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Home » Persistence is Pivotal: Dr Meenakshi Chaudhary (Transcript)

Persistence is Pivotal: Dr Meenakshi Chaudhary (Transcript)

Here is the full transcript of Dr Meenakshi Chaudhary’s talk titled “Persistence is Pivotal” at TEDxIIMRanchi 2022 conference.

Listen to the audio version here:

TRANSCRIPT:

Hi guys, is the josh high still? I’m the last speaker but I guess it’s still not the least. I’ve still got a lot more to share so got your attention here. Right, so… “Don’t lose the grips on the dreams of your life. You must fight just to keep them alive.” These are the lines from one of my favorite songs called “The Eye of the Tiger,” a soundtrack of one of my favorite films, Rocky. Something that I can relate to in my life. Because if there is one word to describe me, I’m a fighter.

Family Background

It is in my genes. I am my parents. So let me start from the very beginning. My father, Colonel B.R. Chaudhary, was the first ever army officer from his village. A very hardworking man and a simple kind woman with endless resilience defines my mother, Nirmala Chaudhary.

From having been born in an army hospital to having spent my childhood in cantonments to studying in army schools, the army life was a part and parcel of the springtime of my life. In fact, when I was born, my dad was posted in Leh at the time, barely managed to reach the hospital just in time for my birth, because he wouldn’t miss that for the world. How he managed is another story altogether.

Childhood and Education

So I’ve always been a very good student, you know, good in studies, good in academic studies, sports, extracurriculars. I represented my state in swimming and in badminton. And like every other army kid, I was disciplined.

So yes, I was that kid that every auntie in your neighborhood would compare their kid with. You know, like Sharma ji ka beta, I was that. However, contrary to the usual belief that army kids usually lose out on a lot of childhood fun, I’ve actually enjoyed every bit of it, every transfer that we’ve had, and every new person that I met along the way.

For me, fun meant learning and exploring new things. And thanks to my army background, I got oceans of opportunities to do that. So my parents always emphasized and made sure that we were given the best education in and out of home, the right values, and made sure that we were always connected to our roots.

That is the reason every summer vacation was spent in my village, Haripur, Punjab, where my brother Tanveer and I would water the fields, play around in the tubers, and even make cow dung cakes, something that my friends back in the city never understood and could relate to.

So from having, you know, getting transferred to a new place every two years, to making friends wherever I went, to the calmness, ruggedness, and the freshness of the village life, all of these places and the memories became a pit stop in that fun journey of my life.

Adaptability and Dreams

And I learned to adapt. Something that actually helped me, you know, to be able to straddle the entire gamut of being in the city as well as in the village life very comfortably. Something that I was supposed to face in the near future, which I’ll be talking about.

I’ve always wanted to be a doctor, you know, Dr. Meenakshi Chaudhary. In fact, as a kid, I’ve always had these three things that I wanted to be: doctor, Miss India, and an IAS officer. But let’s be real now. The only way I’m being an IAS is when I play one in the film.

Life’s Challenges

But soon after school, I cleared my BDS exam, which is Bachelors of Dental Surgery and got admission in one of the reputed dental colleges. Life felt like a smooth ride on my way to achieving all of my dreams one by one. But, we all have tossed a coin at least once in our life, guessing whether it’s going to be heads or tails when it lands.

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That moment when it is suspended in the air, in that space, flipping and flipping, that is life. The coin lands only when we cease to exist. So the coin of my life was about to flip for the burst.

Personal Loss

That completely turned my life upside down. My father was diagnosed with brain tumor, and despite all of our efforts to cure him, he passed away in January 2018. I was completely shattered because he was everything to me.

You know, I was very, very close to my father. I remember how every annual function, he’d be there cheering the loudest and clapping the loudest whenever my name was announced on stage, be it for sports or extracurriculars. You know, he was my biggest cheerleader, my biggest fan.

Facing Adversity

So, me being good in studies and good in sports, all of that amounted to just one thing on that one day of the year, to see him in the audience being proud of me and cheering for me. So, after losing him, I had no clue what to do. You know, the darkness that came into my life pushed me into an abyss, and I was thinking.

My mother was lost. He was the only earning member of our family, and you know, she cursed herself for not being able to study enough so that she could help us financially. My brother was dealing with his own grief. Everything was going downhill.

Rising from the Ashes

But remember how I mentioned in the beginning that I’m a fighter and I get that from my parents? My mother stepped up then. She started picking up the pieces because she wasn’t going to let herself and her kids go down.

So, here is where I have to tell you this very amazing thing, okay? My mother comes from a background which is as conservative as conservatives can be, okay?