Tuesday, December 23, 2008

This is life

Last week I was at the PAN IIT meet. During one of the sessions on entrepreneurship, there were many questions on the role of IITs in nurturing entrepreneurial skills among its students. A few people were even skeptical about the interest among IITians in setting up their own firms. Having seen such kind of bashings for the last five years, here is what I have to say.

If the meeting is about political awareness, then they claim that IITs are not doing enough to nurture political awareness among students. If it is about environmental protection, they point out at each and every thing done at IIT and examine how environmentally unfriendly it is. If it is entrepreneurship, they point to the lack of diversity {of business thought} among students at IITs and how that has prevented them from becoming global business leaders overnight. If it is about social service, they point out towards the lack of courses in social sciences for an engineer at IIT.

And they do all this sitting in the CLT, at the center of IITM.

Fine, we understand and accept your ideas. But it is better that you try understanding us too. IITs have not been set up to do all sorts of these things, from political awareness to social sciences. A host of other institutions are there to officially '”train” you in such things.

IITs have been set up for providing technological leadership, and they are good at doing that. That does not mean all of us do engineering design alone. There are quite a few of us who have excelled in one or more of the things in the list above. It is not because IITs have trained them to. It is because of their own personal interest coupled with the confidence and thought leadership that IIT life has provided them with.

Dear friends, next time you come to CLT to bash us out for not having produced world class musicians and painters, please bear this in mind.

Monday, November 03, 2008

I, Sri Vallabha.

There has been a slack in my blogging activity and it took more than two months for this post to come out. I acknowledge this delay. When ever there is something that we all know, I feel that it is better to talk about it and clear up things, than keeping mum. This delay had been due to a few things. Till end of September I was busy preparing for GRE and TOEFL. And then, joblessness took over. {Don’t worry; I am not jobless in the literal sense, I have a job.} With applying to the US delayed for a year, and having finished GRE etc. I find myself free, so free that I am lost in confusion about how to use this free time. I have been trying to do many things, from learning flute to volunteering for Janaagraha, to blogging in Telugu to carrying out a few experiments in human psychology. Experiments which gave me valuable insights into how people from different academic and social backgrounds think. More about these in the next post.

In this post I would like to talk about my thought process and behaviour, something that interests me the most. I wish to explore the various phases it went through and how it matured to what it is today. Here it goes.

As a child, I was a bit naughty. Of course, all children are naughty. I never hesitated to make the fullest use of an opportunity for mischief. At school, these opportunities presented themselves in various forms: sitting in the last bench, lunch break, games period or a favourite teacher’s class. During these times, I was at my usual best, doing what I liked. Sitting in the last bench, I used to play pen-games during class hours. {There were two designs for a pen-gun. Competing with friends, I perfected both. Feel free to contact me for more information on pen-guns.} In sixth standard, during history class on one lazy afternoon, a misfire from my pen-gun sent the ‘bullet’ straight to the teacher from the last bench I was sitting in. May be he did not know how it came, or may be he did not know about pen-guns, the teacher left it at that, and I escaped punishment. At home, picking up a fight with my little sister was the easiest thing to do. Whenever I felt its time for some liveliness, I used to scare my sister or pull her pig tails and run away. Those chases felt more heroic than most of the ones I see in films today. Of course, if I was unlucky, I would get caught and receive a slap or two from my parents. Being a kid, I was not at all worried about the consequences of my actions. If I felt like doing something, I did it.

As I grew up, my understanding of the surroundings improved. I was able to think through and understand the consequences of an action. If I wanted to do something, I would think of what others would feel about it. During that time, ‘others’ comprised of my parents, teachers and my friends’ parents. Being a first ranker at school, I was supposed to be a good boy, who would conform to the norm. And I followed it religiously. This restrained me from being mischievous or being myself. When my friends would scale the school walls to pluck mangoes, I would stand outside - watching. Actually, I was uncertain of what was right or what was wrong, and how I should act.

This confusion and indecisiveness only increased with time. As I came to Hyderabad, to study at Ramaiah, the number of ‘others’ increased greatly. Now, apart from being a good boy for those back at Ponnur, I was also expected to conform to the opinions and expectations of people in Hyderabad - may it be my relatives or people I got to know through my uncle. Added to this was my poor academic performance during those days. I was doing badly at Ramaiah, and that made me withdraw into a shell; into a set of rules I framed for myself, hoping they would bring me success. I was not willing to watch movies, as good boys always focussed on studies. I remember one particular day when I waited at a theatre for an hour to get tickets for my uncle’s family. Despite their prodding, I refused to watch the movie myself, gave them tickets and went back home to study.

I am not very sure as to why I was so meticulous in following such things, but they gave me a sense of satisfaction, of doing the ‘right’ thing. It was not just about doing things I liked, it was also about things I felt wrong with other people. If someone did things I disliked, or hurt me with their caustic comments, I never replied back. I used to think of their comments and the possible repartees, but never had the desire to express myself. Some doubt that I might be wrong and they might be right prevented me from doing this. In this process, I had to sacrifice many things I liked, had to put up with that mental strain and had to calm down the surge of emotion at feeling insulted. In short, I was like a wax statue, moulding myself in the way people wanted to see me.

This kind of thinking didn’t leave me till my third semester at IITM. During the first year, I was the same introspective and cautious guy. In fact, even to play cricket in the hostel quadrangle, exams had to be as far as a month away. However, three semesters of life at IIT brought back the same old confidence I had as a kid. The sense of being capable; of doing things I liked, returned slowly. Of course, there was an event that triggered this. It made me understand that sitting and ruminating about the course of action will take me no where, and to at least get close to what I wanted; I need to take the plunge. And so I did something I liked, after a long time, in the October of 2005. Since then, I started being myself again. Never hesitating to enjoy those small pleasures that matter, either coffee in rain or badminton at night, or riding my bike @ 70kmph in city traffic. Of course, I know my limitations. I only did those things that did not trouble others.

Speaking my heart was a different story. In the process of expressing myself frankly, I hurt a few people; some who matter the most to me, and some I wish I had never met. With people who mattered, it was more of explaining myself, convincing them that I had my own ideas and beliefs too. Making them understand that I was right in my own sense was difficult, but a worthy exercise. And with people I wish I never met, it was more of an ego satisfaction. With their feeling of self importance and skewed sense of equality, they would subject me to unwanted trouble. Not being able to appreciate an idea is fine, but refusing to think, to use the brain that is given for the sole purpose of thinking is not fair. Dealing with such people had been and will be difficult. In such cases, I had and will have the last word and prove that I have a set of superior moral values or what ever. I have no regrets for doing this, because at the end of the day, all that matters is being at peace with myself than being a good boy to the wrong people.

Here is a way to explain all this behaviour. As a I kid, I did not know that there was something called a value system, and hence did not care about right or wrong. As I grew up to be a teenager,I knew of its existence, but was not sure as to what it comprised of. The cognizance of its existence made me cautious in my actions. I did not want to cross the line, but did not know where the line was. Now, having lived for more than 20% of my life, my value system is approximately 80% complete.{I am just applying the Pareto's principle.} And hence I act, in accordance with my value system and live at peace with myself.

I, Sri Vallabha mean what I say, speak my heart and do what I feel is right !


Monday, June 30, 2008

Life means

Views about life, of a 24year old engineer from IITM working with an MNC in Chennai.

Do not misunderstand me if these views sound too materialistic, these are just a collection of things that make me feel good about life.

Life means:

  1. Coffee @ Hot Chips

  2. Tapti Hostel, IIT Madras

  3. Honda Shine 125 cc

  4. Gutti vankaaya koora (brinjal curry) by Mom

  5. Dell Inspiron 1525

  6. TTD-IC Temple, T Nagar

  7. Of friends and more of friends

  8. Berth 0035, S6, 7043-Circar Express

  9. Meals @ Rathna Cafe

  10. Traffic police and an AP vehicle on Chennai roads

  11. Prasadam @ Lord Anjaneya's temple, Naganallur

  12. Kathipara Junction

  13. Barrons GRE 17th Edition

  14. STD @ Rs 1.30/min, Vodafone

  15. Maggi @ Gurunath

  16. Group mails on Gmail

  17. Send offs @ Chennai Central

  18. Loan repayment, Andhra Bank

  19. Moserbaer DVDs

  20. Masala Dosa @ Tiffanys

  21. Career fundaes to sister

  22. Credit card bills

  23. Tairsadam (Curd rice)

  24. Local trains

  25. IRCTC

Now coming to the most odd item on the list, point no 8. Since I shifted here, I have been traveling to Ponnur on the Circar express. And the four times I have traveled by it so far, online reservation allotted me the same berth, time and again: Coach S6, Berth no: 35.

Thursday, June 05, 2008

The fundamental laws of professional life

Deevi's laws of Professional life { On the lines of the “Newton's laws of motion"}

The zeroth law, that exists only for thermodynamics and not for kinematics, can be extended to the laws of professional life.


0. College - Office(that you don't like) = (Work+ Interest) - (Work) = Interest [courtesy: Sriram]


1. Every employee continues to be in the state of ultimate enthuless-ness or of absolute procrastination unless a new girl joins his team

2. The rate of change of interest in work is directly proportional to the state of the girl {state = function (beauty, nativity, marital status, interest [she shows on you]) etc.}

3. To every overture to the girl, there is an equal and opposite admonition from the boss

Wednesday, March 05, 2008

Parting

Parting is not an easy thing, but when the memories attached with a place are bad, it is "made easy". Leaving deloitte was made easy for me, so to say. I am finishing the formalities ,meeting friends and bidding my farewells to the people here in Deloitte.

I did think of writing about my leaving this place but wanted to do it at a later date. But now, there was an incident that made me write this post from a public terminal in office. Two of my friends, here in deloitte.

I first met them eight months ago, during the induction for the new campus recruits. Though we had very less things in common,we became friends and "still a student" sort of attitude tied us closely. The fact that we belong to different work streams made it difficult for us to meet daily or talk. But today, when I was leaving the firm, they met me and handed me over a gift with their warm wishes. I felt like I was in school again. It was like classmates parting. Their attachment moved me immensly and as I walked out of their floor, my eyes were wet with tears. It was the pain, the pain of seperation and having to part.

Dear friends (you know who i am addressing to) thank you very much. I lack words to express my feelings, but one thing is sure, I will cherish your friendship for ever.

Sunday, January 27, 2008

Pan IIT - the "Machchan" feeling that stays for life....

Some of you might have heard of the Pan IIT Entrepreneur Mentoring Program that was held across 16 cities in India on this Republic day. It was conducted to help the would-be entrepreneurs of IITs (though many other people came in to seek guidance and mentorship) gain more clarity about the businesses they were planning to start. The mentors were super seniors of IITs who have started their own companies and have gained experience in various fields of business. I had an opportunity to volunteer and help organizers in ensuring that the session at Hyderabad went smoothly.

The first dilemma I faced was the dress that would be appropriate for the occasion. Back in Insti, people never bothered even if one turned up in ManU's jersey for an official event. But this was going to a place where one meets big people who run companies and have been in corporate world for a long time. A formal dress seemed appropriate, but I decided to wear my Insti sweat shirt, and infuse a sort of freshness into all that corporate thinking. When I first met the organizer, and asked him if the way I dressed was fine, he laughed and patted my back saying, "After all you are in a Pan IIT meet, this is more than fine". He was from IITM too, an electrical engineer who graduated long before I was born. Most of the seniors turned up in business formals (coat and tie) but nobody bothered about my sweatshirt. They would look at the emblem on the shirt and try to figure out the name. I would suggest them "Madras" and a smile would appear across their face. "Are the elephants in your campus fine? Do you still have a water problem?" Questions would come pouring in. I feel more than happy, telling them about the centralized water supply system and the elephants at GC.

The best part of this experience came from a super senior. He was sitting at a table, waiting for his "mentee" to turn up. I went to know if there was anything he needed. He was looking at the emblem and I suggested him Madras. As soon as he came to know that I am a mechanical engineer from IITM, he stood up, shook hands heartily and said “I am a mechanical engineer too, from IITM. I graduated in 1968." We had a talk about the Insti, his experiences as he came out in search of employment in young India. His affable smile and feeling of friendliness made me extremely happy. What had he to do with me, some one as old as his grandchild? For the first time I realized how strong the feelings of cordiality can be towards ones juniors. It was the power of alumni and I felt fortunate being a part of the brand IIT and a strong network.

The first hour or so has been busy, with us sorting out the lists of mentors and "mentees" and helping them to meet in their given time slots. These "mentees" were recent grads, people with some four to six year work experience. They wanted to know about various things, ranging from the "tech" part of business to the "business" part of business. Once the event started, it was easier, and we had enough time to move around and interact with people. What inspired me was the diversity of ideas that people came up with. Apart from the fully commercial ideas that would generate revenues and provide employment, there were people with sustainable ideas that would help to uplift the quality of technical education and the lives of masses.

Another thing I noted was that the sense of being classmates and friends doesn't subside easily. You may be running a big company, but you are still my classmate- that’s the feeling they had, and let me give you an example. Two seniors from the same batch turned up for the program. During a break I was talking to one of them, and the other came in to join his friend. They fell back to talking in the same old familiar language, and made fun of each other as if they were still in college. One of them was teasing the other on how he changed after going to US. I admired their friendship and stood watching. Will my classmates be at the same ease after 10 years? I thought.

Apart from being called "a kid" for being fresh out of college, I learnt a lot from seniors about their experiences with running a company. One of them told us why he chose to employ non-IITians. "We are impatient and get frustrated easily. We can't sit learning the basics for a long time, and want to get into action soon" he remarked. I reflected on how true it was in my case. Just six months out of Insti, and I was getting frustrated at not being able to change the world.

At the close of the event, there was a lecture by Dr APJ Kalam on how IITians can help the country, by creating employment opportunities. He said "IITians should not be job seekers but job creators" and stressed on the importance of us contributing towards the cause of India.

Wednesday, January 09, 2008

Lengthy hours of work in the office with laptop have made me reluctant to touch it at home after work. Though I have a couple of topics to blog, I have started to hate computers. So, there may not be posts for a while.