Myth: You have to study 24*7- all day & every day.
Fact:
You have to study effectively, thatâs it. 8 hours or 10 hours- the hours donât matter. Give it your complete focus when you sit to study. Donât overdo the hours, youâll exhaust yourself.
Quality > QuantityMyth: You shouldâve been a topper in your college days to ace the exam.
Fact:
The UPSC exam is a great leveler & offers an equal playing field to all. Your academic history does not matter. The only thing that matters is your performance at each stage.
Consistency > TalentMyth: You must buy & read 100000 books. Knowledge is power, right?
âI have a disease. I keep buying all the magazines and coaching material. Is there any cure for this?â
Fact:
Wrong! Stick to the basics (NCERTs), standard books, and current affairs (newspapers).
Read. Revise >3 times. Retain.
Donât become a âcollectorâ of material. We both know that youâll be donating it for recycling.
Myth: You must possess great English writing skills like Shakespeare.
Fact:
You donât need to win a literary prize. UPSC wants simple, clear and precise answers. Basic English is enough. Work on it daily.
SIMPLICITY & CLARITYMyth: You need to isolate yourself from the world & study.
Fact:
No need to cut off from family and friends. They support you during tough times. Remember, it is just an exam!
Myth: Daily schedule should be only StudyâStudyâStudy.
Fact:
All work & no play makes one a dull aspirant. Take breaks, exercise, and sleep well. At least 8 hours of focused study is enough.
Myth: Join an institute; itâs the ONLY way.
Fact:
Self-study works if youâre disciplined. Coaching is optional. Choose what suits you best.
Myth: Luck is needed to clear UPSC.
Fact:
Success is 1% luck and 99% hard work. Donât lose grip on the 99%.
Myth: IAS is the best job on earth.
Fact:
It is a great job if you want to serve society, but itâs not the only good career. âBestâ is subjective.
Myth: UPSC asks questions outside the syllabus.
Fact:
UPSC sticks to the syllabus. Questions may appear new, but they are always linked to it.
It was my last attempt. I failed in Prelims. Now I want to kill myself. Help me.
To kill you? First, kill your ego, not yourself. You took a journey but couldnât reach the destination. It doesnât mean the end of your life or the end of the road â start a new phase in your Life from where you are now. What matters, in the end, is how well you lived your Life, not how many successes you achieved.
Watch our podcast: A Little More Light which showcases how one can succeed beyond UPSC! Life is much bigger than an exam! Remember this well.
Lakhs of aspirants give this exam and only few get into IAS. I am scared.
Though lakhs of aspirants apply and write this exam, the real competition is between only 2000â3000 serious aspirants. Those who study systematically and consistently, get into service.
Make the process fun, enjoy reading, love what you do, and do everything to please your heart. Not the society.
They say there is corruption in recruiting IAS officers. Is it true?
This allegation is utterly false. The whole examination is so opaque that you have to trust it blindly (Oxymoron). There is no corruption involved in the recruitment of civil service officers.
Those veterans laugh when I tell them I am preparing for IAS. Instead, they insist I should say that I am preparing for civil services. What is the difference?
Preparing for IAS shows clarity and confidence of purpose. Choose what suits you best â not the veterans.
I am getting a headache while making notes. There are so many books to refer to and I want my notes to be the best. What to do?
Leo Tolstoy wrote in Anna Karenina, âIf you look for perfection, youâll never be content.â Managing time is more important than making perfect notes.
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