Last year, I made one of the most difficult decisions of my
life.
After spending over two decades in IT, holding a well-paid
leadership role, financial stability, global exposure, and the comfort of a
predictable salary, I chose to walk away. Not because I was forced to. Not
because I didn’t have options. But because somewhere deep inside, I knew
comfort was slowly replacing courage.
And I didn’t want to live with the regret of “What if?”
Quitting a stable, high-paying job is romantic in theory. In
reality, it is terrifying.
The first few weeks felt empowering. Freedom. Control. No
reporting lines. No corporate politics. No late-night escalation calls. But
soon, the silence of a fixed monthly credit hitting your bank account
disappears and reality sets in.
For the first time in 20+ years, there was no guaranteed
income.
I made a conscious decision not to look for another job.
That was the hardest part. I could have easily moved to another role. My
experience, network, and credentials would have made it possible. But I didn’t
want another job. I wanted ownership. I wanted to build something that was
mine. Something that could outlive designations and corporate titles.
So, I focused entirely on building my own company.
The year that followed was not glamorous.
There were sleepless nights, not because of deadlines, but
because of doubt.
There were weeks when expenses felt heavier than ambition.
There were moments when I questioned myself: “Did I make a mistake?”
The emotional swings were brutal. One day you feel
unstoppable; the other day you feel exposed. Entrepreneurship has no appraisal
cycle, no HR reassurance, no structured roadmap. It tests your patience, your
ego, your resilience.
The ups and downs weren't just professional they were deeply
personal. I said no to friends. I watched others move forward in their careers
while I was rebuilding from zero. Every small win was hard-earned, and every
setback felt magnified in the silence of doing this alone.
There were personal sacrifices too.
Time away from comfort. Tight control over spending. Saying
no to things I would have easily afforded earlier. Missing social events
because the mind was elsewhere, building, planning, recalibrating.
More than money, it test’s identity.
When you leave a big title behind, you also leave behind the
validation that comes with it. Suddenly, you’re just you no corporate badge, no
hierarchy, no team applauding a presentation. You have to build belief from
scratch.
But here’s what I learned:
Pain is experience.
Every setback forced me to sharpen my thinking. Every slow
month made me more disciplined. I became leaner, sharper, more aware of risk,
and more decisive.
Gradually, momentum built. What looked uncertain started
stabilizing. What felt like chaos started forming patterns. Relationships
deepened. Revenue became more predictable. Confidence returned not the corporate
one, but a new one rooted in self-reliance.
And then, it paid off.
Not just financially, but mentally too. The satisfaction of
building something from zero, of surviving without a safety net, of proving to
yourself that you can operate outside structured systems that changes you.
I didn’t just survive the year.
I grew stronger because of it.
The journey required perseverance. It required swallowing
pride. It required learning new skills at an age where most people prefer
stability. It required staying committed when shortcuts were available.
Most importantly, it required faith in myself.
The one thing that this year taught me was:
Security is not a salary.
Security is the ability to rebuild.
And once you realize that, fear loses its grip.
I remind myself every day:
खुदी
को कर बुलंद इतना
कि हर तक़दीर से
पहले,
ख़ुदा
बंदे से ख़ुद पूछे,
बता तेरी रज़ा क्या
है?
To anyone considering taking a leap just know that it will
test you. But if your belief is stronger than your fear, the results eventually
follow.
Today, I can say, it was worth it.
What started as an idea is now real. Proud to announce and
continue building:
✨ Welcome to Dravyam
Technology my first endeavour as an entrepreneur. ✨
The journey is just beginning. 🚀
Grateful for everyone who stood by me through the uncertain
days.
Onward. 🚀
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