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CSE 2023: Plan/ Strategy/ Daily Routine

A Window for all things CSE 2023. You can type in your ways and means of achieving your goals, your daily updates, strengths and things that might be holding you down. No-judgement, no-tugging, just a healthy discussion to help discuss our way through this long and interesting journey. Lets get prepping!.#CSE 2023
D503,DMand112 otherslike this
861.5k views

3.4k comments

.
mightyraju,
4.4k views
@iphoole No, it isn't working for me as well. I think there might be some server issue. 


mightyraju,
4.5k views
.
mightyraju,Dauntless
4.3k views

Today:

1. Forum open test

2. Vision environment sectional test (half only)

3. Newspaper

4. CA lecture

5. Human geography

First forum open mock (10th Jan) and aaj ke mock me Zameen-Aasmaan ka fark tha.

Yeh bolke, 102 leke aye open test mai.

mightyraju,
4.9k views

Today:

1. Forum open test

2. Vision environment sectional test (half only)

3. Newspaper

4. CA lecture

5. Human geography

First forum open mock (10th Jan) and aaj ke mock me Zameen-Aasmaan ka fark tha.

Yeh bolke, 102 leke aye open test mai.

Maine online diya hai, ranklist nahi aayi hai uski. XP

Name same hai bas ek bande ka offline list me.

mightyraju,
4.4k views

Today's done targets 

Geo ncerts

Pol & history revision

Test answercheck

mightyraju,
4k views

Today:

1. Forum open test

2. Vision environment sectional test (half only)

3. Newspaper

4. CA lecture

5. Human geography

First forum open mock (10th Jan) and aaj ke mock me Zameen-Aasmaan ka fark tha.

Yeh bolke, 102 leke aye open test mai.

Maine online diya hai, ranklist nahi aayi hai uski. XP

Name same hai bas ek bande ka offline list me.

Tum hardworking ho bhai. Best of luckkkk!

AB12,ryzenausterand1 otherslike this
4.8k views
If anyone is thinking to buy current affairs classes by Dipin sir (Pre+Mains), kindly dm me. I bought them for approx 25k, but am willing to sell them for 19k (still open for negotiation). 
3.9k views

Today:

1. Forum open test

2. Vision environment sectional test (half only)

3. Newspaper

4. CA lecture

5. Human geography

First forum open mock (10th Jan) and aaj ke mock me Zameen-Aasmaan ka fark tha.

Yeh bolke, 102 leke aye open test mai.

Maine online diya hai, ranklist nahi aayi hai uski. XP

Name same hai bas ek bande ka offline list me.

Tum hardworking ho bhai. Best of luckkkk!

Thanks bhai. Very grateful. :D

State PSC ke liye bhi aapko all the best. Kab hai?

mightyraju,AB12
3.7k views
@TheSherlock kyu bhai kya hua .? Aap thande kese padh gye class join krne ke baad ? ☺️ 


TomiokaGiyu,
3.4k views

Today:

1. Forum open test

2. Vision environment sectional test (half only)

3. Newspaper

4. CA lecture

5. Human geography

First forum open mock (10th Jan) and aaj ke mock me Zameen-Aasmaan ka fark tha.

Yeh bolke, 102 leke aye open test mai.

Maine online diya hai, ranklist nahi aayi hai uski. XP

Name same hai bas ek bande ka offline list me.

Tum hardworking ho bhai. Best of luckkkk!

Thanks bhai. Very grateful. :D

State PSC ke liye bhi aapko all the best. Kab hai?

Between 20 Feb- 2 March bhai.Thank you vaise!

TomiokaGiyu,
4k views
Anyone using forest app?
2.9k views
Deleted

2.8k views

Life update for all those kind souls who care about me : Not giving the exam this year. I am focusing on completing my LLB. Telling this because while we are in this preparation, it is so damn easy to forget that there exists a huge & beautiful world away from the civil services examination 


Today, I am here as I thought of sharing some of my learnings as a lot of my friends have started shifting gears towards prelims prep. I felt I should share my learnings with you all. For that I need to give you all a background as well. Here we go : 

I am someone who has failed prelims twice & also managed to clear prelims twice


2019 : I couldn't Crack it mainly due to lack of revision(didn't have short notes + obviously first attempt naiveness), blunders in Economics (Static part) & lack of what I call the stillness of mind. I attempted around 78 Questions & fell short by 4 marks 

2020 :Attempted Vision tests + Revised throughly + Kept still during exam + Made short notes. I attempted 87 questions & cleared by a narrow margin of 2 marks 

2021 :This was the attempt that pained me the most. This is where I was most prepared but still I choked. I was so shocked to see sports questions & I couldn't digest that questions were still so difficult for me despite putting in so much efforts. None of my friends & even I till this date cannot believe that I attempted only 68 questions. I fell short by 4 marks again. This is the attempt that made me realise about the need for a strong mental state and how "Losing your mind in the face of a crisis(here - shocking prelims paper) is a good way to become crisis itself" 


Then began the roughest & the toughest phase of my life from Nov 2021 to June 2022. This year I decided to Join FORUM IAS test series & thoroughly analysed the PYQ. I realised medieval history including name of kings is bound to increase given the trend from 2020. Thus, I made short notes from Satish Chandra as well. This time, I didn't want to leave any stone unturned. 


I focussed more on understanding & inquisitively thinking about things that appear. I used YouTube, watched a lot of documentaries to FEEL things. This time I also decided to completely ditch Vision (despite massive FOMO) . I just couldn't stand the dry language. Instead I relied more on PMF IAS Current affairs notes & Only IAS Videos. Another thing I focussed was on being anti fragile (concept by Naseem Taleb) & develop nerves of steel. I gave all Forum tests at center & attempted Abhyas. While Vision did simulate UPSC in terms of toughness , I still found Forum SFG & Test series question, the most relevant. Vision's questions irritated me a lot. I still don't know why 😒


Again in this attempt, I could only attempt 81 questions. I had only one principle : I will not make any random Tukkas (But do know that in my humble opinion - Prelims cannot be cleared without taking risks & making intelligent guesses) . Hence I was satisfied with even 81 questions. As per keys, I was scoring around 102-106 and cleared the cutoff 


While this was my journey, following are my learnings 


1.Short notes + Revision: For me, it was impossible to revise anything without short notes.So if you believe you have time, please do invest on making smart & short notes

2.Practice for Randomness. After the COVID shock, countries are moving towards developing resilient economies. UPSC aspirants too need to develop anti fragility & resilience. This can only come by facing shocking papers. Then come back & analyse how you could've fared better. List those things down & try again 

3.You MUST know what NOT to study. Prelims test series provide a lot of random stuff. You must learn to separate the chaff from the grain. I don't know how a new aspirant can develop this skill. But I believe this is a very very important skill and Seniors are able to do this very easily. They are able to eliminate the FOMO & still carry massive confidence 
Also, I never studied any frog species that was discovered or random facts. I knew I won't be able to remember them. Hence eliminated them completely. I never focussed on Polity current affairs as UPSC has stuck largely to the static part only. For rest, I believed that TS would make for it .

4. Method in madness : Develop a method & STICK TO IT TILL the end. Which test series you'll practice, how you'll Revise & how you'll analyse. Understand WHY are you practising or WHY you are reading a certain book/chapter. Once the objective is clear, your efficiency would increase a lot. For eg- I never focussed on making notes out of Vision Abhyas as I felt my only aim was to simulate & not develop content out of it especially as it is held in April end & May. But with Forum & SFG (Till April), I did make notes

5.Do what works for you: Vision current never worked for me. I found it very very dry. Even for Mains, I couldn't stand the document (Still don't know why) 

6. Study everything (especially biotechnology) with inquisitiveness & interest- In all my 4 attempts, this has always helped me solve some questions easily. Watch youtube videos to understand concepts (Discussed above too). Those who have given 2022 prelims -(Watch from 33:00, At precisely 36:00, Fungi is discussed)

7.The last learning (for life & not prelims) that is very close to my heart is I began to appreciate ALL those around me who were putting their heart and soul in to the preparation . It didn't matter what score or what result they got or whether they would make it or not. I began to respect them solely for the efforts that they were putting in. I don't know how relevant this is for the exam. But whenever, I went to write Prelims test, I felt very very proud of all my peers who sat along with me, each going through their own struggles, and coming back test after test. Maybe some of us were not moving in the right direction but all of us fought like fierce warriors and that's what mattered !  


At the end I would say : Feel free to ignore anything that you're not able to connect with. I am just posting this because a lot of peers messaged me that they had benefitted in some ways from some of my posts. Hence even if one of you benefits from this, I would be content. All the best to ALL OF YOU. Go get it this year ! 😁


P. S : Putting it here as I couldn't find the relevant Prelims thread. If there is separate thread, do let me know please. 


Edit : In 2022 Prelims, I had set D and I am telling you I could only attempt around 20 questions from the first 50 questions. But I tried to keep calm and from 50-100 Qs were relatively easier. I came back with greater confidence and attempted 81 as explained earlier 


Also I have added a YouTube video to illustrate the inquisitiveness aspect in point 6.Also, This doesn't mean you should watch dozens of documentaries. Just be Inquisitive 

mightyraju,DMand26 otherslike this
3.8k views

Life update for all those kind souls who care about me : Not giving the exam this year. I am focusing on completing my LLB. Telling this because while we are in this preparation, it is so damn easy to forget that there exists a huge & beautiful world away from the civil services examination 


Today, I am here as I thought of sharing some of my learnings as a lot of my friends have started shifting gears towards prelims prep. I felt a I should share my learnings with you all For that I need to give you all a background as well. Here we go : 

I am someone who has failed prelims twice & also managed to clear prelims twice

2019 :I couldn't Crack it mainly due tolack of revision(didn't have short notes + obviously first attempt naiveness), blunders in Economics (Static part) & lack of what I call thestillness of mind. I attempted around 78 Questions & fell short by 4 marks 

2020 :Attempted Vision tests + Revised throughly + Kept still during exam + Made short notes. I attempted 87 questions & cleared by a narrow margin of 2 marks 

2021 :This was the attempt that pained me the most. This is where I was most prepared but still I choked. I was so shocked to see sports questions & I couldn't digest that questions were still so difficult for me despite putting in so much efforts. None of my friends & even I till this date cannot believe that I attempted only 68 questions. I fell short by 4 marks again. This is the attempt that made me realise about the need for a strong mental state and how "Losing your mind in the face of a crisis(here - shocking prelims paper) is a good way to become crisis itself" 

Then began the roughest & the toughest phase of my life from Nov 2021 to June 2022. This year I decided to Join FORUM IAS test series & thoroughly analysed the PYQ. I realised medieval history including name of kings is bound to increase given the trend from 2020. Thus, I made short notes from Satish Chandra as well. This time, I didn't want to leave any stone unturned. 

I focussed more on understanding & inquisitively thinking about things that appear. I used YouTube, watched a lot of documentaries to FEEL things. This time I also decided to completely ditch Vision (despite massive FOMO) . I just couldn't stand the dry language. Instead I relied more on PMF IAS Current affairs notes & Only IAS Videos. Another thing I focussed was on being anti fragile (concept by Naseem Taleb) & develop nerves of still. I gave all Forum tests at center & attempted Abhyas. While Vision did simulate UPSC in terms of toughness , I still found Forum SFG & Test series question, the most relevant. Vision's questions irritated me a lot. I still don't know why 😒

Again in this attempt, I could only attempt 81 questions. I had only one principle : I will not make anyrandom Tukkas (But do know that in my humble opinion - Prelims cannot be cleared without taking risks & making intelligent guesses. Hence I was satisfied with even 81 questions. As per keys, I was scoring around 102-106 and cleared the cutoff 

While this was my journey, following are my learnings 


1.Short notes + Revision: For me, it was impossible to revise anything without short notes.So if you believe you have time, please do invest on making smart & short notes
2.Practice for Randomness. After the COVID shock, countries are moving towards developing resilient economies. UPSC aspirants too need to develop anti fragility & resilience. This can only come by facing shocking papers. Then come back & analyse how you could've fared better. List those things down & try again 
3.You MUST know what NOT to study. Prelims test series provide a lot of random stuff. You must learn to separate the chaff from the grain. I don't know how a new aspirant can develop this skill. But I believe this is a very very important skill and Seniors are able to do this very easily. They are able to eliminate the FOMO & still carry massive confidence 
Also, I never studied any frog species that was discovered or random facts. I knew I won't be able to remember them. Hence eliminated them completely. I never focussed on Polity current affairs as UPSC has stuck largely to the static part only. For rest, I believed that TS would make for it 
4.Method in madness :Develop a method & STICK TO IT TILL the end. Which test series you'll practice, how you'll Revise & how you'll analyse. Understand WHY are you practising or WHY you are reading a certain book/chapter. Once the objective is clear, your efficiency would increase a lot. For eg- I never focussed on making notes out of Vision Abhyas as I felt my only aim was to simulate & not develop content out of it especially it is held in April end & May. But with Forum & SFG (Till April), I did make notes
5.Do what works for you: Vision current never worked for me. I found it very very dry. Even for Mains, I couldn't stand the document (Still don't know why) 

6. Study everything (especially biotechnology) withinquisitiveness & interest- In all my 4 attempts, this has always helped me solve some questions easily. Watch youtube videos to understand concepts (Discussed above too) 

7.The last learning (for life& not prelims) that is very close to my heart is I began to appreciate ALL those around me who were putting their heart and soul in to the preparation . It didn't matter what score or what result they got or whether they would make it or not. I began to respect them solely for the efforts that they were putting in. I don't know how relevant this is for the exam. But whenever, I went to write Prelims test, I felt very very proud of all my peers who sat along with me, each going through their own struggles, and coming back test after test. Maybe some of us were not moving in the right direction but all of us fought like fierce warriors and that's what mattered !  


At the end I would say : Feel free to ignore anything that you're not able to connect with. I am just posting this because a lot of peers messaged me that they had benefitted in some ways from some of my posts. Hence even if one of you benefits from this, I would be content. All the best to ALL OF YOU. Go get it this year ! 😁


P. S : Putting it here as I couldn't find the relevant Prelims thread. If there is separate thread, do let me know please. 

One word@Ganesh_Gaitonde 

Superb🙏


GaneshGaitonde,TheNotoriousand1 otherslike this
2.7k views

Life update for all those kind souls who care about me : Not giving the exam this year. I am focusing on completing my LLB. Telling this because while we are in this preparation, it is so damn easy to forget that there exists a huge & beautiful world away from the civil services examination 


Today, I am here as I thought of sharing some of my learnings as a lot of my friends have started shifting gears towards prelims prep. I felt a I should share my learnings with you all For that I need to give you all a background as well. Here we go : 

I am someone who has failed prelims twice & also managed to clear prelims twice

2019 :I couldn't Crack it mainly due tolack of revision(didn't have short notes + obviously first attempt naiveness), blunders in Economics (Static part) & lack of what I call thestillness of mind. I attempted around 78 Questions & fell short by 4 marks 

2020 :Attempted Vision tests + Revised throughly + Kept still during exam + Made short notes. I attempted 87 questions & cleared by a narrow margin of 2 marks 

2021 :This was the attempt that pained me the most. This is where I was most prepared but still I choked. I was so shocked to see sports questions & I couldn't digest that questions were still so difficult for me despite putting in so much efforts. None of my friends & even I till this date cannot believe that I attempted only 68 questions. I fell short by 4 marks again. This is the attempt that made me realise about the need for a strong mental state and how "Losing your mind in the face of a crisis(here - shocking prelims paper) is a good way to become crisis itself" 

Then began the roughest & the toughest phase of my life from Nov 2021 to June 2022. This year I decided to Join FORUM IAS test series & thoroughly analysed the PYQ. I realised medieval history including name of kings is bound to increase given the trend from 2020. Thus, I made short notes from Satish Chandra as well. This time, I didn't want to leave any stone unturned. 

I focussed more on understanding & inquisitively thinking about things that appear. I used YouTube, watched a lot of documentaries to FEEL things. This time I also decided to completely ditch Vision (despite massive FOMO) . I just couldn't stand the dry language. Instead I relied more on PMF IAS Current affairs notes & Only IAS Videos. Another thing I focussed was on being anti fragile (concept by Naseem Taleb) & develop nerves of still. I gave all Forum tests at center & attempted Abhyas. While Vision did simulate UPSC in terms of toughness , I still found Forum SFG & Test series question, the most relevant. Vision's questions irritated me a lot. I still don't know why 😒

Again in this attempt, I could only attempt 81 questions. I had only one principle : I will not make any random Tukkas (But do know that in my humble opinion - Prelims cannot be cleared without taking risks & making intelligent guesses. Hence I was satisfied with even 81 questions. As per keys, I was scoring around 102-106 and cleared the cutoff 

While this was my journey, following are my learnings 


1.Short notes + Revision: For me, it was impossible to revise anything without short notes.So if you believe you have time, please do invest on making smart & short notes

2.Practice for Randomness. After the COVID shock, countries are moving towards developing resilient economies. UPSC aspirants too need to develop anti fragility & resilience. This can only come by facing shocking papers. Then come back & analyse how you could've fared better. List those things down & try again 

3.You MUST know what NOT to study. Prelims test series provide a lot of random stuff. You must learn to separate the chaff from the grain. I don't know how a new aspirant can develop this skill. But I believe this is a very very important skill and Seniors are able to do this very easily. They are able to eliminate the FOMO & still carry massive confidence 
Also, I never studied any frog species that was discovered or random facts. I knew I won't be able to remember them. Hence eliminated them completely. I never focussed on Polity current affairs as UPSC has stuck largely to the static part only. For rest, I believed that TS would make for it .

4. Method in madness :Develop a method & STICK TO IT TILL the end. Which test series you'll practice, how you'll Revise & how you'll analyse. Understand WHY are you practising or WHY you are reading a certain book/chapter. Once the objective is clear, your efficiency would increase a lot. For eg- I never focussed on making notes out of Vision Abhyas as I felt my only aim was to simulate & not develop content out of it especially it is held in April end & May. But with Forum & SFG (Till April), I did make notes

5.Do what works for you: Vision current never worked for me. I found it very very dry. Even for Mains, I couldn't stand the document (Still don't know why) 

6. Study everything (especially biotechnology) withinquisitiveness & interest- In all my 4 attempts, this has always helped me solve some questions easily. Watch youtube videos to understand concepts (Discussed above too) 

7.The last learning (for life & not prelims) that is very close to my heart is I began to appreciate ALL those around me who were putting their heart and soul in to the preparation . It didn't matter what score or what result they got or whether they would make it or not. I began to respect them solely for the efforts that they were putting in. I don't know how relevant this is for the exam. But whenever, I went to write Prelims test, I felt very very proud of all my peers who sat along with me, each going through their own struggles, and coming back test after test. Maybe some of us were not moving in the right direction but all of us fought like fierce warriors and that's what mattered !  


At the end I would say : Feel free to ignore anything that you're not able to connect with. I am just posting this because a lot of peers messaged me that they had benefitted in some ways from some of my posts. Hence even if one of you benefits from this, I would be content. All the best to ALL OF YOU. Go get it this year ! 😁


P. S : Putting it here as I couldn't find the relevant Prelims thread. If there is separate thread, do let me know please. 

This is good stuff. The first two lines of the 3rd pointer wrt “You must know what not to study” are so relatable ngl. Even I struggle to separate the chaff from the grain, when it comes to analysing test paper solutions. FOMO ke chakkar mei I end up spending double the amount of time I decided initially to spend upon, by reading everything, thinking padh hee leta hu kahi isse in future koi question na bann jaaye!

P.S AzadHindFauz bhai tried reviving the Prelims 2020 thread. Udhar copy-paste maar doe if possible. 

Here is the link: https://forumias.com/post/detail/Prelims-2020-Preparing-Repeatedly-Asked-Questions-1599284307?page=20

GaneshGaitonde,Magnetozand1 otherslike this
2.5k views

DMsaid

Life update for all those kind souls who care about me : Not giving the exam this year. I am focusing on completing my LLB. Telling this because while we are in this preparation, it is so damn easy to forget that there exists a huge & beautiful world away from the civil services examination 


Today, I am here as I thought of sharing some of my learnings as a lot of my friends have started shifting gears towards prelims prep. I felt a I should share my learnings with you all For that I need to give you all a background as well. Here we go : 

I am someone who has failed prelims twice & also managed to clear prelims twice

2019 :I couldn't Crack it mainly due tolack of revision(didn't have short notes + obviously first attempt naiveness), blunders in Economics (Static part) & lack of what I call thestillness of mind. I attempted around 78 Questions & fell short by 4 marks 

2020 :Attempted Vision tests + Revised throughly + Kept still during exam + Made short notes. I attempted 87 questions & cleared by a narrow margin of 2 marks 

2021 :This was the attempt that pained me the most. This is where I was most prepared but still I choked. I was so shocked to see sports questions & I couldn't digest that questions were still so difficult for me despite putting in so much efforts. None of my friends & even I till this date cannot believe that I attempted only 68 questions. I fell short by 4 marks again. This is the attempt that made me realise about the need for a strong mental state and how "Losing your mind in the face of a crisis(here - shocking prelims paper) is a good way to become crisis itself" 

Then began the roughest & the toughest phase of my life from Nov 2021 to June 2022. This year I decided to Join FORUM IAS test series & thoroughly analysed the PYQ. I realised medieval history including name of kings is bound to increase given the trend from 2020. Thus, I made short notes from Satish Chandra as well. This time, I didn't want to leave any stone unturned. 

I focussed more on understanding & inquisitively thinking about things that appear. I used YouTube, watched a lot of documentaries to FEEL things. This time I also decided to completely ditch Vision (despite massive FOMO) . I just couldn't stand the dry language. Instead I relied more on PMF IAS Current affairs notes & Only IAS Videos. Another thing I focussed was on being anti fragile (concept by Naseem Taleb) & develop nerves of still. I gave all Forum tests at center & attempted Abhyas. While Vision did simulate UPSC in terms of toughness , I still found Forum SFG & Test series question, the most relevant. Vision's questions irritated me a lot. I still don't know why 😒

Again in this attempt, I could only attempt 81 questions. I had only one principle : I will not make anyrandom Tukkas (But do know that in my humble opinion - Prelims cannot be cleared without taking risks & making intelligent guesses. Hence I was satisfied with even 81 questions. As per keys, I was scoring around 102-106 and cleared the cutoff 

While this was my journey, following are my learnings 


1.Short notes + Revision: For me, it was impossible to revise anything without short notes.So if you believe you have time, please do invest on making smart & short notes
2.Practice for Randomness. After the COVID shock, countries are moving towards developing resilient economies. UPSC aspirants too need to develop anti fragility & resilience. This can only come by facing shocking papers. Then come back & analyse how you could've fared better. List those things down & try again 
3.You MUST know what NOT to study. Prelims test series provide a lot of random stuff. You must learn to separate the chaff from the grain. I don't know how a new aspirant can develop this skill. But I believe this is a very very important skill and Seniors are able to do this very easily. They are able to eliminate the FOMO & still carry massive confidence 
Also, I never studied any frog species that was discovered or random facts. I knew I won't be able to remember them. Hence eliminated them completely. I never focussed on Polity current affairs as UPSC has stuck largely to the static part only. For rest, I believed that TS would make for it 
4.Method in madness :Develop a method & STICK TO IT TILL the end. Which test series you'll practice, how you'll Revise & how you'll analyse. Understand WHY are you practising or WHY you are reading a certain book/chapter. Once the objective is clear, your efficiency would increase a lot. For eg- I never focussed on making notes out of Vision Abhyas as I felt my only aim was to simulate & not develop content out of it especially it is held in April end & May. But with Forum & SFG (Till April), I did make notes
5.Do what works for you: Vision current never worked for me. I found it very very dry. Even for Mains, I couldn't stand the document (Still don't know why) 

6. Study everything (especially biotechnology) withinquisitiveness & interest- In all my 4 attempts, this has always helped me solve some questions easily. Watch youtube videos to understand concepts (Discussed above too) 

7.The last learning (for life& not prelims) that is very close to my heart is I began to appreciate ALL those around me who were putting their heart and soul in to the preparation . It didn't matter what score or what result they got or whether they would make it or not. I began to respect them solely for the efforts that they were putting in. I don't know how relevant this is for the exam. But whenever, I went to write Prelims test, I felt very very proud of all my peers who sat along with me, each going through their own struggles, and coming back test after test. Maybe some of us were not moving in the right direction but all of us fought like fierce warriors and that's what mattered !  


At the end I would say : Feel free to ignore anything that you're not able to connect with. I am just posting this because a lot of peers messaged me that they had benefitted in some ways from some of my posts. Hence even if one of you benefits from this, I would be content. All the best to ALL OF YOU. Go get it this year ! 😁


P. S : Putting it here as I couldn't find the relevant Prelims thread. If there is separate thread, do let me know please. 

One word@Ganesh_Gaitonde 

Superb🙏

Hey, I hope it benefits you :). All the best dost 

DM,TomiokaGiyu
2.2k views
» show previous quotes

This is good stuff. The first two lines of the 3rd pointer wrt “You must know what not to study” are so relatable ngl. Even I struggle to separate the chaff from the grain, when it comes to analysing test paper solutions. FOMO ke chakkar mei I end up spending double the amount of time I decided initially to spend upon, by reading everything, thinking padh hee leta hu kahi isse in future koi question na bann jaaye!

P.S AzadHindFauz bhai tried reviving the Prelims 2020 thread. Udhar copy-paste maar doe if possible. 

Here is the link: https://forumias.com/post/detail/Prelims-2020-Preparing-Repeatedly-Asked-Questions-1599284307?page=20

FOMO end karo. Think like this 30 questions in total are doable from standard materials - You must not miss out on them at all 


Now from the rest 55-60 questions, even if you have 50% accuracy, You'll make it. Any serious aspirant who has studied well and also mastered intelligent guessing is able to increase accuracy in these 55-60 questions to >60%


Also, Thank you for the link. I have copied the post there too. All the best :) 


TheNotorious,Swapsand1 otherslike this
2.2k views

DMsaid

Life update for all those kind souls who care about me : Not giving the exam this year. I am focusing on completing my LLB. Telling this because while we are in this preparation, it is so damn easy to forget that there exists a huge & beautiful world away from the civil services examination 


Today, I am here as I thought of sharing some of my learnings as a lot of my friends have started shifting gears towards prelims prep. I felt a I should share my learnings with you all For that I need to give you all a background as well. Here we go : 

I am someone who has failed prelims twice & also managed to clear prelims twice

2019 :I couldn't Crack it mainly due tolack of revision(didn't have short notes + obviously first attempt naiveness), blunders in Economics (Static part) & lack of what I call thestillness of mind. I attempted around 78 Questions & fell short by 4 marks 

2020 :Attempted Vision tests + Revised throughly + Kept still during exam + Made short notes. I attempted 87 questions & cleared by a narrow margin of 2 marks 

2021 :This was the attempt that pained me the most. This is where I was most prepared but still I choked. I was so shocked to see sports questions & I couldn't digest that questions were still so difficult for me despite putting in so much efforts. None of my friends & even I till this date cannot believe that I attempted only 68 questions. I fell short by 4 marks again. This is the attempt that made me realise about the need for a strong mental state and how "Losing your mind in the face of a crisis(here - shocking prelims paper) is a good way to become crisis itself" 

Then began the roughest & the toughest phase of my life from Nov 2021 to June 2022. This year I decided to Join FORUM IAS test series & thoroughly analysed the PYQ. I realised medieval history including name of kings is bound to increase given the trend from 2020. Thus, I made short notes from Satish Chandra as well. This time, I didn't want to leave any stone unturned. 

I focussed more on understanding & inquisitively thinking about things that appear. I used YouTube, watched a lot of documentaries to FEEL things. This time I also decided to completely ditch Vision (despite massive FOMO) . I just couldn't stand the dry language. Instead I relied more on PMF IAS Current affairs notes & Only IAS Videos. Another thing I focussed was on being anti fragile (concept by Naseem Taleb) & develop nerves of still. I gave all Forum tests at center & attempted Abhyas. While Vision did simulate UPSC in terms of toughness , I still found Forum SFG & Test series question, the most relevant. Vision's questions irritated me a lot. I still don't know why 😒

Again in this attempt, I could only attempt 81 questions. I had only one principle : I will not make anyrandom Tukkas (But do know that in my humble opinion - Prelims cannot be cleared without taking risks & making intelligent guesses. Hence I was satisfied with even 81 questions. As per keys, I was scoring around 102-106 and cleared the cutoff 

While this was my journey, following are my learnings 


1.Short notes + Revision: For me, it was impossible to revise anything without short notes.So if you believe you have time, please do invest on making smart & short notes
2.Practice for Randomness. After the COVID shock, countries are moving towards developing resilient economies. UPSC aspirants too need to develop anti fragility & resilience. This can only come by facing shocking papers. Then come back & analyse how you could've fared better. List those things down & try again 
3.You MUST know what NOT to study. Prelims test series provide a lot of random stuff. You must learn to separate the chaff from the grain. I don't know how a new aspirant can develop this skill. But I believe this is a very very important skill and Seniors are able to do this very easily. They are able to eliminate the FOMO & still carry massive confidence 
Also, I never studied any frog species that was discovered or random facts. I knew I won't be able to remember them. Hence eliminated them completely. I never focussed on Polity current affairs as UPSC has stuck largely to the static part only. For rest, I believed that TS would make for it 
4.Method in madness :Develop a method & STICK TO IT TILL the end. Which test series you'll practice, how you'll Revise & how you'll analyse. Understand WHY are you practising or WHY you are reading a certain book/chapter. Once the objective is clear, your efficiency would increase a lot. For eg- I never focussed on making notes out of Vision Abhyas as I felt my only aim was to simulate & not develop content out of it especially it is held in April end & May. But with Forum & SFG (Till April), I did make notes
5.Do what works for you: Vision current never worked for me. I found it very very dry. Even for Mains, I couldn't stand the document (Still don't know why) 

6. Study everything (especially biotechnology) withinquisitiveness & interest- In all my 4 attempts, this has always helped me solve some questions easily. Watch youtube videos to understand concepts (Discussed above too) 

7.The last learning (for life& not prelims) that is very close to my heart is I began to appreciate ALL those around me who were putting their heart and soul in to the preparation . It didn't matter what score or what result they got or whether they would make it or not. I began to respect them solely for the efforts that they were putting in. I don't know how relevant this is for the exam. But whenever, I went to write Prelims test, I felt very very proud of all my peers who sat along with me, each going through their own struggles, and coming back test after test. Maybe some of us were not moving in the right direction but all of us fought like fierce warriors and that's what mattered !  


At the end I would say : Feel free to ignore anything that you're not able to connect with. I am just posting this because a lot of peers messaged me that they had benefitted in some ways from some of my posts. Hence even if one of you benefits from this, I would be content. All the best to ALL OF YOU. Go get it this year ! 😁


P. S : Putting it here as I couldn't find the relevant Prelims thread. If there is separate thread, do let me know please. 

One word@Ganesh_Gaitonde 

Superb🙏

Hey, I hope it benefits you :). All the best dost 

Ty 💕

All the best to u 🙏


GaneshGaitonde,TomiokaGiyuand1 otherslike this
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This is good stuff. The first two lines of the 3rd pointer wrt “You must know what not to study” are so relatable ngl. Even I struggle to separate the chaff from the grain, when it comes to analysing test paper solutions. FOMO ke chakkar mei I end up spending double the amount of time I decided initially to spend upon, by reading everything, thinking padh hee leta hu kahi isse in future koi question na bann jaaye!

P.S AzadHindFauz bhai tried reviving the Prelims 2020 thread. Udhar copy-paste maar doe if possible. 

Here is the link: https://forumias.com/post/detail/Prelims-2020-Preparing-Repeatedly-Asked-Questions-1599284307?page=20

FOMO end karo. Think like this 30 questions in total are doable from standard materials - You must not miss out on them at all 


Now from the rest 55-60 questions, even if you have 50% accuracy, You'll make it. Any serious aspirant who has studied well and also mastered intelligent guessing is able to increase accuracy in these 55-60 questions to >60%


Also, Thank you for the link. I have copied the post there too. All the best :) 


Fomo ke karan, pre and mains ke 1000 classes lagi hai. Epic clown era chal raha hai mera upsc prep mai.

MichaelScarn,
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