felt the same way. Except, a few of them had it figured out. The purpose is not to be the best; it is simply to push yourself. Push yourself to work harder, to take more responsibilities, to ace that surprise quiz, to taste failure, to earn a professor’s praise after a sleepless night of PowerPoint preparation. Appreciation does not come easy in the world. And we are taught that the hard way. And the right way.
This essay roughly describes my life in the first term (with a great deal of exaggeration for effect). As I write this, I am almost done with my first year at b-school. And I’m surprised at how much I’ve learnt. At the age of nine, to teach me to swim, the instructor threw me into the deep end of the pool on the first day. At an IIM, everybody is thrown into the deep end of the pool on the first day. The boundaries that separate people with work experience from the freshers blur. And two years later, at the other end of the pool emerge people who can take responsibility and steer a corporate ship. Or at least a corporate fishing boat.
I may not be qualified enough to comment on this, but my limited experience with employers (yes, summer internship) tells me that they look beyond grades. They look for responsible and passionate people. And b-schools attempt to bring out those aspects in you from day one (or day zero, as they call it).
And while I’m still only halfway there, I surely look forward to choppier waters ahead.
The writer, Ashutosh Pathak, is an alumnus of IIM Bangalore. A Mechanical engineering graduate, there is much in life he needs to figure out. Till then, he is happy living in the shadows of marketing gurus and finance gods.
Comments
Ananya Rao
I loved reading this. Your humour is amazing. All the best!
8 Mar 2015, 03.04 PM
+Read Replies (1)
Ashutosh Pathak
Thanks a lot :)
9 Mar 2015, 01.18 AM |
Abhinav Yadav
lakers fan till i die
Bravo pickoo!
8 Mar 2015, 03.48 PM
Paridhi Bhandari
The best one I read on InsideIIM till now.. :p Though relating to the timeline is obvious but the last 2 paragraphs sum it all up the best way! Loved it.
9 Mar 2015, 04.09 AM
+Read Replies (1)
Ashutosh Pathak
You're too kind, thank you!
10 Mar 2015, 09.31 PM |
Prakash Danny Sagar
I can very much relate to that...another Mechanical Engineer from IIMA
9 Mar 2015, 04.51 PM
+Read Replies (1)
Ashutosh Pathak
Getting used to the workload now. Quite liking it, actually, no?
10 Mar 2015, 09.33 PM |
Vineet Sudev
You can express yourself very well. You should give a shot at becoming a writer, may find peace in it rather than running the rat race - a' la Chetan Bhagat.
10 Mar 2015, 11.25 AM
+Read Replies (1)
Ashutosh Pathak
Thanks, man. I found my peace when I realized it was not a rat race.
10 Mar 2015, 09.35 PM |
Shashikant Nayak
Loved it man..hope to join your league soon ;-)
11 Mar 2015, 11.07 AM
+Read Replies (1)
Ashutosh Pathak
thank you :)
11 Mar 2015, 09.46 PM |
Hitesh Takhtani
We are into our prisons of self deeds - me "But you see, I have, let's say, sixty years to live. Most of that time will be spent working. I've chosen the work I want to do. If I find no joy in it, then I'm only condemning myself to sixty years of torture. And I can find the joy only if I do my work in the best way possible to me. But the best is a matter of standards--and I set my own standards. I inherit nothing. I stand at the end of no tradition. I may, perhaps, stand at the beginning of one." - HOWARD ROARK “Do not let the hero in your soul parish, in lonely frustration, for the life you deserved but never have been able to reach. Check your road and the nature of your battle. The world you desired can be won. It exists, it is real, it is possible, it is yours.” - AYN RAND
Whilst my greatest finance teacher is blurting out ratios and calling out names sporadically, I found a solace in reading this master piece of your's. Yet another tonic of inspiration incites me for the Marketing Research and I'm deeply consoled by the mere fact that I'm not alone. :p After all they say, 'a deception that elevates us dearer than a host of low truths' :) But in the end, I know that with each passing day I'm toiling in only direction- forward !
11 Mar 2015, 01.58 PM
+Read Replies (2)
Ashutosh Pathak
Masterpiece and all too much dude. Glad you liked it :) You should pen down your own article.
11 Mar 2015, 09.48 PM |
Hitesh Takhtani
We are into our prisons of self deeds - me "But you see, I have, let's say, sixty years to live. Most of that time will be spent working. I've chosen the work I want to do. If I find no joy in it, then I'm only condemning myself to sixty years of torture. And I can find the joy only if I do my work in the best way possible to me. But the best is a matter of standards--and I set my own standards. I inherit nothing. I stand at the end of no tradition. I may, perhaps, stand at the beginning of one." - HOWARD ROARK “Do not let the hero in your soul parish, in lonely frustration, for the life you deserved but never have been able to reach. Check your road and the nature of your battle. The world you desired can be won. It exists, it is real, it is possible, it is yours.” - AYN RAND
if only i were that adept.. the 'consumer behaviour' wouldn't have slept.. its 4.14 am here and i'm racing against time... internship they said is gonna be the litmus of your concepts done and dusted, they never asked 7 ps :D :D #random
27 Jun 2015, 04.17 AM |
Mudit Srivastava
Awesome article! Was mesmerized by the time I reached the end!! Keep writing :) (may be on the second term summer placements!)
21 Mar 2015, 05.31 PM
+Read Replies (1)
Ashutosh Pathak
Thanks a lot, man! Sure will :)
24 Mar 2015, 05.07 PM |
Raahool Sharma
Gregarious....Epicurean....Phlegmatic...Philanthropic...Witty.....An Aspiring Entrepreneur.......!!
One word bro, AWESOME!! It felt like as if I am walking with you in the same park. Keep sharing your experiences, you have got good humor.
26 Oct 2015, 11.08 PM
chandbee shaik
I just completed 5 months of MBA but your explanation reminded all the previous months incidents...... Especially as a fresher even I felt the same..... Perfect!!!!..... & awesome....... Nyc way that took us into the story....... U narrated.... :)
27 Oct 2015, 08.25 AM
Nikil Adithya Gunasekaran
Really a worth reading paragraphs yaar!!!
14 Apr 2017, 09.54 PM
Nirnoy Nimesh
I liked it. The way you have described, it is awesome.
23 Feb 2018, 05.00 PM
Soura Poddar
very amusing and frightening at the same time!
23 Feb 2018, 06.28 PM
Jasmin Kaur
Very well written.
23 Feb 2018, 07.13 PM
Deepak Shah
Amazing
24 Feb 2018, 02.25 PM
Nikhil J
Beautifully written!
24 Feb 2018, 08.20 PM
IPSITA BISWAS
I am a 2017 BSc passout currently working in a startup and preparing for 2018 CAT. I believe getting an MBA will give me the necessary exposure to business world as well as shape my future. I hope I can make it to a good B school after this hectic but exciting year.
Great article!
25 Feb 2018, 03.31 PM
Shivani Gupta
A die-hard Priyanka Chopra fan and a proud Bihari, I am currently pursuing my MBA( Ist year) from IIM Rohtak. Being a voracious reader, I love to study everything around me.apart from reading, I am a travel and food enthusiast and love to travel and enjoy new cuisines
Amazing article.
21 May 2018, 10.07 PM
Keerty Madala
Many new words added to my vocabulary though :)
21 May 2018, 10.51 PM
Aditya Trupta Pattanayak
Amazingly written ; but to be honest I am getting scared after reading this as I know my life will gonna be like this in few days from now . But yes then I feel ab panga le liye hai(the decision to do an MBA) ; toh nibhana toh padega Hii . It sets everything straight that I have to make my ass-off at my b.school to be one successful there & will surely try my best in doing that . Thanks Ashutosh for this Virtual experience of the IIMB life ?? .
8 Jun 2020, 02.31 AM