Disclaimer:
All thoughts expressed here are author’s personal views and no mockery
is anywhere intended. I am responsible for what I say and not for what you
understand.
So, it has been 1 year since the gullible
girl got out of the gobbledygook of books and ventured into the real world. I
have been meaning to write about my experiences but the cobwebs of the
corporate world caught me up and I have been neglecting my introspection for
long. But not anymore!
Before we begin, let me give you a bit of
trivia. Everybody is aware that financial year starts from April 1st
and ends 31st of March. But can we have a longer financial year? The
answer is yes.
Here is an excerpt from the Companies Act,
1956 (sec 129 of Companies Act 2013) for your reference -
"Financial Year means, in relation to any to any body corporate, the period in respect of which any profit and loss account of the body corporate laid before it in annual general meeting is made up, whether that period is a year or not the period to which the account aforesaid relates is referred to as a 'financial year'; and it may be less or more than a calender year, but it shall not exceed fifteen months; Provided that it may extend to eighteen months where special special permission has been granted in that behalf by the Registrar."
So my year in the blog is going to start from January 2017 and last till April 2018. So we are still talking about Financial year 2017-18. (I am just justifying my inability to write my year-end blog, as my tradition has always been, by using CA jargon. :P)
"Financial Year means, in relation to any to any body corporate, the period in respect of which any profit and loss account of the body corporate laid before it in annual general meeting is made up, whether that period is a year or not the period to which the account aforesaid relates is referred to as a 'financial year'; and it may be less or more than a calender year, but it shall not exceed fifteen months; Provided that it may extend to eighteen months where special special permission has been granted in that behalf by the Registrar."
So my year in the blog is going to start from January 2017 and last till April 2018. So we are still talking about Financial year 2017-18. (I am just justifying my inability to write my year-end blog, as my tradition has always been, by using CA jargon. :P)
Oh, what a roller coaster ride this year
has been!
It began with my result last year in
January. CA results have always been a
jittery affair. Primarily because they say that it would be announced around 2pm
but they never publish the results before 4pm. Can you imagine the state of the
student during these two hours? One can almost cook rice, such is the pressure
in the head. I remember my IPCC results came out at 11pm; 9 hours of torture!
CA final was even worse. The website crashed around 4pm and then a gazette
reached me via whatsapp! It felt incredibly foolish to believe a whatsapp
saying that I was now a CA but for a few magical minutes I was blissful. And
then, a friend finally uttered sense – whatsapp gazette is false! Darkness shrouded
my mind and I was gasping for breath. Then finally when I could see no way out,
I dialed my favourite SharmaJi’s number (she is now my brother’s wife,
such an eventful year this has been! :D) and requested her to confirm my result
– her father is in ICAI, you see. Sharma Uncle confirmed my result and I heaved
a sigh of relief! And then I did what I was dying to do since the inception of
CA odyssey, I texted my father “All my life I have been known as a CA’s
daughter. Now, you are going to be known as a CA’s father. Debit equals credit
”
Hallelujah!
A perfect ending to the CA journey. Ending,
did I say? It was the beginning! Inception of the hard road that lay ahead! But
before that, I had a few moments of relief and fun – GMCS 2. I met a variety of
people- a few assholes, a few really good friends and a few
forget-after-the-gmcs people. In a nutshell, it was an eye opener. It told me
what kind of people I would meet ahead and the types of challenges that were
going to ensue. I sat for one off campus interview at Deloitte which was a
fiasco. Big 4 never really tempted me but as every person preached me that it
was stupid not to sit for the interview so I went ahead. After waiting for 3
hours, I finally entered the room. Technical sucked. HR went good. Then I was
asked if I had any questions. I asked the interviewer how had his experience
been with Deloitte. He began in his monotonous tone that life was okay. (okay?
OKAY? He told me that I would need to work 16 hrs a day and for what? An ‘okay’
life?!). Sometimes in my not-so-sane moments, I feel that all these big corporate
companies are actually a secret organization and their aim is to plague the
world with frustration. Frustrated people recruiting more guinea pigs to suck
life and turn into zombies.
Anyway, so then came the campus placements!
The interview could not have been more different from the previous one. The
interviewer was COOL, there is no other word for him and I was laughing so hard
by the end that I had to apologise! So I was selected as an Internal Auditor in
the company. I was on cloud 9. I was a CA, I had a job… I needed no other thing
in life!
How very wrong I was.
Once I joined, I realized that things were
not so rosy. Firstly, my place of reporting was Gurgaon and I simply detest Gurgaon.
All the tall glass buildings copied from the west by DLF irritated me (You put
up glasses all over the building, leading to greenhouse effect and then install
centralised air-conditioning to beat it and then fret over huge power bills and
pollution!) and the traffic was/is/will always be crazy in Gurgaon. Shuttle
rides gave me sore muscles and back ache. I felt like I had aged 20 years in
just 20 days. But I met this wonderful lady here who turned out to be Virat
Kohli’s cousin! (I did not believe her till I saw her picture with Virushka at
the grand celebrity reception last year! I openly admit that I was green with
envy, Kohli is the love of my life after Harry Potter.) After the introductory
few days at the new company, we were sent off to its various branches for
conducting the internal audit and then reality hit me – it was nowhere near the
audit I had envisaged. I was supposed to
visit the customer place and confirm our company’s services and controls were in
place. The heat and exertion from long travel hours soon took toll on my health
and I resigned within 2 months mainly because of the safety factors – these
customers lived in the JJ colonies, since my company was into micro finance, and
I was supposed to visit these areas with a salesperson on his bike!
And I was back into
what-am-I-going-to-do-in-my-life phase. I started analyzing my strengths and
weaknesses, interests and available options. Thoughts like ‘did I do the right
thing by resigning; who is stupid enough to leave campus placement which is so
difficult to get through; maybe I should have persevered’ kept plaguing me.
Thanks to some wonderful people that God has bestowed me with, I could get out
of it and got my next job in OBC after successfully clearing the written and
interview. The month of darkness was soon forgotten just like a bad dream.
The number 17 continued to rule my stars.
My CA result was announced on 17th Jan. I joined my first job on 17th
of April. I joined my subsequent job on 17th of August! And this is
just the tip of the iceberg. ;)
The week-long induction training was my
first experience in hostel and it was a memorable one. I realized why all
hostelers kept cribbing about bad food – food at the mess was extremely oily but the
dessert always made up for the bad taste.
Obviously, I slept through the lectures but
was wide awake during our badminton matches at night. And again, I met a
variety of people – a bunch of idiots, some nice friends, a few
I-don’t-even-remember-their-names and one adorable lady needs special mention here
- Shraddha! She is one of the most hardworking, polite, sensible and decent
women I have ever met!
At the end of our training, we were all
given our postings. I was posted at Head office (Gurgaon, will you ever leave
me?!) in large corporate credit department- I had to deal with the big fish,
loans above 50 crores. The next few
months were horrendously challenging – I had to learn all the new stuff about
loans, policies of the bank, RBI guidelines and more importantly, how to deal
with people and how to coordinate between various departments I needed to rely
upon for information! I tried my best but my pace was slow. I got scolded again
and again. Again, some people who I call Gifts-from-God, helped me through each
difficult day. Some days were so bad that I went home resolving to never be
back but got up the next morning to face all the challenges.
Meanwhile, my brother got married. And a
wedding, as enjoyable and wonderful and sacred thing may be, is a stressful
affair! Shopping is as time consuming as it is financially-depleting. I tried
one dress after the other till I settled upon this beautiful black-golden gown
and a golden saree. It cost me my entire month’s salary but the look and the
compliments overshadowed the monetary aspects.
After fun-filled 4 days wedding saga, it
was difficult getting back to work. But what options do we have other than
slogging our asses off for organizations who replace us within a fraction of
second?
Just when I started to get a little hang of
my work, life threw me a curve ball again!
I was transferred to the Accounts
department! Out of the blue. Just like that. Personal grudge of the bosses? Or
was it my slow pace? God knows how many times my mind berated me till I was
shown sense (again by the good people!) that
- Things don’t work like that in professional domain. Transfer is as ubiquitous in banks as chaai
- I need not blame my slow pace since I was a newbie and I was given 2 years to learn and train myself. Nobody catches bullet trains in 6 months, every body rides a bullock cart.
- Change is good. Change is inevitable. Moreover, wasn’t I so stressed and unhappy in that department so why not give the new department a chance?
And so I entered the Accounts department. So far, so good. My father
worships Accounts, by the way. So he showed me all the positive (N.B. sarcasm
detected!) side – balance sheet is the lifeline of any company’s finances, GST
is the future of India, IFRS is the in-thing. He had said the same things about
the credit department also… that credit department would lead to my
holistic learning as it would involve
processing of balance sheets, application of tax laws. I have lost all hopes
that I can ever be as much in love with CA stuff as he is.
Amongst all the anguish, I found my solace in fulfilling my travel
dreams that I nurtured since childhood. I have covered Rajasthan, Shimla and
Goa so far; sand, snow and sea. I fell in love with the sound of the sea. You
have no right to be alive if you can’t take out time to watch the sunrise and
sunset. Sunsets in Goa are proofs that not everything that goes down is sad and
melancholy; it taught me to stay still and just be in the moment… the
realization dawned on me that a higher power looks upon us all and I could feel
all my stressed neurons slackening as the force of the mighty sea hit me. Nothing
mattered anymore and I learnt just to be… in unison with my soul… at total
peace.
All in all, this year was all about what they call as blooming and
budding; making mistakes and learning from them; getting out of my comfort zone
and most importantly taking note of my happiness and dreams.



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