One Down in Delhi
Halfway to One Year
Yeah, it's halfway to the year-end, but for me, I've completed a full year in Delhi. This one year has taught me a lot.
As a guy who knew nothing about this environment, who came out of his comfort zone all the way from home (1500 kms away), I made things different when opportunity found me close, I still chose the harder path. I still do.
As a Management Trainee in Sales, I started this wonderful journey, and I'm always thankful to the people who believed in me and helped me get here. In today's job market, opportunity exists, but giving the right opportunity to the right person is difficult and many people never even get the chance to choose. That itself is a privilege.
Before going further, I want to share something that connects me to this place: you always have a few people close to you, and those people keep changing with time. But when it's time again, you realize that the more you explore and experience outside your comfort zone, the more you find things even your bloodline couldn't have imagined. So stop dreaming and start exploring.
This one wholesome work year didn't just tune me professionally it mentored me personally. Imagine a frog in a well, waiting for the right time to leave the pond, only to realize the monsoon has already passed and summer is near, and it never prepared for it. That was me arriving here not knowing that the people around me would push me into extreme places. And I thank them for it, because I learned what "extreme" actually feels like, and how continuous learning and sharing knowledge pays off in the long run.
This post isn't about the accomplishments. It's for myself to see how far I've come. From my attire to my attitude. From mindset to how money works. From ego to power. From process to system. So far, I've built the base understanding of life.
I started new habits, stopped a few old ones. Learned a new language, picked up new skills, made mistakes, failed over a hundred times, faced rejection, tasted my first real success, and started understanding myself staying grateful for the life I have and the people around me.
When you take everything to heart, the heart can't pump anymore. Take it for your growth instead, and let it go without overthinking.


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