I am finally done with it and I am a lot poorer than I was
two years before. The shock of the amount of money spent is mitigated by the
concepts of NPV and IRR taught, interestingly, in the very curriculum I was
spending my money on.
Overall I am glad that I am going to apply my knowledge
learnt in MBA in my job. My undergrad knowledge of mechanical engineering was
no use in developing a banking software product. Which brings me to the point
of the flaw in the Indian education system and the way kids are pushed to
becoming engineers, doctors, MBA’s. Recently IIT-Joint Entrance Exam and other
engineering college results came out and there was a frenzy of excitement to be
seen wherever I went. Excited dads and moms were discussing how there kids got
so and so rank and were therefore going to get so and so branch in so and so
institute. It’s almost an assembly line of kids doing math, science and then
engineering and then going to Bangalore
to sit in cubicles and code, suppressing all their creativity and inclinations
to live the dreams and aspirations of their parents. Most of the parents don’t
know what they are pushing their kids into; and they would be happier having
their kid work for some Indian recognizable brand name like Infosys, TCS( which
they can boast to their colleagues and neighbors )rather than Oracle, Nvidia or
Synopsys.
I know I was in the same glut and doing an MBA was also
following the same design. While I have followed the conventional track, yet I
would like to believe that there was a subtle difference to my MBA as against
an Indian MBA. A lot of learning happened through my classmates, most of who
didn’t think in the way I thought, which is to say that they were not
engineers. In addition to learning new ways of approaching a situation, I felt
these two years gave me time to consider various career options (which I never
got before in my life) and choose the one I felt the happiest with. That’s a
big thing for us Indian mechanical engineers turned software engineers – the
freedom of choice. Investment banking didn’t happen to me in these times of
recession but I am pretty happy with what I have. The one thing I have learnt
in the past few years is to do the best with what you have and keep trying to
pursue what you enjoy. The quest for success continues.
I missed writing for a long time, partly due to being under
excessive workload to complete credits early in time for H1-B application(
Foreign non-resident students have additional challenges on the track) and then
enjoying the last mod by going to the gym, playing a lot of racquetball, some
tennis and a bit of golf.
To tell you the truth, I didn’t want to graduate. Studies
were wonderful, you could choose classes starting a bit late and not get up
early, let people see you unshaven and sleepy without raising an eyebrow, have
Friday’s off the year long and not be too responsible to anyone. All this will
change now I guess.