The day that changed my life didn’t arrive with a thunderclap or a cinematic swell of music. It arrived in the quiet, mundane space of a Tuesday afternoon, carrying the scent of rain and old paper. Up until that moment, I had been living a life of "eventually"—a perpetual state of waiting for the right time to begin being the person I wanted to be.
I was sitting in a crowded transit station, watching people blur past like streaks of unexposed film. I had just received a piece of news—not a tragedy, but a closing door. A job I didn't love but desperately needed for security had fallen through. In the silence of that rejection, the noise of my own excuses finally died down.
I looked at my reflection in the window of a departing train and realized that I had spent years building a fortress out of "safety," only to find I was the one imprisoned by it. The realization was visceral, a sudden shedding of skin. I understood then that the "right time" was a ghost I had been chasing to avoid the vulnerability of trying.
That afternoon, I didn't go home to browse more listings. I went to a small park, sat on a bench, and wrote down the things I was actually afraid of. Not the fear of failing, but the fear of never having truly started. By the time the sun went down, the trajectory of my life had shifted by only a few degrees, but over time, those few degrees have led me to a completely different continent of existence.
The day that changed my life didn’t arrive with a thunderclap or a cinematic swell of music. It arrived in the quiet, mundane space of a Tuesday afternoon, carrying the scent of rain and old paper. Up until that moment, I had been living a life of "eventually"—a perpetual state of waiting for the right time to begin being the person I wanted to be.
I was sitting in a crowded transit station, watching people blur past like streaks of unexposed film. I had just received a piece of news—not a tragedy, but a closing door. A job I didn't love but desperately needed for security had fallen through. In the silence of that rejection, the noise of my own excuses finally died down. 1. The day that changed my life...
I looked at my reflection in the window of a departing train and realized that I had spent years building a fortress out of "safety," only to find I was the one imprisoned by it. The realization was visceral, a sudden shedding of skin. I understood then that the "right time" was a ghost I had been chasing to avoid the vulnerability of trying. The day that changed my life didn’t arrive
That afternoon, I didn't go home to browse more listings. I went to a small park, sat on a bench, and wrote down the things I was actually afraid of. Not the fear of failing, but the fear of never having truly started. By the time the sun went down, the trajectory of my life had shifted by only a few degrees, but over time, those few degrees have led me to a completely different continent of existence. I was sitting in a crowded transit station,
Ministry of Skill Development And Entrepreneurship
9 Indian Institutes of Management
National Instructional Media Institute
MGNF is a Certificate Program in Public Policy and Management offered by IIM Bangalore. It has been designed at the initiative of the Ministry of Skill Development and Entrepreneurship (MSDE), Government of India (GoI). The Mahatma Gandhi National Fellowship (MGNF) is an opportunity for young, dynamic individuals to contribute to enhancing skill development and promote economic development.
