The first few months you are working your ass off for the summer placements, from making that perfect CV to becoming the master of your subject; Not to mention the academic rigour going on, with 6-7 subjects to ‘pass’ in three months; you try to study and midway you had a realisation, “multivariate calculus was easier”! Now your priorities shift, you don’t aim for that gold medal anymore, you just want this to get over! While preparing for CAT, I contacted a few people studying at IIM A (Perks of living in Ahmedabad) and they suggested that I do three things. One, to be clear about my goals and priorities, and for that, you need to know yourself, you need to know who you are from inside. Introspection is the word. The other two tips were centred around the same thing. I tried...there is no fixed way to do this, so no way to check if you are doing it right, or if you have done it all together.
Two months into the system and I realised that they were right. You have so many things to do and to excel at but you need to be very clear with yourself to decide which one to do. Otherwise, you’ll end up wasting your time and you won’t be content with anything either! That is the worst part, wasting your time at a b-school. They are called ‘schools’ for a reason. Amongst all this, then there is a pressure from your conscious to ‘learn’, because one fine night you’ll realise that in this chaos of a place, you haven't learned anything and 1/6th of your MBA is over and soon 1/3rd will be over and if you look back you don't seem to feel that you have learned anything, the fear that your MBA will be over soon with no learning with you, starts haunting you. I felt the same way when the 1st semester of my engineering ended, and when somebody asks me what have you learned so far in engineering. I had many things to say, and my accomplishments to back them up. So, you conclude that learning is not material, you can always refer to the books and an exam result doesn’t decide your future, learning is an experience. After few years, you won’t be judged based on your marks but on the basis of what you take with you unless of course you are appearing for CAT and hoping to get into IIMs :P
Strike one, you are learning, even though you aren’t. Remember you are not the first. Thousands of people have gone through the same process, and some of them didn't even have a phone! Then again one fine night when you are trying to become Aristotle, you question yourself! Why am I doing an MBA! My life was going smooth, I isolated myself for 4 months from everyone preparing for CAT for this? Spent the next 4 months waiting anxiously for that one convert, for what? For being here! Trust me it’s not that bad as it seems, it is amazing!
You see, I have learned to outsmart myself, now I know, that I’m capable of doing anything; anything in the world provided I’m motivated enough! See, it’s simple; just find your motivation and start working. And that is all that matters. Suddenly everything becomes clear to you again; you have come here for chaos. Now that you have learned to surf the tides, the ocean doesn’t scare you anymore.
No matter how hard you try, you can’t answer this question without being philosophical, at least I can’t. For someone with three years of experience in equity research an MBA might be a tool to climb that corporate ladder, or for someone working in IT, MBA can be a change of career; or for the CA right there an MBA may be a __(seriously I have no idea what’s in it for a CA). But for me, it’s a pursuit, a pursuit to know myself better, a playground to test myself. It’s a boxing ring for me, but with no Apollo in it. It’s an expression for me, not just a fancy degree or a tag! or maybe I was too scared to go into corporate and it was just an escape from that. You never know. And no, I don't regret my decision to do an MBA, I thank myself every day for taking this decision.
Comments
7/A Deepak Nagar Behind K.T. Nagar Katol Nagpur
Great!
7 Dec 2017, 10.09 PM
Shilpa Thakur
When we are asked in pi sessions why mba, then?? Being a fresher, i have such philosophical reasons too but i guess they won't buy them
8 Dec 2017, 04.18 AM
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Pankaj Mann
Pankaj Mann is a 22 years old electronics and communication engineer and a PGP2 student at IIM Lucknow. He's a huge Harry Potter fan and when he says his hobby is reading, he means reading Harry Potter again and again. He's an avid runner and a marathon enthusiast. His passion lies in teaching!
As long as you're not being foolish and you can back up your answers with reasonable logic, everything works! But again that's just my opinion.
11 Dec 2017, 10.04 AM |
Piyush Vats
A question. Does the want to work in a particular industry checks out as a valid reason? It's more than half the reason for me. Thoughts?
8 Dec 2017, 06.58 PM
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Pankaj Mann
Pankaj Mann is a 22 years old electronics and communication engineer and a PGP2 student at IIM Lucknow. He's a huge Harry Potter fan and when he says his hobby is reading, he means reading Harry Potter again and again. He's an avid runner and a marathon enthusiast. His passion lies in teaching!
If you believe in your reason and convince a person logically, then it is your answer!
11 Dec 2017, 10.06 AM |
Ayush Sharma
A good perspective I must say, I can surely convince the panel on why MBA is also a personality development program for me.
13 Feb 2018, 08.47 PM
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Pankaj Mann
Pankaj Mann is a 22 years old electronics and communication engineer and a PGP2 student at IIM Lucknow. He's a huge Harry Potter fan and when he says his hobby is reading, he means reading Harry Potter again and again. He's an avid runner and a marathon enthusiast. His passion lies in teaching!
You got me bro!
16 Feb 2018, 02.15 AM |