“Hey! When are you reaching? Everyone who has
been selected for the core committee has been called for a meeting immediately”
“Oh? I did not receive any call”
I say.
Awkward
silence. “All the best!” And I hang
up.
Contrary to
what most people think, the disappointment of not making it to something you
really hoped and wished for, stems from the lack of a backup plan. I was no
different. Not making it to the committee I really worked hard for, left me
clueless of what to do for the whole year! That is when it struck me. Failure
is not about not making it to the place you really wanted to. It’s about not
knowing what to do, when you don’t.
I get into
a frenzy mode when I don’t have work to do at hand, and when I realized I
wouldn’t have a pre-planned engagement for the whole of next year, I was
hysterical! Using the most popular mode of de-stress, I was scrolling through
my Facebook newsfeed when I came across this article from the Hindu about
Harvard US-India Initiative. Applying with as good an application as I could,
getting into HUII taught me way more than what I had expected, way faster and
in a manner more interesting than I expected.
Colleagues
at HUII immediately recommended to me the Harvard Project for Asian and
International Relations 2015 – a biannual conference held at Harvard University
every February and nursing the passion to reach my ultimate goal as fast as
possible, I never realized how quickly I was in a Harvard dorm room. My panel
was Corporate Leadership and it included discussions on behavior that would be
expected of us, young leaders, when we hold responsible positions in the near
future and how do we groom ourselves, keeping a wide perspective and targeting
inclusive leadership. Meeting people from countries you have probably never
even heard of (blame my weak Geography!) and understanding how it is to grow up
in different parts of the country, I somewhere fell in love with the way Indian
kids are brought up. That is when I decided I would pursue my Post graduation
from India itself! The conference involved 200 delegates from over 30 countries
across the world with over 70 speakers, each one at the pinnacle in their own
sphere. The organizing committee consisted of Harvard students and thanks to HUII,
I stayed with an Indian student at Harvard. The greatest pop on what I was
doing with my life came to me on the 2nd morning at Harvard, when my
host, a girl from Jaipur, woke up when her phone rang. She picked it up and
said “Good morning Amartya! When do you
want me to be at the office today?” Yes, she worked part time, managing her
final year at Harvard in Applied Mathematics and Economics. And oh, in case you
missed it, the call was from her immediate boss – Amartya Sen. THAT is when I
realized how trivial things here meant so much to us and how we are blissfully
unaware of the real BIG things!
The best
experiences, moments and learning came from people who did not realize that
they are teaching me something in the course of the conversation. For instance,
most of us know that apart from India, pretty much everywhere students support
their own selves once in college and still end up doing than an average Indian
undergrad. But the more important learning for me was realizing why does this
happen. There are a plenty of reasons, the most important ones being – they
NEVER want to rise up pulling someone else down, their humor is NEVER sourced
from mocking someone else, they read, read and read everything and anything and
the most important one (I know I am repeating myself) is that if they have a
difference of opinion with you, they would rather keep shut. That implies,
conversations are either positive or no conversations at all, and that is where
they save their time and energy.
Writing this article probably took me a week to think and minutes to write because I can never express what these interactions have given to me.
Writing this article probably took me a week to think and minutes to write because I can never express what these interactions have given to me.
The journey
that began from a desperation to keep myself busy with a 2 day conference in
Delhi in January 2015, will probably terminate with the World Business Dialogue
– World’s largest Student run Conference in Cologne, this March, or might never
terminate. This is an addiction to me. The high of meeting new people, with
different languages and perspectives, getting a 3rd person view of
what you have been doing with your life all along and knowing what you could
do. At the end if there is one learning out of all the travel and adventure I
have had in these, it must be – You have never learnt enough, never travelled
enough, never met enough people and definitely never failed enough!