Hello
potential officers. I feel extremely privileged to have the opportunity to walk
you through my pursuit to join the Indian Army. My story started in 2012, I had cleared my NDA written and was all set
to join the esteemed National Defence Academy. For this I didn’t want to leave
any stone unturned and also took
coaching. I still consider it as the
BIGGEST BLUNDER of my life, the coaching made me too much conscious and
anxious. It placed a mental block in my mind and as a result I was not able to
think freely. It made me an IMPOSTER that too a bad IMPOSTER of a military
leader.
As a young Delhi chap, full of Josh ,I went to Allahabad, got conferenced out, it was a shock. After couple of months I visited Varanasi, got conferenced out again, the MENTAL BLOCK still haunted me and I felt a sickeness in me. This sickness came due to my inability of being GENUINELY MYSELF, the coaching I received had put a veil on my real personality and transformed me into a PET PARROT who repeats what he’s told without using his mental faculty. I longed for Freedom, I wanted to free my mind of this bondage. Then I came across a book “My Appointment with a Psychologist”, don’t wory! Its free and you can download it here. This book explained in detail the psychological profile of a suitable candidate for the forces, I read and re-read it many times till its lessons were ingrained in my mind. I felt liberated as the confusion surrounding the SSB slowly faded and I felt confident that I can be what they are looking for.
As a young Delhi chap, full of Josh ,I went to Allahabad, got conferenced out, it was a shock. After couple of months I visited Varanasi, got conferenced out again, the MENTAL BLOCK still haunted me and I felt a sickeness in me. This sickness came due to my inability of being GENUINELY MYSELF, the coaching I received had put a veil on my real personality and transformed me into a PET PARROT who repeats what he’s told without using his mental faculty. I longed for Freedom, I wanted to free my mind of this bondage. Then I came across a book “My Appointment with a Psychologist”, don’t wory! Its free and you can download it here. This book explained in detail the psychological profile of a suitable candidate for the forces, I read and re-read it many times till its lessons were ingrained in my mind. I felt liberated as the confusion surrounding the SSB slowly faded and I felt confident that I can be what they are looking for.
I
didn’t look back from then on, I was not a good leader back then, I lacked persuasion,
decision making, managing men n material, public speaking, mental and physical
stamina. In the past 3 years I worked
extensively on developing my leadership potential. I participated in
various competitions, organized events and served at various leadership
positions at NCC, co-curricular clubs, class representative etc. I did a lot of
reading – newspapers, books, blogs etc. I kept hunting for knowledge about
anything and everything relevant to FAUJ. I did a lot of adventure activities
at various esteemed institutes in the country which includes Rock climbing,
mountaineering, paragliding, rafting, skiing, trekking etc. etc.
Some
say that taking coaching shows your interest in joining the forces. For some
it’s the first-hand experience of the SSB environment. I feel going to an
institute is OKAY as long as you don’t get influenced too much by them,
especially in the Psych tests. Having an experience in GTO and Interview is
always a help. Even if you want to go for it, just keep one little advice in
mind- Never compromise your true self,
always maintain the originality of your responses and you are at the
liberty to express the same responses in a better way. So if someone helps you
in tweaking your responses and at the same time respects the originality of
your response, make him your GURU.
Then
in December 2015 I went for my third attempt in Bangalore, I was pretty
confident this time as I felt I had done my homework. I was relatively at ease
from the beginning. I did my psych test with 0% stress and for the first time
enjoyed it, I my self was astonished by my performance, in WAT I was often left
with 2-3 seconds to relax before the next word is projected. I did 35 SRTs only
, I didn’t practice before and it was pointed out by the IO. My interview
lasted for hardly 15 minutes, it went good. I gave to the point replies and he
looked fairly satisfied. I blew it in the GTOs. I went for it with full and
extra josh and enthusiasm than I naturally project. In PGT, our GTO told that
Army jawans have finished this task in 18 minutes and that he expected better
from us. I remember in the back of my mind, I smirked and thought, “ this task
is not worth 18 minutes I’ll get it done in 15”. That’s it, then and there I
became the victim of the stress that the GTO created by adding a time
constraint.
I was regulating almost
everything, from the front, my tone and tenor were far from being polite, also
projecting a bad body language (constricted eyebrow, palms down and directing),
I openly showed dissatisfaction and lost my composure. For me the completing
the task was paramount and I neglected the interpersonal relationships n
courtesies. In GD, there was a guy sitting next to me who was way too dominant,
he spoke constantly and interrupted everyone, this made me insecure. I gave in
to the pressure and joined the chaos sponsored by him. Again as the heavens had
decided to teach me a lesson, I was conferenced out for the 3rd
time. But something peculiar about this SSB was, I felt I just missed the bull
eye by a little fraction and rather than being shocked by the result I kept
pondering and introspecting. This helped me in zeroing into my grey areas
and subsequently transform myself into a better being, more officer like.
Lessons
That I learnt from 3rd attempt:
1) Giving
into the chaos is detrimental
2) Being
in total control of your emotions in paramount
3) Cooperation
and exchange of ideas make a good team player
4) GTO
is a team sport
5) Good
relation with group mates ensure cooperation on ground
6) Positive
body language influences people
7) Calm
and assertive people are accepted and heard to
As
soon as I was conferenced out my mind was racing with with all the mistakes I
did, I introspected and discovered
things that henceforth I didn’t give much importance to. I learnt about
projecting a positive and widely accepted body language, worked on my tone and
tenor, developed my patience while persuading someone, did more listening than
talking, and observed my friend’s body language and tone and pace of speaking
and its effect on the group. I talked to my group mates, took their feedbacks,
improved the grey areas, took some tips from them and at the same time
maintained the originality of my responses, participated in GDs, practiced
Psych tests, GDs, GPEs etc
I
resolved not to ever give into stress. I read experiences of recommended
candidates from online blogs and figured out the commonality i.e. staying composed and balanced throughout
the testing and now I know that is what MATURITY really is. People all
around us will keep on testing our patience and limit, giving into these
cheapness by showing anger, frustration etc is a WEAKNESS. Keeping all the
interactions positive and healthy helps in building long term and trusting
relationships and this helps in generating cooperation on the GTO ground.
Then
in Feb 2016 I went to NSB Coimbatore,
there I hit the deepest low of my story. I was aghast at getting screened out.
The reason for this was by the time I decided to speak in the GD the GTO
signalled the closure of the discussion, my contribution towards the GD was 0%.
However I took this failure as a reminder of my weaknesses and vowed to correct
them before the next attempt. In the same month, I went to Bangalore. Got
screened in, sailed through the rest of
the tests acing it in the process and the rest is HISTORY.
Hope you are eager to hear more about what happened in the final attempt and how this guy who failed four times made in the fifth attempt. Keep reading and learn from the failures.Stay updated to get latest updates and be connected on facebook where aspirants discuss what to do and what not to do. Follow us for not missing a single update on defense.
Click here : SSB Experience Series: Recommended in 5th Attempt for Indian ARMY- Part 2
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About the Author:
Jeet, is
a diehard Army aspirant, a rock climber, a mountaineer and a marathoner. He
had his setbacks early in life and made a gentleman out of himself by
constant efforts and dedication. Today his persistence and Never say die
attitude paid him the biggest honor of his life.
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feeling positive by reading this... nice introspection bro.. all d best
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