A couple of days ago a friend of mine asked me this question. I felt it was a logical question and I decided to give her all the details to the best of my ability.
This question has a lot of history to it. When I was young, I liked what my dad did. But as a kid all I saw him doing was walk out with a suitcase in the morning and come back with the same suitcase in the evening.I never knew what he actually did nor did he tell me. Maybe that was a clear sign that shouted out "Son don't make the same mistake I made". But I did exactly that!
So I went through school hating everything that I studied. Every subject was boring. I loved sports. Soccer was top of the list. I wanted to play for Manchester United along side David Beckham. But the soccer dreams came to an end when I had to choose a "real" career.
I had a certain inspirational point that changed my life: The time when a back bench student (yours truly) scored a 100/100 in physics. He silenced his peers and the staffs who told him that he was never going to make it. From that day on I was found walking around school with an autobiography of Albert Einstein. People thought I was crazy. And the truth is, I was.
I headed to college. I chose engineering because when I was a kid I saw a bumper sticker that read "Engineers make the world", which in a way is actually true. So I decided I would do engineering. But what engineering? You had so many choices. I looked at Mechanical engineering with a keen eye but then Electrical engineering was something that my dad did and I admired it. My childhood dream was to work for a company whose name was made of three letters in the color of the morning sun - ABB. And so I worked towards that dream. I did a B.Tech degree. I fell ill the day ABB came for recruitment. I still wonder what would have happened if I had gone for the interview then.
So then I landed a job in the booming software industry. I worked for a year and decided to do a masters degree in electrical engineering. I got into a good school. My prof. happened to be a former student from my same undergraduate college. Things fell into place.
One year into my Masters program and I was working with ABB as an intern for three months. My dream had come true (at least a small part of it).
Now I am in my final semester of my Masters program and I still wonder - Why did I ever decide to take up engineering?
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Well that was what I said. I know this post seems a bit pompous but that is not my intention. What must be really noted is how some things just fall into place. Always remember, Whatever happens, happens for a reason; a very good reason.
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7 comments:
woohoo new post :)
but when on earth did u get 100/100 in school... I wud ve remembered something like that...
You know... I'm not sure I've met too many engineers who had a good reason to get into engineering. For myself, I didn't even know what an engineer did when I applied for college... and I only applied to Colorado School of Mines - a distinctly engineering college (excepting all of the engineer dropouts who went for economics). That's not an exaggeration either... didn't even know what they did. But somehow I knew I wanted to be one.
Here's hoping you continue in your delusion as I did and come work for ABB :)
Good to see you using the right side of your brain a bit again - keep up the posts!
@ Shm: haha, it was in ninth. We were in the same class and we were both 165cm tall! :X
@ Shane: Haha! Thanks Shane! Hope work is treating you well! :)
Interesting story, funny how different people end up with engineering. You know for a long time I had sworn to myself I would not take up engineering, but then again one fine day it hit me as THE field. I'll tell the whole story another time;)
really a nice blog !!!
Thanks Krishna!
Did u really carry around a biography of Albert Einstein in School? Interesting... And btw I took engineering because MBBS and BE were the only 2 courses i was allowed to take. My mother and I put the medical entrance application in the bin after an hour of discussion. If only I had someone who'd encouraged me to do the same with my engineering application. I was made to believe the after medicine, engineering was the toughest thing to do. And this is jus one side of the story. There's another one for why i took Civil engineering. :)
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