Every year, more than a million young Indians pin their hopes on a single dream: clearing the UPSC exam and stepping into a life of public service, prestige, and purpose. It’s a journey marked by long hours, relentless pressure, and often, crushing silence when things don’t go as planned.
We hear plenty about the ones who clear it, the ranks, the glory, the photos with smiling parents. But what about those who don’t? The ones who walk away without a number but with years of effort behind them?
This is the story of one such woman. She didn’t clear the exam. But she didn’t let that define her. Instead, she chose something braver, to begin again.
Veda Gogineni chased the UPSC dream with everything she had. When it didn’t work out, she could’ve faded into the background. Instead, she built something better: lives full of impact, creativity, and meaning, entirely on her own terms.
Hers is not a story of failure. Hers is a story of what happens when you stop chasing one path and start creating your own.

THE LEAP THAT CHANGED EVERYTHING
In 2015, Veda Gogineni made a decision most people wouldn’t dare. She was working at Deutsche Bank in Mumbai with a promising career and an offer to move to London, a future many would envy. But she left it all behind to chase something else: the UPSC exam.
She shifted base from Hyderabad to Delhi, rented a 10-foot-wide room in Mukherjee Nagar, and began the slow, exhausting climb that lakhs of aspirants take each year.
Her life shrank to a routine of libraries, note-making, mock tests, and barely-there social interaction. The rent, the stress, the solitude — she accepted it all, believing that this was the price for a shot at service.

WHEN CLOSE ISN’T CLOSE ENOUGH
Over the next three and a half years, Veda gave it everything she had. Four serious attempts. Endless revision cycles. Long nights. She came heartbreakingly close, missing cutoffs by a single mark.
The mental toll was sharp. Unlike most exams, UPSC stretches over an entire year, and one wrong step at any stage means starting over from scratch. She lived in that loop for years, hoping the next one would be it.
Eventually, she reached a breaking point. It wasn’t the failure alone; it was the never-ending feeling of being stuck. With her mother’s encouragement, she chose to step away. Not to give up, but to breathe.

BUILDING EARTHFUL, A NEW KIND OF PURPOSE
In 2020, Veda began a different chapter, not in government service, but in entrepreneurship. Along with her sister Sudha, she co-founded Earthful, a plant-based supplements company focused on clean nutrition and mindful wellness.
Their startup caught attention quickly. It landed on Shark Tank India, where the duo impressed investors and secured Rs 75 lakh in funding. More than the money, it was a moment of clarity that all those years of hard work weren’t wasted. They had simply prepared her for a different kind of success.
At Earthful, Veda found something UPSC never offered — creative freedom, a sense of control, and the ability to build something real, visible, and immediate. The mission was still impact-driven, but now it was on her own terms.

REDEFINING WHAT SUCCESS LOOKS LIKE
Today, Veda looks back at her UPSC journey not with regret, but with perspective. It shaped her, yes. But it didn’t define her. What mattered more was what came after: the decision to pivot, the courage to rebuild, and the mindset to keep moving.
Her journey is a quiet reminder: sometimes, not getting what you want opens the door to something you never imagined.
She didn’t clear the exam. But she cleared the fog. And that’s what changed everything.