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For details- https://t.me/SociologyTasks/1082
Stay informed. Stay inspired. Stay connected with Sociospect.
#SOCIOSPECT@SociologyTasks
Day 9
The names in the news 'Leviathan', 'Tamar', and 'Ras Tanura' are
1 ice fields in Greenland
2 energy refineries in the middle east
3 types of snakes found in Amazon forest
4 names of operations launched by USA against Venezuela and Iran
Question designed by Anurag Srivastava sir ( 4 prelims, 100+ scores) @demon_stration
#CAthroughMCQ@DecipherCivils
The names in the news 'Leviathan', 'Tamar', and 'Ras Tanura' are
1 ice fields in Greenland
2 energy refineries in the middle east
3 types of snakes found in Amazon forest
4 names of operations launched by USA against Venezuela and Iran
Question designed by Anurag Srivastava sir ( 4 prelims, 100+ scores) @demon_stration
#CAthroughMCQ@DecipherCivils
DEC!PHER CIVILS pinned Β«Day 9 The names in the news 'Leviathan', 'Tamar', and 'Ras Tanura' are 1 ice fields in Greenland 2 energy refineries in the middle east 3 types of snakes found in Amazon forest 4 names of operations launched by USA against Venezuela and Iran Questionβ¦Β»
CSE_2025_FR_Eng_06032026.pdf
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Final Results CSE 2025
Audio
The past - a dreadful nightmare for most of us.
This is true not only for our life experiences, but it threatens our journey to our dream job too.
Let the past teach us lessons, and remain a source of inspiration.
LET IT NOT INTIMIDATE YOU.
Let it not diminish your value.
May it mould you into a strong individual.
Remember, before serving others as a civil servant, we need to serve ourselves by strengthening our mind.
May each one of you be blessed with nerves of steel.
May you be driven to work for the betterment of society.
All the best!
MAY VICTORY BE YOURS!π
#InspireYourselfToday
This is true not only for our life experiences, but it threatens our journey to our dream job too.
Let the past teach us lessons, and remain a source of inspiration.
LET IT NOT INTIMIDATE YOU.
Let it not diminish your value.
May it mould you into a strong individual.
Remember, before serving others as a civil servant, we need to serve ourselves by strengthening our mind.
May each one of you be blessed with nerves of steel.
May you be driven to work for the betterment of society.
All the best!
MAY VICTORY BE YOURS!
#InspireYourselfToday
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CSE2025 AIR-02
Rajeshwari Suve M, a graduate from Madurai, secured All India Rank 2 in the Union Public Service Commission Civil Services Examination 2025. She said the achievement was the result of a seven-year journey that began in 2018 after her graduation. Suve also credited the Tamil Nadu governmentβs βNaan Mudhalvan UPSC Scholarshipβ scheme for providing crucial financial and academic support during her preparation.
π₯ANI
Rajeshwari Suve M, a graduate from Madurai, secured All India Rank 2 in the Union Public Service Commission Civil Services Examination 2025. She said the achievement was the result of a seven-year journey that began in 2018 after her graduation. Suve also credited the Tamil Nadu governmentβs βNaan Mudhalvan UPSC Scholarshipβ scheme for providing crucial financial and academic support during her preparation.
π₯ANI
β€5
Day 10
Consider the following statements
1 strait is a narrow water body which connects two different seas
2 It is not a strait but an isthmus when a narrow water body connects two seas part of two different oceans
3 Strait of Hormuz is a narrow, waterway located between the Persian Gulf and gulf of oman
4 India doesn't feature any natural strait in its geographical boundaries
Which of the following statements are correct
A 1,2,3
B 1,2,3,4
C 1,3
D 1,3,4
Why is this question asked
Strait of Hormuz blocked by Iran
Question designed by Anurag Srivastava sir ( 4 prelims, 100+ scores) @demon_stration
#CAthroughMCQ@DecipherCivils
Consider the following statements
1 strait is a narrow water body which connects two different seas
2 It is not a strait but an isthmus when a narrow water body connects two seas part of two different oceans
3 Strait of Hormuz is a narrow, waterway located between the Persian Gulf and gulf of oman
4 India doesn't feature any natural strait in its geographical boundaries
Which of the following statements are correct
A 1,2,3
B 1,2,3,4
C 1,3
D 1,3,4
Why is this question asked
Strait of Hormuz blocked by Iran
Question designed by Anurag Srivastava sir ( 4 prelims, 100+ scores) @demon_stration
#CAthroughMCQ@DecipherCivils
π΅Every year when the Union Public Service Commission announces the final results of the Civil Services Examination, the preparation ecosystem suddenly fills with new narratives. New toppers appear, new βbest optionalsβ are advertised, and new coaching institutes claim to be the ultimate kingmakers. For many aspirants, this creates a mix of inspiration and anxiety. But behind the celebration lies a quieter truth that is rarely discussed openly β most toppers did not succeed because they discovered a magical strategy or a perfect institute. They succeeded because they stayed in the process long enough to discover what works for them.
The harsh but liberating reality is that many successful candidates reach their destination after five to six years of trial, reflection, and refinement. During this journey they often attend different coaching classes, try various study materials, experiment with multiple answer-writing styles, and learn from several mentors. None of these alone makes them a topper. What truly shapes their success is the gradual process of self-discovery in preparation. As the philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche once wrote, βHe who has a why to live can bear almost any how.β For UPSC aspirants, the βwhyβ is often stronger than any external guidance.
Result season naturally brings emotional turbulence. Beginners may feel overwhelmed by the scale of competition. Those with two or three attempts may start questioning their strategies. Candidates who have written multiple mains or appeared for interviews may feel the pressure of time and expectations. It is important to recognize that this anxiety is not a personal weakness β it is a collective emotional phase of the UPSC ecosystem. Instead of reacting impulsively, the wisest step is to pause, take a short break, and allow the mind to regain clarity.
After the pause comes the most important phase: honest self-assessment. The only reliable indicator that you are moving toward success is not comparison with toppers but comparison with your previous version. Ask yourself simple but powerful questions. Am I writing better answers than I did last month? Do I remember concepts more clearly than before? Have my analytical abilities improved compared to my previous attempt? If the answer to these questions is gradually becoming βyes,β then you are already progressing in the right direction. As James Clear reminds us, βSuccess is the product of daily habits, not once-in-a-lifetime transformations.β
UPSC preparation is not a sprint where speed decides the winner; it is a long-distance intellectual marathon where consistency matters more than brilliance. Small improvements β clearer structure in answers, sharper examples, better conceptual clarity, and disciplined revision β accumulate quietly over time. The candidates whose names appear in the final list are often those who simply refused to stop improving, even when results were delayed.
Therefore, the message for every aspirant in this phase is simple: do not chase myths, chase progress. Institutes may guide, materials may help, and strategies may evolve, but the real transformation happens within the aspirant. Focus on becoming a slightly better version of yourself every month. When improvement becomes a habit, success eventually becomes a consequence.
In the words of Abraham Lincoln, βI will prepare and someday my chance will come.β For those who continue learning, refining, and persevering, the list you read today may feel distant β but the list you read tomorrow may carry your own name.
The harsh but liberating reality is that many successful candidates reach their destination after five to six years of trial, reflection, and refinement. During this journey they often attend different coaching classes, try various study materials, experiment with multiple answer-writing styles, and learn from several mentors. None of these alone makes them a topper. What truly shapes their success is the gradual process of self-discovery in preparation. As the philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche once wrote, βHe who has a why to live can bear almost any how.β For UPSC aspirants, the βwhyβ is often stronger than any external guidance.
Result season naturally brings emotional turbulence. Beginners may feel overwhelmed by the scale of competition. Those with two or three attempts may start questioning their strategies. Candidates who have written multiple mains or appeared for interviews may feel the pressure of time and expectations. It is important to recognize that this anxiety is not a personal weakness β it is a collective emotional phase of the UPSC ecosystem. Instead of reacting impulsively, the wisest step is to pause, take a short break, and allow the mind to regain clarity.
After the pause comes the most important phase: honest self-assessment. The only reliable indicator that you are moving toward success is not comparison with toppers but comparison with your previous version. Ask yourself simple but powerful questions. Am I writing better answers than I did last month? Do I remember concepts more clearly than before? Have my analytical abilities improved compared to my previous attempt? If the answer to these questions is gradually becoming βyes,β then you are already progressing in the right direction. As James Clear reminds us, βSuccess is the product of daily habits, not once-in-a-lifetime transformations.β
UPSC preparation is not a sprint where speed decides the winner; it is a long-distance intellectual marathon where consistency matters more than brilliance. Small improvements β clearer structure in answers, sharper examples, better conceptual clarity, and disciplined revision β accumulate quietly over time. The candidates whose names appear in the final list are often those who simply refused to stop improving, even when results were delayed.
Therefore, the message for every aspirant in this phase is simple: do not chase myths, chase progress. Institutes may guide, materials may help, and strategies may evolve, but the real transformation happens within the aspirant. Focus on becoming a slightly better version of yourself every month. When improvement becomes a habit, success eventually becomes a consequence.
In the words of Abraham Lincoln, βI will prepare and someday my chance will come.β For those who continue learning, refining, and persevering, the list you read today may feel distant β but the list you read tomorrow may carry your own name.
β€7