Thursday, 7 May 2020

Salary of Indian post office clerk?



It's not clerk but it's called Assistant, I mean Postal assistant. I joined as a postal assistant in october 2018 through CHSL2016(combined higher secondary level examination 2016). As we know it's 2400gp post so its basic pay is 25,500. I got posting in kolkata & it is in X city, So I got highest salary of postal assistant in this city. When I joined in this department, my first month inhand salary was 34,879. After that I got increment & DA has been increased by central government. So at present my inhand salary is 37,913 & gross salary is 41,295 in x city. Salary depends on the city.(X, Y, Z)
For better experience I show you my salary slip:

-Kanhaiya Kumar Mehta, Assistant at India Post (2018-present)

{Blogger's  Note : You can give SSC CHSL after 12 and get a job in postal assistant or clerk }

Wednesday, 6 May 2020


What is the biggest source of motivation for IES preparation?

Don't you ever imagine, what changes you could have made if you could make a trip to your past?
Then why do something unimportant in present to think the same in future?
We always think about making our life meaningful and beautiful in some or the other way. We all enjoy and cherish our childhood without any purpose or fear. But now when we grow up, with wisdom and a proper mindset, one must attach a purpose to his or her life.
Life should not end with a bundle of regrets, rather it should be a book of gratitude and moments of feeling proud of not giving up , sacrificing little pleasures and working hard to achieve everything you aspired for.
If you attach that feeling to ESE, then during times of demotivation, remember it is not going to be easy.
But giving up is for the coward, Respect time, unleash your potential and start studying again.
Had it been so easy, everyone could have cleared it. More than preparing for the exam, you need to prepare your mind every single day to stick to your goal. Develop that inner strength.
If you are exhausted, stop for a while. We all need to relax and rejuvenate. But begin again with double the zeal.
So according to me, the biggest source of motivation is the meaning and purpose you attach to a thing or goal.
If something is important, it is important. All the excuses will hold no place.
Always remember, what your capacity is not able to achieve, your willpower will.
All the best

Tuesday, 5 May 2020

Achieving something really splendid,requires enormous efforts and patience as well


Achieving something really splendid,requires enormous efforts and patience as well.

My class 12th:


I left my class 11th hostel and took a rented room with a friend. All the beautiful memories of class 11th hostel, all close friends and the comfortable environment of my hostel: all I had to leave. Only thing in mind was to crack medical entrance exam

  1. My roommate was not studious. He just wanted to get a good percentage. Bit friction occured between both of us.
  2. I had to lock myself for studies since in 11th I did not study much. I had to cover that too. you can understand the stress of covering 11th, 12th, board, medical entrance and engineering entrance in 1 year
  3. We could not afford a good house or cook. Each day we had to struggle for food. I was missing the comfort of hostel.
  4. I tried to avoid my close friends in hostel for 1 year many often.
That 1 year was like 1 lifetime. Each minute was a moment of struggle: related to studies, friends, food, accommodation.

Only thing that helped me was patience and consistent effort .

And finally I cracked both medical and engineering entrance exam and got into IIT Kharagpur.
This is the power of patience.

Were all those sacrifices worth it? Hell yeah

Life is a full circle. Again the time came.

Civil services preparation:

June 2016:

I put my best effort. Yet I could not qualify for 6 marks.
I had to restart everything from scratch.

June 2017:

I put everything possible this time. Last time I could not qualify just because of 6 marks. I put my heart into it. But again I failed.

It feels so disheartening when your whole year goes to waste. I thought to leave the preparation and work on my Start up full time. My personal life was at stake. My family's financial condition deteriorated.

Amidst all these distractions and struggles somehow my close friend persuaded me to give one more attempt. That one year was hell of a time.

It takes immense grit to get back to studies and study the same books, notes.

April 27 2018:

Finally patience paid off. I got into Indian Administrative service. (IAS)

Whenever I look back I see two things. If you want to achieve something big in your life, you need equal amount of effort and time.

So patience is the key. It keeps you motivated amidst all the negativities and it keeps you moving towards your goal.

Stay positive and work hard in right direction. You will win.

      -Abinash Mishra

Monday, 4 May 2020

Success...........



Once Ramakrishna Paramahansa (teacher of Swami Vivekananda) sent two of his students to dig a well to get water.

First student dug for 1 metre in a place. Then left it thinking this place is too dry to get water. He dug for another 1 metre. Then again he did not get water. He left this one too. He kept on digging at several places and abandoned those after little effort. So finally he returned with huge disappointment with the excuse that this place is too dry to get water.

The second student dug for 1 metre. He found rock. It was difficult to dig. But he kept on doing. He found harder rock as he keep on digging. He got exhausted, but he did not leave hope. He kept on digging. After digging 99 metre deep, there lied the hardest rock. For a while he thought how can there be water beneath such hard rock. He was bit dillusioned with exhaustion.

 But he remembered his teacher's conviction of getting water at that place. He came back strongly. He removed the hardest rock with his full energy. And underneath this he found water.
To get success Patience and hard work are must. Complete focus and dedication over one thing for a substantial time.

-Abhinash Mishra

Sunday, 3 May 2020

How to Think?

{On The Subtitle If you are finding it difficult to understand the accent or language}

How much of an advantage do the children of the richest families really have?


I used to teach maths to underprivileged kids on Saturday mornings.
3 of the kids, aged 17, were really good at mathematics, like top 5% in terms of natural ability.
I suggested they do the A-level maths in one year, not the standard two. I explained that the maths A-level should be easy for them, and they just needed to give it a go. If they did their maths A-level a year early, they could then focus on their other A-level subjects.
They were studious, wanted to do well, but told me they would not be able to do a two year course in a year - they didn't believe in themselves, and, sure, they didn't believe in me.
Now, fast-forward many years to a few years ago, my son got an A in the same exam, aged 11. He was about the same level of mathematical ability as those kids.
But the difference was my son believed in himself - because his parents have given him that confidence from an early age.
Now, sure, I’ve given some extremes - and to some extent my son was too young to know any better - but I’ve also observed that in general private school kids tend to believe in themselves way more than state school kids even if they achieve the same grades - despite it being harder for state school kids to attain those grades.
I’ve come to the view that one of the biggest things holding back the underprivileged is that less of them have role models, those around them don’t believe in them as much, so they don't believe in themselves.
The result is that they don't expect as much from themselves - in life.
Privilege isn't just access to the best resources, a helping hand, financial security, it's much more - it’s also a passed down mindset.
 

Saturday, 2 May 2020



I and Joseph were in my preparation days. We targeted some top institutes for our PG. Joseph was not good in his studies. In his 10th and 12th he scored less than 65% and he attempted JEE twice in which he failed.
One day Joseph got a call from his uncle. His Uncle said “son, go for UPSC CDS and become an army officer” to which Joseph agreed. Although Joseph was not interested in this.
CDS is an exam which opens the door for an individual to become a lieutenant in Indian Army. After the written exam one has to clear the SSB also which is comparatively tough than the CDS.
He asked me to fill the exam form for CDS just to accompany him to which I agreed and we filled the exam form. We both were preparing for one of the toughest aptitude examination so I was sure about clearing the written exam of CDS but about Joseph I doubted.
The exam day came, we both attempted the exam and eventually we both cleared the written exam. Now I was not interested in getting into the army so cleared it to Joseph that I will not be appearing for SSB. Joseph also said the same but he was skeptical about it.
One day his father paid a visit to us. Joseph’s father run a Medical Store in Bhubaneswar and he use to earn 15 to 20K a month. Joseph told his father about the exam. His father got extremely happy after getting the news but Joseph said he doesn’t want to serve the army and wants to run the medical store. (He was hopeless about clearing his SSB.)
His father said “Son, Your Grandfather used to run this store. He wanted me to study and get a job but I wasted my life with my friends and in the end I had this store left. I may not earn as much as your friend’s father but I did my best to provide you good education. I do not buy a smartphone for me because I want to buy it for you. Your mother do not purchase any jewellery because she saves money for your education. If not for you then at least for us go for the further process, join the army and make us proud.”
This had a great impact on Joseph and he started working hard for the SSB and his sheer hard work and dedication bore him fruits. He ended up clearing the SSB and got recommended for Indian Military Academy.
Every year lacs of students fail in exams like JEE and NEET and Joseph was one of them. He started thinking that he is an average and he is not born for becoming an officer or getting a heavy package in a MNC. But when he changed his mindset he was able to do exceptional things. So, we must cancel our pessimistic attitude towards our life, we must stop thinking that we are average.
We are humans and we all have infinite potential.
-Krishnakant Singh, B.A. Sociology (2017)

Friday, 1 May 2020

Lets start with little background about me I am 23 years old female. i am working as a clerk in bank of india . I completed my graduation in computer science engineering from private college in june 2018. From the beginning of last semester I was preparing for banking exams
After college I give SBI clerk SBI po rrb clerk rrb po IBPS po and IBPS clerk exams.
Finally I cleared IBPS clerk in April 2019 and from 3 marks I missed final selection in IBPS po
Then I joined bank of India in July 2019. I got posting in semi urban city around130km away from home.
I get around 23600 salary pm that I spent something like this
Rent 3500pm
Food 2k pm
Education loan EMI 5k pm
Traveling around 1500pm
Other stuff 1k or 2k it depends
After all this deductions I save around 10k or 11k every month
I belonged to a lower middle class family. My father and mother both are sanitation workers.I have 3 siblings I am elder among them. In the beginning of my education it gets really difficult for my parents to pay my school fees I remember all those days when my father left with no money even for food we took help from our relatives. But my parents never give upon our education. They give us best education as they could.
I am first graduated person in my family and also first one who get job in bank.
Yes I am happy with my salary and even more i am happy with my job because whenever someone ask about me,my job ,my career to my parents, they proudly tell them.
Since my childhood we are living in single room tiny house still we live there only so I am planning to buy house for my parents after 3–4 years when I have enough savings.
And I am still preparing for other government exams better than my current job let see what future holds for me.



Thankyou…

Thursday, 30 April 2020

What did you miss out on learning in real life because you were too busy studying?




Nothing major.
However, I do have missed out all the following
  • Hanging out with friends everyday.
  • Amassing tons of likes, followers on Instagram, et cetera( “But what if they earn through their influencing gigs”, said Ankit with 55 followers and no real content to provide)
  • Following dumb-ass trends that could get you literally killed and flaunting your near death experience.
And it’s not like I did not have any friends whom I hung out with or enjoyed myself while studying parallelly for my Chartered Accountancy exams. Every weekend was either bowling, movies or just your casual hanging out. None of us had time other than the weekends and we were all 19 and none other than me were pursuing CA. All of us had different commitments which we were focused towards. And that just multiplies the experiences by a million times.
The point people is PRIORITIZATION (no, I couldn’t highlight it more, I would have if there was any way to do it).
You have to set your priorities right and give up enough of your time to them and not the other way around ,and yes it could be becoming a youtuber or an influencer, but try and be the best at what you aim, you cannot have fun all the time while doing what you want to do, but you have to push through and emerge your best self.
And another thing is when having cruising through life, never give a second thought to your studies because you have done enough and deserve the little breaks.

-Akshay Jain, CA Intermediate AIR 1

Wednesday, 29 April 2020


I will like to start my answer with a quote - A hungry stomach and an empty pocket can teach you the best lessons of life. Because the answer I'm going to write is quite relatable to this quote.
What made me upset today - As everyone knows, there is lockdown all over the country. Just llike everyone, I'm also at my home. Just like everyday, I was sitting in my balcony (Around 11 am) immediately my attention went to the street which is infront of our house, 3 children carrying some vegetables and fruits on a cart and selling it. But no one was buying from them, immediately me and my mother went and bought some tomatoes from them.
In between I had a small conversation with those children. ( Tejas who is 13 , Nikhil is 10 and Rahul who is youngest one is 9 year old.)
I - you know, we have lockdown, but still you are selling vegetables.
I - aren't you afraid of corona?
Tejas - yes bhaiyya , it's very scary but what to do, we have nothing to eat, No job - No earning. That's why we are selling this ( just to support our parents)
I took this photo from my balcony.
It was very sad to hear such a big story from such small children. Then they went ahead to sell.
We are so lucky ( we are safe at our home.)
What about these people?

-Anay Chaudhari

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