Most of my colleagues and juniors who stayed in their 9–5 IT jobs are now VPs, CEOs, or have settled in first-world countries with impressive titles and comfortable lives. Every now and then, I catch myself wondering — what if I had chosen the same path? What if I had never quit my IT job and instead continued climbing that corporate ladder?
On paper, I might have looked successful — the paycheck, the promotions, the professional validation. But deep within, I’m certain I would have been an unhappy soul.
When I left the world of IT to become a Vedic Astrologer, I didn’t know what the road ahead would look like. All I knew was that I couldn’t spend my life fixing websites when I was more drawn to understanding the cosmic system itself. My curiosity was never limited to data or devices; it was about destiny, meaning, and the subtle architecture of human experience.
If I had stayed in that 9–5 routine, perhaps I would have gained more luxury — but I would have lost my alignment with my dharma. And in the Vedic sense, nothing corrodes the soul more quietly than living out of sync with one’s dharma.
Today, my work is not about targets or teams; it’s about timelines of karma and cycles of consciousness. The world may not remember me as a CEO or a tech innovator, but I’ve guided thousands toward clarity — helping people make peace with their life, patterns, and purpose.
So yes, I might have missed the corporate jet, but I found something far more liberating — a life that feels authentically mine.
Maybe the world didn’t need another VP, but it certainly needed someone who could decode the stars and speak to the human heart.