Saturday, 25 January 2025
Government Jobs have become a talk of the town and ..............
Government Jobs have become a talk of the town and it is growing day by day. For a lower middle class family it is the only way out to come out of that poverty. For some, social prestige is of utmost importance.
Let's first talk about the PROS -
- Job security - No bloody job can match the level of job security that you get in a government job. Even in a situation like Covid-19 which brought down countries across the world to its knees, the government employees and pensioners were getting their salary (except DA freeze) more or less on time. Post-Covid phase saw a manifold increase in craze for government and allied sector jobs. When 90% of the tech sector jobs are getting threatened by ChatGPT & AI, Government sector employees are chilled with no worries of loosing their job or getting replaced by a new invention im the market.
- Work Pressure - It surely can't be generalised because of the multiple factors involved. But majority of the civilian jobs (Desk jobs) are quite easy going in nature and you don't need to keep reeling under pressure much. Just finish your job and enjoy your time with family and friends without worries.
- Salary and Facilities - Once you get into a job, the foremost thing you desire is financial stability in life to increase the living standards. Surely government jobs are highly under-paid but at the same time it is far better than majority of the private sector jobs. You get salary on time. Combined with that you get facility of NPS which is to ensure a comfortable post-retirement life. You and your dependents get medical cover under the CGHS scheme. Apart from that there is Diwali Bonus, regular Increment in DA to compensate for inflation, Children Education Allowance, LTC, etc.
Cons -
- GROWTH - Maximum 3 promotions are possible in government jobs. Most of the government sector jobs don't have good promotional avenues. You will face heavy stagnation.
- INCREMENTS - There is a mere 3% increment in basic pay each year. With time expenses will increase but salary wouldn't grow proportionately. That will surely make you struggle to save.
- MONOTONY - You will keep doing the same job every day and 12 months in majority of the jobs.
Life became SO MUCH SIMPLER the day I realized that...
- A calm mind can handle any situation
- We are all bad in someone's story. You cannot please everyone
- If you cannot decide, then the answer is NO
- Don't care about society's advice or judgement. Most of them have no idea about what they are saying or doing
- Discipline is more important than talent
You need to be your own biggest supporter.
Thursday, 23 January 2025
Ernest Hemingway stated: "Happiness in intelligent people is the rarest thing I know"
This famous quotation by Hemingway illustrates two types of common fallacies that lead most of us to the wrong conclusion.
1. Fallacy of Generalization
The fallacy of generalization is a logical fallacy that occurs when a claim is made based on insufficient evidence.
- It is well-known that Ernest Hemingway was a very intelligent man, as evidenced by winning the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1954.
- It is also well known that towards the end of his life, he was so unhappy, and finally, he committed suicide.
The fallacy he committed through his quote is that he generalised his personal experience as universal truth.
2. Fallacy of Causation
It is quite common for people to connect an outcome with the wrong cause. It is well known in science that correlation is not causation.
Most people are unhappy as they fail to achieve what they think they should in life. However, the unhappiness of a person may be due to different reasons like poverty, physical disability, broken relationships or emotional intelligence. You can also feel miserable if you lack empathy and fail to develop deep relationships with your family and friends.
Some intelligent people mistreat others like a speck of dirt and feel entitled to everything good in the world. No one wishes to be mistreated by a friend or family. As a result, people avoid them, and they are left alone and suffer pain. However, instead of blaming themselves, they blame their superior intelligence for their suffering.
How arrogant of them?
What is the Truth?
The truth can only be found by critical thinking, which means relying on the empirical evidence and scientific study rather than on anecdotal evidence.
However intelligent or accomplished a person may be, his knowledge outside his domain is just ordinary.
Ernest Hemingway was a fiction writer, and he had no expertise on the issue of happiness and living.
Hence, we must disregard his personal opinion and look for the scientific evidence on this topic to know the truth.
In a study conducted by Ati et, all (Reference provided), it was found that
- Happiness is significantly associated with IQ.
- Those in the lowest IQ range (70-99) reported the lowest levels of happiness compared with the highest IQ group (120-129).
The study concluded that those with lower IQ are less happy than those with higher IQ.
So, the good news is that dumb people are not happier, and you don’t have to be unhappy if you are intelligent.
If you are feeling unhappy in life, instead of blaming your intelligence for unhappiness, use you intelligence to find the real reasons for your suffering and work on them to achieve happiness.
That is the true sign of an intelligent person. Isn’t it?
Reference: Ali A, Ambler G, Strydom A, Rai D, Cooper C, McManus S, Weich S, Meltzer H, Dein S, Hassiotis A. The relationship between happiness and intelligent quotient: the contribution of socio-economic and clinical factors. Psychol Med. 2013 Jun;43(6):1303-12. doi: 10.1017/S0033291712002139. Epub 2012 Sep 24. PMID: 22998852.
Source of picture: Google Images
-Awdhesh Singh, IRS-IIT
Footnotes
Wednesday, 22 January 2025
Unknown Things About Me
- I was bullied when I was a kid. I was living in Bareilly back then, and was around 10 years old, when I became the target of a bully who lived in my colony. He and his gang of 5–6 other kids used to pull my hair and hit me on the head in the school bus. They ensured I had no friends in my childhood days, and made my life miserable for more than a year. It probably worked out well for me in the end, because I started devoting my time to studies as a kid instead of playing.
- When I was 13 years old, I was diagnosed with severe dengue and jaundice at the same time. I was hospitalized on and off over a period of 6 months, during which I had blood tests taken twice a day. I was fed intravenously, and was on the verge of a coma. I used to initially shout in pain when the needles pierced my arm, but slowly became immune to the pain. This incident, along with the bullying incident, defined my childhood to a large extent, and made me strong and focused.
- I have a Masters in Management degree from EBS Business School, Germany also, which I got when I went there on a dual degree exchange from IIM Ahmedabad. Very few people know about this since I don’t mention this degree anywhere on my resume in India as it is not very relevant here.
- I am addicted to coffee. I need coffee in the morning to start my day. I feel uneasy and irritated if I don’t have my coffee on time in the morning.
- I am not always as sorted as people think I am. I have my weak moments as well. There are times when I feel stressed out because things don’t go according to plan. There are moments when I feel lost and can’t decide what to do. What keeps me going is that I always try to look at the bigger picture and keep pushing myself towards my goals.
UPSC CSE vs 30 LPA Job
You must first understand that civil services is not a job, but an experience.
What you get in civil services in India, you can’t get anywhere else, even in government services in other countries.
For instance, US President Donald Trump dismissed 4 appointeeas within 24 hours of taking charge and will dismiss nearly 1,000 Biden appointees who are not aligned with the goal of 'Making America Great Again'.
In India, even the Prime Minister can’t dismiss a civil servant arbitrarily.
There is no way you can compare the private sector jobs with the civil services because in corporate, there is no job security, and you can be dismissed at any time in corporate if you don’t please your bosses.
The reasons for preferring civil services over private sector jobs are as follows.
- The President of India appoints you, and only he can dismiss you if you commit a criminal act or violate conduct rules. The dismissal has to follow a laid down procedure and is subject to judicial review and scrutiny of courts.
- If you have sufficient numbers in Parliament, you can appoint any person as the Prime Minister of India (like Dr Manmohan Singh). However, even the PM can’t make anyone an IAS, IPS or other civil services officer.
- The civil servants in India are appointed by UPSC, a constitutional body, and their jobs, promotions, perks, increments, and pensions are all protected by law.
- As a civil servant, you exercise the power the Parliament and legislature conferred to you according to your best judgment. Ministers can transfer you, but no non-civil-servant can ever exercise your powers.
- You directly contribute to the country's development, not working for any private individual or firm.
- You get decent pay and often the best perks, like a vehicle, bungalow or a good apartment, from day one in the government.
- You enjoy great power and get the best recognition in the society.
However, it is important to know that it is very difficult to get selected in the civil services examination.
- There are fewer than a thousand seats, while a million brilliant candidates apply.
- Hence, your chances of rejection are 99.9 %.
- Most UPSC aspirants have to spend 2–5 years preparing before being selected.
You must risk leaving the job only if you are willing to work hard for several years and have the confidence to get into the top 0.1%.
My advice is that you must try to prepare for the civil services examination while doing the job and quit the job only when you are reasonably close to the cut-off marks in your category.
You must also choose your service preferences wisely after understanding the pros and cons of every service and matching them with your aptitude.
If you believe that you will like the job of a civil servant, it is always a great career for any Indian youth.
-Awdhesh Singh
Source of picture: Google Images
Footnotes
ULTRALEARNING Book Summary || For Those Who Have Read The Book
0-> Belief : That you can do it
1-> Metalearning :
Why,What & How ?
Expert Interview
What : Concepts,Facts & Procedures
How : Benchmarking, Emphasize/Exclude , 5% to 10% of Total
2-> Focus :
Dont try to fix but Manage Procrastination & Distraction
Procrastination : Feeling of Pain / Uneasiness ,
Start Doing it For 5 min soon it will vanish
Distraction Source : Environment , Your Task & Mind
3-> Directness :
Spend a lot of time doing the thing you want to become good at.
*Project Based Learning
*Immersive Learning
*Flight Simulator Method
*The Overkill Approach
4-> Drill:
Attack your weakest point.
Identify the rate determining step and isolate and practice it.
The Direct-then-Drill Approach
Drill Ways :
*Time Slicing
*Cognitive Components
*Copycat
*Magnifying Glass Method
*Prerequisite Chaining
Mindful Drilling
5-> Retrieval:
The Testing Effect
Is Difficulty Desirable?
What Should be retrieved?
How :
*Flash Cards
*Free Recall
*The Question Book Method
*Self Generated Challenges
*Closed Book Learning
6-> Feedback :
What kind of Feedback do you need?
*Outcome Feedback : Are you doing it wrong?
*Informational Feedback : What are you doing wrong?
*Corrective Feedback : How can you fix what you are doing wrong
How to improve Feedback ?
*Noise Cancellation
* Hitting the difficulty sweet spot
*Metafeedback
*High Intensity Rapid Feedback
7-> Retention :
Ebinghaus Forgetting Curve
Hypothesis of forgetting :
*Decay
*Interference
*Forgotten Cues
How to prevent forgetting ?
*Spacing:Repeat to Remember
*Proceduralization : Automatic will endure
*Overlearning : Practice Beyond Perfect
*Mnemonics
8-> Intuition :
*Do not ask whether a statement is true until you know what it means
*Do not Give Up On Hard Problems Easily
*Prove things to understand them
*Start with a concrete example
*Don't Fool Yourself
* Work the problem step by step
9-> Experimentation
*Experiment with learning resources
*Experimenting with Technique
How :
*Copy & then Create
*Compare Methods Side by Side
*Introduce New Constraints
*Explore the Extremes
*Find Your Superpower in the Hybrid of Unrelated Skills
-Blog Author
Tuesday, 21 January 2025
Mastering the Art of Learning: A Practical Guide
Belief: Trust Yourself to Succeed
- Why It Matters: The belief that you can improve is the foundation of any learning journey. Without it, your efforts will be half-hearted.
- Actionable Steps:
- Write down past successes where you overcame challenges.
- Create affirmations like, "I can learn this skill if I persist."
- Surround yourself with stories of others who achieved similar goals.
Metalearning: Learn How to Learn
- Why It Matters: Understanding the “map” of what you’re learning saves time and avoids wasted effort.
- Actionable Steps:
- Why: Reflect on the purpose of your learning. Is it to get a job, solve a problem, or create something?
- What: Categorize your focus areas:
- Concepts: What do you need to understand? (e.g., programming logic)
- Facts: What must you memorize? (e.g., syntax rules)
- Procedures: What do you need to practice? (e.g., coding exercises)
- How: Research benchmarks—how experts approach it. Allocate 5-10% of your learning time to planning and refining your approach.
Focus: Manage Procrastination and Distractions
- Why It Matters: Lack of focus leads to inefficiency and frustration.
- Actionable Steps:
- Procrastination:
- Break inertia with the 5-Minute Rule: Commit to working for just 5 minutes—this often eliminates the initial resistance.
- Visualize the task as already complete to reduce uneasiness.
- Distractions:
- Adjust your environment (e.g., work in a quiet space, block distracting websites).
- Redefine your tasks (e.g., split a big task into smaller, actionable steps).
- Calm your mind with techniques like mindfulness or a quick 2-minute breathing exercise.
- Procrastination:
Directness: Learn by Doing
- Why It Matters: Skills are best learned in the environment where they’ll be used.
- Actionable Steps:
- Choose project-based learning: If learning a language, build a chatbot. If learning writing, start a blog.
- Use immersive methods: If learning French, try speaking only French for a day.
- Apply the Overkill Approach: Set a goal slightly harder than what’s necessary. For example, write a 10,000-line program when only 2,000 are required.
Drill: Sharpen Your Weakest Points
- Why It Matters: Addressing weaknesses accelerates progress.
- Actionable Steps:
- Identify your “rate-determining step”—what’s holding you back? (e.g., for guitar, finger transitions; for coding, debugging).
- Try drills like:
- Time Slicing: Dedicate short, focused sessions to practicing a single component.
- Magnifying Glass Method: Deep dive into one aspect (e.g., practice only Python loops for 30 minutes).
- Prerequisite Chaining: Ensure foundational skills are strong before advancing.
Retrieval: Strengthen Memory Through Practice
- Why It Matters: Testing yourself reinforces knowledge better than rereading or reviewing.
- Actionable Steps:
- Use flashcards for facts or vocabulary.
- Practice free recall: After learning, close your material and try to write down everything you remember.
- Create a Question Book: Write questions as you study, and revisit them later.
Feedback: Improve with Purpose
- Why It Matters: Feedback pinpoints mistakes and guides improvement.
- Actionable Steps:
- Seek outcome feedback: Are you succeeding or failing? (e.g., Did the code compile?)
- Ask for informational feedback: What went wrong? (e.g., What caused the syntax error?)
- Get corrective feedback: How can you improve? (e.g., Practice fixing common errors.)
- Maximize feedback effectiveness by:
- Hitting the “difficulty sweet spot”—not too easy, not too hard.
- Asking for feedback early and often.
- Using metafeedback: Evaluate if your feedback process is working.
Retention: Don’t Let Knowledge Fade
- Why It Matters: Retention ensures you don’t waste time relearning.
- Actionable Steps:
- Use spaced repetition: Review material at increasing intervals.
- Proceduralize: Turn skills into habits (e.g., practice scales daily for musicians).
- Engage in overlearning: Practice beyond mastery to ensure permanence.
- Use mnemonics: Create memory aids (e.g., acronyms, visualizations).
Intuition: Build Deep Understanding
- Why It Matters: Intuition helps you tackle complex problems and innovate.
- Actionable Steps:
- Start with concrete examples before abstract concepts.
- Work step by step: Break down problems into manageable parts.
- Prove ideas to yourself: Test assumptions or solve examples to internalize concepts.
Experimentation: Innovate and Adapt
- Why It Matters: Experimentation uncovers new methods and accelerates learning.
- Actionable Steps:
- Try copying and then creating: Replicate a method, then tweak it to fit your needs.
- Compare techniques side by side to find what works best.
- Explore extremes: Push constraints (e.g., learn coding with only 100 lines).
- Hybridize unrelated skills: Combine unique abilities to discover a competitive edge.
JEE is a journey, and a very challenging one at that
JEE is a journey, and a very challenging one at that. It requires sacrifices, and it really strengthens the candidates along the way. It has the ability to bring out the best in people.
Some sacrifices made by me during the JEE preparation:
- No outings or parties with friends: I had minimized my outings to almost non-existent during the JEE preparation phase. As a result, I could not attend the birthday parties of my friends or go for movie outings with them.
- Tussle with school: My attendance started dropping in school, because I spent most of my time at home studying for JEE. This led to quite a lot of tussle and arguments with my class teacher, who felt that Class XII board exam was the only determining factor in one’s career.
- No computer games: I used to play a lot of computer games before I started preparing for JEE. Age of Empires used to be my favourite. Not a day would go by without me playing Age of Empires. I stopped that during JEE preparation, and I soon lost interest in computer games. I haven’t played any computer game since then.
- Control over sleep: I used to study till late night and then wake up early in the morning to study again. My dad used to fill a full jug with cold coffee and keep it by my side at night, so that I could concentrate.
The JEE preparation phase was a defining period in my life, and led to many positive developments:
- I gained an excellent friend circle: While I could not go out with my school friends, I developed a new friend circle in my coaching. All of us had similar goals, and we soon became really close.
- I started developing new hobbies: I started playing Badminton everyday for a couple of hours in the evening to keep myself fit. I also read novels whenever I found any free time.
- I started becoming more confident: JEE preparation makes you more confident in life, especially because the JEE syllabus is tougher than the school syllabus by a huge margin. You start looking even at real-life problems from a different angle, and develop a structured thought process.
I have very fond memories from my JEE days. Those two years of JEE preparation have taught me a lot.
-Rohan Jain
Monday, 20 January 2025
If you want to make the best jewellery with pure gold
So, you go to the market and buy the purest form of Gold, i.e. 24 carare gold, paying the highest price.
Do you think getting gold with 100% purity is possible?
The answer is no.
In the real world, the 24 karat and 999.9 fineness are generally accepted as pure gold as it is impossible to produce 100% pure gold.
It means that even the purest form of gold has at least 0.01% impurity.
The same is true for every other substance in the world.
However, it does not mean that all golds are equally valuable and that 24K gold and 10K gold are all the same because both are impure.
In the same way, it is impossible to have complete (100%) freedom from unhappiness and suffering.
However, we can work to minimise the pain and maximise our happiness.
Numerous people suffer pain most of their lives, with only a rare glimpse of happiness once in a while.
There are also millions of people in the world who are happy most of the time, with occasional instances of pain.
So, living a life almost free from pain and suffering is possible.
Instead of seeking a painless-full-joy life, seek a less-pain-more-joy life.
You can get such a life by working hard today to develop a proper understanding of the self, acquiring proper knowledge, planning for the future, and leading a disciplined and moral life.
Source of picture: Google Images
-Awdhesh Singh
Footnotes
You see rich kids at IITs. You see sons and daughters of rich businessmen making it to IITs.
You see rich kids at IITs. You see sons and daughters of rich businessmen making it to IITs.
You also see poor kids at IITs. You see students who cannot afford to survive in IIT without a scholarship. Students who studied with borrowed calculators and books to prepare for JEE.
You see students who only speak in English all the time. You also see students who have never spoken English or studied in an English medium school.
You see students from the north of India at IITs. You see students from the south of India. You also see students from the east and west of India.
You see Hindus at IITs. You also see Muslims, Christians, Sikhs, Jains and students from other religions. You see students from all castes and backgrounds in IITs.
Everyone in IIT is treated equally, regardless of their background. Once in IIT, everyone has access to the same launching pad. It is then completely upto the students how well they utilize the launching pad.
-Rohan Jain, IIT,IIM
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